T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
682.1 | The Only Time I was Psychic. | MCIS2::SHURSKY | | Mon Mar 28 1988 12:52 | 80 |
| This all started one night on the Wellesley College campus during
my freshman year at MIT. A friend and I were stumbling around in a
not atypical state of inebriation. Our spirits were high in more
ways than one.
We chanced upon a Georgia peach on her way to the student center.
My friend, never shy, and even less so in his current state, began
talking to her.
"Hello, I'm Bob. Who are you?"
"Susan James" <name changed>
"Where do you come from Susan?"
"Carlton, Georgia"
"Which hall are you living in?"
"Beebe."
More idle conversation followed but she soon tired of two drunks and
went on her way.
About *two* years later I was at a mixer (that is what we called them
back them) and who did I see. Susan James. She would dance one dance
with whomever asked and that was all. Well being in one of my "moods"
I decided I could get a few dances out of her. I guess she had a BBH.
(boyfriend back home) So in my most debonair manner I step up to her
and say:
"May I have this dance, Susan." (curiosity piqued, she accepts)
"How did you know my name?"
"You told me." (she "never" saw me before, doesn't believe me)
We dance the first dance and exchange idle chitchat. She turns to
leave as expected. I say:
"Susan James, right?" (got her attention!)
"How do you know?"
"You told me." (she doesn't know what to make of me)
We dance the second dance. She turns to leave a second time. I say:
"From Carlton, Georgia, right?" (hooked her again!)
"Yaas, HOW did you know."
"You told me." (total incredulity)
We danced the third dance. She turns to leave one more time. I say:
"Do you still live in Beebe Hall?" (her eyes widen...)
"Yaaas, HOW do you KNOW?"
"You told me." (by now she thinks I am the devil or psychic and
is totally spooked and makes a hasty exit)
Well having gotten my chuckle for the evening I went back to the frat
house. I related this incident to my friend, Bob, and we laughed for
a long time.
Here is the final punch line. A couple weeks later Bob went out to
a dance a Wellesley and who do you think he saw. Susan James. Well,
he began to go through the same scenario with her. About half way
through, she just royally freaked, and said;
"Someone just did this to me." and beat a hasty retreat.
Some people just can't handle the truth when their memory is at odds
with it!
Any other amusing experiences out there?
Stan
|
682.2 | It was embarassing | BIZNIS::NELKE | | Mon Mar 28 1988 14:01 | 66 |
| About three years ago, my then-boyfriend pulled a good one on
me ...
We had only been seeing each other in Portland (Oregon) for a few
weeks. My family had never met him because they lived about fifty
miles south of there. One night he came over for a visit, and as
we were watching television, he got this puzzled look on his face.
"What does the number 2300 mean to you?" he asked.
"Nothing, really, why?" I said, but thought to myself that the
number was the address of my father's house in Salem. I didn't
mention it to him because there's no way he could know that.
"The number keeps popping into my head. Oh well."
We continued to watch television.
"What does the name Lincoln mean to you?" he queried.
"You mean as in Abraham Lincoln? Or Lincoln, Nebraska? Or,
well, it's the name of the road my dad lives on, but that
wouldn't mean anything to you. Why?" I was kind of
suspicious at this point, but intrigued by the fact that
he'd come up with my dad's address supposedly off the top
of his head.
"I don't know. Just keeps popping up. What about Zena? That
mean anything to you?"
With that question, I was convinced he had to be psychic because
"Zena" was the name of another road near Lincoln Road. My dad's
phone number was unlisted and even if you somehow found it in an
old phone book, the road was not even on the map. So how did he
know?
"Okay," I said, "What's going on?"
"I don't know. I just keep getting these wierd pictures and names
in my head. Here," he handed me a pen and an old envelope that
was sitting on the table, "draw the road to your Dad's house."
I didn't have to. He proceeded to describe it in detail. Every
turn, every hill, even the little country store you pass just
before the turnoff. I was amazed. Then he went in for the sting.
"Oh, there's another word that keeps popping into my head," he
said.
"What, what?" I anxiously inquired.
He took the pen and envelope from me. On it, he wrote, "Gullible."
He then confessed to having found out where Dad lived, and how he
had driven down there one night, using a new map which had included
Lincoln Road.
My only consolation in the thing was that a neighbor had run him
off the property with rifle.
I wish I'd have been there to see that. It would've made the
"gullible" sting a little less painful.
-joella
|
682.3 | I could throttle him | DECWET::MITCHELL | Let's call 'em sea monkeys! | Mon Mar 28 1988 19:51 | 15 |
| Mac, a close friend of mine, seems to be able to read my mind...sometimes
word-for-word. I find this "ability" of his rather creepy and
one day told him to knock it off. He gave me this innocent look and said
"What are you talking about? I can't read your mind...you're going
crazy! Stop imagining things." Later that night he, I and some other
friends (one of whom he married, btw) went out to eat.
The waiter, who was sweating profusely, took our orders. I remember
thinking "man, he's sweatin' like a pig!" (an expression I never
use). I turned to MAC to make this very comment. Before I could
say a word MAC looked at me nonchalantly and quipped, "pigs don't
sweat, John."
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaarg!
John M.
|
682.4 | MIND READING | NECVAX::CANINO | | Thu Mar 31 1988 14:29 | 14 |
| I too have the ability to "read minds" at least where my husband
is concerned. When we were in Florida we were sitting by the pool
at the bar, just having a dring under the cabanna type building.
My hasband noticed the thached roof and started to say "they should
name this building" and in interrupted him and said "that's really
sick - MARGARET!!!" HE WAS DUMFOUNDED.
MAC
p.s. for thos of you who didn't get it "MARGARET THACHER."
|
682.5 | Verbal fencing. | MCIS2::SHURSKY | | Thu Mar 31 1988 15:12 | 21 |
| This doesn't amaze me at all. There were about 4 or 5 of us in
the frat house that would sit around and do nothing but this sort
of thing for hours. It was more of a (il)logic game for us. It
almost entirely included plays on words which lead to another quantum
leap in logic, which lead to another.... We never had a name for
it, but it was like 4-way verbal volleyball.
If someone walked into the room, they couldn't follow the conversation
and thought we were crazy. Of course, as the game progressed we
would be laughing at the puns and word games and get pretty silly.
Sometimes, a couple of beers would help kick it off, somtimes just
good spirits. Maybe they were right, maybe we were crazy. I miss
it. It was good mental exercise, mostly trivia based.
The whole game was predicated on being able to keep up and knowing
each other well enough that from small clues we were able to make
the same (il)logical leap that the latest contributor had made.
It was easy to get left in the dust, but we were able to keep it
up for a long time.
Stan
|
682.6 | Twilight Zone | MCIS2::MORAN | | Fri Apr 01 1988 11:59 | 41 |
| I was working for my brother in law at the appliance service center.
My job was to answer the phones and set up appointments for him
to go to peoples houses and fix whatever appliance they were having
trouble with.
I got a call from a woman who said that her dryer wasn't heating
properly. She gave me the address and the time that she would be
home the next day so my brother in law could go in and fix it.
The next day he left in the morning with his list of service calls
and I got a call a short time later from him. There was no answer
at the house when he knocked and rang the door bell. He was going
to be running late soon if he waited any longer and he wanted me
to give her a call and reschedule.
I called several times that day with no answer. Finally that afternoon
someone answered the phone, I heard a sleepy voice say "hello"
and I proceded to explain that we were going to have to reschedule
because she wasn't home when the service man was there. The woman
on the other end had no idea what I was talking about.
Here's the weird part...
I asked if I had the correct number, and told her what number I
was calling. She said that was the right number. So I told the
address that was given me, and that to was correct. I then told
her the name of the woman gave me when she called. The woman on
the other end asked me if "this is a joke?" I said no. She then
told me she "knew" the woman who called, that was who she bought
the house from 15 years ago! And then proceded to tell me that
the woman had died a few years after she purchased the house. And
then added, "I don't even own a dryer". I apologized for waking
her and hung up.
When my brother in law came in at the end of the day I told him
that it appears to me that we have some how fallen into the twilight
zone, and told him my phone conversation. He insisted that I must
have called the wrong person, and that the lady who made the
appointment will call back to reschedule, she probably had to go
out unexpectedly and didn't have time to call us. He told me to
tac her slip up on the bulluton board and when she called back just
change the slip and schedule her in.
I was about a year after that day when I went to another job. And
even on the day I left the slip for that service call was still
hanging on the bulluton board, a bit yellowed, waiting for the call.
(I didn't want to take it down, just in case).
|