This weekend Craig is hosting a murder-mystery party for his friends, with crimes he's writing himself.
Last night we stopped for a bite on the way home from band practice. He had a notebook, and was frantically writing down ideas for the party mysteries.
At one point he said "One more to go. I JUST NEED INSPIRATION FOR ONE MORE MURDER!!!"
Saying that loudly gets you some interesting looks in a crowded diner.
A Blog detailing the insanity of my medical practice and the stupidity of everyday life.
Friday, March 31, 2017
Wednesday, March 29, 2017
Publishing
Dear Cureus,
Thank you for your recent email.
I must say, I'm delighted that you enjoyed my article "," which was published in , . I spent years working on it, as a much-anticipated follow-up study to "?" and ".", which you may have seen in / and ;, respectively.
I'm impressed that your "new and unique" article rating system felt "," was so important. I'd been concerned, as several colleagues were less flattering, comparing it to something one might see produced by a :
Please keep an eye out for my "!" which will be featured in next month's issue of " as the centerfold.
Yours truly,
Ibee Grumpy, M.D.
- Thank you, SMOD!
Thank you for your recent email.
I must say, I'm delighted that you enjoyed my article "," which was published in , . I spent years working on it, as a much-anticipated follow-up study to "?" and ".", which you may have seen in / and ;, respectively.
I'm impressed that your "new and unique" article rating system felt "," was so important. I'd been concerned, as several colleagues were less flattering, comparing it to something one might see produced by a :
Please keep an eye out for my "!" which will be featured in next month's issue of " as the centerfold.
Yours truly,
Ibee Grumpy, M.D.
- Thank you, SMOD!
Monday, March 27, 2017
Osteichthyes
Mrs. Gourami: "What's your fish's name?"
Dr. Grumpy: "Ed."
Mrs. Gourami: "And he just stays over there?"
Dr. Grumpy: "Yep."
Mrs. Gourami: "That really bothers me. I mean, for him to be in there all the time. You'd think he'd want you to take him out of the water for a walk or something."
Dr. Grumpy: "Uh..."
Mrs. Gourami: "It just doesn't seem fair to me, like animal cruelty."
Dr. Grumpy: "Ed."
Mrs. Gourami: "And he just stays over there?"
Dr. Grumpy: "Yep."
Mrs. Gourami: "That really bothers me. I mean, for him to be in there all the time. You'd think he'd want you to take him out of the water for a walk or something."
Dr. Grumpy: "Uh..."
Mrs. Gourami: "It just doesn't seem fair to me, like animal cruelty."
Sunday, March 19, 2017
Friday, March 17, 2017
Wednesday, March 15, 2017
Parenting
Last night was the twins' indoor marching band show, combined with a school dance recital.
We took my Grumpymobile (a used 2007 Toyota Highlander, recently bought to replace the 1999 Nissan Maxima which had died). Frank also went, since he does lighting for the auditorium.
After the show there were 3 girls and 2 boys chatting with the twins. I let them talk for a few minutes, but after a while I wanted to go home, and went over to break it up.
Apparently, they’d been waiting on ME. Without bothering to check with, say, ME OR MRS. GRUMPY, Craig had previously promised these kids rides home. Since their parents had been told they didn’t need to come get them, they’d made other plans. And it was too late, dark, and cold to walk.
So we were 10 people in a car that holds 5, max.
It ended up as 3 in front (one on my wife's lap), 4 crammed in the back seat, and 3 shoved in the hatchback cargo area in back. It was snowing. The windows were fogged from 10 sets of respirations. Off we went, with my phone giving us directions to their homes.
Marie is taking driving lessons, and has memorized the entire book of state driving laws. So she points out any traffic violations she sees, loudly.
When someone made a turn in front of us without using their signal, she rolled down her window (with snow coming in) and shouted “HEY! That’s against the law!”
Craig's yelled from the cargo area: “So is driving around with 3 kids in your trunk!”
Then Frank farted, LOUDLY, and the whole car smelled like a sewer. On top of the body odor of a bunch of teenagers who have just finished marching and dancing for 2 hours under hot stage lights.
I drove the rest of the way with the windows down, and didn’t care if they froze.
At least I know these kids will never ask for a ride with the Grumpys again.
We took my Grumpymobile (a used 2007 Toyota Highlander, recently bought to replace the 1999 Nissan Maxima which had died). Frank also went, since he does lighting for the auditorium.
After the show there were 3 girls and 2 boys chatting with the twins. I let them talk for a few minutes, but after a while I wanted to go home, and went over to break it up.
Apparently, they’d been waiting on ME. Without bothering to check with, say, ME OR MRS. GRUMPY, Craig had previously promised these kids rides home. Since their parents had been told they didn’t need to come get them, they’d made other plans. And it was too late, dark, and cold to walk.
So we were 10 people in a car that holds 5, max.
It ended up as 3 in front (one on my wife's lap), 4 crammed in the back seat, and 3 shoved in the hatchback cargo area in back. It was snowing. The windows were fogged from 10 sets of respirations. Off we went, with my phone giving us directions to their homes.
Marie is taking driving lessons, and has memorized the entire book of state driving laws. So she points out any traffic violations she sees, loudly.
When someone made a turn in front of us without using their signal, she rolled down her window (with snow coming in) and shouted “HEY! That’s against the law!”
Craig's yelled from the cargo area: “So is driving around with 3 kids in your trunk!”
Then Frank farted, LOUDLY, and the whole car smelled like a sewer. On top of the body odor of a bunch of teenagers who have just finished marching and dancing for 2 hours under hot stage lights.
I drove the rest of the way with the windows down, and didn’t care if they froze.
At least I know these kids will never ask for a ride with the Grumpys again.
Monday, March 13, 2017
Thursday, March 9, 2017
Mary's desk
Mary: "Dr. Grumpy's office, this is Mary."
Mrs. Osseous: "I have a skin tag on my forehead, and need to have it removed."
Mary: "I'm sorry, Dr. Grumpy doesn't do that sort of thing."
Mrs. Osseous: "But it's on my forehead? That's near my brain, isn't it? And he's a brain doctor!"
Mary: "Yes, but he doesn't do procedures like this. Why don't you ask your internist for..."
Mrs. Osseous: "I did. She told me to see a plastic surgeon, but when I called none of them take insurance, and only wanted to talk about fixing my boobs."
Mary: "Have you tried a dermatologist?"
Mrs. Osseous: "They're booked out for a month, and I'm tired of looking at this thing in the mirror after 10 years. I want it off NOW! Can you ask Dr. Grumpy to make an exception?"
Mary: "This just isn't what he does, or can help you with."
Mrs. Osseous: "Even if it's near my brain, just on the other side of my skull?"
Mary: "That's not his field."
Mrs. Osseous: "You people are worthless."
Mrs. Osseous: "I have a skin tag on my forehead, and need to have it removed."
Mary: "I'm sorry, Dr. Grumpy doesn't do that sort of thing."
Mrs. Osseous: "But it's on my forehead? That's near my brain, isn't it? And he's a brain doctor!"
Mary: "Yes, but he doesn't do procedures like this. Why don't you ask your internist for..."
Mrs. Osseous: "I did. She told me to see a plastic surgeon, but when I called none of them take insurance, and only wanted to talk about fixing my boobs."
Mary: "Have you tried a dermatologist?"
Mrs. Osseous: "They're booked out for a month, and I'm tired of looking at this thing in the mirror after 10 years. I want it off NOW! Can you ask Dr. Grumpy to make an exception?"
Mary: "This just isn't what he does, or can help you with."
Mrs. Osseous: "Even if it's near my brain, just on the other side of my skull?"
Mary: "That's not his field."
Mrs. Osseous: "You people are worthless."
Monday, March 6, 2017
Marketing
My reader Tom writes that a friend of his recently had a vasectomy at a place called, I swear, Dr. Snip.
What really makes the whole thing noteworthy, beside a few bags of frozen peas, is the awesome parting gift they present you with after the procedure:
Thank you, Tom!
What really makes the whole thing noteworthy, beside a few bags of frozen peas, is the awesome parting gift they present you with after the procedure:
Now THAT's branding! |
Thank you, Tom!
Friday, March 3, 2017
Wednesday, March 1, 2017
My readers write
From Dr. Max Alt...
In the late 1990's I worked for Ginormous Neurology, Inc.
GNI was a group of 30-40 neurologists carefully selected for significant personality pathology. In neurology this isn't hard to find* but the breadth and scale of it at GNI was truly awe-inspiring. I don't think I was as bad as most of them, but hey, they offered me a job and I needed one.
Anyway.
GNI spent a large amount of money to put together a computerized chart system. By the standards of the era it was reasonably good, and fairly quick. Come to think of it, it was better than most of the crap out there today.
One Monday the system was really SLOW. Granted, these sorts of things happen, and so we all ignored it at first. But it continued the rest of the day, and the next, and the next... The IT guys found something was running in the background, but weren't sure what it was.
Checking the logs on the servers and individual machines, they eventually discovered that one of the partners, Dr. Kent, had spent several hours over the weekend logged into the system, working on most of the office desktops, one at a time.
Eventually it came out that Dr. Kent had secretly installed software on all the computers... to search for extra-terrestrial life.
I am not making this up. He'd quietly installed programming from SETI (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence) to allow them to use the GNI network to search through data picked up by radio telescopes in hopes of locating life out there.
Now, I have nothing against SETI. Or extra-terrestrials. Or science. But when they interfere with my ability to do my day job... that's another matter.
To Dr. Kent's indignation and horror (he thought this would get him a Nobel Prize) the IT guys spent the next weekend removing his software from the servers and roughly 150 computers scattered through the GNI network.
To this day, those of us who knew Dr. Kent think he was hoping to reconnect with his family.
Thank you, Dr. Max Alt!
*I'll vouch for him on that - Dr. Grumpy.
In the late 1990's I worked for Ginormous Neurology, Inc.
GNI was a group of 30-40 neurologists carefully selected for significant personality pathology. In neurology this isn't hard to find* but the breadth and scale of it at GNI was truly awe-inspiring. I don't think I was as bad as most of them, but hey, they offered me a job and I needed one.
Anyway.
GNI spent a large amount of money to put together a computerized chart system. By the standards of the era it was reasonably good, and fairly quick. Come to think of it, it was better than most of the crap out there today.
One Monday the system was really SLOW. Granted, these sorts of things happen, and so we all ignored it at first. But it continued the rest of the day, and the next, and the next... The IT guys found something was running in the background, but weren't sure what it was.
Checking the logs on the servers and individual machines, they eventually discovered that one of the partners, Dr. Kent, had spent several hours over the weekend logged into the system, working on most of the office desktops, one at a time.
Eventually it came out that Dr. Kent had secretly installed software on all the computers... to search for extra-terrestrial life.
"He did WHAT?" |
I am not making this up. He'd quietly installed programming from SETI (Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence) to allow them to use the GNI network to search through data picked up by radio telescopes in hopes of locating life out there.
Now, I have nothing against SETI. Or extra-terrestrials. Or science. But when they interfere with my ability to do my day job... that's another matter.
To Dr. Kent's indignation and horror (he thought this would get him a Nobel Prize) the IT guys spent the next weekend removing his software from the servers and roughly 150 computers scattered through the GNI network.
To this day, those of us who knew Dr. Kent think he was hoping to reconnect with his family.
Thank you, Dr. Max Alt!
*I'll vouch for him on that - Dr. Grumpy.