Mris asked, "What is your favorite kind of roof?"
I like the Heroic Shingle package myself. The shingles seem
sturdy enough for people to run across, but in case of antagonism, slide
conveniently to a steep fall. This would be unappealing if it ever killed a
noble soul, but such souls always catch the lip of the roof or a ladder,
whereas villains fall to serious spinal injury. It’s a fine trope and it keeps
your attic dry.
Mary Garber asked,
"Which Firefly character would you want reincarnated into your pet cat?
The one who would be watching you sleeping?"
Recognizing that I have a highly dangerous allergy to cats,
I doubt I’ll be spending more than one night in the same room as any of the
Firefly reincarnates. But Alan Tudyk is a very versatile actor, so I think he’d
do the most dynamic job playing the animal whose dander kills me. Hopefully he gets
nominated for some award over it.
Elephant's Child
asked, "What colour is your mind, and does it attract prejudice?"
I believe it to currently be somewhere between a deep
purple-blue and pink, although I’ve not had a good look at it. Given it attracts
conflict on a regular basis, prejudice is a natural byproduct of its workings.
I do my best to dispose of the prejudice safely.
Popful Frost asked,
"So, you find the love of your life, the absolute most perfect match
possible for you. Problem is, their head is a giant, disgusting insect or
arachnid. What kind of creepy crawly would be least terrible for this person to
have for a head?"
I’m not so surprising that they have a bug for a head. I’m
more surprised they exist as I’m aromantic and asexual. Somehow they pierced my
very identity, though, and I’ve fallen in love with a China Mieville character.
The heart wants what it wants, and now it wants a bug head in addition to
oxygenated blood.
I’ll pick the Samurai Beetle, as I enjoy pareidolia and my new BAE will get some great double takes around town.
I’ll pick the Samurai Beetle, as I enjoy pareidolia and my new BAE will get some great double takes around town.
Jamie asked, "In several languages, (such as in French, pomme de terre) a potato is an earth-apple. So what would be fire-apples, water-apples, and air-apples?
I had too much fun with this question! They’re tricky
because not much produce grows in underwater, and an apple already grows up in
the air, on the limbs of a tree.
But the easiest is a fire-apple, which would be a ghost
pepper, because of how intensely it burns one’s mouth.
For your underwater round food item, I offer the humble clam as a water-apple. Edible. Pickable. Vaguely round.
For your underwater round food item, I offer the humble clam as a water-apple. Edible. Pickable. Vaguely round.
That still leaves us with an air-apple. If we can’t pick
actual apples, then what’s up in the sky? Clouds seem wrong. But if you’ve ever
seen Mars in the night sky, it’s quite apple-like.
And Jamie also asked,
"If you could spend a year living with any alien species, which would it
be and why? Anything you would most want to see/participate in/eat during your
visit? Assume non-prohibitive space travel, and either a hospitable environment
or access to comfortable adaptive gear."
It’d be pretty cool to discover any of them existed! If I
get to select any fictional species, I’ll go with the xenomorphs from Alien.
Because I have to get to live with them for a year, they can’t kill or
impregnate me. I’d be fascinated to the watch the buggers adapt to presumably
to having to keep me fed and unmurdered. It’d be funny if they got
reverse-Stockholm Syndrome and by the end of the year missed that one mammal
that got away.
And Jamie also asked,
"What's a question that you wish were part of standard small-talk?"
It's tricky formulating a question that won't backfire. For instance I could have everyone small-talk about the last short story they enjoyed, but in my attempts at small-talking this myself, it turns into them ragging on the form. I'm imagining this custom won't revolutionize the culture into suddenly liking a thing in order to be prepared for common chatter.
So I'll pick, "What political issue is most important to you?"
Some people will shrink from this. But this way people with atrocious attitudes are immediately outed, and I have no issue walking away from small-talk with a bigot. Meanwhile more interesting people will get to unpack something that actually matters.
If the experiment turns out dull, I can easily distract them by asking why they're disappointed with the most recent TV show they insist I watch. People *always* want me to watch shows they're complaining about.
So I'll pick, "What political issue is most important to you?"
Some people will shrink from this. But this way people with atrocious attitudes are immediately outed, and I have no issue walking away from small-talk with a bigot. Meanwhile more interesting people will get to unpack something that actually matters.
If the experiment turns out dull, I can easily distract them by asking why they're disappointed with the most recent TV show they insist I watch. People *always* want me to watch shows they're complaining about.
Mishell Baker asked,
"Can you crack an egg without it exploding and if so how?"
Once upon a time I was great at it. Now I cannot crack an
egg without at least some of the shell materializing in the blender. I could do
it in another room. Hell, I could do it in a remote cabin, and somehow that
shell would wind up back home, waiting to add an unwanted and sharp surprise to
my next scrambled eggs.
And Mishell Baker
also asked, "What color is the number 7 to you?"
On my mind's way to saying I didn't have an answer, the text
in my head appeared a particularly deep and dark purple. Not sure why! But now
it's stuck that way.
And Mishell Baker
also asked, "What's the last thing you hung on a doorknob?"
Perhaps a boring answer, but rubber bands. Since my
childhood, a doorknob has always been the official rubber band holder.
Finally, Margit Sage
asked, “If you were locked in a jail cell with three zombies, a plastic hanger,
two pieces of watermelon bubble gum, and a roll of duct tape with only four
feet remaining, how would you escape?”
I imagine I’d exit the cell lodged in the intestinal tracts
of the zombies after they were let out. I bet they got a better lawyer than I
did.
Love the questions and your answers. Smiling broadly at the last. Rubber bands live around door handles here too. Always have.
ReplyDeleteHappy belated birthday!
ReplyDeleteAlso, the doorhanger thing? clothes hangers or hair bands. I mean, DUH. :D
Great answers! Happy birthday! :)
ReplyDeleteI always enjoy these. Sorry I'm so late to the party. - the prodigal friend
ReplyDelete