Once there was a gorilla named Tillie who was really very beautiful. And she did not hide the fact that she was proud of her gorilla good looks. As a matter of fact, her female gorilla schoolmates did not appreciate her attitude at all. They considered her vain, flirty, and ridiculously self-centered. What's more, she was very bratty when she did not get her way. So, as is often the case when teen-age gorillas develop an intense antipathy toward a peer, they thought of a nickname for her. They dubbed her Tillie the Silly and Surly Girlie Gorilly.
Unfortunately, all those adjectives were undeniably accurate, and doubly accurate when she found herself around young handsome males. She would wear very suggestive and sexy outfits (totally inappropriate for school) including absurdly low-cut blouses to show off her gorgeous chest hair, tight short jeans to exhibit her shapely legs, and amazing hair-dos (the hair on her head that is, not the stuff on her chest), to reveal her thick and shiny crowning glory.
When she saw a particularly handsome boy, she would flash a come-hither smile, wink, and flutter her huge eyelashes, in general making a spectacle of herself. And boy, did those guys go for that spectacle. As much as the girls hated her, that's how much the boys adored her. They gleefully went all gorilla ga-ga every time they ogled her.
Now as it happened, when Tillie was a senior, the high school ran a big contest just for the girls, a beauty contest which offered the winner a date to see all three King Kong movies, escorted by their star, the fabulous Stormin' Gorman Gorilla.
Tillie was stunned by her good fortune. A date with Gorman! The very thought was darn near overwhelming. She had had a gorilla-sized crush on him ever since she had seen him in his first film, "Kong Saves the Kongo." She knew she was a cinch to win the contest, and, in fact, her confidence carried the day: "And our winner is.... TILLIE," shouted the chief judge, Gillie Gorilla, who also happened to be Tillie's mother.
"OMG! OMG! (Oh Mister Gorman!)," shrieked Tillie. And she immediately began plotting her plans to beguile the bachelor. One date was not enough, of course, for Tillie. She planned to marry him.
The big day for the big date arrived. She thought long and hard about the image she wanted to project: Tillie the Innocent? Tillie the Shy? Tillie the Mature? But she decided, naturally, on Tillie the Sexy. Out of the closet came her most revealing blouse. Her tightest jeans. Her highest high heels. And she also prepared for this most important event in her life to date with a most unfortunate strategy. Because she was very uptight and had heard that alcohol quiets the nerves, she decided to search the house for something to drink even though alcohol consumption was not one of her many flaws. The only thing she could find, however, was an old half-used can of beer, which she scarfed nonetheless. She felt better now. She thought. So she studied herself in the huge mirror in her bedroom. A veritable vision of simian sexiness, she decided.
I am so fine. I know he's mine.
Gorman didn't send the limo driver to pick up Tillie; he showed up at the front door himself. He wants me already, she opined. And she WAS all ready. Upon seeing him close up and in full gorilla-person, she swooned, almost fainted. But she remembered to assume her most alluring airs. When he gazed upon her, his eyes opened wide in surprise, making him even more handsome, if that were possible. She just knew she had him now. Come to me, my hunky monkey, she fairly drooled, albeit silently. We are a perfect couple.
All the way to the movie theater, he stole sideways glances at her, particularly at her amazing chest, most of which was available for easy viewing. But there were a couple of problems causing her minor concerns. First, she had not wanted to carry a purse, so she had to stow her cell phone somewhere; she had decided to stick it in her blouse, uncomfortable and inconvenient as that was. Also, because she had concentrated so totally on her figure while in front of the mirror, she had completely forgotten to brush her teeth and even to brush and style the hair on her head. "Oh Schlitz," she mumbled. But then she calmed herself again. Gorman knows nobody's perfect, she thought. Even me, Tillie the Terrific.
They watched all three movies --"Kong Saves the Kongo," "Kong Mashes the Monsters," and "Kong Konkers Amerika -- both of them with rapt attention, both focusing entirely on his gorgeousness. That fact began to bother her. Why isn't he looking at ME, TOO? she pondered. She tried cuddling a little. No response. She placed her hand carefully on his knee. Nothing. She even tried the sideways glance routine he had demonstrated in the limo. His eyes and attention remained stubbornly riveted on the screen. Finally, it was over. Six straight hours of IMAX sixty-foot-tall Gorman.
As they began the walk back to the limo, Gorman suddenly stopped and stared at her. Finally, she thought, he's going to tell me the truth about his feelings for me. Unfortunately, that was her first correct prediction of the day.
"Okay," he growled. "I'm going to give you the unvarnished truth. Let's sit down here on this bench." She began to sit, but as she did, the phone which had been ensconced insecurely and uncomfortably in her too-loose blouse fell to the floor. She bent to pick it up, and her too-tight jeans ripped in back all the way from waist to now-bare bottom. As she tried to regain her balance and composure, one of her too-tall high heels caught in the rug, and she plopped down most ungracefully on the bench.
"Listen," he began. "When you opened the door at your house, I couldn't believe what I saw." So his wide-eyed wonder, it turns out, had indeed been a reaction to her appearance, but not to her awesome beauty; instead, it was shock and awe at her incredible vulgarity.
"Look at you. The hair on your head looks like the jungle in my Kongo movie. Couldn't you at least have combed it? And those shoes look more like one of the weapons I used to mash the monsters than something to walk on. Your teeth are the color of a brown bear. Your breath smells like stale beer. And that blouse! The only thing it did hide was your stupid cell phone. You are an insult to my presence."
He WAS a jerk. Conceited, cruel -- and correct. And through her tears, which now flowed copiously, Tillie realized the truth of everything he said and did. His hidden horribleness was the real Gorman. Her life-long image of him had reflected the stupid longings of a silly little girl.
But, she thought, as she studied herself in the mirror one more painful time, I sure hope there's something in that person in front of me besides what I'm looking at right now because if there isn't, then underneath it all, he's right. All my life I've acted like...him. We really are a perfect couple.
Moral (1)
If you look in the mirror and don't like what you see,
Be sure to ask, "Is that really me?
Or is the real me somewhere deep inside?
Is it someone I've been trying to hide?”
Look again. Search hard. Now search deeper.
Could the one deep inside be the real keeper?
Moral (2)
If you're carrying a crush
Remember to brush.
Teeth and hair.
Everywhere.
Moral (3)
People who live in crass blouses shouldn't stow phones.