As promised, the awesome story I had relayed to me.
(Not story, fact) On Saturday night, it rained a shit ton. I’m talking metric gallons here. In the span of 12 hours, I didn’t see one road that wasn’t completely inundated with water (thanks in large park to BA’s antiquated sewage system I’d imagine). After getting drenched three separate times, I gave up changing my clothes and just rolled with the wetness. After seeing a dog float by on a piece of cardboard, I gave chase, but the current was too fast and I couldn’t fun in the water. Sometimes things just stack up against you.
While I was dining on Saturday night (previously described), my boss was called to one of the properties that my company manages. Apparently, the house (small building) was flooding, from the inside out. (Note: Argentine buildings commonly have inner courtyards). While all results have not yet been tabulated, early reports indicate that some errant tree leaves (general crap) in conjunction with a lazy cleaning lady (her name was edith and she got canned) all helped bring this house to floods-town. With the drain for the inner courtyard clogged, the water had nowhere to go, but up, and up it went. When I boss arrived, the people who were staying there had barricaded themselves in the living room, where there was already 2 inches of water ( as compared to the 1 to 2 feet in the courtyard) and they had constructed makeshift sandbags to prevent further inundation. My boss, the man of action he is, opened the levies to try his hand at the courtyard. After thrashing around a bit, and realizing a battle of strength was useless, as he would never land a successful punch against such a watery opponent (I inferred that last bit, was not explicitly stated), he attempted to bale the water out of the courtyard, over the wall, and onto the street. Unfortunately, there was far too much water and pessimism got the best of him. However, before he was able to submit to a watery demise, the college engineering student (here I am serious) who was staying in the house with his family, remembered something he had learned in class (I hope). He recommended that they utilize Bernilli’s last and most often overlooked principle of water hose dynamics, i.e. they siphon water through a hose over the retaining wall and into the street. After finding a hose, the college kid went outside and began sucking on one end, while my boss help the other under the raging currents inside, and success, the water began to pour out. However, after realizing that the courtyard was taking in water faster than it was letting go of it, the pair decided to make 2 and then 3 more side-wall water-hose fountains. In the end, then situation was taken care, not before substantial damage to the building. The family opted to leave some 2 hours later.
Work continues to go along swimmingly. However, as I get home pretty late, usually shooting around 9-10, my social life has slowed.
Last night, I cooked dinner, and as I hadn’t seen my friends in a couple days and I was relatively confident that all they had eaten all day would have consisted of potato chips and soda, I invited a number of them over to partake in the festivities. We had tentatively agreed on a 10 30 rendevous, which I have learned should only be used as the most general of framing tools, so while everything was ready to be cooked by 10 30, I didn’t get things on the grill till more along the lines of 11 30, when these clowns began to slide in.
Dinner consisted of a home made past sauce which I have been working with. It currently stands at about 2 pounds meat, onions, garlic, and a combination of tomato and cream sauces, specifically those which are on sale when I go to the supermarket. I’ve been told it’s delicious, which I state sheerly for informational purposes, as my opinion counts for little considering I’ll eat about anything. If nothing else, it is edible, with a fatality rate low enough to easily pass the most stringent of Argentine health codes, of which I’m sure there are none. I also cooked steak, as per that it remains the cheapest food stuff one encounters.
After dinner, say 12 or 12 30 ish, my building lost power. Not to worry, dinner had been eaten, and all sharp utensils had been holstered in the kitchen sink. It didn’t bother me that power had gone out, as it is not infrequent during the summer here, the thing that struck me as odd was the haphazardness of the power outage. For instance, my building lost power, my neighbors, no. The guys across the street, pitch dark, the people next to them, showering in light. It was unseemly to be honest, these people no doubt sitting in their bastions of florescent brilliance, rubbing that pure, unadulterated light all over their bodies as they watched us and laughed as we scrambled to light the candles that were scattered around my apartment (a remnant of a romantic dinner the roommate had prepared for his now ex girlfriend). I texted some people to see the extent of the blackout, and I was to learn that 1) it was not far reaching, as everyone else I knew had power 2) to some, this confirmed that I in fact lived in the ghetto, which I still continue to contest. Power came back some two hours later, and just in time, as we had almost gotten to the point of drawing straws and eating someone.
At some point during this fiasco my roommate came home, tried to enlist others to smoke with him (he was unsuccessful), got high as balls, and complained that his girlfriend was no longer giving it up. I tried to console him, but he was convinced that the lack of sweetness the last two times they had hung out, was in fact the beginning of a dastardly sinister plan aimed at robbing him of all physical pleasure. As such, he would be boycotting their weekend retreat to the beach, as it made no sense to go now that he would never again know her in the biblical sense
I got relatively few responses on the Chinese laundry man dilemma I posted earlier, however Jorge’s recommendation that I go “American psycho” on them was taken into consideration. As such, I delivered a load of laundry that consisted of only one of every sock, and I covered three of the cheap shirts I bought a while back, (the ones that fall apart a little more every time I wash them) in ketchup (or what passes for ketchup down here). The young gentlemen was unable to took me in the eyes after he pulled out the shirts, and I stood there and smiled sinisterly. In the end, I was actually given back more socks than I dropped off, meaning he had been hoarding my socks from the beginning, in preparation of just such as occasion. Take note friends, as this very well may signal the beginning of a conspiracy.
There is currently music bombarding me from every direction. We have what appears to be Spanish show-tunes coming from the neighbors, and reggaeton from the roomie. The only thing powerful enough to combat these two, would be the Boss. That’s right, Jersey’s holding it down yet again, defending my right to not have to listen to crappy Spanish music.