The Drain Cleaner

After a week without a functioning bathroom sink, I called somebody out to unclog it.  I got the name of a guy from a coworker, but when I called him he told me that he no longer does drain cleaning.  He gave me the name of somebody else – Davey.  “He’s a good kid, knows what he’s doing and is reasonable.”

I gave Davey a call in the morning and by 3:00 he was at our house.

When Davey came to the door I was a little taken aback.  He looked like he was still in high school but I seem to think that about everybody these days.  He was as sweet as could be, shook my hand and introduced himself when he walked in the door and spent a long time petting Henry.  I took him upstairs to show him our problem sink.  “Oh man, the plumbing in these old houses can be tricky sometimes,” he said as he poked around, and while he was doing that we got to know each other a bit.

Davey grew up modestly in a house along the Tennessee River.  His older brothers moved to Kansas City years ago and bought an apartment building which they still own.  As soon as he turned 18, Davey got in his car to come to the big city where the opportunities were more plentiful.  He used to do maintenance for his brothers’ building but now he’s the night security guard for a different building.  His rent and utilities are paid in full as a perk of the job and and so he does side jobs during the day to make some extra money.

When he went downstairs to get his tools he looked around the living room and said, “Ma’m, I like your house.  I really like your house.  You got a knack for putting stuff together.”  We started talking about vintage stuff and curb finds and he pulled his phone out and showed me a picture of a table he got for free in exchange for some drain work.  It was impressive.

Geez, Davey, you’re a kid after my own heart.

Before long I could hear the water running and draining upstairs and went to check things out.  He was cleaning up the black sludge that had come out of the pipe and while he was doing that he told me about the time he was drunk and decided to ride his bike home instead of getting in the car with his brothers.  The next thing he remembers is waking up in the hospital.  He crashed his bike into a tree, and thankfully, a cop happened by and saw the bike which led to the badly injured Davey.  He had a concussion and didn’t come to for 19 hours.  The next two years, he said, he was loopy.  “Couldn’t remember anything.  I’ve smoked a lot of pot over the years, but even after all that with the accident I prefer whiskey to weed.  I kind of manage that a little better now after what happened to me, though.”

Geez, Davey, you need to be careful.

When he had put everything away and it was time to pay him, he told me how last week he hit somebody crossing the street with his car.

You hit somebody with your car?

“Not bad, but it scared both of us,” he said.  “I pulled my car around the corner to get out of traffic and went to check on her and that’s when somebody stole my gun.  Right off my front seat.  Just helped themselves to it.  I think I know who it was, too.  I remember her good.  We’ll meet up again and I’ll get my gun back.”

 A gun, Davey?  You have a gun in your car?  Like right now in my driveway?

“Gotta have it, Ma’m, when you’re a security guy like me.  Don’t worry, though, it’s not on the front seat.”

Jeezus Davey………

“Okay, well here’s my card if you need anything else.  I don’t do plumbing because that would require a lot more tools than I have right now.  I keep it simple and just do drain cleaning so if anything comes up with you or your neighbors give me a call.  I’m reasonable, don’t you think?”

Yep, Davey, you are.

“Oh and Ma’m, if you need some weed I sell that, too.  Three different kinds but I’m liquidating so I’ll give you a good price.”

Forcing The Issue

Back in the good, old days of dating when Mark wanted to impress me, he volunteered to change the oil on my Ford Escort.

Swoon………wasn’t that so sweet of my boyfriend?

He had a little trouble getting the oil filter off and asked me to get him a hammer and screwdriver.

“It’s on here so tight I can’t budge it so I’m going to drive the screwdriver through the oil filter and make a handle so I can turn it.”

It was the dumbest thing I’d ever heard of and I didn’t know a thing about cars.

That was my first sign from the repair gods that my breakable life with him would involve brute force, but I was in love and ignored that which was right in front of my face.

Over the years he has busted most things he’s tried to fix.  I stand over him and say, “It’s fine, Mark.  Just leave it, Mark.  DON’T FORCE IT, MARK!!!”

He mocks my girliness and then says, “Just a little bit tighter, a quarter of a turn and I’m there.”  That’s when the piece snaps off, the glass breaks or the metal bends and before I can scream at him he screams at himself.

Son of a bitch is the preferred scream.

We have been trying to unclog our bathroom sink that has been draining incredibly slow.  My favorite hardware man gave me something to try and said once should do the trick.  Maybe twice but no more than that and your sink will work like a charm.

You dump the stuff down the drain, wait an hour and then run hot water.

#1 didn’t work

#2 didn’t work

The next day Mark wanted to give it one more try.  “No, that’s okay. Mark,” I said.  “We probably need to call a plumber, Mark.  Just leave it and I’ll call somebody out.”

“Mark.”

But my Neanderthal couldn’t leave it alone.

He tried hot water one more time…….massive quantities of hot water dumped into our little, bathroom sink.  After the third time in two days the sink protested the repeated water boarding.

The pipe gave way from all the pressure and all that water gushed over the bathroom floor, the dining room underneath on the first floor, the basement.

“SON OF A BITCH,” he bellowed.

BUCKETS!  I NEED BUCKETS!!!!

Will and I went scurrying for the mop, the buckets, the towels, the National Guard.

It took awhile to clean everything up and when we finished Mark shook his head.  “I think if it weren’t for that pipe breaking I was pretty close to unclogging the sink.”

He. Was. Never. Close.

In the meantime, I am washing my hands in the tub until a pro can come out and fix the bigger problem we now have, and that boyfriend of mine is dragging his knuckles on the ground until he hears the call to duty once again.

Maintenance

I do not work on Fridays and it is always my intention to get a lot done.  That never happens.  I sleep a little later, I read the paper a little longer, I waste ridiculous amounts of time on Facebook and Pinterest, I get on the phone, I putter the day away.

This past Friday was the first Friday of the rest of my life.  The start of getting shit done on my day off.

I had a dentist appointment at 11:00 that was purely for cosmetic reasons.  I started seeing a new dentist a few months ago and she asked me if I wanted the gaps filled in between between my front and eye teeth.

That’s okay.  We like to stay current with the house payment.

As if she could read my mind she said, “It’s not an implant or anything expensive.  I’ll put a bonding material on it like a filling and it shouldn’t be more than $80.00 for both teeth.”

So I signed myself up because if my smile dazzles then maybe you won’t notice the wrinkles.

I was ridiculously optimistic when I sat in the chair and the dental tech said, “We don’t even have to numb you for this.”  Yeah!!!  Instead they started with a lip spreader which is just as awful as it sounds.  A huge hunking plastic thing that stretches and holds your lips apart for oh, I don’t know………an hour or more.  And I was thinking, “You have got to be kidding me,” but since I couldn’t put my lips together to make any sound I pleaded with my eyes.  The dentist and the tech cheerfully chatted over my head and so my plea was to Jesus who happened to not be on ceiling duty that day.

Toast perhaps?

The hour it was supposed to take to do both teeth stretched into an hour and a half for one tooth and I called a time out.  I had a mammogram appointment in thirty minutes and seeing as how I was six months past due on that one I needed to schedule another time to come back for the second tooth.

December?  Yeah, that sounds good.  No, not this December.

I flew out the door of the dentist’s office and raced to my other appointment.  I had been instructed over the phone to arrive fifteen minutes earlier than my scheduled time to fill out paperwork.  I arrived one minute late.  Forty-five minutes later I filled out paperwork.

I was called in and got my mammogram which compared to the dentist wasn’t so bad except for the side views which felt like I was being steam rolled.

People.  Really………..

I came home and laid on the couch.  I was spent.  No cleaning.  No laundry.  No grocery shopping.  No bill paying.  No dinner.  Not even Facebook or Pinterest.

I gave everything I had in me on my day off to two women who told me they were almost done about thirty times.

The Big Daddy came home from work and took pity on me.  “Let’s go out to eat,” he said and I poufed my couch hair and put some lipstick on.  Then I showed him how the gap was filled in on the right and he said, “Holy crap, honey, that looks awesome.”

And it did.  White and polished……..a Crest commercial smile if I ever saw one.

We went to the new pizza place in town and had a glass of wine.  We oohed and ahhed over the funky, industrial-vibed restaurant and watched the hipster employees running around with their cute selves.  My day of being squeezed and stretched was but a distant memory.

The second bite of my pizza made an odd crunching sound and I thought, “No. No. No.  Please no.  Not that.  Please. Not. That.”

And then I spit out a chunk of my newly spackled tooth.
                

The Prodigal Cat

We have had a feline crisis of sorts around here.  Half of the Turd Brothers went missing.  The Frank half.  Both of these cats go in and out all the time so I was not aware that Frank was AWOL until Mark brought it to my attention that two days had gone by without a Frank sighting.  When two more days had gone by I began to worry about the guy out there in the cold.

We decided not to let Mallory know that under our care the cat population had diminished by 50%, so at dinner last Sunday Maggie asked me on the down low if Mallory knew what was going on.  I shook my head “no” while Will blurted out, “Hey, Mal, did you know that we can’t find Frank anywhere?”

So much for keeping secrets.

“What???” she yelled.  “What do you mean Frank is gone?  How long has he been gone?”

Four days, dearie.

“Well, what are you guys doing about it?”

We’re worrying that’s what we’re doing.

“Yeah, but like a plan.  What’s your plan to find him and bring him back?”

Oh honey, we have never been planners.  You know that……….we’re wingers.

“There is a cat missing.  Plans need to be made here.”

She was right and I thought about going to the rental house a few doors away.  We’re a little familiar with that family.  When we had our other cat the girl that lived there liked him so much she picked him up and brought him home.  Mal had her suspicions that Beamer was blatantly kidnapped, and so the next day Mark knocked on their door and said to the dad, “Yeah, I think you’ve got our cat.”

“We don’t have a cat here,” the dad said.

“Yeah, I think you do,” Mark said and the case was busted wide open when a meow came from the bedroom of the alleged kidnapper.

This was running through my mind after Mal left and so I looked at Pip and said, “C’mon, find your brother.  Be useful for once in your life.”  Pip seemed content to be King of the Cats around here and would stalk fluttering leaves like the half-wit that he is without the slightest idea that he was being kicked out of the house to comb the neighborhood for signs of his brother.

He is gone for good, I thought.  Swooped up by an owl, chased to another zip code by a fox, run away to a better home.

We were sad.  Not that I’d want either of them to lead the gypsy life, but of the two Frank is the least annoying.  Pip will bug the shit out of you all day long until you’re screaming WHAT DO YOU WANT FROM ME like he’s some kind of bad boyfriend that keeps showing up drunk, needy and crying with a pee stain on the front of his pants.

Not that I’ve ever had first hand experience with that.

Mal came home to spend the night on Saturday, and night owl that she is she heard a single meow at 2:00 a.m. at the back door.  Ten days after he left you-know-who came back to his girl.

The Frank Whisperer.

Pip gave him a cat bath after his long journey abroad and our wanderer napped most of the weekend.

On the clean shirts right out of the dryer.

Sheesh.


Marie

The first person I met in this neighborhood was Marie who lived next door.  Because we had closed on the house and had until the end of the month to leave our apartment, I would come every morning with a load of stuff – Maggie and Will in tow.  They loved our new empty new house and would run around exploring while I worked on getting things set up.  After a couple of hours we would leave to take Maggie to afternoon kindergarten and return again the next day.

Marie was standing in her driveway one morning when I pulled up.  “Hello new neighbors,” she yelled over and the kids and I went to meet this woman.

It didn’t take long for her to become a mainstay in my life……the older surrogate mom while my own mother and mother-in-law were very far away.  She would come over often, sometimes to visit or to show me some new clothing purchase.  If we were working in the yard she’d tell us to take a break because we were making her tired just looking at us.

She had many friends and when she would go to lunch with them she could never fasten her favorite bracelet and so would appear at my door in her long red skirt and ask me to help her with the clasp.  After my mom met her she said, “Those tall women can wear anything they want and look like a million bucks.”  In Marie’s case, this was very true.

Marie had raised two boys alone in the house next door long before we arrived, and during a time when that was far from being a common experience.  At one point in her life she was the private nurse for Harry Truman after his presidency when he came back to Missouri. 

Mark and I found her fascinating and could listen to her stories over and over.

She was raised in Atchison, Kansas and had a deep knowledge of antiques.  When a local place was going out of business I put a hold on a pine cabinet and drove home to get Marie who couldn’t be happier to go on this adventure.  “Tell me what you honestly think,” I said.  “I’ll only buy it if you think it’s worth it.”  She gave her blessing and every time she’d come over she would admire our mutually agreed-upon purchase.

Sometimes she would call us up and say, “I’ve got his bottle of wine that I can’t open so why don’t the two of you come over and help me out with it.”  And we would sit at her dining room table and talk and laugh over a glass of wine.

For a short while one of her sons moved back home and the two of them wore a path between their house and ours.  They each found the other incredibly annoying, so Mike would come over and complain to Mark about Marie, and Marie would come over and complain to me about Mike.

We were amused.

One day Marie came over very distraught.  Someone who said they were from the water department came to her door to check some things out and she let them in.  While they were in her house she became suspicious and thankfully, got them out before anything happened.  She called the police and by dinner time was on the local news being interviewed about this water department scam that seemed to be preying on the elderly.

She became nervous and afraid after that and I noticed some other things that didn’t seem like her.  I mentioned them to Mark who said her confusion was a sign of aging and that she seemed to be fine to him.  I wasn’t so sure and would later learn that women are especially good at covering up memory issues unless you’re around them often enough to figure it out.

A few weeks after that we were walking down the street to a graduation party for a neighbor’s son when I noticed Marie a few doors away.  We went up to her and though she was going to the same party, she couldn’t figure out where it was.  Her confusion was evident and disturbing to her and us.

After that I called her son, Dan, who lived close by.  “It is none of my business,” I said, “but she seems very forgetful and we’re worried about her.  We are all keeping our eye out for her but I thought you should know.”

He was already aware of her lapses in memory and in the process of taking her car away which made my heart sink.  No more lunches with friends?  No trips to Macy’s for something fabulous to wear when she went out?   No going to church?

I was already mourning Marie’s independence.

As time went on she would often come over to get Mark for help with her washing machine.  “The darn thing keeps breaking down,” she said to him, but in fact she would set it and never pull the knob out to start it.  Once she came and got me in tears because the numbers on the refrigerator wouldn’t stop going around.  It was her dishwasher running its cycle, and rather than explain that I just shut it off which seemed to relieve her greatly.   Besides those things, my neighbor with the impeccable fashion sense started making odd clothing choices.  Wool sweaters in the Kansas heat in July, and layers of clothes that would make me sweat just looking at her.

It was obvious that staying in her home was not going to last for much longer.

Dan came over and told us that Marie had Alzheimer’s and would be going into assisted living by the end of the month.  They were packing up what they could to make her new residence feel like home and selling off the rest.

The day before Marie was to leave I went over to my old friend’s house and invited her over for a glass of wine.  “Just like the old days, Marie.” 

This time Marie had no Harry Truman stories to engage us with, just a nervousness that wouldn’t go away.  We talked about being neighbors for such a long time, and that we promised to see her in her new place when she got settled.  She had a piece of pie and took her wine with her when I walked her home.  By mid-morning the following day she was gone.

I dragged my feet going to see her and when I ran out of excuses and was but five minutes from the place on another errand, I pointed the car in the direction of my friend.  There was beautiful Marie sitting in the lobby with another woman and I was so happy to see her I could have cried.

“Sit, sit,” she said.  “What do you think of the place?  Do you know I can have coffee whenever I want?  It’s just right over there.  Would you like me to pour you a cup?

Always the hostess, our Marie.

“Have you ever met my son, Dan?  He comes by to check on me a few times a week.”

“As a matter of fact, Marie, I know Dan pretty well,” I said.

“Oh yes, of course you do.  I forgot.”

We sat for awhile catching up and then she took me upstairs to see her new place.  There were all the familiar things that were in her house for years.  The chair I always sat in when I went to visit her, the framed paintings of family owned farms in Atchison, the bedroom set that had been handed down for generations.

“I like it, Marie,” I said.  It looks like you have everything you need.”

“Are you kidding me,” she said.  “Sometimes I want to call a cab and tell them to take me back to 71st Terrace, the best street in the world.”

“I know.  Aren’t you glad we found our way there?”

“71st Terrace I would say to the cab driver if one pulled up right now.  Take me back there as fast as you can.”

“Well, Marie, I think you’re in good hands here and I need to be going.  The kids will be getting out of school soon and I have to pick them up.”

“Oh, the children, how are they?”  I miss them so,” she said.

“They are just fine and and they miss you, too,” I said.  “Things haven’t been the same since you left.”

She walked me out and I hugged her when it was time to leave.

“I’m so glad you came,” she said.

“Me too, Marie.  Me too.”

“You have a great husband and kids, don’t you?”

“I do.  I’m lucky that way.”

 “I thought so and now you get to go back to 71st Terrace.  Maybe I should go with you.”

“Oh Marie, I’d get in a lot of trouble if I did that but maybe Dan can bring you over one day for a visit.”

“I would love that.  I’m going to talk to him about that.  About taking me to see my old friends, but before you go tell me again………how is it that I know you?”

Business 101

When I was going to school at night I took an accounting class.

It. Was. So. Hard.

I remember spending hours on a Sunday afternoon doing a spread sheet for homework and could not find my mistake.  I felt like ripping it up and stomping on it, but just when I was about to give up I found my transposed number and VOILA……..we balanced Mission Control.  Now I have a job doing accounting and often daily it feels hard.  It was a failure of my imagination to think that the debit/credit/fixed assets/prepaid expenses mumbo jumbo that made me soooo crazy would rear its confusing head and park itself in my life years later. 

If I am keying something in at work and the numbers don’t jive, a big, red WARNING WILL ROBINSON will appear on the screen saying, “Girrrrrrrl, you can’t do that cuz that just doesn’t add up.  Now put your thinking cap on and try again.”  Then I have to find my mistake.  Often it’s an easy fix but if it isn’t I stare at the screen and whisper in desperation, “Come to Mama.”  

It is my secret accounting tactic from back in the day.

Prior to my accounting class I took Business 101.  Halfway through the semester the teacher missed our weekly class and it was cancelled.  For the night school student who has come from work to finish her degree this is like manna from heaven. 

When he came back he apologized for his absence and said, “I had a death in the family and that’s why I couldn’t be here last week.  It was my father,” he said stopping to control his emotions.  “He had been sick for awhile and his death was not unexpected, but now I am an orphan.  I am a 46 year old orphan and I’m not sure I know how to find my way now that both of my parents are gone.  I’m trying to figure that out so please bear with me for awhile.”

And we did just that while he taught on his wobbly feet.

My accounting background might have gotten me this job and on rare occasions I can recall some of those lessons, but it is the words my teacher spoke that Monday night in Business 101 that have forever been seared into my memory. 

It is the only thing I remember from that class.

Safety Nets & Coworkers

My first retail job was at Petite Sophisticates nearly two decades ago.  I shopped there frequently and one day the manager came up to me and said, “I like your style and we are looking to add to our staff.  Would you be interested in working here?”

The rest is my service industry history.

The assistant manager was a woman named Dorothy.  She was a retired nurse and this was her 2nd career- a welcome departure from the stress of caring for sick people.

One day Dorothy told me about her life.  She had five kids and was married to an abusive man.  When the abuse kept escalating she went to her parish priest for advice and counsel and permission to leave this man.  The priest said to her, “If you leave him you will become a divorced woman and you will go to hell.”  She stayed until one day he kicked her down the stairs and held a shotgun to her head.  “That was the day,” she said, “when I decided that my chances in hell were better than my chances with him.”

Many years later I worked with a woman who was subjected to such verbal and psychological abuse at the hands of an ex-boyfriend that she would shake in fear when the store phone rang.

There are many other examples over the years of woman I have worked with that live on the edge.  Thankfully, the abuse stories are not the norm but the scraping by certainly is.  The ones who are consistently kept under forty hours week after week so the company doesn’t have to pay them health insurance.  The ones who juggle several jobs to make their rent.

They are the woman who know that a car accident, an illness, a root canal or a cut in hours will put them under a pile of bills that they might never recover from.  They rob Peter to pay Paul and come to work sick because that is all they know how to do.

I have loved these woman and it has been my honor to work along side them.

One time I told one of my friends about a situation with one of my coworkers and she said, “Well, why doesn’t she just take some money out of her savings account or get a loan from the bank?”

It doesn’t work that way.

I have worked most of my life.  Getting out of the suburbs with the cars and vacations, the home remodels and relentless faux problems and into the real world was the best thing that has ever happened to me.  As my mom said years ago when we left the comfort and security of our Catholic grade school for an integrated high school that closed every spring because of racial strife, “Kids, you need to see how other people live.”  For the time being, my retail career is over but I miss it and those women.  I miss their guts, their perseverance, their example of putting one foot in front of the other and praying your way through the latest crisis.

I miss their stories most of all because when you know the uninsured, the single mom and the underemployed – when you work next to them eight hours a day, week after week unpacking boxes, hauling trash, moving fixtures, steaming clothes, smiling and waiting on customers when their burdens are so heavy that they could sit and cry at any given moment……….

When you know all that you cannot hear one more time that somehow these are the people who have milked the system.

The October Present

When Will was a toddler he was a holy terror or maybe he was just being a boy.  I’m not sure but he wore me out.

Then all of a sudden he stopped and that kid could entertain himself for hours.  He would go in the basement and you wouldn’t see him until dinnertime.  Down there with his Playmobil and Legos he’d be building and tearing apart and building again.

He’d make roads from construction paper and scotch tape them all over the floor.  I started to hide the tape from him and dole it out on request because I could never find it when I needed it.

Once when we were at a doctor’s appointment for his asthma we waited in the examining room for well over an hour.  I thought they forgot about us and was getting antsy but Will entertained himself the entire time with a paper clip.

When he was about twelve and in the basement he discovered that one of the local radio stations played jazz on Saturday night.

He became a jazz fan in the 6th grade.  Sometimes if I were picking him up from somewhere he’d say, “Let’s turn on the jazz, Mom.”

Today our jazz fan, interior designer, charming, funny Will turns 23 and it has gone by so much faster than I would have liked (except for when he would climb on the table and swing the light fixture back and forth).

Happy Birthday Will.

Watching you discover and march to the beat of your own drum has been my joy.

The Clavicle Incident

The Big Daddy started biking to work twelve years ago as a way to get in shape.  He would come home from the five mile ride and sit on the stairs hacking and clutching his chest.  I’d stand at the ready…..scooping up plates of Prison Food for dinner with one hand and the cordless phone in the other in case I needed to call 9-1-1.

After awhile he got into shape, started taking this biking thing more seriously and participated in more rides than just back and forth to work.  There were charity rides, weekend rides, the 75th St. brewery ride, the Blue Moose ride, the Brookside group, the PV ride, the Ride ride…………..

And I’d about had it with the rides.

One morning after the kids had gone to school and I was getting ready for work, he came downstairs in some of that ridiculous spandex he’d started wearing and said, “Yeah, some guys asked me to ride tonight so I won’t be home for dinner.”

What????  Again???  Who asked you?  What guys?  I want names.

“Oh, you know Cliff and a couple of other guys.”

They didn’t ask you.  You went trolling for riders.  That’s what you do.  You go all over town looking for rides to go on.

“That’s crazy.  I don’t do that, besides it’s just going to be a short ride.”

You’re never here.  We never sit down and have a decent dinner any more.  You. Are. Never. Here. And. What. Are. You. Going. To. Do. About. That?

He went to work.  I might have called him names after the door closed.  No, wait, now that I think about it I’m pretty sure he was still in the room when I called him names.

I stormed off to work and fumed most of the day about this ride he was going on.  At 5:30 he showed up at the store – very apologetic and willing to skip the ride and start dinner.  I was so happy to have a decent meal when I got home that I said, “You start dinner.  Everything is there for chili.  Get it going and then meet your friends for your ride.”

Winning!  Marriage saved, he gets a night ride with friends, we have chili for dinner, and the kids don’t have to worry about an evil stepmother – just their familiar, predictable evil mother.

For the next hour and a half at work I salivated just thinking about that chili simmering at home and when I walked in the door the smell did not disappoint. 

The kids told me that some guy had called numerous times and I was to call him back right away.  I looked at the number, didn’t recognize it and said, “Okay, as soon as I have a bowl of chili.”

I lifted the lid and the phone rang.

It was the police department.  Mark had flown off the front of his bike and was hurt.  Not bad the cop said, and he refused the ambulance but he should probably go to the emergency room.  He told me how to get to where he was and pick him up.

It took awhile because I got lost which happens as soon as I pull out of the driveway.

When I finally got to him, we put his banged up body in the front seat and his bike in the back.  “He passed out,” one of his friends told me.  “He says he’s fine but he needs to get looked at just in case.”

We went to the emergency room of the medical center he’s worked at for twenty years.  The shiny, new multi-million dollar new ER that had been opened for all of two days.  This would not be the ideal time to visit an ER with a non-life threatening injury.

Nobody seemed to know where anything was……essential ER things like an xray machine to look at the collarbone that was sticking up, and all I wanted was to hurry this thing along so we could go home and have some chili.

When multiple attempts to find an xray machine failed, it was decided that Mark would have to go to the old part of the hospital for the xray and a wheelchair was ordered.  “I’m fine,” he said,  “I can walk.”

“Yeah, he’s fine,” I said.  “He can walk cuz we need to get home and have some chili.”  Nobody said anything, not even a polite chuckle but I was serious.  If him walking meant getting out of there sooner and going home to a bowl of chili well, let’s do it.  Better yet I thought, his bike is in the back of my car.  Maybe he could ride it to this random xray department.  After all, he still had his spandex on.

After much deliberation and the curtain opening and closing around him a dozen times, a wheelchair arrived and we went to some abandoned, empty part of the hospital with one xray room.  “I’ll be back,” the kid pushing the chair said.

“No, no.  Just wait here with us.  He’ll be done in no time and then we can all go back down together and he can get a cast or a sling or a cane and then we can go home.  We can.  We can go home real soon if you’ll just stay here.

“Please.”

“Here.”

“Stay.”

He left.

Mark got the xray and it was confirmed that his collarbone was indeed broken.  We sat in the hallway for nearly an hour waiting for the kid who dumped us there to come back and get us.

Finally I said, “That’s it.  I’m pushing you back myself.  We’re not waiting here another minute.”

“Do you even know where you’re going?” Mark asked.

“No,” I said unlocking the brake.  “I have never known where I’m going.  That’s my mission statement in life.  No plan.  No direction.  No clue.”

The Wheelchair Pusher showed up just then.

We went back to our curtained ER room and waited for a doctor nurse resident med student anybody to advise us so we could be on our merry way.  When a doctor-like person finally arrived for the final curtain opening he said, “It’s a broken collarbone.  There’s not much we do for those these days.  We’ll give you some pain pills, a brace if you want one and that’s it.  It will heal on its own.”

And I started to seriously lose it. “What???  Are you kidding me?  We’ve been here all night for that???  I missed chili for something that will heal on its own!”

“There, there,” Mark said wincing as he got up.  “You’re going to be just fine in no time.”

We stopped at the hospital pharmacy (which was only slightly faster than the ER), got some pain pills and I drove us home nice and slow so as not to upset the cracked collarbone.  At midnight, with my coat still on I sat down and ate a bowl of crusty, overcooked chili that I scraped from the bottom of the pot.

Mr. Tour de Shoulder Smash sat at the table grinning in his slinged arm.  Missing were his glasses which had flown off his head as he was falling and were subsequently run over by the ambulance.  I gave him the stinkeye for ruining what was supposed to be the saving-the-marriage-dinner.

By then the Percocet had kicked in and he winked back.

Sheesh.

Playing With Fire

I went with Maggie and Will to the mall last Saturday.  It was a chilly, rainy day so that meant 10,000 other people had the same idea.

I’m not really much of a mall person these days.  A shopper?  Oh yes, with my insecurities I’ll take some of that retail therapy, but my comfort zone has diminished to a few miles and the mall is a few miles past my few miles.

The mall is too much for me……..a sensory overload of baked potatoes, pretzels, piped in happy music and Seacret Spa and electronic cigarette stalkers.

We went to the new H & M and the place was packed.  I found a sweater and it was exactly what I’ve been looking for.  V-neck, oversized, weekend wear but the kids thought $25.00 was too much.  You could get that at the thrift store for a whole lot less, they told me.   

FYI, kids, I buy plenty at the thrift store, but ever since you two started popping tags you’re acting like you’re my mother, who by the way wouldn’t be caught dead in a thrift store.

I ignored them, sang some Hard For The Money and made my purchase.

Will had some guy things to do had to get away from us so Maggie and I went to Sephora which is kind of like taking a gambler to Harrah’s.

Sweet Jeezus, I love that place. 

As soon as I walk in I see the potential for a whole new unwrinkled me with big eyelashes, perfect brows, pouty lips, striking cheekbones.  When somebody hands me a cute, little Sephora basket and I place it over my arm, I instantly feel like Audrey Hepburn.

I tend to lose track of what I’m there for if you know what I’m saying.

The buzzy highs I get when I walk in the door start to feel like ringing in my ears at the register.  I try to keep my voice from sounding shrill and shaky when the associate tells me the total.  “How much did you say that was?” my inquiring mind asks.  And when she repeats the same amount I say, “Ummmm, could you just tell me what each thing costs cuz I might have to put something back.”

Did I mention I am sweating? 

Profusely.

She repeats the same number for the third time and then says, “Did you know you’ve reached 100 points and qualify for a gift?”

B. I. N. G. O.

Oh girl…………

Home alone opening my teeny, little black and white bag with my microscopic free gift wrapped in red tissue paper, the harsh reality sets in.  I have done significant damage to my just deposited paycheck. 

I pout.

With an awesome new lip liner.