Mooning the Preacher

I don’t know how mooning started as a thing. Was it a prank, a stunt, or a joke? I can see a comedian bombing onstage and thinking, “Well, I’ve got nothing else left,” before reaching for his zipper. Or did some soldier looked at his enemy and decided, “I cannot beat you, therefore, I will expose my butt to you!”

In case you’re too young or too mature (doubtful since you’ve read this far) for that sort of thing, the dictionary defines it as:

Moon /slang/: (v) to expose one’s buttocks to (someone) in order to insult or amuse them.

It may have disappeared from popular culture for a time but was ushered right back in with that paragon of cinematic genius, Porkies. That movie spoke to me. There were several things my young self took away from it, one of which was a desire to moon someone.

One must wait for the right time and situation to moon properly. Or sometimes, those situations just arrive and you unwittingly share full view of your buttocks with innocent eyes. So it was for me.

The summer of 1984: my friend Andy and I had been asked to paint the interior of the youth building at our local church. It was a good job, even though we weren’t good at it. I recall that we were covering an off-white with a pale brown. Of course, the first thing we did was paint all kinds of bawdy words on the walls, giggle, and then cover them with paint to make them disappear. And we almost got caught. Luckily Andy was able to distract while I played Letter-man and brushed over a consonant or two.

That should show the maturity level of the paint crew. If more evidence is needed, what happened when these paragons of sophistication go to the other building to wash their brushes and find a 35mm camera sitting on a shelf?

Naturally, they moon it. They moon it from every angle!

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Andy didn’t think there was film in the camera so he became the photographer. He was snapping away while I posed like a butt model – if there is such a thing.

“The camera loves you!”

“Yes, to your left a little. A little more. That’s perfect.”

We were hamming it up when we heard two sounds that stopped us cold.

The first was the sound of the door opening.

The second was the unmistakable sound of the camera rewinding a roll of spent film!

Andy quickly put the camera back up on the shelf while I covered my bum and we hurriedly resumed our brush-washing. Luckily, the film finished rolling up before the preacher peeked his head around the corner. We made small talk and scuttled back to the other building as soon as possible.

Grace is a remarkable thing.

We finished painting over the next few days – a little more serious about our work than before. While we expected a hand of justice at any time, it never came. I found out later the church used that camera to take pictures of new members. Can you imagine what happened when they got that roll of film developed? I have a vivid mental picture of that kindly preacher sitting in bed with his wife and the pictures fresh from the Fotomat.

“Oh, honey look – the Clements. What a nice couple.”

“And the Jenkins. They’re a handsome family. This could be their Christmas card. I think I’ll give them the negative.”

“Mr. Adams – he’s such a stoic man but I think he’ll be a good usher…”

And then… my butt… over and over again from many different angles. Still, he never said a word. Grace… or perhaps he is waiting for me to get famous and then he’ll blackmail me over my butt-tape.

Rationally I know the market for that would be nonexistent. I just like to think that he chuckled about the clowns he’d hired and threw the pictures out. But maybe, maybe the preacher was a Porkies fan, too!

That Voodoo that You Do

Each of us have basic tenets of belief that guide us. Some are passed down from generation to generation and others come to us through experience during our push through this great, big world.

For instance, I will never order a fish at a steakhouse. Yes, they might offer it on the menu but experience has taught me that a steakhouse is in business because they know steak. Therefore, steak offers me the best opportunity at an optimal dining experience at that restaurant. This has become a tenet of my existence.

Likewise, there are things I avoid because I have come to believe they are scams. I don’t want to argue with anyone about these voodoo-magic things. I’m not here to proselytize and force people to my way of thinking. I usually keep these things to myself until something happens to prove I’m right. Then I might crow about it a little… or a lot.

I don’t mean to brag, but I was totally right about the whole raw juice detox cleanse craze. Five years go it was all the rage at my office. People were buzzing about how the stuff jump-started their immune systems to lose weight, but I knew better. And just to make sure, I decided to run a little experiment since bottles of it filled the fridge. Run is the right word because I may have ignored the recommended dosage. There was a definite jump-start, but nothing that could ever be sustainable. In fact, I would estimate one would have to eat twice his normal intake to keep up with the throughput! The good news is that after my little experiment, all of my co-workers soured on the stuff, too.

Here are some other things I am extremely dubious about:

  • Anything sold exclusively by Facebook friends
  • Sorbet
  • Emails from Nigerian princes
  • Veggie Pizza
  • Chiropractors
  • Ohioans who drive
  • brussels sprouts
  • People who like brussels sprouts
  • Magicians

There are many more, but you get the point. Avoidance of these things supports my outlook on the world and the way I navigate life. So if I were to have a positive experience with one of these things, I would be left amiss. Like a table with leg out of kilter, I’d totter until balanced by shoving a matchbook under the short leg.

One thing omitted from the list is Physical Therapy. It has been on there for decades. A shoulder injury took me to PT once and the second I showed up, the receptionist informed me that she had gotten approval for twenty sessions. My radar went up instantly. They hadn’t even seen me and yet they knew it was going to take the maximum my insurance would allow? Some smarmy kid showed me three exercises and sent me home. I never went back.

ALT TAG

I’ve been having severe knee pain lately and finally went to see the doctor (Doctors aren’t on the “extremely dubious” list, but just below). Fortunately, he said my knee was in great shape for my age and the amount I’ve run. Then he wrote me out a referral for, you guessed it… physical therapy. Ugggg.

I drove home thinking, “So this is what it’s come to. I’m just going to live out my days in pain.”

My lovely wife prodded me to go and at least see what they had to say, which I did. Armed with skepticism, I sized up this scam artist with a “doctor” title. He’s too young to be a real doctor.. mail order? As we discussed treatment and he bent me this way and that, I slowly started to think he might know what he is talking about. Some of his torture hurt, but no worse than my knee was hurting before. He gave me exercises to do at home and after about two days there was a noticeable improvement in my knee.

It’s been a couple of weeks now and I think I’m actually getting better. What do I do with that?

I’ve got to find something else to distrust – a matchbook to shove under the wobbly leg because it is conceivable that I maybe, possibly, potentially, might have been wrong about Physical Therapy… perhaps.