Dear Dumb Diary Year Two #2: The Super-Nice Are Super-Annoying

Home > Other > Dear Dumb Diary Year Two #2: The Super-Nice Are Super-Annoying > Page 1
Dear Dumb Diary Year Two #2: The Super-Nice Are Super-Annoying Page 1

by Jim Benton




  From New York Times bestselling author Jim Benton

  The Super-Nice Are

  Super-Annoying

  Think you can handle

  Jamie Kelly’s FIrst year of diaries?

  #1 Let’s pretend this never happened

  #2 My pants are haunted!

  #3 Am I the Princess or the Frog?

  #4 never do anything, ever

  #5 can adults become human?

  #6 the problem with here is that it's where i'm from

  #7 Never Underestimate your dumbness

  #8 It’s Not My Fault I Know Everything

  #9 That’s What Friends Aren't For

  #10 The worst things in life are also free

  #11 Okay, So Maybe I Do Have Superpowers

  #12 Me! (Just Like You, Only Better)

  And don’t miss year two!

  Year Two #1: School. Hasn’t This Gone On Long Enough?

  Year Two #2: The Super-nice Are Super-annoying

  Year Two #3: Nobody's Perfect. I'm as Close As It Gets.

  De

  a

  r Dum

  b

  Diary,

  The Super-Nice Are

  Super-Annoying

  BY JAMIE KELLY

  SCHOLASTIC INC.

  Jim Benton’s Tales from Mackerel Middle School

  Y

  EAR

  TWO

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright

  Conventions. No part of this publication may be reproduced, transmitted,

  downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into

  any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means,

  whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter invented, without

  the express written permission of the publisher. For information regarding

  permission, write to Scholastic Inc., Attention: Permissions Department, 557

  Broadway, New York, NY 10012.

  e-ISBN 978-0-545-58655-9

  Copyright © 2012 by Jim Benton

  All rights reserved. Published by Scholastic Inc.

  scholastic and associated logos are trademarks

  and/or registered trademarks of Scholastic Inc.

  dear dumb diary is a registered trademark of Jim Benton.

  First printing, June 2012

  For my family, who are always

  paradigms of good manners

  and junk.

  Special thanks to the delicate and

  well-mannered creatures of grace at

  Scholastic: Shannon Penney, Anna Bloom,

  Jackie Hornberger, and Yaffa Jaskoll.

  And thanks to Kristen LeClerc for her

  clean, polite assistance.

  Dear Whoever Is Reading My Dumb Diary,

  Do you have any idea how RUDE you look,

  with your nose in somebody else’s diary? What

  do you think we’ll think of you and your nose

  now? We certainly won’t ever invite you to smell

  something polite, like a bouquet of roses or an

  opera.

  Honestly, how do you think that appears to

  others? Do you think that’s

  nice? (And, hey,

  sit up straight.)

  And whatever you do, don’t get all super-

  apologetic about it now, because we find that

  pretty annoying as well.

  Politeness Experts worldwide agree

  that reading somebody’s diary isn’t just like

  chewing with your mouth open, it’s like chewing

  with your mouth open in your underpants with

  your bare feet in the soup bowl and a finger

  up your nose, and what you’re chewing is a piece

  of raw chicken wrapped up in an old piece of

  notebook paper on which is written a disgusting

  joke in very bad handwriting.

  Signed,

  P.S. I know you should never call people

  names like “gross” or “disgusting” or “stupid,”

  but I didn’t call them anything. I

  wrote it.

  And if my parents punish me for it, I will know

  that they have read my diary, which would be

  inexcusably impolite.

  Sunday 01

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  You probably don’t believe that a nostril can

  do you harm. You’re wrong about that.

  My favorite show of all time, in addition to my

  other favorite shows of all time, is on TV right now.

  But I’m up in my room, unable to watch it because

  of a nostril.

  I know what you’re thinking, Dumb Diary.

  You’re thinking, Jamie, the nostrils are some of the

  least destructive of the head holes.

  Sure, the mouth is the most destructive head

  hole by far, with its ability to both bite and whistle

  songs badly, but nostrils are hazardous in ways you

  may not be able to imagine.

  Also, Dumb Diary, you’re probably thinking

  something about how nice my eyes look tonight.

  Kisses!

  Oh, Dumb Diary, you have SO much to learn

  about nostrils. You know a lot about eyes and how

  nice they can look, but you’d get a C in nostrils.

  And since we’re discussing the subject of

  getting something in nostrils, let me tell you about

  Friday. I’ll tell you in the least horrible way I can:

  At lunch, Pinsetti laughed until a spaghetti

  noodle came out his nose. It just dangled

  there for a moment, and it was incredibly disgusting,

  but I also found myself staring at it, imagining for

  a moment that maybe a mouse was preparing to

  descend a tiny rope.

  Isabella, who has mean older brothers and

  therefore no longer reacts to the brain chemical

  that causes disgust to occur, reached over, slowly

  drew the entire spaghetti noodle out of Pinsetti’s

  nostril, and laid it gently on the back of my

  unsuspecting hand.

  Two thoughts race through your head

  at a moment like this. The first one is:

  EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEWWWWWWWW!

  While it’s true that the pasta entered

  Pinsetti’s mouth as spaghetti, and spaghetti —

  even cafeteria spaghetti — is one of my all-time

  favorite foods, once an object exits through a

  nostril, it is transformed into booger. This is just

  science, plain and simple. It works for anything. Put

  a raisin into your nose for even one second, then

  pull it back out, and it becomes booger.

  Look, if you don’t believe me, why don’t you

  go ahead and eat that raisin?

  You won’t: It’s booger now.

  The second thought that goes through your

  head at a moment like this is: I bet I can fly upward

  and backward, away from this spaghetti noodle,

  just by flapping my arms in a panic.

  Nobody can really fly, of course, but that

  won’t stop you from trying. All that you’ll really do

  is shoot backward out of your chair hard enough to

  crash into the cafeteria monitor, Miss Bruntford.

&
nbsp; This will send her toppling over, causing her to

  make the sound of a meteor hitting the Earth, if the

  meteor was made out of an enormous mass of very

  wet ham.

  I’m not saying any of this was her fault, but

  let’s face it: She is expecting a little much from

  those tiny heels she wears. It’s like trying to balance

  a bowling ball on a pair of chopsticks.

  Anyway, everything after that is kind of a

  blur. I think I spent the rest of lunch hour scrubbing

  Pinsetti’s nose residue off my hand.

  Of course, Dad made spaghetti for dinner

  tonight, which normally would be a huge relief,

  because ANYTHING OTHER THAN MOM’S

  COOKING is one of my favorite foods. But even

  though I really wanted to eat it, I couldn’t.

  Because now, for me, spaghetti isn’t spaghetti

  anymore. Now spaghetti is a product of Pinsetti’s

  nostril.

  We got into an argument about dinner, and

  I got sent to my room. I may have referred to the

  meal as booger without explaining what happened

  on Friday, and I may have screamed it, and I may

  have shoved the plate away from me, and I may have

  screamed it a few more times.

  So I’m missing my TV show. I blame Pinsetti’s

  nostril, and somehow I feel that Isabella may have

  to share some of the blame as well.

  Monday 02

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  I have mostly all new teachers this year. This

  is because teachers only learn enough to teach up

  to a certain level. See, third-grade math teachers

  can’t even do fourth-grade math. They only learn

  it up to a third-grade level, so that’s what they

  teach, and that’s why you have to keep getting

  new teachers.

  Think about it: Kindergarten teachers

  probably can’t even go the bathroom by themselves.

  My new social studies teacher is Mr. Smith. I

  know that sounds like a fake name, but if you had

  to choose a fake name, would you choose Smith?

  Everybody would know it was a fake. It’s so obvious

  that Smith is a fake name that the people who

  say that their name is Smith are the only ones that

  are, for sure, telling the truth.

  Besides, we don’t have any reason to believe

  he’s using a fake name.

  Except that he’s wearing a wig.

  Don’t look at it. Don’t look at it.

  When a man wears a wig, it’s customary to

  call it a toupee, because calling it something in a

  foreign language is supposed to make it look less

  ridiculous.

  For this toupee to look less ridiculous, he’d

  also have to actually wear it in that foreign country.

  Where we couldn’t see him.

  I don’t think men need to worry about their

  hair that much. Many attractive individuals are

  bald, like,

  Um

  Homer Simpson and

  Um

  Voldemort and

  Um

  My big toe.

  Okay, Mr. Smith. Keep the toupee. Maybe you

  can see if they manufacture smiles that you could

  wear as well.

  Dumb Diary, like most people, I hate the

  alphabet. Mostly because I can’t alphabetize things

  unless I sing part of the alphabet song in my head

  when I’m doing it, and people can tell I’m doing that

  because it makes me bob my head a little.

  This came up today because Mr. Smith has us

  starting a unit on how people in other cultures

  approach different issues. We do a lot of projects

  in groups at my school now, because they say it’s

  great preparation for the real world. This is

  because projects often go wrong in the real world,

  and so we need to learn how to swiftly blame things

  on somebody else nearby.

  Today,. surprisingly, for the first time ever, the

  alphabet ACTUALLY HELPED SOMEBODY

  when it had to acknowledge that J (for Jamie)

  was pretty close to H (for Hudson Rivers, eighth-

  cutest boy in my grade). Because Mr. Smith was

  choosing teams alphabetically by first names, he

  put us together for the project.

  A very, very long time ago — like months —

  being paired with Hudson would have made it

  difficult for me to breathe. But I’m older now, and

  quite a sophisticated young lady at that, so all it

  did was make me sweat my pits off.

  I know what you’re saying, Dumb Diary. You’re

  saying, “Where was Isabella when this happened?”

  How many times have I heard that exact

  question?

  Answer: She was down in the principal’s

  office. Lately, the principal has been talking to

  Isabella before she does anything wrong. He likes

  to guess what she might do next. I’ve been doing

  this for years. It’s kind of fun.

  If Isabella hadn’t been down at the principal’s

  office, she would have been paired with Hudson,

  because, of course, Isabella’s name begins with I.

  This is really appropriate since most of her

  sentences do, too:

  “I want that.”

  “I will mess you up.”

  “I didn’t wipe insect remains on that.”

  But she wasn’t in the room and I was, so I was

  paired with Hudson. When she got back, Isabella

  was paired up with Yolanda, who is one of the

  dainty people.

  Do you know the type of person I mean? These

  people are nice, with small, thin, clean necks and

  tiny clean fingers that are just right for holding

  perfect, clean little sandwiches and clean, fragile

  ceramic objects. Nobody has a problem with the

  dainty — they’re never loud, and they never argue.

  I would draw Yolanda here, but I can’t remember

  exactly what she looks like, just that she’s

  massively dainty. I’ll remember more tomorrow.

  When Isabella returned, she didn’t really care

  much that she didn’t get paired up with Hudson.

  She’s really great like that. Isabella can work well

  with anybody who is doing all of the work.

  Oh, and one other thing. Mr. Smith made

  Angeline partners with Mike Pinsetti. And it turns

  out that Mike is his middle name. (Something

  revealed on this year’s attendance lists.) His first

  name is actually Antonio, but Isabella said that

  since every male in his family is named Antonio,

  lots of them go by their middle names. Isn’t that

  interesting?

  No. Not really.

  Of course, this isn’t ALL good news. I did

  really bad on the last social studies project — like,

  SUPER AWFUL bad. I was teamed up with Isabella.

  Our project was about Pilgrims, and Isabella put in a

  whole bunch of research she did about them

  dressing in black because they were ninjas.

  Yeah, guess what. They weren’t. I failed.

  That’s how these group projects work.

  Somebody lied to Isabella about those ninjas, and

  we both had to pay for it.

&nb
sp; A lot more is riding on this grade, though, so I

  really have to nail this project.

  Tuesday 03

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  Today at lunch, Angeline was nicely

  circulating a nice card to give to Miss Bruntford,

  who twisted one of her tree-trunk ankles on Friday

  because she decided to be standing behind me when

  I was noodled.

  Isn’t that nice?

  I was really the one who deserved the right

  to nicely apologize to Bruntford, but Angeline was

  somehow taking credit for the apology without

  going to the trouble of committing the crime.

  Angeline has a condition that causes her to

  be annoying. Doctors refer to this as Niceism

  Disease or Nicenicity, and we’re pretty sure it

  has no cure. The problem is that when doctors try

  to cure them of it, the patients are so appreciative

  that they get little gift baskets for the doctors

  and — BAM! — now they’re even nicer than they

  were before.

  It’s tragic, really.

  I probably might have been sad that I had

  crippled somebody, but then I saw Sebastian, who,

  evidently, is the person filling in for Bruntford as

  cafeteria monitor while she’s recovering.

  Some people just have the sort of charm that

  makes you okay with crippling somebody.

  Sebastian is older than we are, but young

  enough that it’s not terribly creepy that we

  recognize his handsomeness. He’s not old, but he’s

  not a kid. And he’s young enough that he doesn’t

  make people call him Mr. This or Mr. That.

  He has those kind of looks that makes him

  seem familiar somehow, like you’ve known him for

  years, even though you’ve never met him before.

  Sebastian dresses well, and acts

  sophisticated. It’s hard to believe that the boys in

  my school and Sebastian are the same species, and

  that one day, these boythings of ours could grow

  up to be people who care how they act around

 

‹ Prev