Thursday, July 31, 2008

1 July 2008: Provo, Utah

The Provo Challenge: Day Seven

I had told Lenora before I left the house the previous night that I was "maybe" going back to their place. It's not like that maybe was ever really a maybe, and in the morning I woke up to Lenora getting some things together in her room.

Note the many scandalous elements involved in this situation. For one, the fact that she was in a bedroom with a dude is, I do believe, grounds for expulsion according to the BYU honor code. Prior to Friday morning, at the scene of the Mormon regret, I'm not sure Lenora had ever been in a bedroom with a dude before. This would have made #2.

More than that, I was in bed. In bed, I tell you! Do you have any idea how close she was to accidentally getting into bed with me? This is no laughing matter. Hell, I wasn't even wearing a shirt!

Anyway, she took it all in stride-- and really, this was a pretty scandalous situation for a female BYU student. I got up and gave her a hug, we said good-bye, and she left. And that was it.

Boy, I'll tell you, it was a pretty abrupt good-bye-- pretty abrupt for me, in all honesty, let alone this girl who had just experienced Mormon flirtation, Mormon foreplay, a Mormon make out, Mormon charm, Mormon regret, a Mormon come-hither, a Mormon hook up, Mormon infidelity AND Mormon cock-frigidity in the span of five days. There was obviously more to this.

In the early afternoon Nerina left too, so I decided to head to campus and have a relaxing day-- technically the first during my time in Provo.

There isn't much to speak of for my final day in Provo in that sense-- really, I was pretty tired and it wasn't so much like I had missed stuff to do on a Tuesday afternoon. But while the day was pretty inconsequential, some text messages did reveal a few things about Lenora.

me: "I don't know what happened last night but I wish the past twelve hours had been more like the first five days."

Lenora: "I know, me too. I'm sorry."

(Whoa. What's this?)

me: "What was it? You obviously were upset about something."

Lenora: "I don't know. Really."

(OK, there really must be more to this.)

me: "Is it because of the 'romantic walk'? Is that why you mentioned your overload of dates?"

Lenora: "Most of the things you mentioned last night I hadn't thought of."

(Well, now I'm confused...)

me: "I'm stumped, but the rules don't apply to me. A walk with a girl isn't the first step towards marriage, it's just a way to hang out with people."

Lenora: "No, I know you like meeting people. Maybe it's because I like you but cant."

(Ah, forbidden love.)

Lenora: "You're not here, and I won't be either. I promised myself not to like a guy like that until after my mission."

Well, I guess there you have it.

So that's where Lenora was coming from. As far as Nerina, she was trying to convince me to stay another day. I was pretty against this idea. For one thing, staying another day would mean being there Wednesday night, which would mean another country dance. Regardless of whether or not Lenora really did have three dates-- since it might have been a ploy-- I wasn't too crazy about the idea of another one. I've already said that the second country dance had lost nearly all of the charm that the first one had, and going to a third would have killed the fun even more and risked ruining the memory of the first. Not a good idea.

More importantly, though, if I left the following morning it would mean I had rolled into town on a Wednesday and rolled out the Wednesday after. I felt like a full week in Provo was a pretty fitting duration for the Provo Challenge, and were I to stay an eighth day I'd have to stay for days nine through fourteen as well. That wasn't going to happen.

So this was to be my final day in Provo. And I was more than happy spending it sleeping in the library. So there.

(Although not before I asked Kirsten, the girl from church, if she wanted to get lunch. Her response, "I'm in Salt Lake at a concert with my boyfriend." So there's that answer.)

When it began to get dark I headed to the house I was at the night before to see about the bonfire. On the walk over there were some voices and the smell of a fire coming from the woods, and I went to check it out. It was another bonfire-- I'm telling you, bonfires are right up there with dancing when it comes to Mormons-- in honor of some girl's birthday, but the fire was nearly out and everyone was getting ready to go home. It was 11:00 on a summer night. Some of these kids really do need to step it up a notch once in a while.

Anyway, I got to the house and pretty soon we all went outside to start the bonfire. Now, by bonfire I should clarify that it was basically a little fire circle with a few planks of wood and a TON of kerosene. Not exactly the "bonfire up the mountain" that I had been looking for, but it was still the same idea I guess.

The two stars of the show at the bonfire were these kids Janelle and Richard. Janelle is in love with Richard and thinks no one knows it but, as you might expect, everyone knows it. Maybe everyone including Richard, but I'm not positive. Most of the people at the bonfire, though, think that Richard is an asshole, and were OK saying this because Richard hadn't arrived and Janelle was in the other room.

And, well, Richard was pretty much a douche to Janelle, and kinda an asshole in general. But he was pretty funny and interesting enough to talk to, so I guess he wasn't terrible. But, without a doubt, Richard failed the "top-five best friend" test with flying colors. So let's keep that in mind.

Anyway, Janelle was pretty interesting in her own right, but solely because of how UNinteresting she really was. Janelle is better known as the Queen of Bad Stories, and though ten minutes of hearing her speak made her the missionary of the bonfire-- that is, I stopped listening to 95% of what she was saying-- I do remember that she literally and actually completely stopped conversation for 23 seconds with "And then she said 'this is "Our Song"' and I said 'what's our song?' and I didn't get it for five minutes." Literally, 23 seconds. I counted.

But, boy, Janelle was a real treat. And persistent. I can't begin to convey the absolute dearth of interest that Richard was showing in her, but she wasn't discouraged at all. And the best part was, the more he alternatingly ignored her and mocked her, the more she tried to flirt with him by acting dumb. Real dumb, like "I studied Darfur so I know for a fact that there's a genocide there."

I've never seen anyone play dumb as effectively as her. Unless she really is that dumb and just plays smart to everyone else.

Sorry, not smart. Smarter.

Anyway, neither Garrett nor John from the previous night were there, so the other person I was mainly talking to-- there were about eight total, including me-- was this girl Hailey, who was the cute and funny one of the group. And not just Mormon cute and funny. Someone asked someone else if he would rather freeze to death or burn to death, and Hailey stepped in and said she'd rather freeze to death because "maybe I'd thaw out." She also told me that "not everyone abstains" from the Big Five of the Honor Code. Sure wish I had met THAT segment of the student body.

So that was my BYU bonfire experience. Like I said, it wasn't the "real thing," and it probably didn't even come that close. But it was just a bunch of BYU students hanging out and talking and telling stories. And making sarcastic comments to and about Janelle. It's like I was a real, true Mormon.

When the bonfire ended everyone dispersed and I decided to go to Denny's to have some coffee and collect my thoughts, this being my last night in Provo. I found a table to myself for a change and was ready to relax and write a little, but a long table to my left was full of people and, well, how can I say no to that? So I picked up my cup and moved to an empty seat.

The first thing to know about this table is that it was the members of a local band and some of their fans and they were having a bit of an after-party, if you will. Or as much as Denny's can be an after-party. So I was dealing with people who, right off the bat, you can assume are friendlier and more open than your typical BYU students.

If that's why the dynamics were as they were, I don't know, but I was literally slaying them for the first ten minutes. After a while, though, and because the table was so long, the two ends split off into seperate conversations. And, sadly, I was at the less interesting end.

So I was telling my stories from the road, and with the hindsight of a week in Provo I had some pretty good ones from Mormon Country, and the conversation was pretty much ho-humming right along.

But then most of the people from my end left and I scooted down to the other end, which had been where most of the talking was coming from during those first ten minutes. And so I went on to repeat pretty much everything that I had just said, but at least this time I was repeating it to a more interesting/interested audience.

Finally the rest of the table got up to leave, and this girl Rachel, who had arrived after me, asked if I needed a place to crash for the night. To be perfectly honest, I suppose I didn't-- after all, the twins had left the key in the mailbox in case I needed to come back. But I had spent a night alone in their house already and felt like a second one was a bit much, even if they had genuinely left that option open for me. Plus, it being the last night, I thought a change of scenery wouldn't be a bad call. So I got in the back seat of one of the band dude's car, with Rachel in shot-gun, and we headed to her apartment.

When we got there Rachel brought out a blanket for me on the couch and was going to go to bed, but she sat down and we started talking.

Now, because Rachel had only arrived a little while before we left Denny's, I hadn't really taken much notice of her. But, let me tell you, she was easily the most beautiful Mormon girl I met during my week in Provo. I can say that 85% without a doubt. And we were hitting it off pretty great.

She asked if I thought a girl could hitch-hike because she's been considering giving it a try, and I said that I thought it would be easier and even safer for a girl, as long as she knew what she was doing. My next project is to race a girl on a hitch across the country and to compare the two experiences, and I thought I might have found a potential partner-in-crime for it.

She asked if I thought it would be smart for her to drink a little while still in college, just so that it wouldn't be too much of a shock once she actually began to drink, and I said that probably wasn't a terrible idea. I thought we almost might have ended up getting something to drink and bringing it back-- although thank God that didn't happen, because I would have lost a week of sleep if I had been the gateway that made her take her first sip.

We maybe talked for an hour once we got back, and Rachel said how she likes the guy who drove us home but that he's not interested in her. I'm telling you, I was money. Or, at the least, I was Mormon money. I was feeling pretty good about ending the night with my hand deep in hers. And maybe even with our fingers intertwined.

And then, wouldn't you know, the dude who drove us home showed up and cock-blocked me. Literally fucking Mormon cock-blocked me. And I didn't even know the Mormon cock-block existed.

A Mormon cock block is, for all intent and purpose, the same thing as a regular cock block. With the one small exception that, instead of blocking a cock, the blocker is blocking a hand-hold. Because, remember, the Mormon cock block would typically happen on the first date, and there's no way in hell anyone's getting even a Mormon make out on the first date.

And that's what happened. I got Mormon cock-blocked so completely I still can't feel my toes. And I didn't even see it coming. The dude knocked on the door and opened it and said to Rachel "I don't want you alone with him." Real chivalrous, you see. And, really man, no offense.

So he came in and sat down, and boy was that the end of it. The true thing about a Mormon cock block is to compare it to a regular cock block in terms of a balloon. When you get regular cock-blocked, the balloon has been filled and tied and someone comes along and sticks a needle in it. You're pissed off, but the balloon's exploded and it's time to move on and get a new balloon.

But when you get Mormon cock-blocked, well, you're still in the process of blowing up the balloon. You're not two seconds away from getting laid, you're still invested in the process of getting to the point where you might consider dating someone that would eventually down the line get you laid. The balloon is nowhere near filled to capacity. So when someone comes along and Mormon cock blocks you, all he's doing is taking the balloon from you and letting the air escape. So you've got to sit there and watch the balloon slowly deflate.

And that's what I did. I sat there while this dude, who said maybe three words the entire time, let all the air escape from my balloon. And all in the name of chivalry. I couldn't fucking believe it.

So finally the guy decided to go to sleep-- another dude who had come over with him was already long since passed out-- and naturally the guy decided to go to sleep on the floor. You know, because he could tell how bold and audacious I was feeling.

And of course when the guy lay down to go to sleep, Rachel got off the couch and grabbed a blanket from her room and decided to sleep on the floor as well. Because, remember, this is the dude who wasn't interested in her. But who apparently is chivalrous as all fuck.

I'm telling you, it was the most authoritative cock block, Mormon or otherwise, in the history of cocks. This dude knew what he was doing. And so Rachel lay down next to him and they fell asleep, literally-and-I'm-not-even-kidding holding hands. Kill me.

I had to walk back to the twins' place to get my stuff in only a few hours, because it was a bit of a walk and I wanted to get the first bus back to Salt Lake City, so I wrote for a little bit and then left. And when I left the apartment Rachel and this dude were spooning. It was literally like he had wanted me to know, before I left Provo, that no heathen is going to parade into HIS town and act like he owns the place. Well played, sir.

And so, having been Mormon pwned, I left Provo.

Friday, July 25, 2008

30 June 2008: Provo, Utah

The Provo Challenge: Day Six

Today, I went with Amber, Deborah, and the twins to Seven Peaks water park, home of the biggest water park in the state of Utah-- not to mention the Friday night-skank fest which I regretably passed up.

The park itself was actually pretty good. There were a bunch of good slides-- I didn't count how many, but something tells me there were seven of them-- and it was a beautiful day, which is always nice. The lines weren't even that bad despite it being the biggest water park in the state of Utah. Maybe that's because it's in the state of Utah.

So that's that. It was a lovely day, but it could have been any day at any water park in America. The only real distinction to note, and it's not a happy distinction, is the bathing suits. The twins both wore a tank-top and shorts as their bathing suits. I don't want to make any generalizations about this because they were just about the only girls I saw with "bathing suits" like that-- including Amber and Deborah-- but it was pretty lame. Well, that's Mormons for you.

Oops.

Anyway, let's skip right ahead through Seven Peaks to the evening. The previous night, while Katie was driving me to Denny's, we made a dinner date for this evening at around 6:30. I called her a bit after that, though, which turned out to be too late because she had to go check up on a friend in her ward to read scriptutes to her and make sure she was "doing alright." Seriously.

Anyway, we decided that she would pick me up at the water park at 7:30 instead. But I lost track of time, and when 7:28 rolled along I didn't want to keep her waiting because I had already fucked up with the 6:30 time. So I said a very quick good-bye, got my stuff and left.

A few hours before this happened, though, the twins had talked about going to see another movie that evening. Thinking I would be seeing Katie at 6:30, and thus would be able to get to the theater in time, I went along with the plan. But since it was a later time than I expected with Katie, I asked Lenora if they could wait until after 9:00 to see the movie so I could go too.

Finally, to set this up, all I told the twins was that I was "going out with a friend." Not that I was trying to hide it from Lenora, since the only thing I assumed I would be "hiding" was another walk around her neighborhood. But, either way, I only said I was seeing a friend. And, for whatever reason, Lenora was visibly upset that I was leaving-- whether it was simply that I was leaving or rather because I was leaving to see "a friend," I do not know.

Well, like I said, I was really only expecting to have another deep conversation while walking around with Katie. Which, essentially, is what I did. But what I hadn't been expecting was that I would also end up committing Mormon infidelity.

What constitutes Mormon infidelity? Well, here's a summary of all the naughty things I did with Katie. Try to keep calm while you read this.

1) When Katie pulled up in her car I told her to get out so I could give her a big hug, because I was wearing a wet bathing and I wanted to get her wet as a joke.

2) I was talking with Katie in the car and facing her while we talked. You know, because once in a while it's nice to look at the person you're talking to.

3) My date with Katie consisted of us walking through town for a little while. Which is as I had expected, except in town instead of around her neighborhood. Great thrills.

4) We held hands. Because I was feeling bold and audacious.

5) I kissed her on the cheek. Because I was feeling bold and audacious.

Now, to be honest, this evening was a little more interesting than the previous as far as the date was concerned because I hadn't really seen much of downtown Provo before then-- crazy, on account of it was already my sixth day there. There isn't much to speak of in regards to downtown Provo, but I suppose it was nice enough.

However, the conversation was more or less as interesting as the previous night's-- which is to say, not very. The one main thing we hit, though, was Mormon propriety. During the "date skit" at the dinner bbq-dance party in the barn, the dude had said the schitzophrenic dude wanted to hold hands with his split personality. More specifically, he said he "wanted to take the relationship to the next level" and hold hands.

Well, that got me thinking. Holding hands seems to me like the FIRST level of a relationship, not the NEXT. Sarah had given me a general idea about the dating-to-marriage trajectory-- four months till "serious," eight months till marriage-- and she had made it pretty clear that Mormon making out with a guy on the third date is skanky. But I was pretty baffled by the idea that there was a time-frame for when a guy should "take the relationship to the next level" and hold the girl's hand. So I asked Katie about Mormon propriety.

I asked her at what point a dude would no longer be considered bold and audacious for holding his date's hand. She said that it depends on the girl and the guy, but that "the third date is typically decent." The third fucking date. To hold your date's hand.

So I asked her what would happen if, depending on the girl and the guy, the dude WAS bold and audactious and went for the hand-hold too soon. Well, she said that one time a dude did just that and went for the hand-hold on his second date with her. Talk about bold and audacious, "I pulled my hand back quickly." Hell, I would've slapped the creep.

Anyway, it was technically my second date with Katie-- although I'm guessing she probably would have considered the car ride its own separate date if I had asked her. Not being quite at the point of Mormon propriety, but figuring I'd try my luck, I asked Katie if it would be bold and audacious of me to hold her hand. Her words, and I quote, "why don't you find out."

BAM.

Now, normally I would say that was a Mormon come hither, if only it had been any other Mormon but Katie. But because it WAS Katie-- the most conservative Mormon I met who had only kissed one guy and who never goes out with guys she doesn't already know and who literally once pulled her hand back from a guy who tried to hold it on the second date-- I was a bit more hesitant. Still, throw caution to the wind. When in Provo, do as the Mormons do.

So I went for the hand-hold.

And wouldn't you know, she willingly accepted.

Feeling pretty money, I decided to take the relationship to even one more next level, and I asked her if it would be bold and audacious of me to kiss her on the cheek. Her words, and again I quote, "why don't you find out." Damn right I'll find out.

Wouldn't you know, she willingly accepted again.

Now, that was where I drew the line, since there was literally nowhere else to go. Any more would be practically a Mormon make out, which I was sure was off-limits, and and the little Mormon sitting on my left shoulder told me that two kisses on the cheek in such a short span of time would be dirty. The little Mormon sitting on my right shoulder agreed.

So we walked a little more and eventually she had to leave to go on another house-call to check up on a friend in her ward and read scriptutes to her and make sure she was doing alright. Seriously, again.

But before she dropped me off at the twins' place, I leaned over and kissed her on the cheek again. I do believe she actually squirmed and was offended by my boldness and audacity. I'm not making this up.

Anyway, the twins weren't home so I called Nerina, who said they were already at the theater but that they'd come pick me up.

Now, do you remember that whole Mormon infidelity thing? Well, when you're caught in the act of Mormon infidelity, your punishment is a little something I call Mormon cock-frigidity. It's when your girlfriend catches you cheating, and you know she knows, and she's not giving you the time of day and she's definitely not putting out for at least the next week as punishment. It's just like that. Except, well, it's for Mormons.

So what are the tell-tale signs of Mormon cock-frigidity? Funny you should ask.

1) Nerina and Amber picked me up at the house to take me to the theater. Now, one of the more adorable things about these girls is that they all blatantly aid each other in Mormon flirtation. Or, at least, the three of them all aid Lenora in her Mormon flirtation with me. They went out of their way to get out of the room after the missionaries visited and, oops, Lenora and I accidentally were alone together. Nerina left the social event after church early and, oops, Lenora and I accidentally had to walk home alone together. Or, with every single ride where they dropped me off or picked me up, Lenora was always without fail in the car. But not this time.

2) Lenora and Deborag were waiting for us in a restaurant, and when I sat down next to Lenora she didn't look up but merely said in her most Mormon cock-frigidity voice "so did you enjoy your romantic walk?"

3) Right before we left for the theater, Lenora blatantly and obviously told Deborah "I want to dance with Matt on Wednesday, but Cameron is coming back and Josh wants to dance with me, too." You don't say, huh? I mean, this couldn't have been any more obvious.

4) When we walked down the aisle at the theater, it went Nerina then Amber then Deborah then Lenora then me. Well, after the first two went into the row, Deborah stepped back and let Lenora go past her so that Deborah was sitting next to me instead. Harsh.

5) When we got back to the house, the last thing Lenora said before Amber left was "I'm so excited for my three dates on Wednesday." Gag me.

Boy, it could not be any more obvious that she knew about my hot date with Katie and was pissed about it. Not to mention that I was definitely not getting another Mormon hook up, or even a Mormon make out, for the forseeable future.

(For the record, if you're wondering how on earth she could have known about this, the girls had left the water park right after I left, were driving next to us the whole way, and, as Nerina said the next day to explain why Lenora was mad, I was "looking at that girl the whole time." Scandalizzle. So that explains the hug and the car ride, and I guess they must have seen us get out and start walking, but thank god they didn't know about the hand-hold or the kiss on the cheek. Would that have been trouble, but good. Damn.)

So anyway, Lenora was the Ice Queen and, to make matters worse, I actually had to sit through "Made of Honor." Good lord was it unbearable. Assuming it was Lenora's choice of movie, since the other three all seemed to be accomplices in her Mormon cock-frigidity, my first thought was that she had picked it simply as a way to purposefully spite me-- you know, to make me sit through that atrocious movie.

But then I thought that maybe she was just giving me food for thought. Lenora is rather quickly approaching marrying-time, and after that she very quickly becomes an old spinster. Maybe, either despite her Mormon cock-frigidity or because of it, she was giving me a clear hint. I'm not going to explain the movie, but let's just say it's got marriage on the mind.

Finally and blessedly, the movie ended and we went home. Lenora said she was tired and went to bed immediately. I was heading out to Denny's-- where else-- but before I left I sat down next to her and asked what was wrong. She said nothing. I pointed out the five instances of Mormon cock-frigidity that I had noticed. She said nothing. I asked her if she wanted to talk. She said nothing. I said bye, and she asked if I would be there in the morning. I said maybe, and she said "I hope I see you again." Take that as you will.

So I went to Denny's and sat down immediately at this one table with a dude and two girls. After about ten seconds they said they weren't BYU students. Crash and burn. Well, once that happens you can't stay for a second round immediately. So I left.

I was walking away when I heard some noise coming from down the street next to Denny's. There were a bunch of kids shooting off fireworks in honor of Canada Day, which I figured was as good a reason as any. It was three dudes and five girls, although one of the dudes left pretty soon after.

After finishing the fireworks we went inside for a little while. I was talking to one of the dudes, Garrett, who said that he and the other guy, Josh, go to the BYU campus in Hawaii. Talking about that campus would be a whole different thing, but what Garrett basically said is that he goes to BYU-H because he doesn't like the stereotypical Utah Mormon. I asked him what he meant by that, and he said "Well, even a Mormon who doesn't drink has to be comfortable around a guy with a beer in his hand. The kids who go here aren't." Boy, did that dude hit the nail on the fucking head.

They asked me if I was enjoying my Provo experience, and I said that I'd had a good time so far but that the one thing I hadn't done was go to a bonfire. So they said that they would have one the next night. A bunch of cool kids indeed.

At this point, since everyone was leaving, it was back to Denny's for me. This time I sat down with two dudes and a girl, all of whom had just gotten off their job at a security company and were sitting at the table against the far wall on the right. These were some all-star kids.

The girl was 18-years old and named Crystal. Make your own assumptions about an 18-year old girl named Crystal who's sitting in a Denny's at 2:00 in the morning. I'm not going to say anything, but you're probably right. Her story, to put it simply, is that she has a kid and is pregnant with another. She has to go to a Mother's School because the main school won't let her attend because she's pregnant. Fucked up. She seemed like a really sweet girl, not that pregnant 18-year old mothers wouldn't usually be. Well, she was.

But the real star of the show was this dude Brenton who's 20 and has taken the past couple of years off to work and get money so he can go to UVU. He's also been working on repairing an old car-- I forget which one-- which he plans on taking on a cross-country roadtrip. His big thing is that he recently found out he had a "surprise kid," which by definition is when the ex-girlfriend shows up with a kid and it turns out that it's yours. A great situation to find yourself in. But this dude Brenton, he said he'd be with the mother if he could and she wanted him to, but she needs to get her act together first. I'm telling you, just an all-around good dude.

Oh, and he gave me $20 of food money. Yeah, I took it. That's Road Karma, baby, and it'll come back to Brenton ten-fold when he gets on the road himself. And I'm pretty sure he knows it, too.

So who does that leave? The third guy, introduced to me as Dumb-Shit.

I don't want to say anything too terrible about Dumb-Shit, but the name kinda works. Or maybe not. But either way, as much of a dude as Brenton was, Dumb-Shit was the exact opposite. For one, he said maybe two words the entire time I sat there. For another, he honestly maybe looked up from his plate four times.

But the main thing, much more important than those first two, is that he asked me why I picked their table to sit down at. I said "Because you guys looked cool." Well, Dumb-Shit made it clear that he wasn't cool, and that he tries to damnedest to not be cool. And he's proud of it. Just so you know.

Well let me tell you, oh wise one, Brenton and Crystal are cool because they're willing and happy to talk to a stranger they've just met. That's pretty cool. One of them's out of school and one of them's a pregnant teenage mother. I'm not too sure how "cool" either of those are. But they're some pretty fucking cool cats. All you gotta do is talk, Dumb-Shit. I'm easily impressed.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

29 June 2008: Provo, Utah

The Provo Challenge: Day Five

Sunday. God's day.

I told the twins I'd go with them to church because, since I'd already gotten a ride with Presbyterians and been to a Baptist service on this trip, I figured I might as well get a little more good karma for the rest of my time on the road.

The absolute first thing to say about a Mormon church service is that, quite simply, it is the drabbest three hours you'll ever spend in your entire life. I think the reason why I like Baptist services is that nothing gets me like a little Christian rock. And, more importantly, I need a little fire and brimstone to get me going on a Sunday morning

Well, the Mormon service offered neither.


But first, the format for the long-as-balls service is broken into three one-hour segments: The Sacrament Meeting, Sunday School, Relief Society/Priesthood.


During the Sacrament Meeting, I sat with Lenora on my right and a cutie named Kirsten on my left. Unfortunately, this meant I wasn't getting away easy this morning. When the bread came down the row, I ate it. When the water came down the row, I drank it. And when we sang hymns, I sang along.

And it was the hymns that were the drabbest part of this unbelievably drab service.

"Walk in the Way of the Lord," "I Love Jesus," "Jesus Was a Nice Guy"-- you can pretty much imagine what the songs were like. Nerina was the pianist for all of them, which isn't really as impressive as you might imagine-- my dog could plunk out the notes if only she had opposable thumbs-- but the funniest part of the whole thing was the dude who stood at the front solely to conduct the song. And keep in mind, we're talking the kind of music you'd sing in your once-a-week music class in elementary school.


So that was the hymns. Later, when Amber asked me if I thought the hymns were as beautiful as she did, all I could do was cry on the inside. Because, hearing them sing, it was literally like every single person in there wanted to die. Or, I guess, was already dead. Just entirely unbearable.

The other part of the Sacrament Meeting was the weekly speech, which this week happened to be given by a woman whose only qualification to speak at a church service was that she is a dietician. One can only hope she is at least church-ordained.

Anyway, I didn't catch all of it, but this woman's thesis for her speech was, and I quote, "everything in science supports the belief that exercise is good for the body, but these are the guidelines that Heavenly Father already gave us." Boy, who knew that God was so health-conscious. And who knew that exercise really WAS good for the body. Shocker, huh?

The best part about THIS, though, was that the entire time the woman was giving her speech, the bishop was giving a little "oh, great, so its one of THOSE Sundays this week" look to the dude sitting next to him. I mean, it was great.

(A final note about the Sacrament Meeting-- I don't know if it's just me, but the fact that Mormons always refer to God as "Heavenly Father" seems a touch on the cultish side to me. It might be something as simple as NOT saying "our Heavenly father," but leaving out the pronoun-- saying, for instance, "we should live our lives the way Heavenly Father wants us to"-- sounds, I'm sorry, straight outta Jonestown. Whenever they said something about Heavenly Father, I kept imagining a dude in robes being lowered from the ceiling by string while the people on the ground look up and chant "Faaaaaather, Faaaaaather." Am I wrong about this?)

At any rate, after the Sacrament Meeting came Sunday School, which was led by Lenora-- apparently the twins are quite high on the totem pole in their ward. There isn't much to say about this part, because it was mostly just reading out loud from a book, but I do have one comment. This week's lesson was about church ordinances performed by living family members for deceased ancestors. Basically, by doing something or other you can essentially "convert" your dead ancestors to Mormonism. All I can say is that this sounds VERY presumptuous to me. If your ancestors had their own faiths and their own beliefs, and are in their own personal heaven, doesn't it seem a bit rude to even attempt to move them to yours? I mean, for a religion that hasn't even been around for 200 years, and that has been persecuted or ostracized for nearly all of them, it seems to me like Mormons are stepping on a few too many toes with this one. Just my opinion.

Anyway, the final part of the service is typically split up-- Relief Society for girls and Priesthood for dudes, which seems rather anachronistic, but I digress. This Sunday, however, there was a joint thing for everyone. I was only sitting next to Kirsten this time, and we talked a bit before the thing actually began. She said that BYU was her third college, having started at the University of Colorado, but she didn't like it because "everyone there is a hippie." So she transfered to USC, but didn't like it there because "everyone parties too much" and her roommate during her one year there "drank just about every night." But she said she loves it so far in Provo, although she was really tired on Sunday because, get this, she had been at an all-night ping pong tournament and "barely slept at all." I'm telling you, if I had met this girl on my turf-- that is, if I had met her among regular people-- I would have absolutely hated her. But because she's Mormon, she was nothing more nor less than a cute Mormon. And, well, I didn't hate her.

Then she mentioned that her boyfriend had won the tournament, which pretty much negated the previous two sentence, and thinking about everything she had said-- about her reasons for why she transfered from Boulder and USC-- kinda annoyed me. But then the Bishop began his speech, and he was talking about how missionaries have a companion with them-- an older member of the Church-- when they go on their mission. The Bishop then asked the people to raise their hands if they had a "companion," and a good number raised a hand-- but not Kirsten!

So I spent the remainder of the service in a good deal of confusion, because Kirsten had said she had a boyfriend but then didn't raise her hand for a companion. As it turned out, the Bishop had meant Jesus when he said companion, so it didn't actually have anything to do with a companion-boyfriend, but I was certainly entertaining the thought.

The rest of the service was basically the Bishop talking about the merits of a YSA ward-- "Young Single Adult ward" in regards to socializing and service. As far as socializing, well, I've already said that YSA wards are a breeding ground for marriage, and the Bishop certainly didn't dispel that myth. He absolutely was encouraging romantic interaction among the students, and chastised "ward-hopping" because you don't get to know anyone long enough to become serious and get married. And mind you, "long enough" means four months. How quickly can these Mormons actually be hopping?

As far as the service aspect of a YSA ward, the only true happiness in life is to "be like Heavenly Father," and doing service for others is valuable because "it allows you to forget YOUR problems." This final part of the service was pretty unbearable. Let's just move on.

Now that the service had ended, though, don't think my first ever legitimate Mormon experience was over. Every Sunday, the twins make lunch for whichever missionaries are in Provo that week. Because, believe it or not, there are actually Mormon missionaries assigned to Provo. Apparently "Hi, do you have time today to hear about the Mormon Church?" is an innovative and effective way to educate the people who live next to a school named after the leader of the Mormon Church about the Mormon Church.

So the twins made pasta and garlic bread, and this week's two missionaries came over-- a young dude around 22 years old and an older dude around 30. Now, I gotta tell you, I can only remember one time when Mormon missionaries came to my door, and I can't for the life of me tell you what I thought of them. However, if you think these dudes would be stuffy or obnoxious or overbearing with their beliefs, you're dead wrong.

To be perfectly honest, for the first hour or so they were just a couple of nice dudes eating pasta and hanging out. Considering that these two missionaries, in the midst of their mission, were OK with the fact that I was staying with the twins, that just about says it all. We just hung out and talked, and they were digging the adventure of my trip. Mind you, nothing too out of the ordinary was said, but they were cool dudes.

That is, until the younger dude asked if I had any questions for him. This was something of an immediate red flag to me, because I didn't want to steer the conversation from regular stuff to Mormon stuff, so I asked how big the "Y" was-- the big white "Y" that is on the mountains right next to campus. The young dude said "haha, that's not good enough," and I knew it was on-- I was about to get missioned.

Still, I was wary about setting him off with anything deep, meaningful, or, well, religious. So I went with "why are Mormons persecuted," which I figured was safe enough. Not so.

Now, I honestly can't tell you what he said. I mean, I can pretty much sum it up for you in one sentence-- "Jesus Christ appearing to Joseph Smith was the most beautiful thing in the history of the world." I can even tell you what the twins said when he asked them how they know the truth about Jesus-- the rather intangible "I can feel it deep in my bones." Hell, I can even tell you what Deborah said when he asked her why she's glad to know the truth about Jesus-- the even more intangible "because it feels like a warm hug whenever I cry." But I honestly can't tell you a specific word he said.

That didn't matter, though, because this younger missionary dude had better eye contact than anyone I've ever met in my entire life. Seriously, it was some great fucking eye contact. And his voice was literally and almost like rain falling on the roof. So I don't know a single thing that he said, but boy was my attention unwavering.

Somehow, though, I was on the money in the one audience-participation moment of the afternoon. The dude was going on and on, and suddenly he told me to describe my father. Thank god I actually heard him ask me this, so at least there's that, but it snapped me out of a near-doze and so all I could think of was "strong and provider." The missionary dude said "so is Heavenly Father." (Oh come on, they said the same thing about Charles Manson, am I REALLY off-base in thinking Heavenly Father sounds like a cult leader?)

Anyway, I wish I had said "absent and deadbeat." What would he have said to THAT, huh?

The last thing he said was that I'm going to heaven. For all the faults anyone might have with the Mormon faith, at least you can say that they're very heaven-friendly. As long as you're a good person, Mormons think you're going to heaven. I like that. Although I still could have used some fire and brimstone.

So finally the missionaries left, but not before they knelt and said a prayer for me and my journeys. For those of you keeping track at home, this means I had now had a prayer said for me and my journeys by Presbyterians, Baptists, and Mormons. I was feeling pretty invincible. All I needed was a Jew and a Muslim and I'd have the complete set.

After the prayer, the younger missionary gave me a Book of Mormon and said he would pray that I might "find the truth." I took the book, and might give it a glance over since that's the least I can do, but this exemplifies my main problem with the missionaries-- I have a hard time with people using words like "truth" or "proof" or "know" when talking about religion. I mean, yeah, more power to you if you believe it, but religion is by definition an act of faith. You can't "know" religion to be "true," and you certainly can't have "proof" of it, and I just have a hard time taking religious types seriously when they make claims for any of those three.

At any rate, they left, and it was just me, the twins, and Amber in the living room. Amber and Nerina went back to Nerina's room, and now it was just me and Lenora, together again at the site of the original scandal-- the living room couch. Lenora asked me what I thought of the missionaries, and I said that they were nice dudes. She asked what I thought of getting missioned, and I just held up my brand new Book of Mormon and said "well, I've got this now."

She smiled and said something about how I had seemed really into it. I didn't disagree but asked her what she meant by that, and she said she was impressed by how I was paying such good attention while the younger dude was talking to me. I didn't disagree. And then she said she was impressed by how I had given such a thoughtful answer to the question about my father. I didn't disagree.

And I guess she must have really been quite impressed. Because, and I would never in a million years have missed this signal, but she gave me what was undoubtedly the Mormon come-hither: she pulled the blanket over her lap.

Think about this for a second.

1) It was two days before July, not to mention over 90 degrees outside.
2) She was impressed by my performance with the missionaries.
3) She felt Mormon regret the last time we Mormon made out on the couch.

Really, women all over this nation give sultry glances from across the bar, but Mormons pull the blanket over their laps. So she gave me the Mormon come-hither and I Mormon went thither. I moved over a little bit and put my hand under the blanket, because I knew she was ready to enjoy a little Mormon foreplay safely out of the discerning eye of Nerina and Amber.

But, let me tell you, we didn't linger too long with the Mormon foreplay-- no sir, we went full speed ahead to a Mormon make out, except for that this was a bit more than a Mormon make out. I would actually go ahead and call it a Mormon hook up.

Don't get too excited yet, though. The thing about the Mormon hook up is that, while emphatically a hook up for Mormons, it nonetheless still falls below a regular make out. The scale, then, to my knowledge is Mormon make out---Mormon hook up---regular make out---regular hook up, with whatever gradations you'd like in between.

The Mormon hook up differs from the Mormon make out in terms of physical activity, of course, but more important is that it takes the emotional state of willingness to the next level. When you Mormon make out with someone for the first time, the girl is in a nearly completely passive state-- that is, the guy goes in for the kiss and the girl basically just sits there and kisses back until the guy pulls away.

The Mormon hook up, though, is mostly about the girl's emotional dirrrtying-- it typically comes a few days after any given Mormon make out, when the girl is safely secure that she has escaped Heavenly Father's wrath.

Now, in a Mormon hook up, the girl still of course never makes the first move-- never ever. But the difference is that, during a Mormon hook up, the girl might linger a while. To best explain this is that the Mormon hook up is where the girl might put her hands on the sides of the guy's head-- encouraging him to stay as long as he likes and suggesting that she, too, might be feeling the electicity of the moment. Along these lines, the Mormon hook up is where the girl might introduce tongue into the equation. "Yes, that's my tongue in your mouth, and I don't care if I'm going to hell because of it."

The other part of the Mormon hook up is the physical lovin', and here is where the ranking of the Mormon and non-Mormon versions of making out and hooking up become debatable. For argument's sake, let's call regular making out strictly kissing and regular hooking up anything more than that but less than sex. For Mormons, let's call making out how I defined it before and let's call BAD DECISION anything pre-marital below the belt.

So where does that leave a Mormon hook up? Well, on the kissing front, a regular make out is almost by definition better than a Mormon hook up. I know I said that the Mormon hook up might introduce the tongue action, but in a regular make out it's safe to say that the tongue action was, comparatively, already introduced yesterday. You'll have to either take my word on this or go make out with a Mormon girl.


The rest is where it gets tricky. A regular make out is no hands. Again going by the definition above, once you get the happy hands you've gotten yourself into a regular hook up. On the flip side, though, and contrary to what you might think, a Mormon hook up doesn't 100% forbid happy hands. Although, of course, anything below the belt is a BAD DECISION.

But above the belt? Let's just say that the Mormon hook up has been known to look the other way. The one caveat, though, is that Mormon flirtation rules apply when dealing with a frisky Mormon hook up-- you have to make it seem like an accident.

Let me run this next part by you, to show you what I mean. Because, while I may not kiss and tell, you bet your ass I'll Mormon hook up and tell.

So, to start with, after some Mormon hook up kissing Lenora kinda finagled her body so that she was at the end of the couch and then kinda finagled mine so that lying down with my head on her lap was the convenient solution. I'm not exactly sure what part of the Mormon hook up this was, but my best guess is that it has something to do with a Mormon hook up being one step closer to a post-marital BAD DECISION, which is of course not a bad decision at all, but which is one step closer to having children. Maybe part of the Mormon hook up is the erotic longings of having a family and letting your child sleep on your lap?

Or maybe lying down with my head on her lap meant that I was giving her Mormon oral sex. Hell, you decide.

Either way, the main point is that she took my hand while I was lying down and held it for a little bit. Standard fare. Then she raised my hand and gave it a little kiss. Standard fare. Then oops, she accidentally dropped my hand and when she caught it she accidentally grazed it against her breasts. Bam, Mormon hook up.

So this happened for a little while, and eventually Nerina came into the living room and suggested that we drive to the river and read scriptures. Hot diggity dog.

We drove about 15 minutes away-- because apparently you need that "perfect spot" to really get the scriptures flowing-- but within three minutes of Nerina reading the mosquitos were starting to hover. And these girls, for all their wonderful charms, have a more irrational fear of mosquitos than anyone that I've ever known for anything else. So back into the car we went.

We started driving back home, but I had a date with a girl named Katie who I had met at the dinner bbq-dance party the night before. She was cute. But on the other hand she was a BYU student. But back on the first hand she hadn't been too into the country dancing. I figured there was at least a little potential.

The twins dropped me off outside Katie's apartment and when she came out she was looking kinda frazzled. She asked me what I wanted to do, and when I said it didn't really matter to me she looked even more frazzled. She asked if I wanted to walk around campus. Sure, it's a Mormon date after all.

So we walked around for an hour or so, and Katie was looking nervous as hell the entire time. We hit it off pretty well and had a good time, and she was a cutie, but she was also so unbelievably conservative I didn't know what to do with myself. I don't mean politically, because thank God we didn't get into that, but this girl is as Mormon as they come. She's only kissed one dude in her entire life, which I guess is to be expected by a strictly conservative Mormon but seems pretty unbelievable anyway. But more than just that, she said it's "so unlike me to go out with someone I just met, I can't believe I'm here with you."

No, that's right. We were taking a walk around campus. It was a pretty big step for her.

So we kept walking around, and considering all the huge differences between us it was pretty incredible that we were getting along. And, I'm telling you, this girl could not stop repeating how big of a shocker it was that she was out with a guy she "barely even knows."

Finally we headed back to her place. Of course, by this point it was getting towards midnight and under no circumstances could she have a guy in her apartment after midnight. Which, along with "no one of the opposite sex in a bedroom at any time," is the golden rule of housing. I can't even BEGIN to imagine what Katie's response would have been if I had met her that first night and needed a place to crash.

So we got to her place and I met her roommates, who were nice enough. But since I couldn't stay we decided to head to the canyon instead, which is one of the main places BYU students go at night to hang out. Well, wouldn't you know, the roommates decided to invite themselves along.

Now, group dating is a pretty big thing for BYU students-- and the whole idea of BYU group dating is, I believe, a result of the culture of "creative dating." When a BYU kid goes on a date he's not taking her to the bar, he's probably not taking her out to dinner, and he's definitely not taking her home afterwards to get laid. So if the dude and his date are going to a bonfire, the more the merrier. If they're having a picnic, the more the merrier. If they're playing a life-sized game of human Risk, you bet your ass there's going to be a crowd. After all, a life-sized game of human Risk is the #1 "date" for BYU students. Hell, even if a dude's only cooking dinner for his date and then they're watching a movie, you might as well make it a dinner party. It's not like anyone's going to need any privacy.

What it comes down to is that, with BYU dating, fun equals creativity. And since dating means being creative with two people, you might as well make it ten. Not to mention that, if you're quintuple-dating, even if Satan gets a hold of you and puts impure thoughts in your head, there's no way for you act on them. That might also be why group dating is so encouraged by the elders.

Anyway, what I'm saying is that other couples coming along on dates is mostly par for the course in Provo. But this situation that we had with Katie and her roommates, this wasn't a group date. This was, surprise of surprises, a Mormon bar save.

With some HUGE distinctions.

First of all, and this couldn't be any more obvious, a Mormon bar save will never in a billion years take place in a bar. It's just not going to happen, ever. A Mormon bar save will take place in a park, or on a walk, or maybe at a dance, but just like a regular bar save it's when a chick steps in to save her friend from the guy that's talking to her.

The second thing about the Mormon bar save is that, and anyone outside of the state of Utah would agree with this, the girl who's doing the saving isn't exactly saving the world. A Mormon bar save protects the girl from the creep who's trying to connect with her soul in conversation, or saves the girl from the sketch-ball who's trying to hold her hand, or God forbid shields the girl from the Shadester McShadikins who's going in for a kiss on the cheek. We're not exactly dealing with Pike guys here.

The third thing about the Mormon bar save, and my favorite, is the tactics employed on the save. A 49-State bar save might employ the "lesbian lover" technique, and even the dude who's game is getting shot down can at least respect the intriguing, if also obviously false, hotness of the save. Not gonna happen in Provo, the anti-homosexual capital of America. Not even if they're lesbians. And not even if they're NOT lesbians. Trust me, you'll get some Mormon fun with your Mormon bar save. Not quite as good as the lesbian lovers.

The other funny thing about the Mormon bar save is that, because we're talking about Mormons here, the girl whose dude is getting interceded can under no circumstances change the outcome of the save. Hand-holding, let me remind you, is just one step short of Mormon making out, which is just one step short of Mormon hooking up, which is just one step short of BAD DECISION, which is just one step short of getting pregnant and going to hell. So no matter how much the girl doesn't want her friends to Mormon bar save her from the dude, tough luck-- if she protests it, everyone knows she's on the fast track to hell.

So that's how we found ourselves on our way to the canyon with Katie's roommates in tow. Any by "in tow," what I mean is that Katie and I rode together in one car and the roommates rode together in another car. Katie had looked pretty devastated when her roommates came downstairs and said they were coming along, and Katie herself had apologized profusely to me when she heard the news, but because she couldn't do anything about the Mormon bar save I guess riding in her car alone was the consolation prize.

And no, you creeps, I didn't hold her hand.

So we went a little ways towards the canyon and got out at a field. Katie and I sat down and talked for a little bit while the two roommates had brought along a soccer ball and were kicking it back and forth-- and hopefully feeling stupid for Mormon bar saving a girl from the guy she's sitting in a field with and talking to. The good news is that, since I had been missioned that afternoon, I had of wealth of things to talk about. The even better news is that, since I had a wealth of things to talk about, I didn't once have to resort to calling the Mormon Church a cult.

So we sat and talked, and I can't be thankful enough that this was on my fifth day in Provo. Because had it been sooner, and had I spent an hour talking to this VERYconservative and VERYmormon girl any earlier in my trip, I probably would have left the very next day. As it was, though, I was prepared. And, I should add, by this point I had learned the exact proportion of serious and comedy that are needed for a good conversation with a cute Mormon girl. Which, for the record, is about 80-20.

It was a beautiful night out, and I told Katie that I thought it was perfect conditions for a camp-out. I asked if she'd want to camp out too-- you know, because if you suggest camping out and bonfires and picnics and life-sized games of human Risk you've got a 50% chance of convincing a Mormon to do just about anything-- and her answer was a resolute no. Not that I was so very surprised by this, although if the roommates had stayed along-- which I know they would have-- it seems to me like it would have been nothing but good, clean Mormon fun. With maybe a little scriptures thrown in there.

But no dice. So, instead, Katie dropped me off at Denny's. Like you didn't know that was going to happen.

This time, however, I had called up Taz and told him to meet me there. Yes, Taz-- I hadn't seen him since Thursday night, and had never seen him outside of Macey's except for the brief time in the hot tub, but I figured he'd be a good dude to hang out with on a Sunday night. So I got to Denny's and waited a few minutes before Taz showed up with a girl on his arm.

It should be mentioned that Taz doesn't go to BYU. It should also be mentioned that this chick was only in Provo for the summer, and so definitely didn't go to BYU. Not to mention, might not have even been Mormon. So when I say that they were "all over each other" at Denny's, do take it with a grain of salt-- but only a grain. They were all over each other "as far as Provo goes," no doubt, but the chick was definitely dropping some hints that our boy Tazzer was going to get lucky that night.

Needless to say, and not just because Taz had good things in store for him that night, I didn't give two shits when he and his chick left. They got up to pay for their food and I walked to the cash register with them, and the cashier-- a cute girl whose name I think was Aushel, although that does seem a bit retarded-- said that she recognized me as it was my third consecutive night at Denny's. She then said that she had sat a couple of scraggly-looking dudes at the table behind where Taz and I were sitting because she had seen that I was mostly meeting people during my time there-- which the exception, of course, of Taz-- and that she thought they'd be cool people to talk to.

So I went over and sat down with these two dudes. Only one of them was scraggly-looking-- albeit very scraggly-looking-- but they were both of the hippie variety, what with their drawing pictures of things and eating hash browns at 2:00 in the morning. Since that's what hippies do.

But these dudes were invested as hell in their pictures, and literally not even saying three words a piece. I was rather, well, bored-- although I hate to speak so low of a Denny's. And since it was late and I was tired, I decided to call it a night.

So I went back to the cash register to talk to Aushel, since I figured her helping me out with the table-- regardless of how enthusiastic the dudes sitting at it were-- counted for at least something. She said she was getting off work in about half an hour, so I asked if I could get a ride back towards town and she said she was going the other way. Which, at least, meant she probably didn't go to BYU. So then, just before I headed back to the house, I asked if she wanted to get lunch the next day, and she said she would be at the Seven Peaks water park all day.

Well wouldn't you know, that's where the twins and I were going, too. What luck.

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

28 June 2008: Provo, Utah

The Provo Challenge: Day Four.

When I woke up this morning it occured to me that I had forgotten about the lunch date with MaunaRay. I had no idea where the Olive Garden was and had little time to get there-- which, itself, was banking on it being a noon date that we had agreed on, which I wasn't even sure about. I called MaunaRay and she didn't pick up so I left a message saying I wouldn't be able to make it. I doubt she was too disappointed.

So now that lunch was out of the way, I had to get ready for my next event of the day: the lunch bbq-dance party with the bell-tower people. Time was ticking, and I had to run back to the twins' place to get my bathing suit and change out of my previous night's clothes, so I left Drew's apartment-- located in Orem, the next town over from Provo-- and got on a bus back to campus.

I had no idea where I was, though, and even less of an idea how to get back, so I called Nerina from the bus to ask her which stop I should get off at. She told me to get off at Macey's and I guess I must have repeated what she said because after I hung up the girl next to me said "this is the Macy's stop."

Re-read that last sentence. Did you catch it? Re-read it again. Yeah, I got off at Macy's the department store and not Macey's the grocery store.

Even worse? I was still in Orem.

By this point I was running perilously close to missing the ride to the bbq-dance party, and my phone was dead so I couldn't call T-O-Double-D. So I asked a woman how long of a walk it would be to the BYU campus, and she said it would be about an hour. And then she offered me a ride.

Because time was running down, I asked the woman to just drop me off at the meeting place for the bbq-dance instead of going back to the twins' place. I was one of the first people there, so it probably wouldn't have mattered if I had been a little late, but I also was able to borrow a pair of shorts to swim in, so it didn't matter at all that I didn't have my bathing suit.

So I got a ride out to Alpine, where one of the ward kids was hosting the thing. I was riding shot-gun and spent most of the time talking to the driver, who said some pretty douchey things like "UVU kids bring a bad influence to Provo" and "they call it UVU now instead of UVSC, but I still think it's more like UVHS." (Utah Valley State College is the school in Orem that recently became a full four-year University. Although, come to think of it, that second comment was actually pretty funny. I admit.)

He also hit me with a bit of "we all hit a cross-roads in our lives" preaching. I didn't so much care about that as I did when I said, of BYU students marrying early, "if there's no pre-marital sex, why wait?" and he, clearly uncomfortable, came up with "uh... yeah... before you mess up, I guess."

I wasn't really listening to the driver, though, because I was trying to catch the back-seat conversation. And I found that, as a the public companion to Mormon regret, we have Mormon scandal. "Went out with" is the "hooked up with" of BYU students. And remember that we don't mean "went out with to a party" or even "went out with to dinner" They were talking about how one girl they knew "went out with" some dude on a hike up the mountain. Mormon scandalous, because she had gone bowling with another dude a couple nights earlier. And before you tell me that it was only a hike, let me remind you that they say sweat is the biggest pheromone for women. It may have only been a hike, but it may also have lead to some pre-marital hand-holding. And we don't want any of that. Mormon scandals, you gotta love them.

(One final thing about the car ride: Mormons absolutely love Fall-Out Boy and Panic! at the Disco. Just so you know.)

Finally we arrived at the bbq-dance party. So let's skip the bbq-- which was bacon and eggs, and thus more of a breakfast than a bbq-- and move right on to the dance party.

The first thing about the dance party was the music. When the first song of the afternoon was "Miami," I was cautiously optimistic. When the second song was "I Like to Move It Move It," I was legitimately excited. When the third song was something from the musical "Hairspray," I knew I had finally found a Mormon dance.

Even when the fourth song was "Get Low" I wasn't fazed. I knew I had come to the right place.

Because, let me tell you, Mormon kids LOVE to dance. Seriously, they LOVE to dance. The entire thing was nearly a non-stop dance party, and man were they loving it. My favorite three people from the afternoon were T-O-Double-D and a dude Connor and girl Lisa who had also been at the bell-tower the night before.

For T-O-Double-D and Connor, I should explain that, when I travel, my way of evaluating people is to basically decide if I would be good friends with them if I went to their school or they went to mine. More specifically, I try to decide where they would fit on my best-friend scale.

And that basically sums up T-O-Double-D and Connor-- I'm pretty sure they'd both be top-6. I'm not sure I've ever seen two people having more fun at any time in my entire life. I'm not exagerating. They were dancing just about the entire time, and were clearly the leaders of the group. And the best thing about it was that, as they kept dancing, I realized their dance move was basically just a modified version of the bop-jump that the girls were doing at the masquerade. They were doing the Mormon bop-jump: all it involves it bopping a little wilder, jumping a little higher, and fancy footwork. That's it. But man, they were Mormon bop-jumping the hell out of that dance party.

The other one of my three favorites was Lisa, who was absolutely adorable and would probably be enough to turn any man Mormon. Believe me when I say that there was absolutely no dancing-while-touching going on, but man could this girl work it. She loves dancing probably just as much as T-O-Double-D and Connor, and was out there just as often, but I'm telling you-- if this girl ever went to a real dance club, she would be the biggest heart-breaker on the floor. No doubt in my mind.

So that was the dance party, which I am confident enough to call a bonafide Mormon dance. They literally must have played the "Hairspray" song four times, and each time they did it T-O-Double-D and Connor would Mormon bop-jump and do the thing where you move your hands in circles twice and then extend your arms to one side. It was literally the wildest thing I've seen on my trip. Those damn kids and all their dancing...

(Seriously, someone needs to find a way to spike these guys' punch. They're already completely Mormon drunk-- which is a bit like being "high on life" except they're literally just high on everything-- I can't possibly begin to imagine what it would be like if they had any less inhibitions. This absolutely has to happen.)

The third aspect of the afternoon, in addition to the bbq and the dance party, was the pool. All I can say is that if Mormons love dancing more than anything else in the whole world-- which they do-- than what they love second most in the whole world is doing flips. Preferably back flips. Nearly everyone was busting out their own personal moves, and then they did pyramids in the water with all the dudes as the base and then-- I'm not kidding-- three levels of girls standing on their shoulders. These are the things these kids do.

(My favorite thing about the entire afternoon, though, was when this one dude came over and confided to me in hushed tones, "some of the girls are offended because your trunks are hanging low," and then walked away. I looked down and saw that my shorts were literally "hanging low" by no more than an inch. Not only that, but I was wearing my Christmas lights boxers. If there's any pair of boxers that wouldn't offend these Mormon girls, wouldn't it be my Christmas light boxers? Thank God I wasn't wearing my vagina boxers, there would have been hell to pay.)

So that was the lunch bbq-dance party, and after I got dropped back off in town I gave Dan a call to see about the dinner bbq-dance party. I had left my phone off all afternoon so there was a little bit of juice in it, and Dan didn't answer but called me back in about five minutes because he had been in a movie. About ten minutes after that, he had picked me up and I was on my way to the second bbq-dance party of the day.

This one, though, was different in every way from the lunch bbq-dance party.

First of all, as far as food went, this one was quite good-- steak, potatos, and beans. A hearty meal for the cowboy inside of me.

I say for the cowboy inside of me because, whereas the lunch bbq-dance party had been a bop-jumping Mormon dance, this second dance was COUNTRY AS HELL. It was the annual barn dance in a town called Payson, which meant it was attended by just about all the local Payson kids as well as a number of BYU wards.

The thing was, as you could probably imagine, held in a barn, and there was hay everywhere and, damn, it smelled terrible. There was a hay ride about every half an hour, too, and I went on one because I thought it might be haunted. It wasn't.

And the whole thing was one huge country dance. The first hour was nothing but country music with the Macarena and "Vengabus" thrown in for some reason. The place was pretty much dead, and Dan and I kept trying to get people to come out and dance, but no one would. It was pretty terrible.

But then they played "Cotton Eyed Joe" and everyone-- I should say, everyone but me-- went out and did the same line-dance with the same moves. It was even more terrible.

And so that was the scene-- it couldn't have been any more different from the afternoon. There were a ton of townies, and nearly all the dudes were wearing cowboy hats-- although, thankfully, no one in Dan's ward-- and everyone was showing off and doing stupid country dance moves.

And then, like this thing could have gotten any better or po-dunkier, they had a talent show. Here's a brief re-cap of the acts:

1) Some dude poured water from a pitcher into a bowl and another dude drank it out of the bowl without using his hands.

2) Some dude told a 10-minute story that I think was supposed to be funny about a dude who went on a date with his split personality, and another dude acted out the motions, such as opening the car door for himself and ordering food for two people.

3) This girl sang a song which was truly and actually the most disastrous noise I've heard in my entire life.

4) More country dancing.

5) Some dude pretended he was an auctioneer, and just said increasing numbers quickly.

6) A girl spun a ball on her finger for about five seconds.

7) A dude actually did some pretty good impersonations.

So that was the second bbq-dance party of the day. It was really pretty fun, but mostly so because Dan and I were Mormon bop-jumping to every song and making fools of ourselves.

After the bbq-dance party was over I got a ride back to Provo and got dropped off at the place where I had gone country dancing and met the twins on Wednesday. For my third dance of the day.

To be perfectly honest, though, this second Provo country dance had lost about 90% of the hokey charm of the first one. I had had a blast on Wednesday night, mostly because it was so bizarre to me, but that first one had been ironically fun more than anything else. This second time, the whole thing seemed a little less bizarre-- although the girls still stood in lines waiting to be asked to dance.

Partly because of how much fun I had had with T-O-Double-D's crew, and also probably partly because the second bbq-dance party had been exactly like the country dance I was then at, I tried to bust out a little Mormon bop-jump. The twins, though, were absolutely not having it. And I, in turn, just wasn't feeling it.

Not too long after I got there we left and headed to the Creamery. On the ride over Lenora said something about candy making her lips feel weird, and I said "they feel fine to me." Amber, who was there as usual, said in her sauciest tone "I hear you've been doing a lot of kissing lately." Mormon scandal, I love it!

So we got to the creamery, but no one really wanted ice cream. The twins said they were going to go back home and I said I would go to Denny's, and Nerina offered to drive me. When we got to Denny's, though, she offered to go in and wait for me. I told her that I didn't need her to do that and could walk home, and she said that it wasn't a problem, and they could get something to eat. I tried to tell her that I normally roll solo on my trips, and that going to a place alone to meet people is pretty much par for the course, and she just didn't get it. Finally Amber explained to her that I'd be fine-- good ol' Amber, coming through in the clutch-- and I went in.

The Denny's scene-->

First Table: I sat down with this dude Jules who was pretty weird in general and another dude who was a bumbling, flinching, tiny little Asian kid who said "my specialty is (watching) anime." I didn't stay at that table long.

Second Table: I sat down with two girls, one who was pretty nice and one was an absolute and total bitch. I said "I think it's pretty interesting that, even without the typical college party things-- you know, sex, drugs and alcohol-- you guys still find other ways to get your kicks." And this girl says in a total bitch voice "actually we just do different things for fun, OK?" I sure wish I had thought of that first. This girl was dumb as rocks.

Third Table: Two girls and two dudes. Neither of the girls spoke much and one of the dudes offered me the rest of his milkshake right off the bat, but the other dude was pretty put off the moment I sat down. I kept noticing him give me dirty looks, but I just kept talking to the milkshake-dude, who was genuinely nice and interested. As I was about to leave and saying good-bye, though, the put-off dude shook my hand and said "this thing you're doing is pretty cool, thanks for talking to us."

Boo-yah.

27 June 2008: Provo, Utah

The Provo Challenge: Day Three

I had made plans to go to Seven Peaks with Sarah this afternoon but forgot to set an alarm and woke up too late. When I did wake up Nerina was gone and Lenora was reading a book on Nerina's bed-- because I was still sleeping in Lenora's.

I went in and said hi, and Lenora briefly looked up, said hi, and went right back to her book. I said something else, and she responded pretty coldly again and kept on reading. It was a beautiful day and I wanted to go outside and hang out, and I especially wanted to do so with Lenora because of the previous night, but she was definitely looking like things were now awkward because of the Couch Ordeal.

So I asked her again if she wanted to go out for a bit, and she said no. So I reached into my bag of tricks and pulled out my best moves, which I call my Mormon charm.

Number One, I asked her if she wanted to have an ice cream date with me. And that's what I said, "have an ice cream date" and not "get some ice cream." You know, because of how much Mormons love going on dates.

Number Two, I picked up one of the ferrets and put it in front of my face and spoke in a ferret voice and said something like "I think you should go on an ice cream date with Zach, I'm jealous because I don't get to." You know, because of how much Mormons love things that are absolutely retarded. In a cute sort of way.

Number Three, I played the song "Stop and Stare" on Nerina's computer because Lenora had said that it was "our song," and then I physically and literally danced to the song by myself. You know, because of how much Mormons love date-like things such as having an "our song" and dancing to it.

So I did these things-- and Numbers Two and Three each literally made a bit of me die inside-- but Lenora was cold as ice. So I went out and walked over to Sarah's place to hang out.

And this is where Sarah gave me one of the campus lessons that Tyrell hadn't told me: making out-- hell, even Mormon making out-- with someone you've only been on three dates with is "a skanky thing to do." (Incidentally, we're calling it three dates because, when I told Sarah the story, she considered the country dance the first date, the masquerade the second date, and the movie the third date.)

So that explains everything. For one, it explains why Amber was so excited about the thought of kissing Mika-- anything else would happen so far down the line it wasn't even worth thinking about. For two, it explains why Lenora was so cold to me in the morning-- it wasn't awkward, it was just Mormon regret!

Ah, Mormon regret. Only with Mormons does a kiss make you feel like a whore when you wake up the next morning and you're remembering what you did the night before. Everywhere else in the country, having sex with a friend is a bad idea because, afterwards, it makes things weird. In Provo, Utah, you kiss someone and things are weird. It's just not going to be the same anymore.

So Sarah told me that Lenora probably thought Mormon making out on with me on the couch was a skanky thing to do, and now all I could think of was Lenora doing the "Where are my panties?" skit on The Love Below in her head when I went into her room-- "He gon' think I'm a ho... Fuck that, I liked it." Anyway, I figured that I needed to make sure I called Lenora that afternoon to ask her again to hang out. You know, so she wouldn't think I had used her for kisses.

(Sarah also told me, a bit different than what Tyrell had said, that four dates with someone means you're serious and four months of dating means you're getting married. Just thought you should know that.)

After a while I left Sarah's and went to go hang out with random BYU students, since technically I had spent all my time up to that point hanging out with kids I met through or because of Tyrell. The following were the conversations I had with some students on campus.

Zach: Where do BYU kids hang out?
BYU student: Over at the bowling alley.
Zach: Well, I'm on my way there, want to come?
BYU student: No, that's OK.

(On my way to the bowling alley.)

Zach: Where do BYU kids hang out?
BYU student: Over at the mall.
Zach: Well, I'm on my way there, want to come?
BYU student: No, that's OK.

(On my way to the mall.)

Zach: Where do BYU kids hang out?
BYU student: Over at the Creamery.
Zach: Well, I'm on my way there, want to come?
BYU student: No, that's OK.

Finally I ended up getting where I was directed, which was the campus ice cream place. I went in, got myself a cup of roasted almond chocolate, and sat down at a table with two girls MaunaRay and Lindsey. They were a bit taken aback at first but were pretty nice. They said I was obviously from out of town because "people just don't approach other people here." But, like I said, they were friendly, and MaunaRay and I made plans to get lunch at Olive Garden the next day-- where Lindsey works-- and they invited me to their friend's birthday barbeque on Sunday night.

After I left I called Lenora and she said she would meet me on campus and we would walk home together. A good sign, since that was at least friendlier than the morning. I met her at the Hollywood House, which is essentially the "party house" in Provo. I knocked on the door to see if anyone was around, and when no one answered I left a note that basically said that I was on a college-town roadtrip and that I had heard that the Hollywood House threw the best parties in Provo. I said they should have a party the next day, told them to "impress me," and said that I would stop by the next afternoon for the answer. Real cool.

Then I walked back with Lenora and of course took a nap, and when I woke up Nerina told me that I had to stay inside because their sister-in-law was outside and would flip out and tell their brother if she knew I was staying there. I did as I had been instructed, but a short while later Nerina came back in and said that they had told the sister-in-law, Deborah, and that I could come out.

So I said hi to Deborah, and she was very nice and didn't seem like she was so put-off by my being there. Nerina and Deborah then went to a rodeo, and Lenora and I hung around because we didn't have tickets but were going to meet them at the rodeo party afterwards. Lenora seemed to have gotten over most of her Mormon regret from earlier but I still knew better than to even make a reference to the Couch Fiasco.

Nerina called us from the rodeo, though, and said that she had been wrong and the rodeo party wasn't until the next day. Lenora decided therefore to go to Salt Lake City to see the friend she had been supposed to see the day before, which seemed also like an easy way to avoid the Mormon regret entirely. Because the rodeo wasn't going to end for a while, I decided to have my first "night on the town" in Provo. Get excited.

The first place I went was a comedy club called Comedy Sportz. It had been highly recommeded to me but cost $10 to see the show. That seemed like an awful lot of money for an hour and a half of entertainment, so I decided instead to go back to the Creamery again.

Let me tell you, this place was pretty hopping. I got myself another cup of roasted almond chocolate and sat down with some kids. They were a little less taken aback, but I think that was only because there were about eight of them compared to two and thus probably thought I knew someone.

They were mostly incoming freshman and transfer students who had gotten to campus for the summer so they could get situated early, and they were pretty nice. Pretty Mormon, too. Two of them were singing Weird Al Yankovic's "Amish Paradise," and they got to the part where it says "I'll be laughing my head off when he's burning in hell." One of them said hell and the other one didn't, and the one who didn't turned to the other dude and said "hey, there's no need for that." Then someone else asked everyone how to spell "bananas." Now, that doesn't make him "pretty Mormon" because he can't spell-- it makes him "pretty Mormon" because he's obviously never listed to pop music on the radio in his entire life.

When the bar closed at midnight I headed, as you might have guessed, to "the favorite haunt of the sleepless and homeless." But on the way I passed the bell-tower, where I heard people talking. So I went over, found a bunch of kids sitting around, and sat down with them. As I do.

Now, my general impression of these kids after talking to them for a while was that they were the "cool kids" of BYU-- you know, the kids that would have been considered cool at a regular college, not just at BYU. For one, the girls that were there were pretty cute across the board. That's not a bad start. But the dudes, you could just tell that they were chilling in every sense of the word. I wish I could describe it better, but I didn't write down any quotes and anyway spent most of the time talking to a rapt audience. But they were funny and offered me a s'more, which had been sitting in aluminum foil on a spot light, and so the chocolate was kinda melted but that was the extant of it. And right before I left one of the dudes-- who said his name was "Todd, T-O-Double-D"-- invited me to their ward's "barbeque dance party" the next afternoon. Well, how on earth could I pass that up?

So I finally made my way to Denny's. Well, let me tell you, on a Friday night in Provo there is absolutely no place to be but Denny's. There literally wasn't a single open table in the place. It was unbelievable. So I picked the first table to the left of the door and sat down with two dudes and three girls.

Like the kids at the bell-tower, these kids were all in the same ward-- like I said, you don't go too far out to extend your social scene. They were pretty cool, albeit not quite at the level of T-O-Double-D, and this one dude Dan was an especially good dude. He told me that he was hitch-hiking to Oregon in a few weeks and was glad to hear about someone having success doing it now. He also bought me an omelette-- the menu said it was the ULTIMATE omelette-- and right before we left, wouldn't you know, he invited me to his wards "barbeque dance party" the next evening. Well, how on earth could I pass that up?

So that night I was back to being homeless for the first time since I had met Tyrell. Although Nerina said I could still crash at her place, the more I thought about it, it seemed like Deborah being OK with my crashing there was enough, and that pushing it by actually crashing there along with her might be tempting fate. So I called up Drew, Sarah's brother, who I had met at Sarah's place that afternoon.

Drew said I could come over to his friend's place, and Dan dropped me off-- with a cute girl in barely any dress standing outside as the landmark. So it'll be one of those nights...

As it turned out, Drew, the girl Caitlin, and their friend Kyle were already pretty drunk. I had a few beers, then, and they kept drinking, and that was basically what the night consisted of. Caitlin was pretty into me, and she was cute, but her sobriety when I met her was already just about the lowest it could have been for me to do anything with her, so it didn't take long for her to be officially "too drunk."

So Caitlin moved on to Drew, and they hooked up in the bathroom while Kyle and I were sitting on the couch in the living room, and it was like I was back at any other college in any other state. We left pretty soon after that and I crashed at Drew's apartment.

So the point of tonight: 1) I had a killer-ass "BYU Friday night" hanging out at the bell-tower and Denny's, 2) I had a fun "any other college in any other state Friday night" at Drew's friend's place. Don't call me a convert yet, but one of those certainly sounds a like a better time than the other.

26 June 2008: Provo, Utah

The Provo Challenge: Day Two

Although we went to bed at around 5:00 in the morning, we were up four hours later to bring Taz breakfast. Suffice it to say, I wasn't exactly thrilled by this, but Lenora and Nerina absolutely insisted that we do so because they had said they would. So, well, we did. And then back to bed for a couple more hours.

When I woke up, though, I was pleased to see that Lenora had decided to stick around for the day instead of going to visit her friend in Salt Lake City. Good news since, obviously, two twins are better than one.

We went out to this place called Kneaders and Nerina bought lunch for everyone, and we had a lovely picnic outside. (It was also at around this point that I realized we had absolutely forgotten to go to a class in the morning. Not that anyone was too disappointed.)

After lunch we went to the local dollar theater to see "Horton Hears a Who," where-- in the spirit of giving-- Lenora bought everyone's ticket. It was Nerina's 6th time seeing it, Lenora's 4th, and Amber's 2nd. Now, I enjoyed the movie-- I thought it was pretty funny-- but if Jesus came to me in a dream and told me every secret of the world and how to achieve an immortal state, and if I had filmed the dream, I would still only watch it four times, tops. I don't know, maybe Mormon's just really love Dr. Seuss.

After the movie it was time to get ready for the main event of the evening: the masquerade. Nerina had told me about it the day before and asked if I wanted to go, and of course I did. Nerina had described it as "the annual masquerade," so I thought it would be huge-- or, at least, closer to a typical "Mormon dance" than the country dance had been. So after the movie we went to a thrift store and I picked up a green suit and blue sunglasses, Lenora got what I would say made her a purple gypsie and Nerina got what I would say made her a pink princess.

With our new gear in tow we went home and took another little nap, and then we headed to the masquerade. It was supposedly being held in a castle in the mountains and, like I said, it was the "annual" masquerade. I was pretty pumped.

Well, it certainly was held in a castle in the mountains. And I suppose it was indeed an annual masquerade, but it was the annual masquerade put on by people from one particular hometown. There were only about 35 people there at the high point, so it wasn't huge, but as I had hoped it was much closer to a "Mormon dance."

So first for the masqueradey part, everyone was in costume. Most of the girls were wearing gowns, most of the dudes were wearing black capes, and nearly everyone was wearing a mask. I mean, it was pretty clear that just about everyone had put more work into it than a trip to a thrift store two hours prior, and some of the costumes were pretty cool-- although some were, well, stupid. My favorite was this dude who came in a ducky suit with goggles as his mask.

So that was the scene. Most of the people knew each other from their hometown, as was the point of the masquerade, so most of the older people were standing around in groups talking.

As for the music, let me put it this way: the first three songs were "You Spin Me Round," "Come on Ride the Train," and "Love Shack." Dance music for white boys it most certainly was. Unfortunately, as I said, most of the college-aged people-- except for me and the twins, who didn't know anyone-- were just standing around talking.

Most, that is, except for a group of church girls who were doing their little church dance moves-- what I mean is, they were bopping up and down and jumping around in circles. Dance music for white chicks, if you will.

But I'll tell you, it looked pretty fun. And I figured I could probably do the bop-jump dance move prett well. Lenora and Nerina were looking pretty bored, and I tried to get them to dance, but they were strongly against the idea. So I said "peace, suckas" and went and bop-jumped with the church girls. Boy was I a hit.

At this point I should probably mention the drama that was beginning to unfold. So, at the beginning Nerina was incredibly excited by my adventures and really wanted me to hang out and crash at their place, while Lenora was pretty skeptical right off the bat and only began to warm up to me as the country dance went on. But I had sat next to Lenora at the movie and was spending a lot of time with her at the masquerade.

During the times when I was hanging out with Lenora off to the side or I would make a joke about something between us, she would say she didn't want Nerina to be jealous. But then when Lenora finally went out onto the dance floor, Nerina and I stayed behind because we were talking, and Lenora was pretty offended. Keep in mind also that, although both twins were cute, Lenora had that one extra what-have-you that put her over the top.

I'll tell you, the fact that they were twins would have made this any dude's fantasy. But the fact that they're Mormons and can't have sex until marriage would have made that a moot point. But the fact that they're Mormons and I could theoretically marry both literally almost made me become Mormon, too. My head was hurting from all this.

Anyway, the twins started dancing too after a while, and it was pretty fun, but it began to get old quick. Add to it that I was making an effort to go off alternatingly with each twin so that neither one would get offended, and I was just about done with the whole thing.

The twins were just about ready to go to, but Amber-- who had been with us at the movie and at the dance the whole time-- was talking to her friends still, since she was from the hometown that was putting on the masquerade, and she refused to leave. I was talking to the twins in a different part of the castle-- one of the few times of the dance that all three of us were together-- when someone told us we had to go back to the dance area because "the juggling and fire-blowing is about to begin."

I'm not making this up. The people who put on the masquerade literally made us sit there and watch these dudes juggle and blow fire. It was all the girls could do to stop me from taking the fire and lighting myself with it, just so the rest of my night would be less painful nursing burns in a hospital than having to watch this.

And still Amber refused to leave. And refused to let us walk home. It was unbelievable. So I kept bop-jumping and trying to make the thing fun, and the twins were just about dead but they were being pretty good sports about it, and finally Amber was ready to leave. But, to be perfectly honest, I'm glad we stayed if for nothing else than to see the church girls do the "Soldier Boy" dance-- I should say, their version of the "Soldier Boy" dance. Boy was I tempted to ask them if they knew what it meant to superman that ho. And I would have liked to know the single one of them that invariably would have.

So that was my Mormon masquerade experience and, all things considered, it was a pretty good time. On the ride home I asked the twins if this was what most of the dances in Provo were like, and they said yes with the exception of the bi-weekly Friday dance at the water park Seven Peaks. But they said that those dances were disgusting. When I asked why, they said "because there's too much dancing while touching." I'm sorry, what? "You know, when you're dancing and touching the person you're dancing with." Oh yes, dancing while touching. Of course. "Yeah, you practically get pregnant if you go to the Seven Peaks dance." Wow! Now that's my kind of dance.

On the way home we decided to stop by Macey's again to get a movie and some snacks. Taz was there, he was stoked to see me, we all talked for a bit, and Lenora said that we would pick him up at 2:00 when his shift was over to come watch the movie with us. The dude was practically our best friend at this point. It's funny how these things work out.

And so we left with Doritos, cheddar Ruffles, and "One Missed Call."

Back at the house Amber was getting ready to leave and she was talking about the singer Mika and saying how hot she thinks he is. Lenora was saying that he wasn't really anything special, and Amber expanded on her feelings and bursted out "oh, I'd just like to grab him and kiss him real hard." That seemed a bit risque to me, especially if he didn't hold her afterwards, but this is important for the context of the rest of the night. This Mormon's wildest fantasy with this dude is to "kiss him real hard." This was literally the pinnacle of sexual lust for her.

So we watched the movie, Nerina on the floor and me and Lenora on the couch. We first put in "The Eye," because we had said we would wait to watch the other movie with Taz, but at 1:55 Nerina was asleep on the floor and Lenora and I decided we didn't really feel like walking all the way back to Macey's. I texted Taz and asked if we could just hang out the next day instead, and he said sure. So with about 20 minutes left in "The Eye," we took it out and put in "One Missed Call." I'm not exactly sure why we did this, but I guess now I'll never know why Jessica Alba kept seeing fire and the number 116. I've had trouble sleeping because of this.

So now we're watching the new movie and Nerina is sleeping on the floor, and Lenora is cuddling up to me. Here's where things get good. And here's where I should brush you up on the day.

Basically, during the day Lenora and I implemented what I would call Mormon flirtation. This is the same as regular flirtation, but you have to make everything seem like an accident. For instance, the twins brought their ferrets to the movie theater-- don't ask me, I thought it was pretty weird, too-- and Lenora was holding one of them in her bag. Towards the end of the movie, the ferret was in her lap and I started petting it. Oops, my hand accidentally brushed against hers. Bam, Mormon flirtation. At the masquerade Lenora would tell me to dance with her sister or Amber and then almost immediately say that we should step outside for a bit. Oops, we accidentally ended up being together most of the time. Bam, Mormon flirtation.

So that's what we were dealing with in the events leading up to "One Missed Call"-- Mormon flirtation. Now, the companion to Mormon flirtation is another little phenomenon that I would like to call Mormon foreplay. With Mormon foreplay-- like with other kinds of foreplay-- what you get is the good stuff leading up to the better stuff.

The first step of Mormon foreplay is the cuddle move. Next up, naturally, comes a little teasing. A brush of the elbow or a brush of the fingers is the nipple-nibble of Mormon foreplay. After a little while you might get a hand-hold or, if you've been really good, an elbow-hold. Then you move in for a kiss on the forehead, and when you follow that up with a kiss on the cheek it's the oral sex of Mormon foreplay-- damn, now you're ready to go.

And so that's how it happened, and then we went all the way and made out on the couch. Actually, I take that back. There's not really a sufficient term between "peck" and "make out," so I guess the obvious choice would be Mormon make out. And that's what we did, we Mormon made out. Three times, even, and for about 10 seconds each time. Which is half a minute of Mormon making out. Hot.

And then the movie ended and I went off to bed to dream the same sweet dreams that Joseph Smith must have dreamt over a century before me. And as I was leaving I stepped DIRECTLY on an unopened bag of Doritos and Nerina screamed and woke up. It was either perfect comedic timing or terrible regular timing. You decide.