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Sunday, February 3, 2013

Night of the Living Swedes

I have just gotten through a harrowing ordeal. My psychiatrist says that telling the story may help, so here it goes: My dad has decided to make a little home office in one of the rooms of our house, and he wants to use the desk in my room. But my ancient computer (HAL) sits on it, so we couldn't move it. And when you're in need of home furnishing, you know where to go...



IKEA. The most evil place on Earth. The place that destroys your soul with the heat of a thousand suns. The hellish nightmare where dreams go to die. The abomination where you can buy all your affordable Swedish crap. And the #1 cause of allen wrench-related carpal tunnel syndrome in the US.











      

You know who else had 'solutions'? Hitler.

A quick note: I haven't made a blog post that has more than one picture for almost six months, but this is a special occasion. Anyway, we stepped through the iron gates of this living nightmare and saw nothing but pain. Babies screaming as the florescent lighting killed their brain waves. Unsuspecting college students sitting, whispering to themselves repeatedly. This was truly hell on Earth.


As we walked through the final scene from Raiders of the Lost Ark, our knees began to atrophy. We stumbled and plodded through the obstacle courses, waiting-- praying-- for sweet, sweet death to come. We found an acceptable desk, and loaded it onto our cart. But the wheels were bent from overuse, and it was impossible to steer. After finally making it through the rows and rows of RamivÃ¥k Slååkøvs, we found ourselves in an enormous Swedish meatball storage facility. Navigating through it, we (at long last) reached the checkout line-- but we had lost dad on the way.











     


What is this? A contact lens for a giant squid?

I bravely dove back into the crowd as my father was pulled away by the tide of braindead parents and stuck-up hipsters. I grabbed him, and we charged through the horde back to safety. And on the way, we were able to nab a $70 sit-'n-spin. Awesome.










     

Me, after surviving the ordeal.

So, we piled into the checkout line and got out of there as fast as we could. Now all we have to do is... forget. And the most difficult part isn't even over yet-- we still have to assemble the s**t!

Bye!

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