The Darwin Awards Countdown to Extinction (6 page)

BOOK: The Darwin Awards Countdown to Extinction
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At-Risk Survivor: My Father, the PhD
Unconfirmed Personal Account
Featuring a father, fire, a chainsaw, and more
 
 
“We have more degrees, but less sense; more knowledge but less judgment.”
—the Dalai Lama
 
Let an amused daughter tell you about her sire . . .
 
This weekend was the final straw. Being an extremely cost-conscious person, Dad decided to put half a can of varnish in the toaster oven to liquefy it, as this was the
cheapest
approach. You guessed it—the stuff caught fire! I found him in front of the flaming oven contemplating grabbing the can with his bare hands. Two-foot flames were shooting out of it, causing me to utter a line spoken far too many times in our home:
 
“What in god’s name were you thinking?”
 
Father’s attempts at Darwin fame have included
1. Tipping a small boat while fishing on a lake, nearly drowning my brother and himself. At the time, I thought Mom was being too hard on him when she said it was his own fault that he was in the hospital. I have since revised my judgment.
2. Removing a branch from a locust tree by climbing a ladder with a
running
chainsaw. The branch was not tied off properly, so it fell onto the roof that he was trying to avoid.
3. Rolling a lawn tractor on top of himself by mowing a roadside ditch at a steep angle, resulting in a broken rib—and poison ivy for me, because I spent ten minutes thrashing around in the vegetation while we tried to roll the tractor off Dad.
Again.
4. Lighting a fire in a basement trash burner
that was not connected to an exhaust pipe.
The fire department loves us.
5. Wandering off to watch the evening news after setting some water to boil in an aluminum Dutch oven. Note that the Merck Index lists the melting point of aluminum as 660°C. When Mom discovered the situation, the sides were glowing bright red, the bottom was melted out, and the kitchen wall was smoking.
A reader who works in the foundry industry warns, “Aluminum does not glow red when it is heated. Molten aluminum does not glow, and that makes it extremely dangerous.”
6. Testing the efficacy of old nitroglycerin tablets by swallowing three at once to see if they still worked. I did say he was cheap—er, cost conscious. The EMS came to the rescue because his blood pressure had dropped to an undesirable level and he had passed out at the kitchen table. Mere minutes before, he had been planning a drive to the doughnut shop. Thank god he didn’t make it to the car before his blood pressure dropped!
He may not yet have used up nine lives, but my father, the PhD, appears to have a running start on Darwin infamy.
 
Reference: Anonymous daughter
Reader Comments
 
“Working with PhDs, I’m completely
not
surprised by this . . .” “I have always said, the more degrees, the dumber.”
WENDY’S WORDS OF WISDOM
Most of the chairs in my house are on wheels; I often stood on them to reach high places. One day I read the Darwin Award about a fellow who stood on a rolling chair to fill his bird feeder . . . and rolled right off the twenty-fourth floor balcony. I no longer stand on those chairs in front of windows!
Learn from the mistakes of others.
You won’t live long enough to make them all yourself.
At-Risk Survivor: Mr. Tinker
Unconfirmed Personal Account
Featuring a do-it-yourself father
 
 
If you ever considered your male parent a doofus, read on.
You might feel better.
 
My father-in-law tinkers and most often fixes things. I have seen him take apart toasters, motors, electronics, and power washers. He often has several projects on the go. One day he came home with a neighbor’s broken microwave and disappeared into his workshop to suss out the problem.
He still tinkers today, but we keep a closer eye on him.
A while later I heard weird noises coming from the workshop, and peeked in. The microwave was now working fine but its front door was missing. The machine was running, and he had his head tucked inside the oven!
I ran in and pulled the plug.
He did not take himself out of the gene pool (not then) but the microwaves may have increased the odds of cancer: A few years later he developed a brain tumor. It was successfully removed and he still tinkers today, but we keep a closer eye on him.
 
See, there are worse parents . . .
 
Reference: Anonymous son-in-law
At-Risk Survivor: Popsicle
Unconfirmed Personal Account
Featuring a father, water, alcohol, and a Double Darwin attempt!
 
 
In the mid-eighties my father sailed on the research ship
Regina Maris
to study whales in Greenland. One night he noticed there were a lot of icebergs floating by the boat. Icebergs!
After drinking several beers too many with a friend, he and the friend decided to do something stupid. A quick hop onto an iceberg proved that they could stand on it. So my dad decided to hop from iceberg to iceberg with his friend until they reached the nearest village two miles away. Hop after hop, they made their way across the ice floe. As the lights of the village and the shoreline grew nearer, they grew colder and began to pick up the pace. Alas, in their hurry, they accidentally hopped together onto one small iceberg. It broke under their combined weight, plunging them into the icy salt water where they quickly sobered up.
Dad decided to hop from iceberg to iceberg.
After thrashing about in the ch-ch-chilly water for several interminable minutes, they managed to climb out onto another iceberg, and carefully hopped the rest of the way to shore. The men limped into the village, where they were admitted to the hospital. Treated for hypothermia and a touch of frostbite and released little worse for the wear, to this day my dad never goes into the ocean
 
Reference: Anonymous son
At-Risk Survivor: Blast from the Past
Unconfirmed Personal Account
Featuring a father, an uncle, vehicles, and dynamite!
 
 
MID-1950 s , about their youth and shared a rather Darwinian story. In their twenties, they succeeded in assembling one great car out of three junkers. After they accomplished this, they had enough parts leftover to make a second working car—but only barely. This car was missing most of its floorboards, so they could see the ground flash past while driving. They called this a feature rather than a flaw, and decided to have fun with it.
To make the dynamite sticks safer, they shortened the fuses.
In the fifties, high-powered explosives were still easy to acquire. So, with quarter sticks of dynamite at hand, my future father and his brother drove around throwing dynamite through the gaps in the floorboards, and basically scaring the daylights out of people in cars behind them. THIS WAS FUN! They even shortened the fuses to make sure that the sticks would “safely” explode before the car behind them drove over them.
When I heard this story, my first response was, “Weren’t you concerned about the gas tank below you?” To my amazement they both looked rather surprised, exchanged glances, and said, “We never thought of that!” My grandfather just laughed and walked out of the room.
 
Reference: Anonymous son
At-Risk Survivor: Volunteer “Fire” Man
Unconfirmed Personal Account
Featuring fathers, alcohol, explosions, and do-it-yourself!
 
 
1978, INDIANA | My friend’s father, Mo
2
, was a volunteer fireman and a home mechanic. He was also a heavy drinker who never seemed to be without booze in his hand. One day I was helping him repair one of their cars. Mo, already well into a six-pack when I arrived, believed that the fuel line was blocked. His solution began with jacking the car up a few feet and draining twelve gallons of gasoline from the tank.
In the process of disconnecting the fuel line from the tank, gasoline spilled all over Mo, soaking his polyester shirt and flooding the floor of the garage. Mo then used several five-gallon buckets to catch the gasoline that was pouring out of the tank. Although the garage door was open to allow ventilation, the fumes were so thick that my friend and I had to step outside to breathe.
Mo continued to lie on the garage floor, in a pool of gasoline under the car.
While we were gulping down fresh air, the water heater, located ten feet from gasoline-soaked Mo, kicked on. Ordinarily this would not be a problem because gasoline fumes are heavy, and the universal building code requires gas-fired tanks to be installed eighteen inches off the floor to prevent accidental combustion But the circumstances were not ordinary.

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