Humor by Dave Barry
Winter's here, and you feel lousy: You're coughing and sneezing; your muscles ache; your nose is an active mucus volcano. These symptoms--so familiar at this time of year--can mean only one thing: Tiny fanged snails are eating your brain.
No, seriously, brain snails are involved only about 35 percent of the time. More likely what you have is a cold or flu. (The word "flu" is short for "the flu.") Colds and flus have plagued humanity for millions of years, but in primitive times, nobody knew what caused them, because everybody was stupid. Then, in the 17th Century, scientists began to suspect that colds were caused by a small creature called a "germ" living inside human nasal passages. But they never found it, although they searched relentlessly, using a painful procedure that involved a feared instrument called the "nostril torch."
The big breakthrough came in the 1930s, when scientists invented a device called the electron microscope. At least they claimed they invented it. Laypersons would come around to look at it, and they'd say, "Where's the electron microscope?" And the scientists would roll their eyes and say: "You can't SEE it, for heaven's sake! It's made of electrons!" And the laypersons, out of pure embarrassment, would give the scientists funding. (This is also how scientists paid for the "radio telescope.")
Using their electron microscope, scientists discovered that colds and flus are caused by "viruses," which are invisible organisms that originate, via a process that biologists call "spontaneous combustion," on doorknobs and action figures. From there they travel into a human body, where they reproduce via a process that biologists call "having sex." Afterward, they smoke tiny cigarettes (this is what causes fever) and then exit the human body by causing it to either sneeze or blow its nose, a process that biologists call "playing the snot trombone."
So we know how cold and flu viruses operate; what we don't know is how to kill them. After trying many unsuccessful methods, including tiny hammers, medical researchers determined that the only sure way to kill a virus is to heat it to 7,000 degrees. This led to an experimental cold-and-flu treatment known as the "microwave sauna," which produced a 100 percent cure rate but had the unwanted side effect of turning the patients into human corn dogs.
But that doesn't mean there's no hope for cold and flu sufferers. Go to any drugstore or supermarket, and you'll find a vast array of cold and flu products that, for your safety, you must stab open with a knife.
Clinical studies show that, if you take these products as recommended, your cold will be gone in two to three weeks; whereas if you DON'T take these products, your cold could linger for as long as two, or even three weeks.
But your best plan is to not get a cold or flu in the first place. According to the
1. Drink plenty of fluids ("fluids" is the medical term for "beer").
2. Remove all doorknobs from your home and office.
3. If you have children--especially small children who attend preschool with other small children--ship them to New Zealand.
Also, just to be safe, you should get a snail shot.
This column was originally published November 16, 2003.
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