7 Reasons

Tag: god

  • 7 Reasons To Play Croquet With A Flamingo

    7 Reasons To Play Croquet With A Flamingo

    The other day a local magazine popped through the door. We get it every month. Usually it takes the small trip from the door mat to the recycling bin. This time though, for a reason I can’t describe, I felt compelled to flick through. It’s just adverts for businesses really. Hardly the stuff of legend. That is until I got to page twelve. When I was confronted by this:

    7 Reasons To Play Croquet With A Flamingo
    Croquet without flamingos?! What?! How on earth can you play croquet without a flamingo? A flamingo makes croquet what it is. Need proof?

    1.  Alice. The first and obvious reason is that the flamingo itself makes a wonderful mallet – as so beautifully demonstrated by the the girl in Wonderland and the Queen of Hearts.

    Of course, it could be argued that the hedgehogs and the cards help make a game of it, but the real challenge when using a flamingo as a mallet is making it have an erection. Of the neck obviously. What happens after this is really neither here nor there.

    2.  Smug. You may decide however that instead of playing with a flamingo, you want to play with a flamingo. Which, luckily, is something the RSPCA continually turn a blind eye at. The thing about playing against a flamingo is that they are just so damn smug. They’re so casual. They hit their shot then just stand on one leg watching as you line up your stroke. It’s enough to drive you mad. But, conversely, it makes you more determined. More focused. You will play like a legend. Has anyone ever told you they lost at croquet to a flamingo? Exactly.

    3.  Location. The chances of you borrowing a flamingo in the UK are fairly slim. They are nearly all in zoos or security patrolled wetlands. To check this I did call London Zoo and enquired as to whether it would be possible to borrow a flamingo, but upon telling them I intended to play croquet with it they lost any sort of interest I had earlier piqued. All this leads us to assume that we need to find a freelance flamingo. And our best chance of finding one of those is in South America, the Caribbean or the Galapagos Islands. Hardly bad places to go for a game are they?

    4.  Contacts. Flamingoes are one of the more social birds out there. Think Tara Palmer-Tomknison. They seem to know everyone. Usually when you play croquet you’ll end up being partnered with Dennis. He’s a nice guy, don’t misunderstand us. The thing is, he spent most of his life working in a signal box. It means he’s used to his own company. He has a few friends. You know, enough to keep him happy. But if you mentioned that you needed a plasterer he’d just raise his eyebrows and play his next shot. Tell a flamingo though and he’ll know bloody hundreds of them back at the colony. Your ceiling will be done in no time.

    5.  God. Be honest, who would like to play a round of croquet with God? Well, if you play with a flamingo that’s exactly what you’ll be doing. Sort of. Obviously it’s not actually God. It’s a living representation of Him. Sort of. It’s not actually that God. It’s the God, Ra. And Ancient Egyptians believed a flamingo to be the living representation of Him. But that’s still kind of cool isn’t it?

    6.  Pure Class. According to the Official Flamingo Database*, pink plastic flamingoes are popular lawn ornaments in the USA. And, if my trips through the town are anything to go by, Swindon. How utterly tacky. These people need to be shown up for the cheap, nasty, dirty beings that they are. Play croquet with a real life flamingo. Show these fools that there is more to a flamingo than decoration. I feel sick.

    7.  Entertainment. You just know that if you send out a few hundred Flamingo Croquet day invites, at least one person – probably not even the dyslexic one – will turn up dressed as a Flamenco dancer. Oh how you’ll laugh.

    *Yes, it was wikipedia.

  • 7 Reasons It Was Inconvenient That The World Didn’t End On Saturday

    7 Reasons It Was Inconvenient That The World Didn’t End On Saturday

    Hello 7 Reasons readers!  It’s Monday 23rd of May, which can only mean one thing.  That the world didn’t end at 6pm on Saturday.  Obviously this has affected our plans somewhat as we didn’t prepare a piece for today just on the off-chance that we would be wasting our time.  This, it turns out, was an error.  Anyway, somewhat belatedly, it’s time to begin the 7 Reasons working week.

    Now, it would be easy to mock the poor, deluded fools who told us that the world was going to end on Saturday, so let’s do that.  Here are seven reasons that it was inconvenient that the world didn’t end at six pm on Saturday.

     

    1.  Marc Fearns.  “It’s Monday morning and I’m in my dining room writing.  I hadn’t planned to be doing this at all.  I was expecting to be hanging out by Piers Morgan’s fiery lake watching Glee while French people force-fed me raw sprouts and read the Daily Mail to me.  I was expecting to be wearing Crocs and an I’m With Stupid t-shirt.  I was expecting to be spending time with my brother.  The rest of time.  This is a right inconvenience.”

    2.  Robert Fitzpatrick.  Robert Fitzpatrick was also inconvenienced.  He’s currently a little bewildered.  Asked how he felt about events (or the lack thereof) he said, “Obviously, I haven’t understood it correctly because we’re still here”.

    3.  Keith Bauer.  Mr Bauer travelled from Maryland to California for the rapture.  As a demonstration of total conviction in Mr Camping’s prediction, he took a week off work for the end of the world.  Not just a few days, but a whole week, mark you.  After all, it was for the end of the world.  You can’t pack that into a couple of days or a long weekend.  That’s a week he’ll never get back.

    4.  Gary Vollmer.  “Judgment day has come and passed, but it was a spiritual judgment on the world”.  Ah, a spiritual judgement.  So it did happen then, just not in the way that it was predicted to.  Not in a way that was in any sense tangible or demonstrable.  Not in a way that anyone could remotely tell whether it had happened or not, except for Gary.  There has been a judgement but only Gary knows about it.  This is not Gary refusing to admit that he was wrong at all.  No one called Gary is ever wrong and especially not this Gary who is especially not wrong about the end of the world.  NOT WRONG.  No.

    5.  Harold Camping.  Harold Camping, the man that made the prediction in the first place, has not been seen since the end of the world and has “no intention to speak or issue any statement” according to a spokesman.  How he communicated this to the spokesman is unclear.  I prefer to imagine that it was via the medium of mime or that it took the form of an interpretative dance.  Perhaps he iced it on a cake or banged it in Morse code on the desk with his forehead.  We may never know.  According to his wife he is “mystified” and “somewhat bewildered” at the world’s failure to end.

    6.  Harold Camping.  And this isn’t the first time that this has happened to poor Harold. The blasted world failed to end in 1994 for him too.  That’s an easy mistake to make once, but when the world doesn’t end and 97% of its occupants aren’t eternally damned for a second time, you might start to feel a tiny bit foolish.  Oh well, cheer up Harold, third time lucky.

    7.  Everyone Else.  So the world hasn’t ended and another working week has begun.  There’s no chance of getting out of painting that spare bedroom, your next dental appointment or paying the gas bill.  We’re also going to have to carry on with all the joy, love, bliss, wonder, gratification and whatnot that characterises our human existence on this beautiful earth.  What an infernal nuisance.

     

  • 7 Reasons It Is Inappropriate For The World To End At 6pm Tomorrow

    7 Reasons It Is Inappropriate For The World To End At 6pm Tomorrow

    Disaster. The world ends tomorrow. So, in our penultimate 7 Reasons post – we’ll still publish a guest piece tomorrow morning – we take a look at the reasons why 6pm is a ridiculous time for it all to come to an end.

    7 Reasons It Is Inappropriate For The World To End At 6pm Tomorrow

    1.  Waste Of A Day. At the moment, as you may have noticed, I am not taking the demise of the World very seriously. That’s because I’m writing this the day before and the idea that I shan’t be writing 7 Reasons on Monday hasn’t really hit home yet. Tomorrow morning, when I rise to the Sounds of the Sixties, no doubt I will start worrying. I dare say I will be petrified. This is it. It’s all over. I had so much to do. There’ll be tears. There’ll be praying. And then there’ll be tea. And a whole lot of waiting. There is no point in doing anything tomorrow. What’s the point in shopping? Or DIY? Or writing my birthday list? There isn’t any. So I’ll just sit there and wait and be bored. What a waste. At least if the world had ended at 6am I wouldn’t have had to endure the slowest day ever.

    2.  Awkward. The problem with 6pm is that it’s that awkward time between coming home after being out for the day and going out for the evening. Those who don’t know anything about the world ending or those who have decided to stupidly ignore it, will be getting ready. And that means a whole lot of nakedness on display. When we end up in heaven or ‘the other place’ surrounded by naked flesh, where are we supposed to look? I tell you something, there will be many an argument in full flow come 6.15pm. “You were looking at that girl’s bottom!” “No I wasn’t. She just raptured in front of me!” “I didn’t believe that excuse last time and I don’t believe it this time. And will you cover yourself up! You’re embarrassing me.” “Oh, I’m embarrassing you am I? Look at yourself, you are the only one who put weight on whilst rapturing.” Yes, many an argument and many a divorce.

    3.  Indigestion. Many people will be cooking or thinking about cooking dinner when it gets close to 6pm. But what should we do? Eat and be prepared to get indigestion during the rapturing phase or miss our evening meal and hope something is provided at arrival when we reach our new destination. It’s a tough call. One we wouldn’t have had to make had the world been due to end at, say, 3pm.

    4.  Heineken Cup Final. This kicks off at 5pm. That means I’m not going to know what happens. Do you know how many hours I have put into watching the Heineken Cup this year? Dozens. Bakers dozens probably. And for what? Just so I know who enjoys their half-time oranges more. It is said that 2% of the population will be ‘raptured’ to heaven at 6pm. No doubt those who end up there will get to see the second half, but for the rest of us – and I rather suspect that includes me – will no doubt be faced with burning hell that is ‘So You Think You Can Dance Live’. That’s a hugely inadequate outcome and should it happen I propose we make an appeal (or overpower The Devil/Piers Morgan and steal the remote control).

    5.  Children. For a lot of young families, 6pm signifies the time at which the youngest members of the family are put in their cots for the night. Or, if you are eighteen and have parents like I, just put to bed. There is nothing wrong with that, especially if you have spent all day chasing them around. The evening is the time when you get to relax. Only tomorrow you won’t. As soon as baby Byron is sung to sleep, death will come knocking at the door.

    6.  Work. Some people, believe it or not, actually have to work on Saturday. As such they’ll be working tomorrow. What a day they’ll have. Wake up early, go to work, work hard, come home, world explodes. The forces at large could at least let them sit down with a beer first.

    7.  Plus This Lot. Given that this is the last proper 7 Reasons post we thought we’d celebrate life by opening this up and asking the 7 Reasons faithful why 6pm would be a bad time for them. Here are some of the replies. (It suggests only a few of our followers are bothered about the world ending. Fair play to them).

    Nick Barrow: “Because it’s my day off.”

    @rachel_simmo: “Because we’d only be half way through the Heineken Cup final! Surely they can put it back a couple of hours to 8pm?”

    @splex: “Dr Who wouldn’t have been on telly yet. Could you postpone the world ending until at least 9pm?”

    Sarah Ay: “Because we’d miss the Champions League final.”

    @rachel_simmo: “We wouldn’t find out what happens in Doctor Who! With Amy and the baby and the eye-patched nurse!”

    @Kateypotatey: “Because I wouldn’t have had time to finish my first glass of fizz/cocktail. 6.30 would be better.”

    @RugbyByDilbert: “I wouldn’t of sung happy birthday to my mate! #actofrevenge”

    Rob Lee: “Because I might be either batting or bowling at that time, and I’ll never know how I got on.”

    @kittyQ: “Because I am getting married next year to a 7 reasoner, that’s after Saturday, that means I won’t get to be the happiest kitty ever”

    Jack Pitts: “Bad? At least we won’t have to sit through Britain’s Got Talent anymore.”

    @RugbyByDilbert: “If the world was to end on Saturday, I wouldn’t have gone to the Waratahs game in Sydney (makes me sad)”

    @NellPlant: “I’d die a work and this would mean I would not be able to iPlayer Doctor Who when I’ve finished work.”

    @rachel_simmo: “We wouldn’t ever know if Birmingham City could manage to stay up on the last day of the season on the Sunday…”

    Richard O’Hagan: “Because (a) Marc would never get the website to work for a whole 7 days in succession and (b) the world would be deprived of the weekly spectacle of one of you accidentally posts a piece they meant to schedule for later in the week.”

    @kittyQ: “Kent play Sussex on Sunday.. I am hoping to go. I’ll get to see the signs I set up for print. If the world ends I won’t get to see Kent THRASH Sussex”

    Richard O’Hagan: “Because we would never get to read the second half of the Russian Roulette interview?”

    @rachel_simmo: “Plus my brother would only be a 21 year old for 3 and a bit days, not even a week being 21!”

    @RevdKathy: “6pm Saturday? The world CANNOT end before Doctor Who has aired!”

    *On behalf of Marc and myself, may I thank you all for reading 7 Reasons for the past 20 months. It’s been ace. See some of you soon. (I’ll bring the ball, you bring the bat).

  • 7 Reasons That Ricky Ponting is the Second Coming of Christ

    7 Reasons That Ricky Ponting is the Second Coming of Christ

    As I was walking yesterday, on the road to Sainsbury’s, a strange and life-changing event occurred.  I strolled past a man carrying a newspaper and, upon the back of that newspaper there was a picture.  An image of Ricky Ponting looking glum.  Christ, I thought, doesn’t that miserable bastard ever look happy? And then, suddenly and without warning, there was a blinding flash of light and a sonorous and divine voice did appear from the sky and say, “Ah look, mate, why do you persecute me?”

    I fell to the floor:  “Who are you,” I stammered meekly.

    “I am Punter, whom you are persecuting,” he replied.  “Now rise and get thee unto the supermarket, and you will be told what you must do.”

    Blimey, that was weird, I thought, and went to the supermarket as I was bidden.  And, to cut a very long story short, in the manner of Saul on the road to Damascus, I, Marc* on the road to Sainsbury’s, had had an epiphany.  I realised that I had been wrong all along about Ricky Ponting and had done him many disservices over the years.  And now I have truly seen the light and it is my divine mission to tell the world of his glory; here are the seven reasons why Punter is the true successor to our lord Jesus Christ.

    Punter as Christ
    Ricky, as he appeared to me on the road to Sainsbury's.

    1.  The Name.  If things look right, and sound right, then they generally are.  And when I tried to think of a way to link the names of Jesus and Ponting, I have to admit, I struggled.  But then I realised that true struggle is the lot of a disciple, and that I’d just have to think harder.  And, lo, I thought harder.  But other than the names Ponting and Christ being interchangeable as profane expletives in my heathen life prior to my conversion, I could find very little to link them.  Then it hit me:  A portmanteau word.  Ricky Ponting is no longer merely Punter the cricket captain.  He now has a divine and biblical-sounding title.  He will henceforth be known as…The Pontychrist.

    Ricky Ponting as Jesus Christ rising angelically from a bible
    Ah, look. It's the Pontychrist!

    2.  Miracles.  Jesus was famed for his making of miracles.  Specifically, for eking out very little, to make a lot.  He turned water into wine, and he fed five-thousand people when equipped with a small quantity of bread and fish; a situation in which a lesser bearded-man – such as Captain Birdseye – merely invented the fish finger.  And, in the manner of Jesus, Ponting (who, though not bearded of face, is bearded of arm), the new saviour, is attempting to win the Ashes with a mere nineteen runs from the first two tests.  And when he pulls it off, it will be hailed as one of the greatest miracles ever seen.  Greater, even, than when he takes a stroll across Sydney Harbour without using the bridge after the fifth test, and greater than when he turns Toohey’s into wine.  Or Beer into a world-beating bowler.

    3.  Serendipity.  This current Ashes series began in almost an exact word-for-word replay of one of Christ’s most famous quotes because Australia opened the bowling in the first test.  And so it was that he, who is without spin, cast the first stone (or ball, as we call them these days).  In fact, like his famous forebear, Ponting tries as much as possible to live a blameless life where lesser men (England) are happy to live a life of spin.  In the grand tradition of divine saviours, The Pontychrist is more spinned against, than spinning.

    4.  The Devil.  There would be no need for the coming of Ponting if it weren’t for the presence of darkness among man.  Who then, is his nemesis, his bête noire, his archfiend, his foe, the Mephistopheles to his Good Shepherd?  It can’t be Andrew Strauss; he’s too nice, he is a mere instrument of the devil.  For Beelzebub himself is cunning, yet is vain, and so gives himself away through his choice of name.  I ask you, what rhymes with horn?  That’s right, many, many, many things but, specifically in this case, Vaughan.  Behold The Antipontychrist!  For though he has now been banished unto the commentary box for the duration of the series – which if the final test ends on day three will have lasted for forty days and forty nights – (which is both biblical and mathematical proof ), he is surely the puppet-master that the righteous Punter does battle against.

    Former England Cricket Captain Michael Vaughan as The Devil
    The name of the beast is The Antipontychrist and his number is 6-0-0 (and he doesn't look very well)

    5.  The Blood of the PontyChrist.  In Christian religions, those arcane churches that we had before the birth of Pontianity, especially in Roman-Catholicism, (where the head of the church will, when Ponting is acknowledged as the second coming, be known as The Puntiff) the blood of Christ is important.  Jesus, we are told, bled for our sins, and so, in the present day, has the Pontychrist.  Here he is bleeding, so that our spirits may be lifted heavenward.  And who amongst us can say that this image of  his selflessness doesn’t fill their heart with joy?

    Punter bleeding from the mouth after being hit by the ball while fielding
    We have redemption through his blood…in accordance with the riches of God's grace.

    Rickey Ponting, Australia Captain, spitting blood after being hit in the face by a ball while fielding
    Yes, this one's just gratuitous.

    6.  Iconography.  And, much like Christ, when so many of his teachings will be open to the whimsical and wilful interpretations of man, many years after he has passed, so the Pontychrist’s visage will be used, in the millennia to come by men warning others to follow his example and to live without sin.  He’s omnipresent, they’ll say, he can see everything that you’re doing, they’ll say.  And they’re right.  In this portent of the future he seems to be staring into your very soul.  And, now that you have seen this picture, you will know, that Ricky can see your every thought and deed.  He will know if you think ill of the French.  He will know when you’re masturbating.  He will know when you’ve eaten Twiglets that you shouldn’t have touched.  He knows everything:  For he is omnipontent.

    Ricky Ponting as Christ on a billboard.
    He can see into your soul, you bad, bad person.

    7.  Reflection.  And later, on reflection at my conversion to Pontianity, I had a moment of doubt, the sort that afflicted people 2000 years ago in Jesus’s time.  I wrote this piece yesterday, but when I woke this morning, I found myself questioning things.  In short, I had a crisis of faith.  I might have taken too much of my flu medication yesterday, I thought.  What if I’d dreamt it?  I’d look a fool.  I’d be mocked and cast asunder by my peers.  I decided that, on reflection, I may have got carried away and resolved to discard what I had written and start afresh with a new piece, after I’d had my breakfast.  And then I saw a sign:

    The image of Ricky Ponting appears on a slice of toast.  He's like Christ.
    It's a sign! (a tasty one, too).

    So, in summary, I’m buying myself a ute and I’m going to fill it with corrugated iron and tambourines and head off to the hills to build the first (of many) Puntecostal churches.  Who’s with me?

    *Henceforth to be known as Parc.

  • 7 Reasons That 7 Reasons Didn’t Appear Today

    7 Reasons That 7 Reasons Didn’t Appear Today

    7 Reasons is owned and run by two men, Marc Fearns and Jonathan Lee.  Outside of the weekends, they tend to – when not co-authoring posts – take it in turns to write for it.  Today it was Marc’s turn.  Despite being on holiday, he was confident that he could combine a trip to the North-West of England with writing.  He was wrong.  Here are 7 reasons that 7 Reasons didn’t appear today.

    Something that isn't there.  Or is, you just can't see it.

    1.  Hair.  Being away from home exposes you to all sorts of new and exciting things.  This morning, in a friend’s bathroom Marc discovered hair moisturiser.  He had no idea what it was, and there were no instructions on the carton, but he felt compelled to experiment with it anyway.  Even now, many hours later, he is still staring admiringly at his hair in the mirror, enthralled by its lustrous sheen.

    2.  Beer. Marc has consumed so much beer in the last few days that it has begun to affect his biological makeup.  He has now mutated into the solid form of beer, which is bread.  Could you type with toast soldiers for fingers?  No, of course you couldn’t.  Nor can he.

    3.  Technology. Marc hates Macs.  He was staying with a friend who hates PCs.  Marc’s friend was writing school reports, and was obliged to use a PC (the report-writing software doesn’t work on a mac).  Because of this, Marc had to write his 7 Reasons post using his friend’s MacBook Pro.  They were sharing a kitchen table.  Unfortunately, the level of agitated technological incomprehension and frankly astonishingly vitriolic invective reached such a vociferous and sustained hubbub that a furious and wrathful god was provoked into smiting them both down.  Forensic pathologists, having sifted through the ashes, have determined that the last words they wrote were:

    4. The Hash Key. Where the hell is the hash key and why are they hiding it?  I’m a grown man, I can be trusted to use the hash key responsibly, it’s not like I can start a war with it or…

    And:

    Bill Gates.  F.  Must try harder and why the fuck can’t I disable the trackpad!

    4.  Tradition. A dog ate 7 Reasons.  It’s true, and if you can read this now you’re inside a giant dog.  We’re fairly certain that he’s called Rex.

    5.  Cycling. Marc lives in a reasonably flat city and rides a fixed-gear cycle.  Unfortunately, he hasn’t mastered the technique of stopping by locking the back wheel of his bike with his legs yet.  With brilliant logic he decided that removing the rear brake from his bicycle would motivate him to learn this technique.  He is staying in Bolton, a town riddled with steep inclines.  The somewhat pensive-looking cyclist was last seen hurtling down a hill at a speed estimated to be in excess of 350mph.  Onlookers reported that, as he overtook two lorries, a bus, three motorcycles, fifteen cars and a coach containing pensioners from Morecambe, he was heard to say, “crikey”.  His current whereabouts are unknown and Bolton Police are too busy investigating reports of a meteor strike to search for him.

    6.  The Nautical Look. Marc was attacked by an angry mob of sailors, or women (he’s not sure which), who took exception to his observation that horizontal stripes were suitable attire for burglars, chavs and Beano characters but should never be worn by decent people: He was cast adrift with no access to writing implements, fruit or espresso.  Which is pretty much the standard Bolton visitor experience, but in a boat.

    7.  Wrongness. It turns out that it has appeared today.  Oh well, everyone can be wrong once a week.  It’s Jon’s turn again tomorrow.