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Thursday, October 26, 2006

Nee Sandman?

All we read or get to nowadays is stories of how the kids just ain't right. And that some one's getting a face transplant. The last one got rejected on account of ugliness I think. It's interesting how medical research is funded. The first knee prosthesis released over a decade ago were simple hinge joints. In other words, they moved only in one plane and around a single axis. And cost the usual GDP of a tin pot little African country. The rich old men who could afford to both play golf and get their knees replaced realised that post getting enough metal in them to set of detectors in all airports except the ones in Bangalore, Delhi and Hyderabad, they couldn't play golf anymore. Not that golf is a game that requires one to be in the pink of health and prime of one's fitness but the issue here is simple - the swing, in golf, to be completed perfectly, requires a small amount of rotation in the joint. Now, the knee is easily one of the most complex joints in the body and though primarily a hinge, it does allow enough rotation to make Woods a Tiger on the fairway. It is also historically an extremely important joint and has been immortalised in the Tamil greeting "nee eppudi irruke". Digression apart, rich old men fuelled their rich old money into material research to give rise to this.

Miracle of modern engineering. And that's why as Chris Rock says we'll never find a cure for AIDS. Because then drug companies will go out of business. Then maybe they'll bring small pox back.
That apart been reading two incredibly creative and entertaining comic series - Fables and Sandman. More on them later. But this is a legend I read - every night as we tuck ourselves into bed, the Lord of Dreams comes along and sprinkles sand in our eyes. This makes us sleep (duh!) and the sand is what makes us dream. This also is why we wake up with a gritty, sandy feeling in our eyes.
So I did wake up with something that felt like sand all over my face for a long time. Maybe I need to start earlier. Circa 1980 when teak was actually available. So then the Provider decided to get himself some teak furniture that would look good and outlast us all. And in the midst of all the wood work were two beds. With proportions that required a custom built mattress (80"x30" - we were a tall thin race apparently). The headboards were out of a single piece of teak some three feet across, worth the GDP of a TPLAC (tin pot little...) in present day. And the years rolled on with little or no change outside of us becoming a tall not so thin race and the Provider's taste in wood changing. Albeit slowly but surely.
Then one fine shopping expedition a gargantuan bed with an intricately carved head board but with more acceptable proportions was procured and yours truly inherited the teak. The new bed though wonderfully carved is a dust magnet and if one is allergic the night is spent with the Sandman battling the Dust bunny. But that's not the story, is it? So the teak device was my place of somnolence for many a moon till I realised that I was waking up with the mother of all back aches every morning. And not because I was sleeping funny. Or anything. Investigation revealed that though the cool headboard was teak, the bed itself was plywood (incidentally invented by Alfred Nobel's dad). And teak lasts twenty years. Plywood on the other hand twists and turns with time and warps like the gravitational field of a small star.
The result is a morning-after back ache. The cure is to take the mattress and use it to soften the floor and enjoy a restful night or two. That's when the sandman came along with me waking to a faceful of dust. The legend we began to believe and dreams were in technicolour.
Till it all fell apart. The dreams, the legend and my mattress which was bought circa 1980. Made to order to fit the bed. It says Dunlop on top, like the tyre and over twenty years the rubbers becomes mud. Like the book says, "... and dust ye shall be." Looks like the folks got conned and got an adult rated mattress.
So it's now the not so soft floor. But I'll live. Looking for someone interested in buying the carved monster so that's one less piece of junk I have to deal with.

But on an aside on tyres, what do you do with 365 used condoms? Melt them down and make a tyre. Call it Goodyear.