He was mine.
He was mine just a few years ago. When he woke up I was the first person he wanted to see.
"That's because you knew how to turn on the VCR." he says.
He was mine, when he came to wake me up & I scooped him up & brought him under the covers with me - til finally he had enough & ran off to play with his train.
He was mine - just a few years ago. He looked at me as if every word I spouted held the secret of the universe. Now he hears me talk (I know he does), but he takes it in & filters my words - casting aside some & taking some to heart. I do not know what percentages these might be.
It is autumn. He is like the leaves, struggling to be free. Time to fly. Time to fall. It is his time. His time to go.
But before all that, he was mine. & without me - well...
he would not have been able to turn on the VCR. Without him - well...I would not have held the secret of the universe.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Odds & Ends
Son standing in kitchen with hand in pants.
"Son, have you lost something in there? Shall I hand you a magnifying glass?"
"MOM!"
"Son, go to the laundry room & pick up your pile of clean clothes & put them away while you are cleaning your room."
"O-ka-a-ay."
Later...
"I see you are almost finished cleaning your room. Take your dirty clothes down to the laundry & don't forget to pick up the clean ones."
"All right."
Later...
"Gee - look at this nice pile of clothes waiting to be taken to your room!"
"I will!"
Later...
"Where are you going?"
"Papa wants me to do some work outside."
"Did you put your clothes away?"
"Yes."
"The ones that are still on top of the dryer?"
"What?! You never said to get those!"
Riding in the car with my son driving:
"Always look far ahead of you so you can see what the traffic is doing."
"I do."
"See - that car in front of us is slowing down."
"I see it."
"Well, you must do more than SEE it, SLOW DOWN! Look - he's stopping!"
"I know."
"Well, put your foot on the break."
"It is!"
"HARDER! Don't you see he's stopped?"
Finally slams down the break inches away from the stopped car.
"What are you thinking?"
"Well, papa gets mad if I break too hard."
"Son, have you lost something in there? Shall I hand you a magnifying glass?"
"MOM!"
"Son, go to the laundry room & pick up your pile of clean clothes & put them away while you are cleaning your room."
"O-ka-a-ay."
Later...
"I see you are almost finished cleaning your room. Take your dirty clothes down to the laundry & don't forget to pick up the clean ones."
"All right."
Later...
"Gee - look at this nice pile of clothes waiting to be taken to your room!"
"I will!"
Later...
"Where are you going?"
"Papa wants me to do some work outside."
"Did you put your clothes away?"
"Yes."
"The ones that are still on top of the dryer?"
"What?! You never said to get those!"
Riding in the car with my son driving:
"Always look far ahead of you so you can see what the traffic is doing."
"I do."
"See - that car in front of us is slowing down."
"I see it."
"Well, you must do more than SEE it, SLOW DOWN! Look - he's stopping!"
"I know."
"Well, put your foot on the break."
"It is!"
"HARDER! Don't you see he's stopped?"
Finally slams down the break inches away from the stopped car.
"What are you thinking?"
"Well, papa gets mad if I break too hard."
Saturday, September 7, 2013
Vertigo
ver·ti·go
noun ˈvər-ti-gō:
a : a sensation of motion in which the individual or the individual's surroundings seem to whirl dizzily
b : a dizzy confused state of mind (which sounds like my normal self, so we will cast that aside for the duration of this blog entry!)
a : a sensation of motion in which the individual or the individual's surroundings seem to whirl dizzily
b : a dizzy confused state of mind (which sounds like my normal self, so we will cast that aside for the duration of this blog entry!)
This past summer I had a very unsettling instance of vertigo. It happened in the most inconvenient of places: behind the wheel of my car, several miles from home. The world began to spin & nothing would stop it. I was at a loss as to what I should do; no one I knew was close enough to my location to be able to help, so I headed home as best I could, driving like a drunk, sitting up close to the steering wheel & breathing carefully, trying to focus on the middle line which kept slipping away. I pulled over several times, to vomit, beyond caring of the spectacle it made. & I waited, air conditioner blasting on my face, hoping that the spinning would stop. It didn't. Finally arriving home, I careened into the house, bouncing off the walls & furniture, until finally coming in for a landing on my bedroom floor, where I stayed for the next 18 hours, spinning all the while. The floor, because the bed was too high.
The next morning the spinning had slowed enough for me to visit the doctor, who seemed unalarmed & prescribed some seasick medication. In a day or two I was back to normal.
But I was waiting. For it to happen again. I was afraid to drive alone. Because there had been no reason, no warning. Who's to say it would not happen again? My seasick pills rattled around in my purse as a reminder.
So, I tried to put a new spin (ha!) on the situation, to keep me from thinking about why such a thing should happen to me. & so I thought - aren't we ALL spinning, really? We are on a planet which twirls about, all the time, yet we never feel it. Maybe my fate is to become a visionary, one of the few who have seen past the veil! Perhaps I will spout poetry to enlighten all civilization -
So, I tried to put a new spin (ha!) on the situation, to keep me from thinking about why such a thing should happen to me. & so I thought - aren't we ALL spinning, really? We are on a planet which twirls about, all the time, yet we never feel it. Maybe my fate is to become a visionary, one of the few who have seen past the veil! Perhaps I will spout poetry to enlighten all civilization -
I have received a gift;
imagined stillness revealed to be false.
Calmness a subterfuge
for what lies beneath the glamour
of my usual life. Unknown.
I have seen the spiral,
the way of the planet, out of control;
hoping for the return
of the hidden reality
of my ordinary life lived.
I have been one chosen-
I have been one chosen-
- Or,
most likely,
it was just the rocks in my inner ear rolling around,
somehow knocked out of place.
Like the doctor said.
most likely,
it was just the rocks in my inner ear rolling around,
somehow knocked out of place.
Like the doctor said.
Friday, August 30, 2013
When Words Fail
While we were still living in Jamaica, my 16 year old son & I had an errand in New York. Our flight landed very late at JFK so we quickly rented a car & headed for the hotel.
The next morning it was pouring & we had about an hours drive ahead of us in unfamiliar Long Island traffic. We ran thru the downpour, hopped into our rental car & headed down the road, with our handy GPS.
As we drove along, I noticed my son kind of sniffing & looking at his hand.
"What are you doing?" I asked.
"l hate to be rude," he said, "but, something really stinks & I just tested my breath & it's not me. Did you brush your teeth this morning?"
My hand flew up to my mouth. "Yes!!" I exclaimed. "Of course!" I sniffed around. "I don't smell anything."
"Well I sure do!" my son made a face. "Did you fart, maybe?"
"Ugh - NO! Did you?"
"No."
"Maybe it's something outside."
"Maybe," my son said doubtfully.
We drove on. Soon he was sniffing again.
"NOW what?" I exclaimed, while keeping my ears open for any bit of wisdom from the GPS. Outside the rain continued to fall, drumming loudly on the roof of the car.
"It's getting worse!" he exclaimed in disgust.
"What is? The traffic? The rain?"
"The SMELL! Don't you smell it?"
"No."
My son attempted to open the window but the rain poured in like someone had thrown a bucket of water, so he quickly shut it again.
"Maybe you stepped in something in the parking lot." I ventured.
"No way," he stated firmly, as if such a thing was inconceivable. "I didn't see anything. I would have known."
Then, he crossed his legs & looked at his shoe. Apparently something on the bottom of his shoe looked suspicious, so what did he do? He took his bare hand & wiped at the offending splotch. He held his hand up to his face & inhaled with trepidation.
"EEW!" he said.
"NOW I smell it!" I said, as the stench drifted across the car. "Why the heck did you wipe your HAND on it? What are you, stupid?" Okay, I admit that the 'stupid' comment is not in the parent manual, but - Hello! Sometimes you just gotta call a spade a spade, you know? My son, however, did not deviate from the teenage boy manual in HIS response.
"I don't know."
"Well, I don't have any tissues & we are currently in the middle of a raging downpour on a six lane freeway full of traffic - it's not like I can pull over! Besides, we have a schedule to keep & I did not include time in my plans for the off chance that my idiotic son would decide to smear dog poop on his hands! You will just have to hold your hand like that until we get near a gas station!"
"Eew," he said glumly.
About 30 miles down the road, the rain slackened & we located a gas station, with no bathroom in sight. My son got out of the car, found a hose & finally washed his shoe & his hand, using the little hotel shampoo I snagged. He took the poop-smeared car mat & put it in the trunk & got back in the car.
"You know," he said, while drying his hands on some piece of used clothing (I hoped) from his backpack, "I just can't believe it."
"What can't you believe?"
And in all sincerity he said, "I can't believe they rented us a car with a big piece of dog poop right there on the floor!"
Sometimes all you can do is shake your head...
The next morning it was pouring & we had about an hours drive ahead of us in unfamiliar Long Island traffic. We ran thru the downpour, hopped into our rental car & headed down the road, with our handy GPS.
As we drove along, I noticed my son kind of sniffing & looking at his hand.
"What are you doing?" I asked.
"l hate to be rude," he said, "but, something really stinks & I just tested my breath & it's not me. Did you brush your teeth this morning?"
My hand flew up to my mouth. "Yes!!" I exclaimed. "Of course!" I sniffed around. "I don't smell anything."
"Well I sure do!" my son made a face. "Did you fart, maybe?"
"Ugh - NO! Did you?"
"No."
"Maybe it's something outside."
"Maybe," my son said doubtfully.
We drove on. Soon he was sniffing again.
"NOW what?" I exclaimed, while keeping my ears open for any bit of wisdom from the GPS. Outside the rain continued to fall, drumming loudly on the roof of the car.
"It's getting worse!" he exclaimed in disgust.
"What is? The traffic? The rain?"
"The SMELL! Don't you smell it?"
"No."
My son attempted to open the window but the rain poured in like someone had thrown a bucket of water, so he quickly shut it again.
"Maybe you stepped in something in the parking lot." I ventured.
"No way," he stated firmly, as if such a thing was inconceivable. "I didn't see anything. I would have known."
Then, he crossed his legs & looked at his shoe. Apparently something on the bottom of his shoe looked suspicious, so what did he do? He took his bare hand & wiped at the offending splotch. He held his hand up to his face & inhaled with trepidation.
"EEW!" he said.
"NOW I smell it!" I said, as the stench drifted across the car. "Why the heck did you wipe your HAND on it? What are you, stupid?" Okay, I admit that the 'stupid' comment is not in the parent manual, but - Hello! Sometimes you just gotta call a spade a spade, you know? My son, however, did not deviate from the teenage boy manual in HIS response.
"I don't know."
"Well, I don't have any tissues & we are currently in the middle of a raging downpour on a six lane freeway full of traffic - it's not like I can pull over! Besides, we have a schedule to keep & I did not include time in my plans for the off chance that my idiotic son would decide to smear dog poop on his hands! You will just have to hold your hand like that until we get near a gas station!"
"Eew," he said glumly.
About 30 miles down the road, the rain slackened & we located a gas station, with no bathroom in sight. My son got out of the car, found a hose & finally washed his shoe & his hand, using the little hotel shampoo I snagged. He took the poop-smeared car mat & put it in the trunk & got back in the car.
"You know," he said, while drying his hands on some piece of used clothing (I hoped) from his backpack, "I just can't believe it."
"What can't you believe?"
And in all sincerity he said, "I can't believe they rented us a car with a big piece of dog poop right there on the floor!"
Sometimes all you can do is shake your head...
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Telephone Conversations
-Hi Cindy. This is Helen- we met last week? When I came in to pick up the tile?
-Yes, yes, I remember. How can I help you today?
-Well, on Tuesday the man came over to measure for the vanity & toilet installation. But, today is Friday & I haven't had a call back to actually schedule the date of the installation. I'm beginning to think Lowes doesn't want my money!
-Right, right. Let me see, there was a problem with, uh, let me look at the paper again-
-Problem? What problem? The measuring guy didn't say there were any problems.
-Here it is- "a problem with the woodwork".
-Wood work? What "wood work"? I don't need any wood work done. I mean, we talked about how I might need new baseboards, but I didn't ask this guy to do it.
-Well, I don't know - it says right here "a problem with the woodwork". Let me call the company back & ask them.
-Hello, Helen? This is Cindy from Lowes.
-Hi. Did you find out anything?
-Uh, yeah, this company that does the installation for us, Do-It-All Repair?
-Yeah...
-Well, they are really plumbers, so they don't want to touch the vanities. They will do the toilets tho.
-So, they apparently don't "do it all"...
-No, (ha ha) but, oh yeah, they WILL do the sinks & faucets, as well as the toilets.
-I don't think the sinks would help much, if they are lying sideways on the floor.
-No, no...
-Don't you have another installer?
-Well, we do, but he is not available for some reason, & I've tried to call some other people but I haven't had any luck.
-Hmm.
-Hmm.
-I have a question: why would Do-It-All Repair have done the measuring for the vanities if they were not planning to install them?
-Well, I think Do-It-All Repair thought that they might do it...you know, they really are PLUMBERS...but when they looked at your bathrooms they just decided it was too much for them. I don't think they expected us to ask them to DO the installation. You know, there's a lot to installing a vanity - it has to be leveled &, well, & a WHOLE lot of other stuff...
-So, when you called them up to schedule a measuring for a vanity installation it didn't kind of tip them off that you MIGHT ask THEM to actually DO the installation? What? - they were totally surprised? Never expected such a request?
-I know, right?
-I guess you need to find me a new installer, then. I mean, right now my old vanities are sitting out on my front porch all broken because of the tiling. I'm looking at your ad in the paper & it specifically says "bathroom vanities installed".
-I just don't know what to do. Even if I found another installer to do the job, they would still have to come out & measure again. I mean, none of these guys would trust another companies measurements.
-That would be another two days til the measurer came & two more days after that so I could maybe be having this same conversation with you again? No. OK, fine - what if I had our handy man install them - would Lowes bring the vanities out to me?
-Well, they would charge extra for that.
-& what about taking away the old vanities?
-They would charge extra for that, too.
-Right. So, Lowes idea of "bathroom vanities installed" means "the customer picks out a vanity, wastes at least two weeks waiting for measuring guys who refuse to do the job, pays Lowes not only for the vanity, but also pays to have the vanity DELIVERED, pays to have the old vanity TAKEN AWAY and pays some other third party to INSTALL the vanity", is that right?
-Well, it doesn't sound very good when you put it that way...
-No. Listen, Cindy, I'm square with Lowes right now, right? I paid for the tile job already, I have not yet purchased the vanities due to all these measuring problems, so I don't owe Lowe's anything more, correct?
-That's right.
-Then I think it's time I cancelled my order.
-But what about your vanities?
-Hello, honey?
-Yes, what do you need?
-Have you ever wondered if it might be fun to try to install a couple of bathroom vanities ourselves? & maybe a toilet or two? I was thinking of running over to Home Depot this afternoon...
-Yes, yes, I remember. How can I help you today?
-Well, on Tuesday the man came over to measure for the vanity & toilet installation. But, today is Friday & I haven't had a call back to actually schedule the date of the installation. I'm beginning to think Lowes doesn't want my money!
-Right, right. Let me see, there was a problem with, uh, let me look at the paper again-
-Problem? What problem? The measuring guy didn't say there were any problems.
-Here it is- "a problem with the woodwork".
-Wood work? What "wood work"? I don't need any wood work done. I mean, we talked about how I might need new baseboards, but I didn't ask this guy to do it.
-Well, I don't know - it says right here "a problem with the woodwork". Let me call the company back & ask them.
-Hello, Helen? This is Cindy from Lowes.
-Hi. Did you find out anything?
-Uh, yeah, this company that does the installation for us, Do-It-All Repair?
-Yeah...
-Well, they are really plumbers, so they don't want to touch the vanities. They will do the toilets tho.
-So, they apparently don't "do it all"...
-No, (ha ha) but, oh yeah, they WILL do the sinks & faucets, as well as the toilets.
-I don't think the sinks would help much, if they are lying sideways on the floor.
-No, no...
-Don't you have another installer?
-Well, we do, but he is not available for some reason, & I've tried to call some other people but I haven't had any luck.
-Hmm.
-Hmm.
-I have a question: why would Do-It-All Repair have done the measuring for the vanities if they were not planning to install them?
-Well, I think Do-It-All Repair thought that they might do it...you know, they really are PLUMBERS...but when they looked at your bathrooms they just decided it was too much for them. I don't think they expected us to ask them to DO the installation. You know, there's a lot to installing a vanity - it has to be leveled &, well, & a WHOLE lot of other stuff...
-So, when you called them up to schedule a measuring for a vanity installation it didn't kind of tip them off that you MIGHT ask THEM to actually DO the installation? What? - they were totally surprised? Never expected such a request?
-I know, right?
-I guess you need to find me a new installer, then. I mean, right now my old vanities are sitting out on my front porch all broken because of the tiling. I'm looking at your ad in the paper & it specifically says "bathroom vanities installed".
-I just don't know what to do. Even if I found another installer to do the job, they would still have to come out & measure again. I mean, none of these guys would trust another companies measurements.
-That would be another two days til the measurer came & two more days after that so I could maybe be having this same conversation with you again? No. OK, fine - what if I had our handy man install them - would Lowes bring the vanities out to me?
-Well, they would charge extra for that.
-& what about taking away the old vanities?
-They would charge extra for that, too.
-Right. So, Lowes idea of "bathroom vanities installed" means "the customer picks out a vanity, wastes at least two weeks waiting for measuring guys who refuse to do the job, pays Lowes not only for the vanity, but also pays to have the vanity DELIVERED, pays to have the old vanity TAKEN AWAY and pays some other third party to INSTALL the vanity", is that right?
-Well, it doesn't sound very good when you put it that way...
-No. Listen, Cindy, I'm square with Lowes right now, right? I paid for the tile job already, I have not yet purchased the vanities due to all these measuring problems, so I don't owe Lowe's anything more, correct?
-That's right.
-Then I think it's time I cancelled my order.
-But what about your vanities?
-Hello, honey?
-Yes, what do you need?
-Have you ever wondered if it might be fun to try to install a couple of bathroom vanities ourselves? & maybe a toilet or two? I was thinking of running over to Home Depot this afternoon...
Friday, August 16, 2013
In the Drawer
"Ho, Ike, back again?"
"Yup - I'm ready to kick back until the Gods see fit to call me back to duty, I'll say!"
"What was it this time?"
"Almond butter."
"Almond butter again?!"
"Day in, day out - the Goddess likes almond butter, that's for sure!"
"Well, there are worse things, I suppose..."
"Yeah, almond butter's not so bad. How 'bout you, Ian, you been out in a while?"
"I've had a few days off - last bit of duty I had was strawberry jam, I believe."
"Yum! Now I wouldn't mind handling a bit of jam for a change."
"Oh, yeah, jam's a nice bit of work. A little sticky tho..."
The two brothers rested quietly for a moment.
"So, tell me, Ike - who'd ya see out there? I've been shut in here for awhile, you know! I'm hungry for some news of the world!"
"Let's see - I saw two of our sisters, Little Susie & Little Sheryl. We floated in The Pool for a few hours."
"Aw, Susie & Sheryl...how are they doing?"
"Pretty well - tho they are both complaining about the overcrowding in their apartment."
"Well, that's nothing new..."
"True. But you know, it really IS a problem for them - they have, what, besides them, their two sisters, our SEVEN little brothers, plus the four new girls fresh out of the box AND the two girls from Grand Cayman! All living in that small space!"
"I know, Ike, I know you're right, but sometimes I get so tired of hearing those girls bitch & moan that I don't even want to float in The Pool with them anymore!"
"Well, Ian, you know they have to vent sometimes. Plus, now they have a new one who came in just last month! It sure does make you feel grateful for OUR situation over here in the end apartment - why, our space is actually a little larger than theirs & there are only us seven guys living here. Then you got, say, one, two of us out on a job at any one time - that leaves just a few of us here with more than enough room to stretch out! Tho, it does get to be a little boring around here sometimes. I guess that's the trade-off."
"Truer words were never spoken, Ike. And now there's a new girl, you say? Where'd she come from?"
"Oh!" Ike shifted around, "THIS one! You'll never guess - she used to be working in an ice cream shop!"
"Wow! A business girl! Must find it pretty dull here in our complex - same old people all the time...& think of all that ice cream! We hardly ever get to work in ice cream any more." Ian said wistfully.
"Actually, Ian, Susie says this one- Shelly's her name- she actually seems pretty happy to be here. Apparently she was taken by one of the Gods to do a piece of work OUTSIDE (Banana Split, she said, you ever done that?) for awhile & then he just left her there on the ground! Away from all her sisters! Shelly told Susie that she'd been lying there for just about FOREVER when our Goddess walked by & picked her up! Shelly said it was the loneliest feeling in the world, lying there alone...& worse, in the beginning she was COVERED by ants, walking all over her, licking her! Then, later, even the ants didn't want to have anything to do with the poor little girl."
"No kidding, Ike?!" Ian shivered, "What a horrible story. Hey, wait a minute, didn't that big girl Sara - you know, the one that lives with our sister Big Sandy & the other big sisters two apartments down? - didn't she used to be in business as well?"
"Yup, you're right. I think she used to work in a restaurant. Can't remember how she came to be here."
"Hmm, me either."
"Hey, Ian," Ike whispered, "Tell me, how's Ira doing?"
"Shhh!" Ian glanced over his shoulder. "He's about the same, I guess. At least, the same as he's been since the accident."
"Ah - but, he's not in any PAIN, is he?"
"No, no," Ian shook his head, "It's not like that - I think he's more self-conscious & embarrassed than anything. Ira knows he's never going to look like the rest of us again - that's gotta change your whole way of seeing the world, you know? Always being pointed at, whispered about by the others. Knowing you have to go thru the rest of your life with such a disfigurement...& now he's only fit for yogurt duty..."
"Poor Ira..." Ike frowned, "Has he ever said how it happened? I mean, to get his neck SO bent! The Gods must have really mistreated him!"
"No, he's never said..."
"Makes you wonder. I mean, the Gods have always been pretty gentle with me. Was it something Ira did to provoke them, you think?"
"Naw. Ira! Come on - he's just as obedient as the rest of us. I just think it was some fluke - it could have happened to any of us. Besides, the necks of us seven brothers are more likely to be damaged, as long & skinny as they are." Ian & Ike quieted for a moment while they contemplated their fragile necks.
"What HAPPENED, tho? It might help if Ira would say!" Ike argued.
Ian was shaking his head, "I don't think it matters. It's not like we can do anything to protect ourselves. In the God's hands we are all just instruments with no choice but to do their will."
"I guess you're right." Ike gave a frustrated sigh. "It's just hard to see Ira so silent & sad."
"Yeah..."
"Hey!" Ike gave a start. "I know! Maybe there's a way we can cheer Ira up!"
"You think?" Ian perked up. "What do you mean?"
"Well," Ike said, "It would mean giving up a bit of our space, I don't know if our brothers would be willing..."
"What? Giving up space? How would that cheer Ira up?"
"We could ask our little brothers to move in with us! They are a rowdy bunch - might liven up things around here! Make Ira happy again - take his mind of his troubles!"
"All SEVEN of them? George & Gerry & Geoffrey & Gene..." Ian raised his eyebrows.
"Yes, yes!" Ike laughed, "& Gabe & Garret & Gaston! ALL of them!"
"Oh my!" Ian gasped.
"'Oh my' is right! Think of those spiky-headed little guys living here!"
"I am, believe me! Seems like our apartment would be utterly chaotic!"
"It sure would," Ike laughed, "& just think - our little sisters next door would be so happy to get some extra room! Like we were saying, our place is bigger, after all. Besides, those boys could use some brotherly guidance, don't cha think?"
"I think you may be onto something, Ike!" Ian smiled, "Let's do it! I am sure our brothers would agree - we all want to raise Ira's spirits! Let's talk about it with the others - whichever one of us gets called to duty first - either in The Pool or in The Hot Shower -"
"But HOW will we make it happen? How will we let the Gods know?" Ike wrinkled his brow.
"By PRAYING, of course! We must all pray to the Gods - but, actually, just to the Goddess this time, I think...so let us tell the others that we must all begin sending our prayers to the Goddess! If we ALL do it-"
"ALL? Even the tough guys at the end of the complex? Niles & them?"
"Yes, we are all family! I am sure they will help us! For Ira!"
"For Ira!"
And it came to pass that a few weeks later, Helen looked in the silverware drawer & said, "Hmm, I think I'll move these grapefruit spoons in with the ice tea spoons. No reason for these ice tea spoons to have all this room to themselves!"
"Yup - I'm ready to kick back until the Gods see fit to call me back to duty, I'll say!"
"What was it this time?"
"Almond butter."
"Almond butter again?!"
"Day in, day out - the Goddess likes almond butter, that's for sure!"
"Well, there are worse things, I suppose..."
"Yeah, almond butter's not so bad. How 'bout you, Ian, you been out in a while?"
"I've had a few days off - last bit of duty I had was strawberry jam, I believe."
"Yum! Now I wouldn't mind handling a bit of jam for a change."
"Oh, yeah, jam's a nice bit of work. A little sticky tho..."
The two brothers rested quietly for a moment.
"So, tell me, Ike - who'd ya see out there? I've been shut in here for awhile, you know! I'm hungry for some news of the world!"
"Let's see - I saw two of our sisters, Little Susie & Little Sheryl. We floated in The Pool for a few hours."
"Aw, Susie & Sheryl...how are they doing?"
"Pretty well - tho they are both complaining about the overcrowding in their apartment."
"Well, that's nothing new..."
"True. But you know, it really IS a problem for them - they have, what, besides them, their two sisters, our SEVEN little brothers, plus the four new girls fresh out of the box AND the two girls from Grand Cayman! All living in that small space!"
"I know, Ike, I know you're right, but sometimes I get so tired of hearing those girls bitch & moan that I don't even want to float in The Pool with them anymore!"
"Well, Ian, you know they have to vent sometimes. Plus, now they have a new one who came in just last month! It sure does make you feel grateful for OUR situation over here in the end apartment - why, our space is actually a little larger than theirs & there are only us seven guys living here. Then you got, say, one, two of us out on a job at any one time - that leaves just a few of us here with more than enough room to stretch out! Tho, it does get to be a little boring around here sometimes. I guess that's the trade-off."
"Truer words were never spoken, Ike. And now there's a new girl, you say? Where'd she come from?"
"Oh!" Ike shifted around, "THIS one! You'll never guess - she used to be working in an ice cream shop!"
"Wow! A business girl! Must find it pretty dull here in our complex - same old people all the time...& think of all that ice cream! We hardly ever get to work in ice cream any more." Ian said wistfully.
"Actually, Ian, Susie says this one- Shelly's her name- she actually seems pretty happy to be here. Apparently she was taken by one of the Gods to do a piece of work OUTSIDE (Banana Split, she said, you ever done that?) for awhile & then he just left her there on the ground! Away from all her sisters! Shelly told Susie that she'd been lying there for just about FOREVER when our Goddess walked by & picked her up! Shelly said it was the loneliest feeling in the world, lying there alone...& worse, in the beginning she was COVERED by ants, walking all over her, licking her! Then, later, even the ants didn't want to have anything to do with the poor little girl."
"No kidding, Ike?!" Ian shivered, "What a horrible story. Hey, wait a minute, didn't that big girl Sara - you know, the one that lives with our sister Big Sandy & the other big sisters two apartments down? - didn't she used to be in business as well?"
"Yup, you're right. I think she used to work in a restaurant. Can't remember how she came to be here."
"Hmm, me either."
"Hey, Ian," Ike whispered, "Tell me, how's Ira doing?"
"Shhh!" Ian glanced over his shoulder. "He's about the same, I guess. At least, the same as he's been since the accident."
"Ah - but, he's not in any PAIN, is he?"
"No, no," Ian shook his head, "It's not like that - I think he's more self-conscious & embarrassed than anything. Ira knows he's never going to look like the rest of us again - that's gotta change your whole way of seeing the world, you know? Always being pointed at, whispered about by the others. Knowing you have to go thru the rest of your life with such a disfigurement...& now he's only fit for yogurt duty..."
"Poor Ira..." Ike frowned, "Has he ever said how it happened? I mean, to get his neck SO bent! The Gods must have really mistreated him!"
"No, he's never said..."
"Makes you wonder. I mean, the Gods have always been pretty gentle with me. Was it something Ira did to provoke them, you think?"
"Naw. Ira! Come on - he's just as obedient as the rest of us. I just think it was some fluke - it could have happened to any of us. Besides, the necks of us seven brothers are more likely to be damaged, as long & skinny as they are." Ian & Ike quieted for a moment while they contemplated their fragile necks.
"What HAPPENED, tho? It might help if Ira would say!" Ike argued.
Ian was shaking his head, "I don't think it matters. It's not like we can do anything to protect ourselves. In the God's hands we are all just instruments with no choice but to do their will."
"I guess you're right." Ike gave a frustrated sigh. "It's just hard to see Ira so silent & sad."
"Yeah..."
"Hey!" Ike gave a start. "I know! Maybe there's a way we can cheer Ira up!"
"You think?" Ian perked up. "What do you mean?"
"Well," Ike said, "It would mean giving up a bit of our space, I don't know if our brothers would be willing..."
"What? Giving up space? How would that cheer Ira up?"
"We could ask our little brothers to move in with us! They are a rowdy bunch - might liven up things around here! Make Ira happy again - take his mind of his troubles!"
"All SEVEN of them? George & Gerry & Geoffrey & Gene..." Ian raised his eyebrows.
"Yes, yes!" Ike laughed, "& Gabe & Garret & Gaston! ALL of them!"
"Oh my!" Ian gasped.
"'Oh my' is right! Think of those spiky-headed little guys living here!"
"I am, believe me! Seems like our apartment would be utterly chaotic!"
"It sure would," Ike laughed, "& just think - our little sisters next door would be so happy to get some extra room! Like we were saying, our place is bigger, after all. Besides, those boys could use some brotherly guidance, don't cha think?"
"I think you may be onto something, Ike!" Ian smiled, "Let's do it! I am sure our brothers would agree - we all want to raise Ira's spirits! Let's talk about it with the others - whichever one of us gets called to duty first - either in The Pool or in The Hot Shower -"
"But HOW will we make it happen? How will we let the Gods know?" Ike wrinkled his brow.
"By PRAYING, of course! We must all pray to the Gods - but, actually, just to the Goddess this time, I think...so let us tell the others that we must all begin sending our prayers to the Goddess! If we ALL do it-"
"ALL? Even the tough guys at the end of the complex? Niles & them?"
"Yes, we are all family! I am sure they will help us! For Ira!"
"For Ira!"
And it came to pass that a few weeks later, Helen looked in the silverware drawer & said, "Hmm, I think I'll move these grapefruit spoons in with the ice tea spoons. No reason for these ice tea spoons to have all this room to themselves!"
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Clearly Not Clear
Last month we decided to update two of our bathrooms.
Who should we get to do the work, I wondered.
I don't know, said my husband.
Then we both gave each other a look of disgust - already we were stymied & we hadn't even begun. Then we said, Hey! Let's go to Lowes - they will install everything & we won't have to deal with a bunch of different people!
That was the plan. It didn't seem like we were asking too much.
I met Mr. John in the Bathroom Department at Lowes. After some deliberation, I knew what we needed. I said to Mr. John, "Okay, we need 2 vanities, 2 toilets, 2 faucets & one mirror installed." Mr. John was very enthusiastic, until I added, "& we also need one bathroom tiled."
"Oh-h-h-h," he said, "Well, you have to go to Flooring for that - we don't handle flooring in Bathrooms".
"Fair enough. But then," I began my flight into fantasy, "the Departments will coordinate with each other, so that when the bathrooms are all torn up I can get the tile & bathroom installation done at the same time, boom, boom, right?" I was thinking this might take a couple weeks at most.
I should have noted the slight hesitation.
"Uh, right. Right!" Mr. John agreed, nodding vigorously (TOO vigorously it seems, now that I look back on it....).
I went to Flooring, talked to Mr. James, told him my tale, picked out my tile & he said he'd send someone to measure my bathroom right away.
"Perfect. How 'right away'"?
"Someone should call you within 48 hours to schedule."
"Why can't I just schedule the measuring right now?"
"We don't handle scheduling in Flooring - that is Installations." He looked at me chidingly, as if I should have known all this. "It takes 48 hours to get into our system."
"Ah." I said, wondering if Lowes had not heard about the Internet, which is amazingly fast...
The next day Lowes called to "thank me for my purchase" - which was odd because I hadn't yet purchased anything - in either Flooring or Bathrooms. They wouldn't let me until the measurers came. I kept offering to pay for the stuff but they wouldn't have it. My husband suggested we should shop there more often.
Meanwhile I talked to Mr. John. "Why don't you send your bathroom measurer out with the tile measurer?" I suggested, hoping we could move this project along, thinking quite foolishly that perhaps all the measuring could happen at once.
"No," Mr. John told me, "They won't measure the bathroom til the tile is done."
"Why ever not?"
"They want to be sure the tile won't change the measurement."
"Why would the addition of tile, which is on the floor, change the measurement of the space for the vanity & toilet?"
"You never know." said Mr. John sagely.
I never knew WHAT?, I wondered. Whether the tile guys would just get so carried away that they might run the tile up the walls as well? Was I going to have to watch them closely? Keep their enthusiasm in check?
The tile measurer came a few days later - Mr. Walter. He had a fancy measuring thing & an ipad. He spent more time trying to make the ipad talk to his measuring thing than it probably would have taken him to whip out a tape measure. I asked, "So, will the tile guys take up the linoleum first?"
"Oh, no," said Mr. Walter, shaking his head, "They won't do that. It will have to be removed before they get here."
"Does Lowes have someone that will do that?"
"No, you'll have to hire somebody else. Lowes won't touch that."
"Of course not. Why would I expect that?" What was I thinking? "Also, I need the tile to go underneath the vanity, since this vanity is being pulled out. I don't suppose the tilers will take out the vanity?"
"Nope, tilers won't do that. Bathroom people would tho."
"But the bathroom people aren't coming til AFTER the tile people!"
"That is a problem...Looks like you'll have to hire that done as well." Mr. Walter agrees, snapping his ipad case shut with a CLICK.
Great. So far I have talked to four people & no progress has been made, but at the same time, they all think they are helping me! Worse, they've told me I have to hire MORE people! My plan of a "one stop shop" seems to be backfiring. Clearly it was not clear to me that this simple-seeming project could be so complicated.
I made a panicked phone call to a handyman to talk about linoleum & vanity removal - as soon as possible!
"Can't come til next Saturday." Stanley the Handyman said. "Costs extra on weekends."
"Fine." If I had known that the glacial movement of the Flooring Department was their typical speed, I would not have gone for the "extra expensive" weekend. I was operating under the mistaken impression that I had to hurry.
After a weekend plus 48 business hours, I get a call that I can come in & pick out my tile. I thought I had done that, but apparently Mr. James didn't think I was serious, "I figured you might change your mind so I didn't write it down."
So thoughtful.
"Hey, Mr. James? I need to have a small area of the 2nd bathroom tiled (FYI readers-the second bathroom is already tiled except under the vanity) as well because of the new vanity coming - but I already have the tile for that - do you think your guys could quickly lay that tile as well?"
"Oh, sure, they could do that."
You heard the man...
So, I go down to Lowes to deal with Mr. James. Mr. James does not fill me with confidence. First, he looks like an accountant instead of a builder. Second, he & his computer don't seem to get along so he has this totally frazzled look about him, huffing & throwing his hands up at every BEEP his computer makes. Third, he has decided I am the perfect captive audience to hear all about his troubles with the Obama regime, & while I don't mind him going on & on, (because I'm not really paying attention anyway) he is but a man, so he can't seem to do anything ELSE (like write up my order) at the same time. I am beginning to wonder if my bathroom installation will indeed be finished BEFORE the installation of the next President!
Then, in the middle of tile-choosing & Obama-bashing, Mr. James asks, "Who approved the tilers doing the extra work in the 2nd bathroom?"
"YOU DID!" I exclaim, "When I talked to you on the phone this morning!"
"I did?" Mr.James throws up his hands in dismay, "I can't APPROVE anything! - you have to go thru Installations! They will have to approve it & send the measurer out again!"
"I can tell you the measurements - it's a 24" X 36" vanity."
Not good enough. I need to wait 48 hours more for Mr. Walter to be scheduled to come back again with his magic measurer, & then 48 hours afterwards for the new measurement (4.85 sqft) to "get into the (archaic) system". Another week goes by. Meanwhile, Handyman Stanley has ripped up the linoleum (leaving me to scrub up the glue) & removed 2 vanities - one hours work for the mere sum of $150.
But finally the day arrives when I receive a phone call to schedule the tiling date - from a place called Quality Carpets (perhaps I should have just gone there to begin with?). The woman says that I will have to take out the toilet.
"I will? Myself? I was told the tiler could do that."
"Normally we would, but Quality Carpets will not remove a toilet unless we are going to put it back in again."
Ah, this derives from my original plan NOT to have the old toilet re-installed since a new toilet is coming - somehow this logic only seemed to make sense to me. The lady informed me that there were "liability issues" involved in not re-installing a toilet once removed.
Liability issues? Like, what could happen, someone might fall into the 4" hole & sue? Fine, I decided. I figured my husband could remove a toilet, how hard could it be?
& in that assumption, I was correct - my husband & the boys removed the toilet yesterday successfully with minimal mess - & guess what! The tiler is here RIGHT NOW! I don't yet see the light at the end of the tunnel, but I think we may have reached the middle...
But you will have to excuse me - I must go check on the tiler - make sure he is tiling only the floor - you know how those tilers can get so out of control...
Who should we get to do the work, I wondered.
I don't know, said my husband.
Then we both gave each other a look of disgust - already we were stymied & we hadn't even begun. Then we said, Hey! Let's go to Lowes - they will install everything & we won't have to deal with a bunch of different people!
That was the plan. It didn't seem like we were asking too much.
I met Mr. John in the Bathroom Department at Lowes. After some deliberation, I knew what we needed. I said to Mr. John, "Okay, we need 2 vanities, 2 toilets, 2 faucets & one mirror installed." Mr. John was very enthusiastic, until I added, "& we also need one bathroom tiled."
"Oh-h-h-h," he said, "Well, you have to go to Flooring for that - we don't handle flooring in Bathrooms".
"Fair enough. But then," I began my flight into fantasy, "the Departments will coordinate with each other, so that when the bathrooms are all torn up I can get the tile & bathroom installation done at the same time, boom, boom, right?" I was thinking this might take a couple weeks at most.
I should have noted the slight hesitation.
"Uh, right. Right!" Mr. John agreed, nodding vigorously (TOO vigorously it seems, now that I look back on it....).
I went to Flooring, talked to Mr. James, told him my tale, picked out my tile & he said he'd send someone to measure my bathroom right away.
"Perfect. How 'right away'"?
"Someone should call you within 48 hours to schedule."
"Why can't I just schedule the measuring right now?"
"We don't handle scheduling in Flooring - that is Installations." He looked at me chidingly, as if I should have known all this. "It takes 48 hours to get into our system."
"Ah." I said, wondering if Lowes had not heard about the Internet, which is amazingly fast...
The next day Lowes called to "thank me for my purchase" - which was odd because I hadn't yet purchased anything - in either Flooring or Bathrooms. They wouldn't let me until the measurers came. I kept offering to pay for the stuff but they wouldn't have it. My husband suggested we should shop there more often.
Meanwhile I talked to Mr. John. "Why don't you send your bathroom measurer out with the tile measurer?" I suggested, hoping we could move this project along, thinking quite foolishly that perhaps all the measuring could happen at once.
"No," Mr. John told me, "They won't measure the bathroom til the tile is done."
"Why ever not?"
"They want to be sure the tile won't change the measurement."
"Why would the addition of tile, which is on the floor, change the measurement of the space for the vanity & toilet?"
"You never know." said Mr. John sagely.
I never knew WHAT?, I wondered. Whether the tile guys would just get so carried away that they might run the tile up the walls as well? Was I going to have to watch them closely? Keep their enthusiasm in check?
The tile measurer came a few days later - Mr. Walter. He had a fancy measuring thing & an ipad. He spent more time trying to make the ipad talk to his measuring thing than it probably would have taken him to whip out a tape measure. I asked, "So, will the tile guys take up the linoleum first?"
"Oh, no," said Mr. Walter, shaking his head, "They won't do that. It will have to be removed before they get here."
"Does Lowes have someone that will do that?"
"No, you'll have to hire somebody else. Lowes won't touch that."
"Of course not. Why would I expect that?" What was I thinking? "Also, I need the tile to go underneath the vanity, since this vanity is being pulled out. I don't suppose the tilers will take out the vanity?"
"Nope, tilers won't do that. Bathroom people would tho."
"But the bathroom people aren't coming til AFTER the tile people!"
"That is a problem...Looks like you'll have to hire that done as well." Mr. Walter agrees, snapping his ipad case shut with a CLICK.
Great. So far I have talked to four people & no progress has been made, but at the same time, they all think they are helping me! Worse, they've told me I have to hire MORE people! My plan of a "one stop shop" seems to be backfiring. Clearly it was not clear to me that this simple-seeming project could be so complicated.
I made a panicked phone call to a handyman to talk about linoleum & vanity removal - as soon as possible!
"Can't come til next Saturday." Stanley the Handyman said. "Costs extra on weekends."
"Fine." If I had known that the glacial movement of the Flooring Department was their typical speed, I would not have gone for the "extra expensive" weekend. I was operating under the mistaken impression that I had to hurry.
After a weekend plus 48 business hours, I get a call that I can come in & pick out my tile. I thought I had done that, but apparently Mr. James didn't think I was serious, "I figured you might change your mind so I didn't write it down."
So thoughtful.
"Hey, Mr. James? I need to have a small area of the 2nd bathroom tiled (FYI readers-the second bathroom is already tiled except under the vanity) as well because of the new vanity coming - but I already have the tile for that - do you think your guys could quickly lay that tile as well?"
"Oh, sure, they could do that."
You heard the man...
So, I go down to Lowes to deal with Mr. James. Mr. James does not fill me with confidence. First, he looks like an accountant instead of a builder. Second, he & his computer don't seem to get along so he has this totally frazzled look about him, huffing & throwing his hands up at every BEEP his computer makes. Third, he has decided I am the perfect captive audience to hear all about his troubles with the Obama regime, & while I don't mind him going on & on, (because I'm not really paying attention anyway) he is but a man, so he can't seem to do anything ELSE (like write up my order) at the same time. I am beginning to wonder if my bathroom installation will indeed be finished BEFORE the installation of the next President!
Then, in the middle of tile-choosing & Obama-bashing, Mr. James asks, "Who approved the tilers doing the extra work in the 2nd bathroom?"
"YOU DID!" I exclaim, "When I talked to you on the phone this morning!"
"I did?" Mr.James throws up his hands in dismay, "I can't APPROVE anything! - you have to go thru Installations! They will have to approve it & send the measurer out again!"
"I can tell you the measurements - it's a 24" X 36" vanity."
Not good enough. I need to wait 48 hours more for Mr. Walter to be scheduled to come back again with his magic measurer, & then 48 hours afterwards for the new measurement (4.85 sqft) to "get into the (archaic) system". Another week goes by. Meanwhile, Handyman Stanley has ripped up the linoleum (leaving me to scrub up the glue) & removed 2 vanities - one hours work for the mere sum of $150.
But finally the day arrives when I receive a phone call to schedule the tiling date - from a place called Quality Carpets (perhaps I should have just gone there to begin with?). The woman says that I will have to take out the toilet.
"I will? Myself? I was told the tiler could do that."
"Normally we would, but Quality Carpets will not remove a toilet unless we are going to put it back in again."
Ah, this derives from my original plan NOT to have the old toilet re-installed since a new toilet is coming - somehow this logic only seemed to make sense to me. The lady informed me that there were "liability issues" involved in not re-installing a toilet once removed.
Liability issues? Like, what could happen, someone might fall into the 4" hole & sue? Fine, I decided. I figured my husband could remove a toilet, how hard could it be?
& in that assumption, I was correct - my husband & the boys removed the toilet yesterday successfully with minimal mess - & guess what! The tiler is here RIGHT NOW! I don't yet see the light at the end of the tunnel, but I think we may have reached the middle...
But you will have to excuse me - I must go check on the tiler - make sure he is tiling only the floor - you know how those tilers can get so out of control...
Sunday, August 4, 2013
A Quick Bite
My younger son & I are driving down the road. We have been to Arby's, where we both had roast beef sandwiches & bought an extra to take home to the other son.
Suddenly, out of nowhere, I become violently dizzy & have to throw up. I pull over.
"Quick, son, I have to be sick! Take that Arby's out of the bag & hand it to me. HURRY!"
So, he rushes to take the Arby's out of the bag & hands me -
Suddenly, out of nowhere, I become violently dizzy & have to throw up. I pull over.
"Quick, son, I have to be sick! Take that Arby's out of the bag & hand it to me. HURRY!"
So, he rushes to take the Arby's out of the bag & hands me -
the SANDWICH!
Thursday, August 1, 2013
Useless Drivel
Cr-e-e-e-k ...the door opens, the dust motes fly...
Hey! I remember this place - I have BEEN in here before... Boy, it sure is dusty!
(cough, cough)
I used to write in here, I remember now.
Right - like I actually forgot that. No, but sometimes I seem to forget how - HOW did I used to write in here?
Well, duh, just like I am doing now. You just set your hands over the keyboard & hope that what pours out of your fingers isn't just some useless drivel - of course "useless drivel" was always a speciality of mine! So I will pray to the Gods of Writing to send me some MORE useless drivel!
I was in the shower the other day, when I found myself reading my husband's shampoo bottle. It has a kangaroo on it & the words Aussie MEN. The bottle promises a DEEP CLEAN, along with a catchy little slogan: Lose the dirt, Keep the adventure. All that aside, the bottle has a handy pump, which is most likely what caused me to buy it. I hadn't considered the possibility for the multitude of adventures that could be had while washing hair.
But that's not all! Not only can you get an adventuresome DEEP CLEAN, but it comes with a NO WORRIES GUARANTEE! Which is great, because I don't want my husband to be worrying about his shampoo!
Hello! I can hardly get him to remember to USE it!
& just what is the NO WORRIES GUARANTEE? I thought you'd never ask! It is this: Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back.
Is this really necessary? What would cause me to feel dissatisfaction about a shampoo for Heaven's sake? Is there such a thing as a shampoo NOT cleaning?
"Hello? Is this Aussie MEN customer service?"
"Goodday, Mate! Yes, this is customer service. How can I help you today?"
"Well, I am sorry to say that I need to return this bottle of shampoo."
"I am SO sorry to hear that. May I ask why?"
"It doesn't work."
"The shampoo doesn't work?"
"Right."
"Well!" the customer service rep takes a breath, "Did you follow the directions?"
"Of course! What do you think? Even MY husband can figure out Work into wet hair. Rinse. The problem is that now my husband is sitting around waiting for the adventure that was promised on the bottle."
"The adventure?"
"Sure - it says right on the bottle that he would get an adventure."
"I'm sorry - could you repeat that?"
"...and I quote, 'Lose the dirt. Keep the adventure' - so, where is this adventure, that's what my husband wants to know."
"I see. Let me put you on hold for a moment, while I speak to my supervisor."
♪♪
Buying bread from a man in Brussels. He was six foot four and full of-
"Ma'am?"
"Yes, I'm here."
"OK, I spoke to my supervisor & he did point out that the shampoo bottle doesn't promise an adventure; it states that you may keep the adventure. Therefore, the adventure must be something you have already."
"So, what you are saying is that if my husband uses any OTHER shampoo, he will have to return his adventure? To whom must he return it then?"
"Well, I don't know about that..."
"& not only THAT, but his deep clean from any other shampoo will not 'pack as much punch as a dingo on the prowl'?"
"Excuse me?"
"It's right on the bottle. Tho, you know, I never HAVE seen a dingo on the prowl...when do we get the dingo?"
"The dingo?"
"To watch it prowl! Hey, that in itself might qualify as an adventure! Tell you what, if you would throw in a dingo, I would go ahead & keep the shampoo."
"Throw in a dingo?!"
"Great! Now what about that boomerang?"
"Boomerang?"
"Yes, right on the bottle there is a boomerang. I would call that an implied boomerang, I surely would! Will you be sending that with the dingo? Hey - I won't have to pay shipping on all this, will I?"
"I think - I mean, no, well, no - please hold!"
♪♪
And he said, "I come from a land down under
Hey! I remember this place - I have BEEN in here before... Boy, it sure is dusty!
(cough, cough)
I used to write in here, I remember now.
Right - like I actually forgot that. No, but sometimes I seem to forget how - HOW did I used to write in here?
Well, duh, just like I am doing now. You just set your hands over the keyboard & hope that what pours out of your fingers isn't just some useless drivel - of course "useless drivel" was always a speciality of mine! So I will pray to the Gods of Writing to send me some MORE useless drivel!
I was in the shower the other day, when I found myself reading my husband's shampoo bottle. It has a kangaroo on it & the words Aussie MEN. The bottle promises a DEEP CLEAN, along with a catchy little slogan: Lose the dirt, Keep the adventure. All that aside, the bottle has a handy pump, which is most likely what caused me to buy it. I hadn't considered the possibility for the multitude of adventures that could be had while washing hair.
But that's not all! Not only can you get an adventuresome DEEP CLEAN, but it comes with a NO WORRIES GUARANTEE! Which is great, because I don't want my husband to be worrying about his shampoo!
Hello! I can hardly get him to remember to USE it!
& just what is the NO WORRIES GUARANTEE? I thought you'd never ask! It is this: Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back.
Is this really necessary? What would cause me to feel dissatisfaction about a shampoo for Heaven's sake? Is there such a thing as a shampoo NOT cleaning?
"Hello? Is this Aussie MEN customer service?"
"Goodday, Mate! Yes, this is customer service. How can I help you today?"
"Well, I am sorry to say that I need to return this bottle of shampoo."
"I am SO sorry to hear that. May I ask why?"
"It doesn't work."
"The shampoo doesn't work?"
"Right."
"Well!" the customer service rep takes a breath, "Did you follow the directions?"
"Of course! What do you think? Even MY husband can figure out Work into wet hair. Rinse. The problem is that now my husband is sitting around waiting for the adventure that was promised on the bottle."
"The adventure?"
"Sure - it says right on the bottle that he would get an adventure."
"I'm sorry - could you repeat that?"
"...and I quote, 'Lose the dirt. Keep the adventure' - so, where is this adventure, that's what my husband wants to know."
"I see. Let me put you on hold for a moment, while I speak to my supervisor."
♪♪
And she said, "Do you come from a land down under?
Where women glow and men plunder?
Can't you hear, can't you hear the thunder?
You better run, you better take cover.
Buying bread from a man in Brussels. He was six foot four and full of-
♪♪
"Ma'am?"
"Yes, I'm here."
"OK, I spoke to my supervisor & he did point out that the shampoo bottle doesn't promise an adventure; it states that you may keep the adventure. Therefore, the adventure must be something you have already."
"So, what you are saying is that if my husband uses any OTHER shampoo, he will have to return his adventure? To whom must he return it then?"
"Well, I don't know about that..."
"& not only THAT, but his deep clean from any other shampoo will not 'pack as much punch as a dingo on the prowl'?"
"Excuse me?"
"It's right on the bottle. Tho, you know, I never HAVE seen a dingo on the prowl...when do we get the dingo?"
"The dingo?"
"To watch it prowl! Hey, that in itself might qualify as an adventure! Tell you what, if you would throw in a dingo, I would go ahead & keep the shampoo."
"Throw in a dingo?!"
"Great! Now what about that boomerang?"
"Boomerang?"
"Yes, right on the bottle there is a boomerang. I would call that an implied boomerang, I surely would! Will you be sending that with the dingo? Hey - I won't have to pay shipping on all this, will I?"
"I think - I mean, no, well, no - please hold!"
♪♪
And he said, "I come from a land down under
Where beer does flow and men chunder
Can't you hear, can't you hear the thunder?
You better run, you better take cover", yeah-
♪♪
"Hello, Ma'am?"
"Hello, Ma'am?"
"Yes, hello!"
"My supervisor suggests that perhaps you should go ahead & return the shampoo. That seems to be the most expedient solution, at this point."
"Well, okay. I must say my husband will be very disappointed. I am sure he was looking forward to adventuring with his dingo & his boomerang. But, that's neither here nor there. I guess he'll have to settle for some other shampoo as well."
"I'm sorry, Ma'am, but I am sure it will all work out for the best. Luckily, with our NO WORRIES guarantee, you will be eligible for a full refund. Now, is there anything else I can help you with?"
"Well, yes, actually, there is. Something I've always wanted to know..."
"Yes?"
"What exactly is 'chunder', anyway?"
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Time on a String
It's like this:There is a theory that a timeline - the thought that time is progressing in a straight line from Point A to Point B - is maybe not a "line", but a spiral, or a circle, or some other shape. I am subscribing to the idea that the shape of time is flexible, or fluid. I personally like the "string" theory (which I cannot take credit for inventing, sorry), as I am experiencing this phenomenon at this very moment.
For example, I could take a long string & somewhere along it's length I would attach a label that says June 2008 (which marks the time my boys & I left Georgia to join my husband in the Caribbean). Next, I would move down the length of the string a decent space & attach another label that says February 2013 (which marks the time our family moved into our new house in Louisiana).
So, I have a string with two labels. So? Don't rush me now, be patient!
This past month has been hectic but great. We finally moved into our house & I was sent to Georgia to open the storage unit for the moving men, so that we might finally be rejoined with our belongings. I will use a partial quotation from Howard Carter, who discovered King Tut's Tomb, to describe how I felt at the moment of the rolling up of the storage door:
'At first I could see nothing.. but presently, as my eyes grew accustomed to the light, details of the room within emerged slowly... strange animals, statues ... I was struck dumb with amazement... So enormous was this structure ...From top to bottom it was overlaid with gold, and upon its sides there were inlaid panels ... the magic symbols which would ensure ... strength and safety...at the north end, the seven magic oars the king would need to ferry himself across the waters of the underworld. The walls... were decorated with brightly painted scenes and inscriptions, brilliant in their colors...'
Okay, maybe the part about the gold is not quite accurate in my case, & in fact, instead of seven magic oars I saw perhaps seven dirty shovels & hoes, which may or may not be sufficient to get me across the waters of the underworld. But you get my point; my feeling. It was one of excitement & discovery. It made my heart swell up. Our ancient life - a time capsule cracking open. I watched it all get packed into a United Van Lines truck & away it rolled, headed not toward the waters of the Underworld, but instead the waters of the Mississippi River.
Anyhow, since we have been back from Jamaica, in picking up our old lives (as it were), the string of time has been altered. What seems to have happened is that the labels on my string of June 2008 & February 2013 have been taken up in two powerful hands & brought together, leaving the five years in the Caribbean outside of the line; in a loop, which may or may not have existed at all.
Does this make any sense?
Other than the fact that the two boys I took with me are not the same two boys I brought back (as can be witnessed by the amount of toys that arrived on the moving van that have been outgrown, & sports trophies that no longer matter - but yet needed to be kept at the time), it is as if we never left the US at all. It is, in some ways, quite unsettling.
Tomorrow, tho, I hope to stretch out that string again, as the moving men with the Jamaica portion of our household goods is finally arriving. Perhaps this integration of belongings from the old & the new life will get that time loop all smoothed out & let us reclaim those five years.
After all, our time in the Caribbean will surely provide us with some of the best memories of our lives...
& I want them ALL visible on MY string!
Wednesday, February 6, 2013
Quest for Cleanliness (Part II)
On a sunny Tuesday in my own personal bayou here in Louisiana, the Lowe's truck pulled up to my door & delivered unto me a Samsung washer & dryer set. The delivery guys quickly hooked everything up, ran test cycles for each & were out the door before I knew it.
"You're all set!" the delivery guy hollered over his shoulder as I waved goodbye.
I rushed inside to use my new purchase, as laundry had been piling up. Inside the yellow laundry room I introduced myself to my washer. "Hello there!" I told it. "I have been waiting for you! My, what a lot of buttons you have!" I ran my hand over the machine & gave it a friendly pat. I opened the lid & threw in a bunch of darks. I did not over load it, not wanting to be so rude on our first mission together. I fed it some High-Efficiency Tide (nothing was too good for my new baby!). I made a multitude of selections from these choices:
What size load?
What temperature water?
Presoak?
What degree of 'soiledness'?
Delicates?
Power rinse?
Warp drive?
Do you want fries with that?
Will you introduce me to your smartphone later?
I answered the last question under my breath, "I don't HAVE a smart phone!" I pressed start & so many small lights came on that I could have turned off the laundry room overhead light & been able to see just fine.
The washer made a couple DINGS & then went "Whirrrr" & spun gently to the right. Then it went "Whirrr" & spun gently to the left. Then it did this several more times, (I remembered my buddy Joe telling me about this - calibrating the load). The dryer (who I patted now, so he wouldn't feel left out) stood by quietly, regarding the washer in what seemed to be an interested silence.
So, I went on my way, back to the kitchen where I was cutting shelf liner. After a while, I heard the washer give a little chime. How cute, I thought, much nicer than that horrible buzz they used to make. I assumed it was telling me something like it was changing cycles, or my fries were ready, or it was still waiting to meet my phone. Very soon it chimed again. After several chimes, it finally occurred to me to go & look at the washer. Sure enough, it had decided to talk to me. On it's screen it said "nF" - which as we all know is an abbreviation for, "Hey there! I am complaining about the water hoses! I don't like the way they are connected! Come fix me! & btw, if you had a SMARTPHONE I would have CALLED you!"
I opened the top & peered inside - the clothes were clumped in a wet puddle at the bottom. I turned the washer off. I turned it on again. It started up & then chimed & flashed his "nF" at me again. Great.
I called Lowe's.
I ended up with Robert, in appliances. "Oh," he said in a dreamy way, "You'll have to call back at 6 in the morning & talk to the Delivery Manager, Brian, to see if maybe they can come back tomorrow."
"Well, Robert," I began, "I'm not looking for 'if they can come back tomorrow'; I am looking for 'they WILL come back tomorrow'. I have a pile of wet clothes marinating in this washing machine!"
"Oh, yeah, right. I can send him an email?"
"Fine. Do that & copy me as well. I will call him in the morning, if that's what it takes."
"What brand did you say that was?" Robert queried.
"Samsung."
"Oh, I can't believe that! We NEVER have problems with Samsung!"
Early Wednesday I chased down Brian, who quickly arranged to recheck everything & then (when that failed to turn up anything) swap this washer with the floor display model - "The only other of this particular washer in the store". He told me he was sure it was some kind of fluke, because they NEVER have problems with Samsung. I hauled out the wet load & threw it in a garbage bag. The dryer gave me a baleful look, apparently upset that he had not yet been able to show me his stuff. "Sorry." I told it.
New washer. After running it thru it's cycles again, the delivery guy (the same one from Tuesday), said "You're all set!" & drove away. "I've heard THAT before!" I muttered. I approached this 2nd washer with trepidation. I patted it & stroked it (the way my buddy Joe did). "Remember me?" I asked it. "We met in the store the other day?". I filled the machine with the wet clothes, made all my button choices & broke the sad news to the washer that, no, I didn't have a smartphone. I fed it some Tide & turned it on & quickly left the room. I couldn't bare to watch.
The chime came faster this time, only 8 minutes into the cycle. "You are KIDDING me!" I shouted, stomping my foot at the other end of the house.
I drove to Lowe's. Brian & Robert were around, but they said we needed to wait for Joe (my buddy!), who was the expert on all things washer related, so maybe HE could figure out what was going wrong with the Samsung (that NEVER has problems!).
"I don't care what's wrong with it." I told Joe, as he wandered in from lunch. "I think Samsung just doesn't like me. Maybe it's mad that I don't have a smartphone. I think it's time for me to change brands."
Joe, undaunted, went over to the computer & did some searching. "Maybe it's your water pressure - Samsung is very particular about water pressure. You might need a plumber to come & blow the lines."
"I don't think there's anything wrong with the water pressure." I told him. "I don't want to call a plumber! I think I would just rather look at another washer - you know, the old kind. The kind without all the lights & sensors. Besides, the old kind of washer will fill up up even if the water pressure is low, right?"
"Well, yeah, but it will take a while." Joe conceded reluctantly.
"Better than not filling at all." I countered.
"If that's the kind of washer you want..." Joe fired back, giving me a disdainful look - as if I had spurned a Mercedes only to choose a Yugo.
"The only kind of washer I want," I drew out my words slowly, "is the kind that works."
GAME, SET & MATCH! - Joe could only fumble at his computer keys in defeat.
Thursday I wrestled yet again that same load of soaking laundry (now THAT's what I call a 'Presoak'!) into a garbage bag & awaited the new washer/dryer.
("What's wrong with the dryer?" Joe wondered.
"How would I know?" I responded, "But I don't want to break up a set!" In other words, I didn't want to park my Yugo next to my Mercedes.)
Here came the same delivery guys, bringing me my 3rd washer in as many days. "I hope we don't see each other again any time soon." I joked.
"You're all set!" he replied.
I crossed my fingers.
I went to behold my new acquisition. It had nobs. It claimed to have a sensor, but I could turn it off. I did. I loaded the washer. It did it's job. I gave the load to the dryer. It did it's job.
GE - they bring good things to life!
& never once did the machine ask to speak to my smartphone. But, just in case, I picked one up the other day.
It is not a Samsung.
"You're all set!" the delivery guy hollered over his shoulder as I waved goodbye.
I rushed inside to use my new purchase, as laundry had been piling up. Inside the yellow laundry room I introduced myself to my washer. "Hello there!" I told it. "I have been waiting for you! My, what a lot of buttons you have!" I ran my hand over the machine & gave it a friendly pat. I opened the lid & threw in a bunch of darks. I did not over load it, not wanting to be so rude on our first mission together. I fed it some High-Efficiency Tide (nothing was too good for my new baby!). I made a multitude of selections from these choices:
What size load?
What temperature water?
Presoak?
What degree of 'soiledness'?
Delicates?
Power rinse?
Warp drive?
Do you want fries with that?
Will you introduce me to your smartphone later?
I answered the last question under my breath, "I don't HAVE a smart phone!" I pressed start & so many small lights came on that I could have turned off the laundry room overhead light & been able to see just fine.
The washer made a couple DINGS & then went "Whirrrr" & spun gently to the right. Then it went "Whirrr" & spun gently to the left. Then it did this several more times, (I remembered my buddy Joe telling me about this - calibrating the load). The dryer (who I patted now, so he wouldn't feel left out) stood by quietly, regarding the washer in what seemed to be an interested silence.
So, I went on my way, back to the kitchen where I was cutting shelf liner. After a while, I heard the washer give a little chime. How cute, I thought, much nicer than that horrible buzz they used to make. I assumed it was telling me something like it was changing cycles, or my fries were ready, or it was still waiting to meet my phone. Very soon it chimed again. After several chimes, it finally occurred to me to go & look at the washer. Sure enough, it had decided to talk to me. On it's screen it said "nF" - which as we all know is an abbreviation for, "Hey there! I am complaining about the water hoses! I don't like the way they are connected! Come fix me! & btw, if you had a SMARTPHONE I would have CALLED you!"
I opened the top & peered inside - the clothes were clumped in a wet puddle at the bottom. I turned the washer off. I turned it on again. It started up & then chimed & flashed his "nF" at me again. Great.
I called Lowe's.
I ended up with Robert, in appliances. "Oh," he said in a dreamy way, "You'll have to call back at 6 in the morning & talk to the Delivery Manager, Brian, to see if maybe they can come back tomorrow."
"Well, Robert," I began, "I'm not looking for 'if they can come back tomorrow'; I am looking for 'they WILL come back tomorrow'. I have a pile of wet clothes marinating in this washing machine!"
"Oh, yeah, right. I can send him an email?"
"Fine. Do that & copy me as well. I will call him in the morning, if that's what it takes."
"What brand did you say that was?" Robert queried.
"Samsung."
"Oh, I can't believe that! We NEVER have problems with Samsung!"
Early Wednesday I chased down Brian, who quickly arranged to recheck everything & then (when that failed to turn up anything) swap this washer with the floor display model - "The only other of this particular washer in the store". He told me he was sure it was some kind of fluke, because they NEVER have problems with Samsung. I hauled out the wet load & threw it in a garbage bag. The dryer gave me a baleful look, apparently upset that he had not yet been able to show me his stuff. "Sorry." I told it.
New washer. After running it thru it's cycles again, the delivery guy (the same one from Tuesday), said "You're all set!" & drove away. "I've heard THAT before!" I muttered. I approached this 2nd washer with trepidation. I patted it & stroked it (the way my buddy Joe did). "Remember me?" I asked it. "We met in the store the other day?". I filled the machine with the wet clothes, made all my button choices & broke the sad news to the washer that, no, I didn't have a smartphone. I fed it some Tide & turned it on & quickly left the room. I couldn't bare to watch.
The chime came faster this time, only 8 minutes into the cycle. "You are KIDDING me!" I shouted, stomping my foot at the other end of the house.
I drove to Lowe's. Brian & Robert were around, but they said we needed to wait for Joe (my buddy!), who was the expert on all things washer related, so maybe HE could figure out what was going wrong with the Samsung (that NEVER has problems!).
"I don't care what's wrong with it." I told Joe, as he wandered in from lunch. "I think Samsung just doesn't like me. Maybe it's mad that I don't have a smartphone. I think it's time for me to change brands."
Joe, undaunted, went over to the computer & did some searching. "Maybe it's your water pressure - Samsung is very particular about water pressure. You might need a plumber to come & blow the lines."
"I don't think there's anything wrong with the water pressure." I told him. "I don't want to call a plumber! I think I would just rather look at another washer - you know, the old kind. The kind without all the lights & sensors. Besides, the old kind of washer will fill up up even if the water pressure is low, right?"
"Well, yeah, but it will take a while." Joe conceded reluctantly.
"Better than not filling at all." I countered.
"If that's the kind of washer you want..." Joe fired back, giving me a disdainful look - as if I had spurned a Mercedes only to choose a Yugo.
"The only kind of washer I want," I drew out my words slowly, "is the kind that works."
GAME, SET & MATCH! - Joe could only fumble at his computer keys in defeat.
Thursday I wrestled yet again that same load of soaking laundry (now THAT's what I call a 'Presoak'!) into a garbage bag & awaited the new washer/dryer.
("What's wrong with the dryer?" Joe wondered.
"How would I know?" I responded, "But I don't want to break up a set!" In other words, I didn't want to park my Yugo next to my Mercedes.)
Here came the same delivery guys, bringing me my 3rd washer in as many days. "I hope we don't see each other again any time soon." I joked.
"You're all set!" he replied.
I crossed my fingers.
I went to behold my new acquisition. It had nobs. It claimed to have a sensor, but I could turn it off. I did. I loaded the washer. It did it's job. I gave the load to the dryer. It did it's job.
GE - they bring good things to life!
& never once did the machine ask to speak to my smartphone. But, just in case, I picked one up the other day.
It is not a Samsung.
Saturday, February 2, 2013
Quest for Cleanliness (Part I)
Standing in Lowe's last week I found my washer & dryer.
Actually, I found MANY washers & dryers! A veritable ARMY of them, poised & ready for the never-ending battle against dirt & grime on fabric. All races were represented - mostly white, but a few silver, blue & red ones were included as well. Ah, Lowe's is an Equal Opportunity retailer...
I haven't bought a washer/dryer since 1998. Things have changed somewhat.
"Where are the nobs?", I asked myself. An eavesdropping salesman wandered over.
"They're all computerized." The salesman, Joe, told me, stroking the machine lovingly. "Much more efficient."
I could definitely see the 'computer' part. Countless buttons & lights were arrayed across the top of the machine like the bridge of the Starship Enterprise.
"Where are the washing machines," I looked around, " - these all look like dryers."
Joe gave me a look. "These are front-loaders. Maybe you haven't bought a washing machine in a while?"
I figured that was his polite way of asking if perhaps my last washing machine was a washboard & tub.
"No. I haven't. Front-loaders, huh? Now, why would I want to have to get on my knees to load the washer?"
Joe was quick to point out that there was a separate bottom drawer-thingy that would lift the washer higher up. For an extra $300. On top of the $1100 for the washer, of course.
"$300 for an ugly metal drawer? Don't they make the kind that opens from the top anymore?"
"Top-loaders," Joe corrected me, "Yes, over here."
"Better." I said.
I opened a sleek looking top-loader up & peered inside. "Now, where's the thing that goes in the middle?"
"The agitator."
"Yeah, that."
"These machines don't use an agitator. These are high-efficiency machines that use a sensor to weigh the load & blah, blah, blah." (He actually didn't say 'blah, blah, blah', but I got lost in all the technical stuff.) I figured my buddy Joe must know what he was talking about.
"Okay. The price looks better anyway."
"Yes, this set is on sale for $200 off each. $800 a piece.
"Is this a good brand? What is it...Samsung?"
"Yes, that's right."
"Samsung makes washers? My phone is a Samsung!"
"Oh, yes, Samsung has been making appliances for a long time. These are very high quality machines. We never have a problem with them. In fact, these are smart washers."
"Smart in what way?"
"They can communicate with your smartphone."
It never occurred to me that my previous washing machine may have been lonely. The dryer was not a good enough companion. No. My washing machine wanted more. In fact, it deserved more! It had things to say! It had needs! How could I have been so thoughtless?
It must be a joke: 'So, this washing machine walks into a bar & says to the smartphone--'
"Okay, I give up." I said to Joe, "What on earth would a washing machine say to a smartphone?"
"Well, you can check on the status of the load. It will tell you what cycle the wash is in & when it is done."
"You're kidding."
"No! It's a great feature!"
"Great?! What would be the point? If I am home, I KNOW when the wash is done & if I am not home, why would I CARE that the wash is done? What - I'm going to be in the middle of a haircut, my phone will beep & I will run out of the salon, clips & scissors strewn in my wake, to come home & unload the laundry?!"
Joe smirked at me.
He probably knew I didn't have a smartphone.
(to be continued...)
Actually, I found MANY washers & dryers! A veritable ARMY of them, poised & ready for the never-ending battle against dirt & grime on fabric. All races were represented - mostly white, but a few silver, blue & red ones were included as well. Ah, Lowe's is an Equal Opportunity retailer...
I haven't bought a washer/dryer since 1998. Things have changed somewhat.
"Where are the nobs?", I asked myself. An eavesdropping salesman wandered over.
"They're all computerized." The salesman, Joe, told me, stroking the machine lovingly. "Much more efficient."
I could definitely see the 'computer' part. Countless buttons & lights were arrayed across the top of the machine like the bridge of the Starship Enterprise.
"Where are the washing machines," I looked around, " - these all look like dryers."
Joe gave me a look. "These are front-loaders. Maybe you haven't bought a washing machine in a while?"
I figured that was his polite way of asking if perhaps my last washing machine was a washboard & tub.
"No. I haven't. Front-loaders, huh? Now, why would I want to have to get on my knees to load the washer?"
Joe was quick to point out that there was a separate bottom drawer-thingy that would lift the washer higher up. For an extra $300. On top of the $1100 for the washer, of course.
"$300 for an ugly metal drawer? Don't they make the kind that opens from the top anymore?"
"Top-loaders," Joe corrected me, "Yes, over here."
"Better." I said.
I opened a sleek looking top-loader up & peered inside. "Now, where's the thing that goes in the middle?"
"The agitator."
"Yeah, that."
"These machines don't use an agitator. These are high-efficiency machines that use a sensor to weigh the load & blah, blah, blah." (He actually didn't say 'blah, blah, blah', but I got lost in all the technical stuff.) I figured my buddy Joe must know what he was talking about.
"Okay. The price looks better anyway."
"Yes, this set is on sale for $200 off each. $800 a piece.
"Is this a good brand? What is it...Samsung?"
"Yes, that's right."
"Samsung makes washers? My phone is a Samsung!"
"Oh, yes, Samsung has been making appliances for a long time. These are very high quality machines. We never have a problem with them. In fact, these are smart washers."
"Smart in what way?"
"They can communicate with your smartphone."
It never occurred to me that my previous washing machine may have been lonely. The dryer was not a good enough companion. No. My washing machine wanted more. In fact, it deserved more! It had things to say! It had needs! How could I have been so thoughtless?
It must be a joke: 'So, this washing machine walks into a bar & says to the smartphone--'
"Okay, I give up." I said to Joe, "What on earth would a washing machine say to a smartphone?"
"Well, you can check on the status of the load. It will tell you what cycle the wash is in & when it is done."
"You're kidding."
"No! It's a great feature!"
"Great?! What would be the point? If I am home, I KNOW when the wash is done & if I am not home, why would I CARE that the wash is done? What - I'm going to be in the middle of a haircut, my phone will beep & I will run out of the salon, clips & scissors strewn in my wake, to come home & unload the laundry?!"
Joe smirked at me.
He probably knew I didn't have a smartphone.
(to be continued...)
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