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Saturday, December 25, 2010

Twas the Night After Christmas


Twas the night after Christmas and all through the house
 Not a creature was silent, not even my spouse.
Stocking were flung carelessly on the ground,
 Beneath piles of wrapping they could scarcely be found.

The kids in their bedrooms, playing with toys,
 And those they’d not broken made plenty of noise.
I in a stupor and ma drinking gin
 Dreading the chores that were about to begin,

The lights that we’d hung with such care from the gables
 Must be taken down in a way that won’t leave me disabled.
The wreaths and the mistletoe, the nativity scene,
 Ornaments, Santas and elf figurines,

Must be carefully packaged and wrapped up in cotton,
 Then stuffed in the attic and promptly forgotten.
The lights must be wound with the utmost of care
 So they can knot themselves up at some point in the year.

The tree, once beloved, will be on the curb soon,
 But we’ll be finding pine needles until some time in June.
And then there’s the more immediate stress
 Of cleaning the expanding and unending mess.

With my cranium throbbing and my saving diminished,
 I find that the spending is never quite finished.
The shopping I’ve dreaded is once more resurrected,
 By a random component I’d somehow neglected.

Refunds to collect from toys that were broken,
 Before the words “Thank You”, could fully be spoken.
None of the clothes fit and the games were outdated,
 They must be exchanged, returned or rebated.

Gift cards from grandma will cost me a day,
 As they come from a store eighty-five miles away.
I look at my bank accounts and equate them with train wrecks,
 All the money I’ve borrowed from Visa and Amex,

For Daffys, for Dillards, for Pennies and Saks,
 For Marshalls, for Nordstroms, For Sears and the Gap
For Target and Wal-Mart, For Gamestop and Borders,
 Count up your profits and celebrate the fourth quarter.

But as for myself, I will be in the black,
 About the same time the warm weather comes back,
And if I can’t make the payments I’ll still be all right,
 If I just sell the house I need not take down the lights.

But the headaches will lessen before New Year’s Eve,
 When I can drink all I want and my relatives leave.
So as I look at the workload I give up and say, “Screw it,
 Merry Christmas to all and at least we got through it.”




Merry Christmas from all of me to all of you!
Aaron Davies
www.blognoscor.blogspot.com

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Who Would Win in a Fight? The Eastern Zodiac vs The Western Zodiac

It’s time for another first installment of my award-worthy series, “Who Would Win in a Fight?”  This week we pit the time honored tradition of astrology in a cross-cultural death match and find out who would reign supreme, the liberally interpreted connect the dots of Western origin or the team of animals that graces place mats in Chinese restaurants.

So without further ado, let’s meet our contestants…

 In the Red Corner: The Eastern Zodiac 

According to this thing, all people
my age are successful.

One needs look no further than the dragon to know that the Western Zodiac is in for an uphill battle.  Even granting that it is a Chinese dragon and thus more snake like than the canine-dinosaurs of European dragonry, it is still a formidable foe that combines physical power with extreme intelligence and, of course, fire breath.

Standing in the dragon’s shadow are a number of other beasts, some far more suitable for battle than the others.  The tiger, snake, ox and dog make up the most salient secondary threats.  Granting that the rat, hare and rooster are relative non-threats, that still leaves a ram, a pig, a horse and a monkey. 

In the interest of cultural fairness (and the best possible brawl), we’ll assume each of these animals to be the most battle worthy of its race.  In other words, we’ll grant the Chinese zodiac a vicious Doberman rather than a wiener-dog.  In that same vein we’ll grant a razorback boar and a pretty badass monkey.  Heck, we’ll even say that the monkey is riding the horse.

 In the Blue Corner: The Western Zodiac 

Nothing about this is screaming "formidable".

More familiar to most of my readers, this motley crew of rag-tag symbolism is anchored by Sagittarius the centaur archer and an army of lesser warriors trying not to get eaten by Leo before the fight starts.

The clearest advantage on the side of the Western zodiac is one of intellect.  Dragons are rumored to be pretty darned smart and monkeys aren’t too shabby, but the Western zodiac brings five human brains to the fight (but only 8 human feet).  This promises a strategic advantage, though it is largely overshadowed by the fact that the other side has a freaking dragon.

In addition to the archer, water bearer, virgin and twins, the Western zodiac boasts a lion, a bull, a ram and a scorpion.  The lesser players here are clearly the fish, the goat and the crab.  Far worse are the scales, which have to be carried to battle and left somewhere near the margins once the fighting gets going.

 The Battlefield: Queens Center Mall (Over by Macy’s) 

Like this, except over by Macy's.

While the location is anything but neutral, it doesn’t give either side a very distinct advantage.  Both the archer and the dragon would operate better in a more open arena, but the archer’s advantages are diminished to a greater degree.  Open spaces and walkways will give the dragon plenty of room to escape and/or ambush, but not enough room to use fire breath without risking damage to his own army.

The most distinct advantage here goes to the Western zodiac in that humans, fish and a set of scales are really the only things on the list that one would expect to see at a mall.  The entire Eastern zodiac would suffer from inhibited movement and be unable to move stealthily due to the echoes of horrified screams they would elicit.  Having a thorough understanding of the workings and limitations of escalators would also serve a distinct advantage.

That's more like it...

 Rules of Engagement: 

Impromptu weaponry only (excluding Sagittarius’s bow).
All fighters must remain within the designated battlefield.
No penalty for collateral damage.
No declaration of aggression required.
No code of combat enforced.
Last man/woman/beast standing is declared winner.

ROUND ONE… Fight! 

The melee that would mark the start of this battle is difficult to comprehend but after the first clash, certain observations could quickly be made.  The ox and bull likely cancel one another out, neither able to gain a substantive advantage in the early part of the conflict.

Both armies also contain rams and it is safe to say that they would not only cancel out, but given their natural fighting proclivities, they would likely move away from the general field of battle and utilize their exceptional balance and agility to move their fight to the catwalks and ledges.

In addition to exceptional balance, rams also have the
inexplicable ability to lead their division at 6-8.

This tactic would make the Eastern ram an easy target for Sagittarius, but he would be unable to focus on assisting his animal compatriots.  At the first charge three of the fighters retreat quickly, drawing the dragon from his army and leaving the Geminid twins to direct the remaining force.

Once the dragon is out of sight, the monkey takes control of the army and charges.  Unable to determine the voracity of each threat, he steers his horse randomly toward the crab.  Tragically, he would trample the rooster along the way, making it the first fatality of the war.

A quick thrust leaves the Eastern zodiac at a seeming advantage.  The snake makes quick work of Scorpio, the horse tramples Cancer and the goat falls under the first potent strike by the pig.

The fishes watch on from a nearby aquarium as the Tiger adopts a predatory stance and begins slowly circling Leo.  The most formidable remaining threat for the Western zodiac is rendered impotent for several moments by the whole growling and intimidating dance that felines are notorious for.

You know, the part where all the tiger's friends are talking smack
and all the other cats are yelling "fight! fight! fight!"

This costs a lot in the short run, but when the dog locks on to one of the twins, the other pounces on it making surprising use of the scales by whacking the dog mercilessly about the head with Michael-Vick-like ferocity.

This single victory quickly turns the tide of the battle.  The monkey turns quickly toward the twins but tumbles off the back of the horse in a comical monkey-like way.  The horse carries on without him and the twins split, forcing the horse to choose a single target.

Meanwhile, elsewhere on the battlefield…

The dragon is fast and powerful, but cannot fit in the elevator.  This gives the lead team a critical moment to lay their trap.  They move hastily with the dragon close on their trail.  Sagittarius knows his fellow mythological beasts well enough to know that even if the dragon can overcome his innate proclivity for attacking sacrificial virgins, the temptation would be too great if that sacrifice was placed in the middle of a Zales.

With the water bearer nearby as a fire-breathing contingency, Sagittarius ducks behind an ad for Tron: Legacy and takes careful aim.  Virgo sets about mock-binding her hands to the countertop, mixing her virginal dragon-seducing pheromones with the beast’s genetic predisposition for acquiring precious stones.

Within seconds the dragon’s ghastly form fills the hallway beyond them, riding in on a wave of horrified shouts.  Sagittarius watches the scene unfold through a reflection in the Orange Julius window, ducking around with bow drawn only once the reptilian antagonist turns in toward his waiting prey.  For a precious second, the underbelly is fully exposed.

Had to use this... strangely enough I couldn't find a pic
of a centaur fighting a dragon in a mall.  Google sucks.

Round Two… Fight!

Even from the battlefield above they could hear the echoes of the dragon’s death knell.  The momentum of its massive body barrels forward unabated after the archer’s mortal shot.  The beast’s weight crashes into walls below, shaking the foundations of the mall and educing a deafening exclamation of “OMG!” from behind.

The tiger slips slightly as the floor shakes beneath him and Leo takes that moment to strike.  His potent forearms spring out with monumental power and decapitate the tiger before it can raise a paw in defense.  Leo would turn from his victim with a victorious growl and snack on the rat in celebration.  The rat had avoided detection to this point, but the sight of that bounty of crabmeat was too much to resist.  With a second foe swallowed, Leo turns his eyes on the monkey.

Any excuse to use this picture is a good
excuse to use this picture.

The twins would have avoided the horse by taking advantage of its inability to navigate stairs, but this also keeps them separated from the battle.  The snake slowly creeps in behind their upstairs sanctuary and is poised to take them both when the battle-hardened centaur makes a dramatic reappearance.

His hoofsteps are scarcely audible before his arrows begin reigning down on the remaining foes.  He takes the pig out before it knew he was coming.  Its squeal draws the attention of the dwindling remains of the Western army.  The snake is the first to react and springs from its hiding place in full slither.  The twins subdue it before it can advance very far and behead it with a novelty knife from the nearest kiosk.

The two warring rams come into view and Sagittarius scores a quick assist by planting an arrow in the hindquarters of the opposing ram.  He then turns his rage against the ox as the water bearer goes to check on the fish.

The monkey raises its squeaky little voice in an effort to scream but it is drowned out by the lion’s mighty roar.  This leaves the horse as the only real threat, but with the bulk of the Western Zodiac still remaining, it is quickly and humanely dispatched (in the alternate ending the virgin tames it).

Final Outcome: Western Zodiac Wins

With only a few casualties, the intellect of the human (and centaur) minds reign supreme over the might of the Eastern zodiac.  The side effects of the battle are minor for the east; Cancers, Scorpios and Capricorns will need to find a new sign and Leo is going to have something of a complex for the next few millennia.

The results for the west are far more ruinous.  It could take decades for them to find something new to put on their place mats.


Aaron Davies

PS This all really happened by the way.  It happened on Tuesday while I was trying to finish up my Christmas shopping so if I didn’t get you anything, this is why.  Malls are crazy enough this time of year without supernatural wars taking place as well.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Pseudoscientific Proof That my M&Ms are Psychic


Over the weekend I recounted a fictitious event that suggested that my M&Ms may or may not be psychic.  I was understandably dismissive of the possibility but when my fictitious friend Sam read the blog entry, he was irate over what he considered a wholly inaccurate recollection of the event.  I reminded him that both he and the event were fictitious but he was unswerving in his conviction that I had grossly exaggerated the details to create an unjust impression that there was nothing remarkable about the powers my M&Ms displayed.

I was still unconvinced, but I decided it would be unfair to dismiss the possibility outright.  My skepticism may have led to confirmation bias that did not allow me to see the actual predictive powers of the M&Ms.  Conceding this point, I proposed a fictional test.

We set about creating a rigorously controlled set of scientific protocols.  Sam picked up several bags of test M&Ms and a few bags of Skittles for our control group and we spent the next several hours asking the M&Ms to predict random coin flips.  To be thorough, we also tested Peanut M&Ms, Dark Chocolate M&Ms and the new Pretzel ones, though we were unable to obtain a sufficient sample size of the third group (starting eating them).

After several hundred trials, we crunched our numbers and determined that all of the predictive powers fell well inside normal ranges:

  • Original M&Ms: 47% success rate
  • Peanut M&Ms: 51% success rate
  • Dark Chocolate M&Ms: 54%
  • Pretzel M&Ms: 48%
  • Skittles (control): 49%
  • Reese’s Pieces: Do they still even make those?

The data clearly showed that the predictive powers of the M&Ms obtained by assigning value to the color was easily explainable by random chance.  This seemed to deflate Sam.  I was satisfied just knowing we could finally start eating all of the test subjects.

But Sam lifted himself from his depression quite quickly.  I was surprised to see the smile creeping back into his lips mere minutes after the negative conclusion.  Clearly something had occurred to him that merited a full-bellied laugh before he would share it with me.

“I’ve got it!” Sam said, “I think the M&Ms might still be psychic.”

“But… we just scientifically proved that they weren’t,” I argued.

“Right.  We scientifically proved it.  But you can’t scientifically prove the paranormal.  That’s what makes it paranormal.  We shouldn’t have been doing scientific tests at all.”

“Then what should we have been doing?” I asked around a mouthful of milk chocolate and colored candy shells.

Pseudoscientific tests,” he offered triumphantly.

My first instinct was to argue but as I tried to formulate a rebuttal I realized that it was perfectly valid.  After all, Tarot cards and astrology don’t pass scientific tests and people make a living off of them.  Perhaps I had been looking at it the wrong way the whole time.

“So how do you do pseudoscientific tests?” I asked.

“Well, instead of starting with something falsifiable, we’ll need some kind of untestable, unrepeatable, unverifiable claim.”

I nodded.  “Gotcha.  Like last night when I was visited by those space aliens that gave me the sacred parchments upon which were scrawled the ancient secrets of M&M divination.”

“Really?  Are you serious?” he asked excitedly.

“Sure, why not?  I could be lying.  I don’t believe me, but since I can’t prove me wrong…”

Sam was nodding along but suddenly a wrinkle occurred to him.  “Do you actually have the parchments?”

I swallowed the dark chocolate I’d been munching on.  “Turned to dust and blew away as soon as I finished translating them.”

“Ooh… good one.”

“Thanks.  So that’s step one.  What next?”

“Next we need to throw out all the data that doesn’t support our hypothesis.”

“So we trash all this,” I concluded, nodding toward the results of our failed survey.

Sam regarded me as though I’d just made an animal noise.  “What?  Of course not.  There’s some good stuff in there.”

“But… it proves we’re wrong,” I argued.

“Not all of it.  You remember that run we had with the Peanut M&Ms while you were playing Wii Tennis?  We got 12 out of 15 at one point.”

“But that was just random noise…” I argued stupidly.

“Not in pseudoscience.  We just publish that along with the best run we had with the other ones, leave out all the stuff about “control groups” and “blinding” and then list the relative psychic abilities of each type of M&Ms.”

“Like, Dark Chocolate is better, regular is the worst, et cetera.”

“Exactly.”

“Alright, what’s step three?”

“That’s it.  We’re done.  M&Ms are now officially psychic,” Sam pronounced.

“Don’t we need a plausible mechanism or something?”

“Chi.”

“Do M&Ms have chi?” I asked.

“All things have chi.”

I scratched my head and glanced back at the colorful bowls.  I’d eaten enough now that they’d stop looking delicious and now simply looked like a McDonald’s playhouse for hamsters.  “I don’t know… are you sure that’s enough?”

“Dude, we now have as much support for our hypothesis as there is for acupuncture, reiki, feng shui, chiropractic, herbal supplements, astrology, magnet therapy, dowsing, anthroposophic medicine, cartology, palmistry, UFOs, cryptozoology, auras, seances, graphology and homeopathy combined.”

“Wow… so what do we do now?”

Sam scratched his chin and peered beyond me for a moment.  He was in his element to a degree I’d never witnessed before.  His gaze descended slowly and finally landed a few feet to my right.  “I think we should ask the M&Ms.”


Aaron Davies
www.blognoscor.blogspot.com

Friday, December 17, 2010

How I Know My M&Ms Are Psychic

If you fire a Nerf dart from my love seat and angle it properly, it will bounce off the coffee table, off the opposing wall, back off the coffee table and into your hand.  I was in the midst of discovering this a few days ago when a friend of mine arrived unannounced.

I knew who it would be and considered not answering.  It was my friend Sam and most of the time Sam is a pretty good guy but of late he has become enamored with a psychic who sets up shop in Forest Hills.  I live nearby so for several weeks I’d been receiving him shortly after having his mind blown by his palmist and it doesn’t take many recollections of the experience to bore me to tears.

“Come in”, I said over my own objection.

“Dude!” Sam said, thrusting his way through the door like Kramer, “I just came from…”

“Your psychic,” I finished and fired a Nerf dart a few inches off the mark.  I had to stretch and reach for it, which totally killed the cool factor.

“Right,” he said, hastily tossing his jacket on the couch beside him.  “I know you’re skeptical of this kind of stuff but after what she told me today…” he hesitated, searching the chunk of my living room above him for words grandiose enough to describe the magnitude of this revelation.

I saved him the trouble.

“What did she tell you?” I asked politely, reloading my gun.  He moved his lips for a second but the words changed their minds and retreated.

“No…” he said with a shake of his head, “It won’t do any good.  It doesn’t matter what I say, you’ll shoot it down and not believe it.”

I nodded noncommittally.

“I have a different way to prove it to you,” he said with a wry smile.

I tried to project dubiousness but it’s anyone’s guess to what degree I succeeded.  “What?”

“You’re coming with me.  She’s free for the rest of the afternoon.”

I glanced to the TV, which wasn’t on, and then back to the coffee table.  “I don’t know man… these darts aren’t just gonna shoot themselves.”

“I’ll even pay for it,” he offered.

“It’s cold,” I complained.

“Tell you what, if you can hit that shot five times in a row and catch the dart every time, I’ll shut up about it.  If you miss you have to come and have your aura read.”

Sam knows my weakness.  I accepted.

So a few minutes later I arrive at this psychic’s place that has a vibe that I could only describe as “clinically hippie”.  There’s a small waiting area but I didn’t have time to explore it.  The psychic was desperately not busy so she urged us in right away.  She did us the favor of not saying we were expected.

Now, I’m not going to spend a thousand words ripping on this nice woman who steals money from ignorant people by promising them something she can’t remotely deliver so I’ll just sum up the details of my Tarot reading (I know, I thought I was getting an aura reading as well).

In all, Madame Fraudulina (name changed to protect the guilty) never made any concrete or testable predictions about the future exactly, but she did make six statements that could more aptly be called predictions of the present.  She said that I was dissatisfied with my job, married, an only child, I loved to write, I have great aspirations and a special connection to the month of April.

Now, this would be pretty impressive if it was true.  I am married, I do love to write and I suppose that I have “great aspirations”, though I’m not sure how exclusive that club is.  I’m lucky enough to have a job that I love, unlucky enough to have three siblings and can’t imagine what would be significant about April.

To be fair, my friend got a lot more than this for his $65.  She also told me a lot of stuff like “you have a very old soul”, “your energy is focused in your heart charka” and “you’re more of a stone than a tree,” but I don’t think these constitute testable prophecy.  In all, she made six quantifiable statements and had a hit rate of 50%.  Even that’s being pretty generous because I have to believe the “great aspirations” line counts for more than half of us and though I don’t wear a ring, I’m far too careless with my appearance to be single.

Sam seemed surprised when my mind failed to throb visibly in my skull on the way back out into the bitter cold.  His every molecule vibrated with anticipation as he regarded me with a smile.  “Well?” he prompted.

“About what I expected.”

“Are you kidding me?  How did she know you liked to write?”

“The fact that I used words she didn’t know probably clued her in.”

“But still,” he argued as though those syllables actually represented a cogent rebuttal.

“She said I was an only child.  I’m the third of four kids.”

“But she still got most of the stuff right, though.  You can’t expect her to get it right every time.”

“Well… the weather man has a better hit rate than that,” I said, turning into the Duane Reade and sighing when I caught sight of the line.  I needed a Mountain Dew and the psychic’s place was too cold to get my bones up to temperature for the walk home.

“She was right three times out of six,” I reminded him.

“She said way more than six things.”

“Six real things.  Whether or not I was an artist in a former life doesn’t count.”

“You’ve just closed your eyes to the possibility and you can’t see psychic powers when they’re right in front of you.  Man, that’s kind of sad.  What would convince you?”

I shrugged and grabbed a green bottle of yellow corn syrup.  “How about better than coin flip odds?” I shuffled through the surprisingly ample greeting cards section and stepped into the red ribbon labyrinth that preceded the checkout.  As usual, two cashiers manned the eight registers.

“I think you’re just too cynical,” Sam interjected.

“Man, anybody could guess right half the time.  Look, I’ll prove it.”  The gentleman in front of me in line had glanced back and I caught his attention.  He shifted a muscle magazine under one arm.  “You mind helping me test my psychic powers?” I asked.

I half expected him to dismiss me as a new age nutcase or lecture me about the sin of the supernatural but to my surprise he was quite amiable.  I suppose it’s better than the entertainment one usually gets in line at the Duane Reade.

I proceeded to make six random guesses about the guy and for the sake of recreating the actual circumstance I tossed in a few neo-pagan buzzwords.  I told him he was a moon bearer and a temperate soul.  I also offered the same six guesses that the psychic had given me.  I said that he was married, siblingless, filled with great aspirations, hated his job, loved to write and felt a connection to April.

As it happened, I was right on four of the six guesses and he also seemed to agree emphatically that he was a moon bearer.  I’d managed to best the psychic’s hit rate on a random stranger and felt that the argument had been settled.  I turned back to Ian with a victorious grin.

“Holy crap,” Sam said as the revelation sunk in.  “You’re psychic too.”

I rolled my eyes and shuffled forward in line.  “I am not.  How many people hate their jobs?  How many people in their thirties are married?  Who doesn’t have great aspirations?”

“Come to think of it, I used to like to write songs,” the man in line remarked.  “Maybe that’s what you were sensing.  I think you actually got five out of six right.”

“I was just repeating what some supposed charlatan told me today,” I assured him, “There was nothing psychic about it.”

“And my sister and I haven’t spoken in years…” he continued.

“Next!” a cashier yelled, saving me from any further states of epiphany from my demonstration.

“You try,” I said, nodding to the woman in line behind Sam.  Like every woman ever standing beside me in line at a Duane Reade, she was carrying a box of tampons.  “Ma’am, do you mind if my friend tests his psychic powers on you?”

She laughed a bit but agreed.  The elderly woman occupying the other cashier was arguing about a coupon so I figured we had plenty of time.

Sam hesitated but eventually he recited as much of what I said as he could remember.  He forgot the only child part and he called her a moon baron, but other than that he nailed it.

“I am a moon baron,” she said with a face-devouring grin.  “And my husband was born in April!”

“Do you hate your job?” Sam asked excitedly.

“I loathe it!” she agreed.

“Do you love to write?” I asked.

She considered for a second and nodded with something of a visible asterisk in her expression.  “Kind of!”

“Okay so that’s five for five,” I summarized, “See?  Anybody could say that to anybody and be right at least as often as they’re wrong.”

“But what if I’m psychic too?” Sam offered as I plucked a pack of M&Ms from the counter front.

“Oh, you’re definitely psychic,” the tampon lady offered.

“You said the exact same thing as I said.  How can you be psychic if you’re just repeating something somebody else predicted about somebody else?”

“Next!” the cashier said in typically inviting New York fashion.  I reached into my wallet for a five-dollar bill with Sam in tow.

“Maybe we predicted psychically what spot to get into in line.  Heck, you don’t know why we happened to wonder into this particular store.”

“Because it’s on the way to my house,” I said, taking my change and cracking open my soda.

“But we could have stopped at any of these stores,” he said with a wide gesture as we exited back onto the street.  The guy who I’d offered my psychic wares to greeted us on the sidewalk and presented his wife.

“I was just telling my wife about your abilities,” he said.

“No…” I protested but he cut me off.

“Can you see her aura?  My sister says it’s green.”

“You hate your job, you dig April, you’re married, you love to write, you have great aspirations and you’re an only child,” I blurted out.  “Oh… and you’re a moon bearer.”

“Oh my God!” she screamed excitedly, “can you talk to dead people?”

Of course, like anyone, I can talk to dead people but I didn’t feel like explaining the semantic error.  “Was any of that stuff true?”

“Well, I’m not an only child and I don’t have a job but the rest was dead on.”

“When’s my birthday?” came a random voice from the street.

“I don’t know,” I said, tearing open my M&Ms and glancing over at a Starbucks employee on a cigarette break, “June?” I guessed.

His expression froze.  “Whoa…” he remarked.

Sam jumped excitedly.  “Was that right?  Was he right?”

“No, August, but still…”

“Only two months away!” Sam said with a proud punch to my shoulder.

“Yeah… I kind of nailed the season,” I conceded sarcastically.  “It’s really cold…”

“How do you do it?” the wife demanded, “What’s your secret?”

“There is no secret.  I’m just saying random stuff and as often as not I’m getting it wrong.  You want to believe that I’m psychic so in your mind you’re exaggerating the veracity of my claims.”

Her husband nodded slowly but she seemed unsatisfied.  “He doesn’t want to tell us,” he whispered.

“He doubts his powers,” Sam argued.

“No…” I tried, but the woman interrupted again.

“Please?  I’m very into the occult and sometimes I see auras and stuff, but I’d love to develop a power like yours.”

“It’s in the M&Ms,” I said.  I’d given up on trying to argue.  It was cold and it seemed the easiest way to end the conversation.  “I divine based on the color of the M&Ms.”

She nodded and smiled as though she’d always suspected as much.  “Can you tell me about my grandmother?” she pleaded.

I shook three M&Ms into my palm; two yellows and a blue.  “Well,” I said as I pondered them,  “Blue represents imagination and intellect based in the stillness of yellow.  The more her mind opens, the more she will be at peace.”

She grinned and her husband poked her excitedly.  “Thank you so much,” she said and shook my hand.  I turned away and the Starbucks employee offered me a wide berth.

“That was amazing,” Sam uttered and remained silent for the rest of the walk.

As I reflect on that afternoon I’m left with two distinct possibilities.  Either I’m the last sane man on earth or my M&Ms are psychic.  I refuse to believe the former.

Aaron Davies