"Thanks, Bob." I took the coffee from him and paid for it, then left the shop to go for a stroll down the road. It was a beautiful day outside, and since it was thunderstorming inside, I figured I'd go out to enjoy the lack of weather.
Unfortunately I was approached by a person who I don't often associate with anymore, and in a rather unexpected manner. Don't get me wrong... I love people, and I can think of very few that I no longer wish to associate with. It's just that when your fourteen-years dead great grandfather falls from a helicopter and hits you going about 40 miles per hour, wrenching the coffee from your hands and easing the transition from standing to face-first-into-the-ground, you'd probably consider it unpleasantly unexpected too. The good news is that after all this happened, I realized that it hadn't. In actuality, I had simply forgotten to take my medication. So I popped a few pills. Now, you often hear of people who "take pills like they were candy." I'm not one of those people. I am, however, a person who "takes candy like it's pills that are enough like candy that you want lots of them/it." In short, I like candy. In long, I like pills because they are an excellent way to stop you from imagining that you've just been hit by a falling corpse and lost your coffee.
Then I realized I actually had dropped my coffee.
So, as I was feeling particularly sorry for myself, I decided to go to the movie theater. I can think of no better place on earth to go when you're feeling sorry for yourself. I mean, hey, you sit down to see something entertaining, you get candy and sodas, and everyone who walks past you after you've sat down apologizes to you. That's why I always sit at the end of the row. It's kinda nice when every time someone wants to get past it's "Sorry, sorry. Excuse me. Sorry, I'm sorry. Pardon. I'm sorry." Makes you feel kind of important, somehow.
The movie, however, was horrible. Watching it was like getting punched in the eyeball for an hour and a half. Come to think of it, I haven't the faintest idea why I didn't simply leave. At any rate, as I left the theater to take a right on Left Street... is that right? No, wait. That's left. I mean incorrect. I took a left on Right Street, then three more lefts, then a wrong on Right, and by then was completely lost and right back where I'd started. In other words, I was back at the theater, but didn't know how I'd gotten there in the first place. In the same words again, I was back at the theater, but didn't know how I'd gotten there in the first place. In other words, but out of order, I until then confused or before, because how arrived I'd as to at was completely the again, I didn't theater there even know theater there a was. In those words again, but arranged so they make more sense, I was completely confused as to how I'd arrived at the theater again, or before, because I didn't even know there was a theater there until then.
The orange building across the street was a barbeque joint that I'd heard was pretty good, but it was actually a vaudeville jazz club, made of bricks with the occasional door or window. Also, in case you're wondering, I'm aware that you might think I'm either constantly contradicting myself or making a small amount of sense, or a large amount of sense if you're crazy, or some combination thereof. However, I'd like to assure you that I never ever contradict myself, except sometimes, and the sense I make is mine and you can't have it so give it back right now, because goodness knows that the sense I have I'd better hold onto lest I write more stories like this.
Now then, on to the molar of the story... because incisors have a point and morals are overrated.
I like cheese.
Merry Christmas.