5 Rules.

There are a few rules that I think should and can be implemented into society… at least in my perfect world. I should probably note that I don’t think this will ever happen, it’s just what I want.

Rule #1: There must be elevator entertainment. Human has never been so uncomfortable than when we’re standing in an elevator. I hate the long-standing awkward silence, and the elevator is a test of how you deal with these moments. Do you look down at the ground? Stare at the elevator’s numbers changing? Stare at the doors? I have long thought that every elevator has a camera and it’s just some big science experiment.

If we can somehow get something that everyone can do while in there, like a quick puzzle or trivia I think the world would be a happier place.

Rule #2: Root Beer at all meals. When you go out to eat and a server asks if you’d like water I think the question should be: “Would you like water and a Root Beer?” Or “Would you just like Root Beer?” I don’t think I can properly explain the underrated value of Root Beet. Sometimes I wonder if it’s so great because it’s not as main-stream as Pepsi or Coke.

Rule #3No walking slow in a parking garage. “YO! Slow fing walker, get out of my way because you’re in the middle of the driving area!” Not sure if it’s a LA thing or what, but people who take their sweet time and hold up traffic in a parking garage should be banned from parking. The only possible solve (without running someone over) is to implement a power walk rule in every and all garage. Move fast or get arrested… okay not arrested… but something.

Rule #4: When you say your age you say it in days and not years. Doesn’t it just sound cooler and as though you live longer to place a bigger number here? “How old are you?”

“I’m 25.”

Or –

“I’m 9,125.”

Sure, it will eventually sound common day and lose its appeal over time but at least you can feel like Yoda for just a moment. I want to feel that I’m so old I actually forget the days.

Rule #5: Notes on poorly parked cars. Imagine if you see that car that’s parked on an angle occupying 2 spots for no reason. Now imagine if you had a note that said “I messed with your car and you’ll never know what I did” even though you did nothing. I think that note alone would scare someone into submission and start a trend of properly parked cars. Even if you’re not parked like a complete idiot but are doing something that messes with the flow, you should still get a note on your car.

I even think that new cars should come with a set of notes just out of courtesy. I don’t think people realize what bad parkers do to the common man’s psyche. Or is it just me?

I’ll stop at 5 … it’s just a start, but it’s something.

The Importance of Change

Nope, not talking about President Barack Obama and his planned change in late 2008. I’m talking about the adjustment from your normalcy to what you will know as normal. Changes come in all shapes and sizes, it can be tangible or it can be a thought, but the actual movement that forces you to live and think differently is completely necessary.

Think about the times in your life, whether you had a monumental break-up, a move, a incident, a fight, a injury, a decision. Now think about how it changed your normal day, now think about how it changed you. How it changed you is all that really matters, because now it adjusts how you walk through everyday of your life. Why is this so important? Well, I think it is quite obvious. It forces you to make decisions and view everyday differently. Change allows growth.

The funny thing about change is that you don’t always know you need it, and it can creep up on you in a second. It seems scary and unsettling at times, but eventually we all figure out how to deal with it - That figuring out process is the key, that is what allows us to gain and maintain knowledge and depth.

Change is not always easy, but it’s completely important. Change is essentially living, and I think we all need a few moments where we change what we know, and begin to know something new, whether it’s a person or a location.

I think the quicker we accept that change is inevitable and we accept the fact that what you currently know now is not going to be everything you know tomorrow, the better life becomes.

Scooter Rules

There are many things I know and few things I am certain of, one of my certainties is one specific thing. If you ride a scooter or motorcycle: You can’t hold grudges. Grudges on the road that is. I am certain the car will win most of the time. The car can go over any terrain and if you start attacking a car mid drive who knows what could happen.