Dr. Faustroll Writes the Wrongs

A mime leading the blind

&
 

Feb 11 2009

Imaginary diseases. It’s about time. We talked. You, Sonny, listened.

I often receive questions from first time patients who are unfamiliar with the role of pataphysicians in the 21st century. This is understandable because so many people in the NOMPH™ have either been born without imaginations or trained to suppress their imaginations for the sake of finding jobs or mates or waiting in line to obtain a cavity search before boarding an over-crowded plane whose air circulation system is contaminated with hundreds of potentially lethal hemorrhagic viruses.


Many of these patients suffer from debilitating diseases of the imagination that make them believe the most outrageous horse exhaust and use it as the basis for irrational decision-making that often results in a syllogistic reality wherein someone who attempts suicide is revived at great public expense to stand trial, be convicted, and terminated under a three-strikes statute that only benefits the advertisers of the broadcast execution.


Others succumb to profit-taking imaginary diseases contracted by exposure to television advertising, conservative talk radio bloviators, and sanctimonious liberals who are so lame that even their embryos often spontaneously abort in protest. I have heard from victims of restless leg syndrome who don’t realize that shaking your penis at a men’s room urinal is not a disorder, unless, of course, you happen to be a woman, in which case your penis is not there, but even that isn’t anything to get worried about. There are two other legs to the black pataphysical stool of life.


What all these people have in common, of course, is their having achieved a level of ineptitude and self-doubt that places them beyond salvation, which is what makes my job so satisfying. Any minor success I have in treating a continent of mundane binary boobs provides a rush not unlike irrigating my sinuses with a 40 ounce bottle of Ballantine’s followed with a pint of Everclear.


Today I received this e-mail from a first-time patient in Culpepper, Virginia.

Dear Dr. Faustroll,

I was referred to you by Timmy McVeigh, one of my co-workers in Saudi Arabia. He said you would recognize his name in a minute, something to do with a Flag Day celebration you wrote about.

I work for a humongous multinational corporation whose name I can’t remember. I think I’ve been with them for several years, but I can’t be sure because I telecommute, and I’ve never seen any of the people I work with because my Internet connection is so slow that I can’t video conference. Even worse, the PRAM battery in my computer went dead a couple of years ago, and the internal clock resets to January 1, 1960, every time I have to reboot, which is several years before I was born.

Many of the people I work with are in Asia and the Middle East, and I have no problem using e-mail and teleconferencing over SharePoint to meet with them at odd hours, but I am having a difficult time figuring out when to contact my coworkers in Antarica, Australia, and Tiera del Fuego, where they are either half a year ahead or behind of local time, because it is summer there, although it is still winter here.

I have not received a cost of living increase for quite some time, and I suspect I have missed several deadlines because of my confusion over mileposts in the project plan. I can never be sure which spring I should be aiming for or which fall to expect feedback from my reviewers. Can you help?

Sincerely,
Sir William Pilgrim, esq.

I told Billy I would ask my helpful readers for advice on how they coordinate with coworkers who live elsewhere in the space time continuum. Please join in the discussion so that Billy will finally get a focal increase for all his hard work.

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6 Responses to “Imaginary diseases. It’s about time. We talked. You, Sonny, listened.”

  1. seandonlandon 12 Feb 2009 at 6:51 am edit this

    I would recommend that Billy walk backwards across the desert until his shadow is directly beneath him. At this point, it’s probably around noon. Then divide the amount of time it took to walk there from his office by the distance to headquarters. If he applies this formula to the other offices, he should get a firm grasp at least of what time of day it is where he is. He’ll probably need a scientific calculator too.

  2. seandonlandon 12 Feb 2009 at 6:57 am edit this

    Hey, can you ask Billy to write me a letter from the future and let me know where I can find a job “workin’ for the man?” This imagination thing is getting me nowhere.

  3. drfaustrollon 12 Feb 2009 at 4:50 pm edit this

    Das -

    Occult, eh? I don’t think so. Jarry don’t play that.

    Sean -

    I tried that shadow thing myself but it has never helped me. In fact, I once failed a physics course because I gave the professor nine different ways to determine the height of a building using a barometer, most of which involved the use of shadows and congruent triangles. Do they really still make scientific calculators?

    Montana and Billy -

    Get a room.

    Captcha: WTF is 215 enhance supposed to mean? I don’t do Viagra.

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