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Dear Dumb Diary #4: Never Do Anything, Ever

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by Jim Benton




  Never do Anything, ever

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  From New York Times bestselling author Jim Benton

  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.

  Year Two #4: What I Don’t Know Might Hurt Me

  DEAR

  DUmB

  DiARY,

  nEvER DO AnYTHinG,

  ever

  SCHOLASTIC INC.

  Jim Benton’s Tales from Mackerel Middle School

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Con-

  ventions. 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 in-

  vented, without the express written permission of the publisher. For infor-

  mation regarding permission, write to Scholastic Inc., Attention:

  Permissions Department, 557 Broadway, New York, NY 10012.

  e-ISBN 978-0-545-64945-2

  Copyright © 2005 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 Scholastic printing, November 2005

  For the teachers we put up with

  and the ones that put up with us.

  With many thanks to Mary K, who helped out even more

  than usual on this one, and the team at Scholastic,

  who have inner beauty and outer beauty, but let’s not

  quibble over the exact amounts here.Thanks to my

  glamorous genius editor, Maria Barbo, who actually

  chose those words to describe herself, our fabulous art

  director Steve Scott, our scrupulous production editor

  Susan Jeffers Casel, the magnanimous Shannon Penney,

  and Craig Walker, who is Maria’s boss, and therefore

  required by law to be even more ingenious

  and glamorous than she.

  Dear Whoever Is Reading My Dumb Diary,

  Are you sure you’re supposed to be

  reading somebody else’s diary? Maybe I told

  you that you could, so that’s okay. But if you

  are Angeline, I did NOT give you permission,

  so stop it.

  If you are my parents, then YES, I know

  that I am not allowed to call people idiots

  and dipwads and blondwads and half-

  wits- and turds and all that, but this is a

  diary, and I didn’t actually “call” them

  anything. I wrote it. And, if you punish

  me-for it, then I will know that you read my

  diary, which I am not giving you permission

  to do.

  Now, by the power vested in me, I do

  promise that everything in this diary is true,

  or, at least, as true as I think it needs to be.

  Signed,

  PS: Angeline, if this is you reading my diary, then

  you should know that reading another person’s

  diary is a federal crime, and a very ugly thing

  to do, and no amount of staggering beauty — inner

  or outer — can compensate for it.

  PPS: Which means that you stand a good chance

  of being the ugliest girl in prison, and if you have

  ever watched any of those REALITY POLICE

  VIDEOS on TV, you know that most of those girls

  would need an EXTREME MAKEOVER just to

  achieve the delicate good looks of a warthog.

  Sunday 01

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  Isabella and I happened to see Angeline at

  the store today. Isabella wanted to buy some of

  that hair-removing foam because her arms are

  too weirdly hairy. I tried to talk her out of it, not

  because her arms aren’t hairy (because they ARE

  kind of chimpy), but because little hairless naked

  baby arms would be way more weird.

  Angeline was sniffing around over by the hair

  stuff, obviously shopping for whatever secret things

  she uses to keep her hair all perfect.

  As you may recall, Dumb Diary, Isabella

  is a master of disguise. She quickly grabbed us

  some sunglasses and hats so we could secretly

  follow Angeline and see what she bought. (Quick

  note on disguises: As you’re walking, you have

  to occasionally lower the magazine you’re hiding

  behind so you don’t knock over a display of baby-

  bottle nipples.)

  Surprisingly, Angeline didn’t buy shampoo

  or conditioner or coloring gel or hair straightener

  or unstraightener or anything big like that. She only

  bought one little item and she carelessly led us

  right to it. A BARRETTE.

  It must be some sort of special barrette

  because Angeline, as everyone knows, is beautiful

  to the point where you know it probably even

  actually sickens her sometimes to look in the

  mirror.

  Ha - ha, Angeline!Let’s see how you

  stack up to me now that I also possess your

  precious, secret, simple barrette.

  I would’ve bought more than one except the

  store guy wanted me to pay for the magazines I

  wrecked during the nipple event.

  Monday 02

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  Okay, these barrettes are not as simple

  as you may think. I mean, sure, you can sort of

  pull your hair aside with one, and that’s okay, I

  guess, but Angeline must have some sort of special

  technique for attaching it to her head, because I

  couldn’t exactly duplicate her results.

  I wanted to practice on Stinker’s ears a

  couple of times to get the hang of it, but Stinker

  is very, very sensitive about his ears and it upsets

  him to have them touched, so I had to sit on him to

  do it.

  Anyway, I think I finally got it, and tomorrow I

  am really going to have it going on. Here’s a drawing

  of me having it going on. (I think I may also be

  all up in that, but I’m not sure exactly what that

  means.)

  Tuesday 03

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  Remember
Hudson Rivers (eighth-cutest

  guy in my grade)? I am very sorry to report that he

  has a vision problem. Not only did he utterly fail to

  notice the spectacularness of My New Hair

  Accessory when he was talking to me at my

  locker today, but when Angeline walked right past

  and inflicted Beauty upon him, he failed to even

  notice her. I wish I could have enjoyed the moment

  more, except I felt bad about Hudson’s tragedy - I

  mean, everybody notices Angeline.

  At first, I wondered if maybe Hudson just

  wanted to talk to me, and wasn’t that interested

  in Angeline at all. I mean, c’mon, he did write me

  a poem once. But fortunately, Isabella was on

  hand to explain how wrong I was. She says that

  people who don’t notice Angeline have some sort of

  problem like:

  If the tragedy is limited to Hudson’s eyes,

  I said that he could just get glasses, and then

  Isabella flew into this huge crazy rage about glasses

  and how they destroy your life and how she would

  do anything to get rid of hers.

  When Isabella says she would do “anything,”

  you should believe her. One time when she was

  five, she physically attacked a mall Santa for

  not bringing her a panda bear the previous

  Christmas. It was pretty terrifying. When the

  paramedics finally arrived, he had lost a lot of nog,

  and was shaking like a bowl full of jelly.

  Tuesday and Thursday are my Phys Ed days.

  Thankfully, it’s at the very end of the day, so I don’t

  have to walk around stinkfully afterward and we

  can also hear the buses line up right outside the

  gym, which is a handy way to tell time since the only

  clock in our gym, like most gym clocks, was broken

  by a basketball back in 1945.

  As usual, we ran laps in the gym today, which

  made me feel like I was going to have a baby out of

  my left side.

  I calmly suggested to Mr. Dover that he

  find something new for us to do as I lay on my

  back and tried to massage out a cramp that had

  developed inside the cramp that was inside the

  cramp in my leg.

  He looked at me for a moment, and I think he

  felt some pity. Or disgust. Anyway, he said, “Okay.”

  I’ll bet it’s going to be something great!

  Wednesday 04

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  Today, Mom made me gather up old clothes

  and junk I didn’t want anymore. She must be giving

  them to charity or something. It has been a while

  since I cleaned out the drawers. Here are a few of

  the items I decided to part with:

  The old clothes made me think back

  to simpler times, and wonder why I ever wanted

  to grow up. And then I saw this shirt I used to wear

  that has this stupid duck in a cowboy hat on it.

  The main feature of this shirt was the massive

  permanent chocolate pudding stain on the front. I

  wondered how many times Mom had dressed me in

  that Big Ol’ Pudding Stain and let me go out

  in public.

  If my future children are reading

  my diary years from now, here’s a tip: If

  you spill pudding on your shirt, don’t tell Grandma.

  She will let it rot on there until it grows mold or

  other funky- smelling fuzzy stuff. Tell Mommy Jamie

  and she will lovingly make Daddy wash it.

  And while I’m talking to The Future,here’s

  a little note to myself, in case I am reading this

  diary years from now when my mom is all super old:

  Dear Adult Jamie:

  Your mom loves you and did her best raising

  you, but you’re really hot and really rich now

  anyway. Sure, she made just a few mistakes, and so

  she should feel good about that because it means

  that you only have to get even with her for a mere

  handful of things. Here are a few ideas I had just to

  get the old revenge ball rolling:

  Thursday 05

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  You know what Thursday is, right, Dumb

  Diary? It’s Meat Loaf Day at school. (Have I

  mentioned that before?) Today’s meat loaf tasted

  like morning- breath-baked- into- loaf-

  form,which means it was a distinct improvement

  over last week’s meat loaf.

  In Phys Ed this afternoon, Mr. Dover (His

  first name is really Ben. Can you believe it?) told

  us that he took my suggestion to try something

  new, and we will be starting a month of some new

  Phys Ed program called something like Outward

  Adventure Outreach Something. It’s

  supposed to build teamwork, which is when a whole

  bunch of people work together to do something

  wrong instead of doing it wrong one at a time.

  So Dover began by putting us into little

  groups of four. Of course, Angeline and Hudson

  wound up in the same little group because Angeline

  has some sort of Evil Power over the Universe.

  Margaret was also in Angeline’s group. (Margaret is

  the school pencil eater, which means that she is the

  only one whose number 2 pencils actually wind

  up as her Number Twos.) Fortunately, Mr. Dover

  made Isabella the fourth member of that group, so

  at least I have somebody to spy on Angeline and

  Hudson for me.

  My group was me, Mike Pinsetti (he’s the

  nickname king of our school, and he might have

  a crush on me - YUCK! - and he is a huge human

  sack of turds), Anika Martin, and That Ugly Kid

  Whose Name I Forget —who I am going to

  abbreviate as T.U.K.W.N.I.F.

  Our first exercise was called Trust Falls.

  This is when one group member closes their eyes and

  slowly tips over backward, trusting their teammates

  to catch them before they hit the ground.

  Isabella has mean big brothers, so her

  ability to trust human beings has decayed away to

  nothing. Isabella could no more summon the trust

  to fall backward into somebody’s arms than she

  could fall backward into a wood chipper.

  This got her into trouble with Mr. Dover

  because gym teachers get upset if you don’t go

  all jocky and high-fivey about their little sporty

  events. Which was good, since it kept me from

  getting in trouble when Pinsetti cracked his head

  on the gym floor because I may have been staring

  across the gym at Angeline and Hudson when I was

  supposed to be not letting Pinsetti and his trusting

  head down. But in my defense, Pinsetti and his head

  are probably too trusting.

  Anyway, Mr. Dover switched Isabella with

  Anika, so now I don’t have anybody to listen in on

  whatever Angeline is saying to Hudson, whose vision

  seems to have miraculously been restored to normal

  as far as staring at Angeline goes.

  Of course, she did have her barrette artfully

  embracing one silky ribbon of flawless blond hair,

  and Hudson may have been fixated on that alone.

  Friday 06

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  Angelin
e is doing some sort of Walk-A-Thon

  for charity this weekend, and she asked Isabella

  and me to sponsor her.

  This is where we donate a dime for every mile

  she walks. I know, it sounds good, but Angeline

  doesn’t just walk in a straight line. Eventually,

  she turns around and walks back. If she just kept

  walking and walking, I’d give her a hundred bucks.

  But she said it’s for some sort of amazing cause like

  Sending Stuffed Animals Full of Candy to

  Hungry Toddlers in Wheretheheckistan.

  I don’t know. We said okay.

  Later, as we considered Angeline’s sacrifice

  and her willingness to volunteer her time and effort

  for people she doesn’t know who live millions of

  miles away, we had to admit . . .

  Angeline is super stupid.

  Saturday 07

  Dear Dumb Diary,

  Dad dropped me off at the salon today.

  This is supposed to be one of the best hair salons

  in the whole city, and the stylist, Collette, is

  really and truly from France or someplace where

  she graduated from the greatest hair college in

  the world. Collette usually cries at the end of our

  appointments, and lots of times she asks me to

  leave through the back door, but I think she has

  to keep seeing me because they made her take

  some sort of oath back at hair college. It’s like

  how doctors can’t just walk past you if you’re in an

  accident. And let’s face it, my hair is bleeding to

  death on the sidewalk.

  I really didn’t even need a haircut, but

  I asked her to put in the barrette. She spent a

  long time dealing with it and couldn’t get it to

  work. She said my hair was rejecting the barrette

  like a transplanted organ, but if I wanted,

  she could phone a Barrette

  Consultant of hers to talk her

  through the procedure.

 

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