As part of its nation-wide efforts to improve the health and well-being of its inhabitants, the Glorious Republic of Grigovia announced the reopening of the Lower Eastern Yiptlong Hot Springs & Baths (LEYHS&B). Shuttered shortly after Grigovia's independence – in 1988 – from the Union of Soviet Socialist States, LEYHS&B sat dormant and neglected until 1994. Then, a group of private investors conspired with the Grigovian Ministry of the Interior to not only restore the Art -Deco-style bath houses to their former glory but also tap the region's geothermal capacity to provide heating and electricity to the baths and some neighboring communities. At one time closed to all but the most well-connected cadres of the former Soviet regime, LEYHS&B is now accessible to citizens and tourists via Grigovia's robotic bus system. (Buses depart regularly from the town square in Eiyehrdo Ghassdt, a proud village that lies about halfway between Grig and the eastern city of Gar Nuuzsh.) Famous for wide pools of swirling hot waters as well as frigid dipping basins, visitors to LEYHS&B can now enjoy also a full spectrum of spa treatments that include world-class massages, Finnish-style sauna, archery and martial arts lessons, and guided horse-back or hiking tours of the majestic Eastern Yiptlong massif. Expect stunning views of the Great Dune Sea as well as many happy times with your friends and loved ones at our beloved Hot Springs & Baths. Be sure to visit the adjacent Happy Times Smoking Lodge, where all manner of combustible leaves, tars, and saps from around the world are available for purchase and consumption. Come soon, please, and relax.
© americanifesto / 場黑麥
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Showing posts with label springs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label springs. Show all posts
23 September 2013
30 November 2012
Hope springs eternal
Finishing her shift on the trampoline with a lazy backward somersault, Hope Riley Rechard-Johanneson, 22, of Bridgeport, Connecticut, gave a high five to her replacement, Elaine Hope Verminelli before dismounting and heading for the showers. Walking in the manner of a duck in order to keep from pissing herself after so many hours spent bouncing around in the air, Ms. Rechard-Johanneson made it to the toilet just in time. “I normally remember to not drink water before a shift, but, today, it slipped my mind,” she said while a torrent of urine streamed into the porcelain bowl. “My employer is, after all, paying me or someone else with the name Hope to spring eternal; the girl who usually serves as my break-time replacement didn't show up today, so I had to tough it out.”
In addition to paying young ladies named Hope to spring eternally upon a trampoline positioned so that he can watch them jumping from his favorite sitting-chair, Naithen James Otelo, 75, a widower who claims to have made his fortune “selling knockoff designer luxury goods to dumb tourists,” also maintains a number of other folk wisdoms on his property. He pays different girls named Hope (the larger, more corpulent ones) to float around in his Olympic-sized swimming pool; he runs a stable of charlatans who are tasked with always trying to bullshit him, a bullshitter; he employs a team of balloonists to make sure a giant clock suspended from a helium-filled dirigible never touches the ground; he subsidizes his neighbors' lawn maintenance programs so that their grass is always more lush than his own; and he makes sure to tip those of his employees who attend to their tasks without undue and wasteful haste.
“As a way of paying for college, this sure beats stripping,” said Ms. Verminelli, 19, who is originally from Flagstaff, Arizona. “But five hours of non-stop bouncing on a trampoline four days a week is wreaking havoc on my equilibrium. Seriously, I awake from sleep due to nightmares I have in which everything is bouncing – people, roads, the sky, everything. At night, when the boss is sleeping, he provides us with headlamps so we can read books while we're springing, but, in the long run, it's still kind of unsettling. Again, though, it beats giving blowies at interstate rest-stops.” While watching two Hopes slap palms as part of their mandatory hand-off ritual, Mr. Otelo sighed contentedly. “I like my truisms to be right out there, bold and beautiful, the wisdom of the ages being acted out in my back yard. I find it comforting to know that, out on my racetrack, jockeys are waiting until the race is done to change horses, and that, down in the fields, the first birds to arrive each morning get first dibs on food.”
mentiri factorem fecit © 場黑麥
In addition to paying young ladies named Hope to spring eternally upon a trampoline positioned so that he can watch them jumping from his favorite sitting-chair, Naithen James Otelo, 75, a widower who claims to have made his fortune “selling knockoff designer luxury goods to dumb tourists,” also maintains a number of other folk wisdoms on his property. He pays different girls named Hope (the larger, more corpulent ones) to float around in his Olympic-sized swimming pool; he runs a stable of charlatans who are tasked with always trying to bullshit him, a bullshitter; he employs a team of balloonists to make sure a giant clock suspended from a helium-filled dirigible never touches the ground; he subsidizes his neighbors' lawn maintenance programs so that their grass is always more lush than his own; and he makes sure to tip those of his employees who attend to their tasks without undue and wasteful haste.
“As a way of paying for college, this sure beats stripping,” said Ms. Verminelli, 19, who is originally from Flagstaff, Arizona. “But five hours of non-stop bouncing on a trampoline four days a week is wreaking havoc on my equilibrium. Seriously, I awake from sleep due to nightmares I have in which everything is bouncing – people, roads, the sky, everything. At night, when the boss is sleeping, he provides us with headlamps so we can read books while we're springing, but, in the long run, it's still kind of unsettling. Again, though, it beats giving blowies at interstate rest-stops.” While watching two Hopes slap palms as part of their mandatory hand-off ritual, Mr. Otelo sighed contentedly. “I like my truisms to be right out there, bold and beautiful, the wisdom of the ages being acted out in my back yard. I find it comforting to know that, out on my racetrack, jockeys are waiting until the race is done to change horses, and that, down in the fields, the first birds to arrive each morning get first dibs on food.”
mentiri factorem fecit © 場黑麥
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