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The Most Expensive Bottle of Dr. Pepper I Will Ever Buy

I’m not sure whether I’ll enter into the kingdom of heaven, but my JBL TUNE 760NC headphones certainly will.

Here’s what happened. Two days ago I was walking home from my new office on NAU campus. The office itself is worthy of another story sometime; it’s the kind of office that elicits the response “You’re in Peterson? That’s a rite of passage” from the older faculty members, located in a building that was reportedly supposed to have been torn down back in 2016.

What’s important to this story is that it’s a mile from where I live, which is short enough that walking is the best way to get there but long enough that it’s pretty miserable if the weather is bad. The rain started just after I left my office. Now, in Utah where I’m from, it’s not worth owning an umbrella, because it rains maybe twice a month, and when it does it’s over in twenty minutes. I thought I would be fine to push through the rain like the grown taxpaying adult that I am.

Never in my life had I experienced rain so thick that it felt like that scene in Lord of the Rings where the Fellowship are walking over Caradhras through the blizzard with their arms over their faces and Saruman says “If the mountain defeats you, will you risk a more dangerous road?” I couldn’t have been more drenched if the whole population of Flagstaff had taken turns emptying five-gallon buckets over my head. And every car that shot by flung dirty water onto the sidewalk, so that by the time I reached home, I was covered in water and mud and looked like I’d just cosplayed a car in a car wash.

(Incidentally, the shoes I was wearing that day—this was the third time I’d worn them—are still wet.)

So that was baptism by water for my headphones—which miraculously survived the whole ordeal well enough to repeatedly play the new Bleachers live recording while I furnished my office yesterday. They made it home dry and intact after work and I put them on the counter just in time for them to receive their second baptism in as many days: baptism by Dr. Pepper.

I was trying to be responsible, honest. After work I wandered around for a little while, trying to decide whether I wanted fast food, before realizing that what I really craved was a vanilla ice cream float with Dr. Pepper, and it would be cheaper to buy the ingredients for that than buying dessert at Dairy Queen. So I walked the fifteen minutes to Target and brought home a tub of ice cream and a two-liter Dr. Pepper. As soon as I got home, I set my headphones on the table, got out a cup for my long-awaited dessert, dished out the ice cream, and opened the Dr. Pepper…

…and a geyser comprising an entire liter of Dr. Pepper, fully half of the bottle, pumped through my hands with immeasurable newtons of force. It couldn’t have gone any higher if I’d dumped a whole bag of Mentos into that bottle. I yelled a couple of curse words and knocked over the ice cream cup—the ill-fated ice cream float got assembled, at least, on the kitchen counter—and, clothing soaked for the second night in a row, I rushed for a towel to absorb the lake of Dr. Pepper off the counter and the floor and the dishwasher and the walls and the ceiling (where brown Dr. Pepper droplets hung like stalactites).

For the next half hour, my roommates (who had been playing Super Smash Bros in the living room when all hell broke loose; Dr. Pepper made its way all the way onto their couches, fortunately upholstered in leather) and I conducted damage control on the brand new kitchen. I should mention that we’re the first ones to live here. Less than a month into our contract and the living room walls are permanently streaked with the evidence of my cola-flavored folly. It came off the baseboards and the doors just fine, and the floors are mostly sticky-free after a couple moppings, but I doubt the constellations of Dr. Pepper on the ceiling will go away without another painting.

I really tried my best to keep this apartment nice, but in the end—no matter how hard you may wish it otherwise—no treasure on earth, even a new apartment, is safe from the moth and rust and Dr. Pepper that doth corrupt, in the words of St. Matthew.

I’ve been reading the fourteenth-century samurai epic Heike Monogatari, which is all about the transience of glory and beauty: “Pleasure and riches are vanity…youth cannot save me, for many die young, and breathing out never assures that the breath will pass in again. Summer heat shimmer, a flash of lightning; life vanishes still more swiftly.” That hauntingly beautiful awareness of doom is moving to read about in classic literature, but I could have used without the reminder of the transience of my wordly possessions via the twin vehicles of H2O and Dr. Pepper.

Granted, my poor headphones made it through their ordeal well enough to deliver me the new Airborne Toxic Event single, so I’ll take what I can get. (It’s very Smiths-wave, for the record.) ∎

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Random

“Don’t Just Sit There, Prophesy!” (Quotes)

I like to say that my greatest talent is having the coolest friends. And what better way to judge the quality of your friends than the ludicrousness of the quotes you share together?

Please enjoy this selection of quotes, exquisitely curated from the Fall 2023 semester and before.

Music People

People who don’t date me are preliterate societies. –Brandon

Yo check me out with my Gucci greaves bro, and my Prada shoulder pauldrons. –Sam Craven on the future of fashion

Use a scalpel instead of a sledgehammer, babe. –Melissa on George Orwell

I just need to like get really good at the piano in one day. Or drop out of school and play the accordion on a farm in Sweden. Those are my two options. –Em

I’ll go months without listening to a metronome in my sleep. –Michael

Hatsune Miku is like the Spongebob Squarepants of the anime community. –Camryn

It’s like wearing a tie with nothing else, except not as hot. –Camryn

[watching Princess Mononoke]
Matt Heslop: Did that impala become more feminine looking?
Brandon: Are you saying you find it more attractive?

Em: Cereal tastes good out of a tupperware.
Dana: Does it taste different?
Em: It does! In a metaphysical sort of way.

Emma: Yeah Emily, what’s your interpretation?
Brandon: Yeah, don’t just sit there. Prophesy.

Anonymous BYU Professors

Yes I taught you that! And now I’m trying to disabuse you of that because it’s wrong!

I’m seriously going to pass out, this marker is so strong. Let’s pass this around! Let’s talk about how we’re gonna build community!

If I say I’ve been crying all day, she will feel bad for me, because she’s socially obligated to.

We have ‘discuss,’ we have ‘discussion.’ ‘Discussive’ feels…disgusting.

It’s a ham sandwich with a brioche bun! Let’s not be ridiculous.

You’re like a ditransitive verb because you need a lot of compliments.

Other

I found a Van Gogh calendar in the dumpster and I was like, ‘This is a waste.’ –George

I feel like a lawyer is a very basic thing to have…. Aren’t your parents old, aren’t they about to die? –Girl in my apartment complex

Resident: Those kids were always at the back of the bus!
Asher: That’s why I dealt drugs at the front of the bus.

Erica would murder you in your sleep and then write a love novel about it. –Emily M. (from the Japanese house) on my laptop Erica

Have your ever read the Book of Mormon? First book they cut someone’s head off! –Overheard in the Wilkinson Center

Not only did I enjoy that kiss last night, I was awed by the efficiency of it. –To Catch a Thief (an old Cary Grant movie)

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Random

枕草子: Delightful Things

The poet Ross Gay came to BYU this month and read some of his work at the English Reading Series. Ross’s skill with the English language is astounding, but what left the biggest impression was his attitude and character. “If you give yourself the task of noticing what you love,” he said, “your life is gonna be more full of what you love.”

I’ve been reading a book by another expert noticer of things. 清少納言 (Sei Shōnagon) recorded her observations and musings in 枕草子, The Pillow Book, a private journal that was leaked and circulated among her contemporaries. The book is full of anecdotes of court life mixed with all kinds of lists. Her observations are often as relatable as they are humorous. Do you relate to any of these?

  • Things About Which One Is Liable to Be Negligent: Preparations for something that is still well in the future.
  • Things That Make One’s Heart Beat Faster: To pass a place where babies are playing.
  • Things That Arouse a Fond Memory of the Past: To pass the time, one starts looking through some old papers and comes across the letters of a man one used to love.
  • Annoying Things: One has sent someone a poem (or a reply to a poem) and, after the messenger has left, thinks of a couple words that ought to be changed.
  • Things That Give a Pleasant Feeling: To throw equal numbers repeatedly in a game of dice.
  • Elegant Things: A pretty child eating strawberries.
  • Embarrassing Things: Parents, convinced that their ugly child is adorable, pet him and repeat the things he has said, imitating their voice.
  • Hateful Things: A man with whom one is having an affair keeps singing the praises of some woman he used to know… Even more hateful if he is still seeing the woman!

It’s a fun and fascinating read! Inspired by 少納言’s lists, and by Ross, here’s my own list of Delightful Things I’ve noticed lately, with pictures.

A paper dragon on campus.

Chalkboard art in the common room.

The light and shadows on the interior of the bus at evening.

This sign near the student center.

A still dragonfly.

An illustration drawn by one of my students while I was teaching.

Fried pickles at Texas Roadhouse.

A heart drawn on the concrete while it was wet.

Have you seen anything delightful lately? ∎