How to Remain Healthy:
Lately, people have been trying Atkins, a diet that says, essentially:
1. Remember how your mother always said the best way to lose weight is 
to eat less, excercise more and eat your veggies? Forget everything 
your mother said.
2. Don't avoid eating fat, just avoid eating stuff that stops you from 
burning fat. Bread is a good example of this. 
3. People accumulate fat by leading a sedentary life: browsing web 
pages, sitting in cars, reading books.
4. Read my book.
Another popular diet takes a whole different approach, namely:
1. Remember how your mother always said the best way to lose weight is 
to eat less, excercise more and eat your veggies? Forget everything 
your mother said.
2. Don't avoid eating fat, just eat less, excercise more, and eat your 
veggies.
3. People accumulate fat by leading a sedentary life: browsing web 
pages, sitting in cars, reading books.
4. Read my book.
The Clay Sails diet plan involves yet a third approach:
1. Get your wife/husband to nag you mercilessly about every calorie you 
 eat.
2. Excercise more. Especially common sense when selecting books to 
read. 
3. Never ever ever believe the hype surrounding a fad diet. (Historical 
perspective, for the record: all fad diets appear to have "real 
scientifically proven" results. This is not a new phenomenon.) 
4. Eat your veggies.
5. (This is the most important one) buy my 7781 page "How-to lose 
weight by using this Book". If you carry it with you and consult it 
before every meal, you are virtually guaranteed to lose weight. 
But I am not here to promote my new, as of yet untested, weight loss 
plan. Hell, I am lunching on frosted donuts as I write.
I am here to tell you that yesterday I did my general health a favor by 
going to the doctor. Now, for those of you who do not know me, I am not 
going to browbeat you with statistics about how when a man gets to a 
certain age he requires a regular finger up the ass to ensure that he 
will be able to sustain a long and healthy life. First of all, I am not 
at that "certain age" yet (but will be at around 114), and secondly, I 
would prefer short, sick life to getting an annual meathook in the 
colon by a stranger who isn't even decent enough to wear pasties and 
call me "hon".  (NOte: if your doctor is a fat, hairy man, this image 
might cause you consternation...to say nothing of constipation. But best just to move on.)  Fortuantely, all 
my doctor needed to do was stare at my tongue and root around my ear 
for missing car keys. This ordeal was enough to justify the 
considerable trouble I had gone through to get to the doctor's office. 
Allow me to elaborate.
It has been shitty cold, icy and slushy lately. This woeful weather is 
supposedly anomalous in a climate that, locals *swear* is "mild". Yeah. 
Mild like Liza Minelli after half a bottle of pills and a 5th of 
scotch. "Thank god we don't live in Minnesota, they say". Chuckle 
chuckle. Yeah, sure. Whatever. You don't see me trying to get a spread 
in St. Paul now, do you?
(bastards)
At least in Minnesota when a body of water un-freezes it becomes a 
lake. Here in Maryland when a lake melts, it becomes...a parking 
lot...a highway...and, (if you're like me), the front seat of your 
leaky car.
Speaking of which -- the car is partly responsible for my health-minded 
adventure yesterday afternoon. Remember how I've been bitching lately 
about how expensive that little beast has become? $1000 here, $600 
there. Something like $2500 in the past 8 months. Remember? What, you 
can't keep my rants straight? YOu only remember me bitching about the 
thousands I've spent recently on dental bills ($5500 in the past 2 
months, no joke, including another $1500 yesterday *after* I went to 
the doctor...and not including the wisdom teeth he said I now need 
removed...which my wife assures me is ok because the less teeth I have 
the less cavities I will have to get filled in the future). But back to 
my car. My precious little 1995 Ford Escort. Turqoise. Grandma's last 
set of wheels, (may she RIP). A thing that has gotten a new alternator, 
a new radiator, a new set of tires, new brakes, new rotors and a bunch 
of other new stuff in the past year.
Well, two weeks ago the blower motor (i.e. the heater) broke. It just 
went kaput. *Pfft*. Nothing. Now it gives off no heat except for the 
occasional disdainful gasp of warmth that works its way naturally 
through the ventillation system when I'm going high speeds. Just a fuse 
perhaps, you ask? No. I wish. I replaced the proper fuse to no avail. 
Probably that means its the heater core itself -- the second most 
expensive repair after the transmission. Needless to say, I ignored it. 
Who needs a heater? I need a heater about as much as I need a kick in 
my fancy new teeth. Besides, when its 11 degrees outside, I can pat 
myself on the back that I wasn't foolish enough to acquire my frostbite 
in a place with a *really* cold climate (like Minnesota).
So the heater broke and I've been cold. Big deal. Absent a heater, I am 
cold in my car. So what. So what? Haven't you been watching the news?
There's been an ice storm the past two days. For those of you 
unfamiliar with the concept (I'm talking mainly to the Californians 
here), an ice storm is a bit like electing a movie star for governor 
except it comes with a massive quantity of hard-packed ice, has no 
star-appeal whatsoever, and cannot possibly making your state the 
laughingstock of even bingo addicts in Ohio. In fact, when word gets 
out that someone somewhere is suffering from an ice storm, people stop 
laughing altogether. Everyone from the Carolinas to Canada engages in 
one bit, collective gulp, causing tornados to form in Brazil that will 
eventually result in small small pacific islands being devoured by 
hordes of wayward butterflies.
So...cold in ice storm. You'll grant me that. Again, so what?
Well, cold is unhealthy for one and the whole point of this discussion 
is to demonstrate that I was healthy yesterday because I went to get a (3 
year out of date) annual physical. But absent a heater, a car has one 
other problem: it has no front defroster. Every breath I exhaled, every 
wisp of steam from a life-sustaining warm beverage (whose succor can 
combat the effects of having my own personal glacier on the passenger 
seat floor), will materialize on the windshield in the form of opaque 
mist. 
Which led me to a catch-22: if I rolled up the windows to build up 
(body) heat on the inside, steam would form that would obscure all 
vision and might not cut the ice anyway. If I left the window down, the 
inside of the car would be so cold that every single droplet of frozen 
rain would remain present and frozen on the outside of the window. This 
is exactly what happened. The instant I got onto the freeway, a 
carapace of ice formed on my windscreen thicker than that which formed 
on Hillary Clinton's thighs the instant Matt Drudge outed Monica to the 
world.      
Yet I still had 20 miles to go, and 40 minutes get there, otherwise I'd 
miss an appointment I'd waited four months to get and take a day off of 
work to go to. If I missed it, how would I ever find out if I was 
healthy or not? 
Reasoning thus, I did what any health conscious individual would do: I 
sped down the road hell-bent for leather, leaning out the window, 
scraping ice on the outside as I drove, blasting music to create 
vibrations strong enough to loosen the smaller bits of ice. I guzzled 
tepid coffee to sustain my inner strength, and prayed that the misty 
blob hovering before my eyes was not either:
a) the onset of frostbite on my iris or
b) a snow plow behind a screen of mist, glass, and ice 
I paused at every stoplight to scrape (effecting an odd sort of 
"chinese fire drill" in which I exchanged places with myself).
Eventually I made it to the doctor's and found out that despite my 
stressful travail, lo! I am perfectly healthy.
I even think I lost some weight in the process.