Saturday, October 26, 2019
Murphys Law :: essays research papers
It is a quiet, Saturday afternoon, and the overcast humidity of the air gives me an obscene sense of nonchalance. Time in hand, I peruse a ââ¬ËSurvival Handbookââ¬â¢, a sort of ââ¬Å"Pessimistââ¬â¢s Guide to the Worldâ⬠. It was given to me as a Christmas present, and its perverse implication of Murphyââ¬â¢s Law amuses me. I would assume that its pleasant uselessness would appeal to all who share my insatiable appetite for superfluous information. A smile creeps onto my face as I remember the one objective truth about this world: ââ¬Å"Anything that can go wrong, willâ⬠. I stop to ponder a hypothetical scenario in which I might need to know ââ¬Å"How to win a sword fightâ⬠or ââ¬Å"How to leap from a burning carâ⬠. Further indulging my pessimism, I begin to fantasiseâ⬠¦ I am siting comfortably in the first class compartment of a train from Paris to Munich, quietly minding my own business, sipping coffee from a china mug and reading my Pessimists Handbook, when the door at the end of the carriage opens. In walks a decrepit looking old man dressed in tattered rags, giving him the appearance of Fagan from Oliver Twist. Unlike Fagan on the other hand, he sports a gleaming new assault rifle and is draped in chains of ammunition. This, I realise, gives him more of a ââ¬Å"Rambo meets Hunchback of Notre Dameâ⬠appearance. After a little deliberation, I notice that this is somewhat out of place in my train carriage, which to my perplexed bemusement, is becoming littered with bullet holes. Caring not at this time to ponder the philosophical implications of this seemingly random outburst of post-teenage angst, I am more worried about the looming possibility of ending unfashionably dead. Remembering my survival handbook, I ââ¬Å"run fast but do not move in a straight lineâ⬠and ââ¬Å"weave back and forthâ⬠. Coming to the opposite end of the carriage, I slide open the door, and ââ¬Å"turn a corner as quickly as I canâ⬠which leaves me but one option; to climb the ladder leading onto the top of the carriage. Having previously read the chapter entitled ââ¬Å"How to Maneuver on Top of a Moving Trainâ⬠, I am fortunately informed that I should ââ¬Å"not attempt to stand up straightâ⬠¦ stay bent slightly forward, leaning into the windâ⬠. As I ââ¬Å"move my body with the rhythm of the train ââ¬â from side to side and forwardâ⬠, I remember my feet should be ââ¬Å"spread about 30 inches apartâ⬠, and that I should ââ¬Å"wobble from side to sideâ⬠as I move forward.
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