Desperate times call for desperate measures. That ski day I mentioned a while back is coming up on Sunday. And with no easy way out — I can hardly fake a bleeding ulcer or scarlet fever now, without laying any fake illness groundwork — I’m pretty much on the hook for it.
Oh, part of the trip will be fun. It’s a two-hour trip or so to the mountain, and the missus and I ride well together. We listen to the same kinds of music, only one of us tries to drive at a time, and there’s almost never any farting while the windows are rolled up. Our car etiquette is superb.
Also, we’re going with a couple of friends, so we should have a grand old time on the way there, on the way back, during any meals we might share, and while they’re visiting me in the infirmary for frostbite or broken bones or being impaled by a ski pole. Or for scarlet fever, if I can manage a really good hacking cough on the way there.
It’s all the other time, when we’re supposed to be skiing, that I never enjoy on these trips, because I’m just so freaking bad at it. I firmly believe that if you try something three times and show no improvement and aren’t having any fun, then you should never have to do it again.
“It really seems to be a matter of whether I’d rather shatter my ego, my body, or my liver. And only one of those has the perk of allowing me to write my name in the snow in pee.”
(Of course, this rule only applies to leisure activities. Otherwise, folks would only get three colonoscopies in their lives, and only pay their taxes for the first three years of employment. I suspect it would cut down enormously on people having four or more children, too. But that’s not the point right now.)
I’ve been skiing four or five times, as I mentioned in the post linked above, and I still stink like a snow-behind-the-ears newbie. Also, I don’t like it. So, in these desperate times, I laid an ultimatum on my wife last night. I’ll go on your little snowy mountain trek, I told her, and you won’t hear a peep of complaint out of me. But I am not — I repeat NOT — strapping on those slats of death and shame and ligament snappage while I’m there. That’s just how it is, lady. I’m the man of this igloo, and I’m putting my fur-lined sealskin-booted foot down. I told her that, and braced myself for a wave of protestation.
‘Oh,‘ she said, nonchalantly. ‘That’s fine. You can always snowboard.‘
‘Look, I don’t care how long you plan to withhold sex over this. I said no, and anyway, I know where you sleep and where we keep the bungee cables, so… wait. Did you say snowboard?‘
‘Yeah, you should trying snowboarding if you don’t like skiing.‘
‘Isn’t that hard?‘
‘Probably. But what else are you going to do for four hours while we’re skiing? Drink yourself stupid at the bar?‘
‘Well, if that’s an option, I’d sure as hell like to try-‘
‘No. It’s not. Try the snowboard. Oh, and also?‘
‘Yeah?‘
‘I moved those bungee cords. And next time I’m mad at you, I’m sleeping with a mousetrap down my pants.‘
Good to know. I guess it’s not quite as terrifying for a woman to stick a mousetrap down her pants as for a guy. One wrong move, and we’d be looking for jobs singing falsetto in a boys’ choir. I guess next time she’s mad at me, I’ll have to test the waters with a stick or something first.
Or throw a mouse down her pants. If she weren’t mad at me already, she sure as hell would be then.
Back to this weekend, before I get into further hot water with the missus. Or PETA.
So, it looks like I’ll try snowboarding. Today at work, I mentioned my newly-planned adventure to a few folks around the office. Their responses, down to the very last one, were unanimously positive.
Positive that I’m going to gravely injure myself, that is. One girl asked if she could have my desk chair, should I never make it back. I licked the seat all over, and told her that if she still wanted it, it’s all hers. She declined. So I keep my chair, but now I can’t get the taste of my own Levis out of my mouth. Where I come from, we call that a ‘draw’.
Meanwhile, my other office chums said things like:
‘Oh, you’ll be falling on your butt all day the first time.‘
‘Snowboarding, huh? Man, you can snap a knee ligament so easy doing that.‘
‘Be careful. My buddy broke his wrist trying to learn to snowboard.‘
‘Watch your head. You could flip over face-first and get a concussion.‘
‘Dude, what are you, suicidal? Snowboarding will screw up your back in a heartbeat.‘
Peachy. So now I have three choices. I can try skiing again, which brings me no comfort or pleasure, fall and bitch and kvetch all day and ruin the day for everyone. Or I can try something new and different in snowboarding, and break my back, head, wrists, knees and ass — quite possibly all in the same maneuver. Or I can say to hell with both, ride up to the mountain and sneak off to the lodge to start drinking at 9:30 in the morning. It really seems to be a matter of whether I’d rather shatter my ego, my body, or my liver. And only one of those has the perk of allowing me to write my name in the snow in pee.
I think I just changed my mind again. If I can weasel my way directly to the bar without also shattering my marriage, I’m considering that ‘Plan A’.
If not, and I wind up strapped to a snowboard — and subsequently airlifted off the mountain and fitted for a full body cast? Well, you can have my office chair while I recuperate.
But you might want to wipe it off first. I’m just saying.
Permalink | No CommentsSomething has fundamentally changed in my life. I just noticed it today. I can’t say yet whether it’s a change for the better or a change for the worse, but it’s definitely different. And probably a lot easier. I’ll explain.
At work, I keep these little piles of change on my desk. Any spare dollar bills go in the car, but the coinage goes on the desk, in neat little orderly stacks. I’ve done it for years, and don’t really know why. I suspect it’s some sort of borderline OCD symptom, boding disaster for my future as I sink into tapping my toe three times with every step, or compulsively licking every button in the elevator. Or every passenger. Maybe both.
Meanwhile, it’s just me and these little stacks of coins. They’re quite a little feat, really, in an overly anal-retentive, mad accountant sort of way.
(How come we never hear about ‘mad accountants’, anyway? Or ‘mad hair stylists’ or ‘mad fry cooks’ or ‘mad toll booth operators’? It’s always ‘mad scientists‘, like they have some sort of exclusive rights to egomaniacal mental illness.
I mean, sure, they’re really good at it. Don’t get me wrong. But surely someone out there is stark raving take-over-the-world loony who doesn’t have an advanced graduate degree in particle physics or structural biomechanics. Where’s the love for the evil not-so-much-geniuses of the world, I ask you?)
“Clearly, the world would collapse on itself if there were only two and a half dollars per stack in one of my quarter piles, so for the sake of the entire planet, those stacks get twelve quarters.”
Back to my piles of coins. I’ve always had them stacked side by side, with ten coins per pile. Except the quarters get twelve, so it’s an even dollar amount. Clearly, the world would collapse on itself if there were only two and a half dollars per stack in one of my quarter piles, so for the sake of the entire planet, those stacks get twelve quarters. No need to thank me. Just doing my part.
If there are partial stacks of coins, they go in the front — the better to stack more onto them, when spare change comes my way again. If there are multiple stacks of ten or twelve, they go behind, forming neat little rows of dimes, pennies, nickles and quarters. And there are always multiple stacks, because frankly, I don’t have a lot of use for spare change most of the time. Once in a blue moon, I’ll need a quarter or two for parking. Maybe I need to make an important life decision — should I weep softly under my desk this afternoon, or retire to a stall in the bathroom? — and I’ll need to flip a coin to seal the choice. But otherwise, the change just sits there in neat little piles in neat little rows, side by side, accomplishing nothing except keeping in check that twisted little bit of my brain that evidently needs them to be in piles and rows.
I can’t explain what’s going on in that little bit of my brain, nor do I assume particular responsibility for it. It reminds me of a doting old matronly librarian, endlessly wandering through the stacks, making sure everything is in order. She’s not using the books herself. Possibly, no one’s using the books, ever. In my case, I’d say the proverbial library has been closed and condemned for quite some time, as a matter of fact. Still, the books have to be in order just so, or it’s not a proper library. And so it seems to work with those little stacks of coins. The other bits of my brain call that one the ‘Coinbrarian’.
Yeah. I’m beginning to think all the bits of my brain are a little cockeyed. Maybe it’s contagious; who knows?
For years, my little coin-keeping ritual was a source of mild amusement — and probably, occasional petty theft — for the people who worked around me, but otherwise pretty harmless. I’d get change from lunch or the soda machine, and — *stack-stack-stack* — I’d throw it on the appropriate piles, maybe straighten a stack or two, and forget about it until the next time my pockets jingled with fresh change. The routine changed a bit, though, soon after I moved into my current office, which I share with another person. And who’s sometimes here without me. And who often has meetings in our office, if I happen to be occupied elsewhere.
All of which is perfectly fine and reasonable. But occasionally, the person she’s meeting with will use my office chair. Again, no problem. And they’ll sit at or near my desk. Which I’m perfectly okay with. And then, they’ll play with the stuff on my desk, including the neat little rows of neat little stacks of coins.
Wait. Sons of bitches did what, now?
Most of the bits of my brain look over this behavior completely. So what if a few papers have moved? Maybe the pens that were over there are over here now — big deal. The speakers are on the floor, the phone’s glued to the ceiling and all my personal effects are in a box labeled ‘TRASH PICKUP’ outside the door? Oh, ha. Nice one, guys. Now change the locks back so I can get in to my computer. That Freecell isn’t going to play itself, you know.
But if a couple of pennies are dumped off a stack, or that back pile of quarters was accidentally knocked over? The little bit of brain responsible for such nonsense seizes up like a smack junkie in a methadone shortage, and pounds on all the other bits to fix it, fix it, fix it, fix it!
At least, that’s what it used to do. This morning, I came into the office, saw that someone had borrowed my desk and toppled a few nickles onto the desk. I sighed and waited for that insistent little voice to compel me to tidy up the piles and smooth out the rows for the umpteenth time.
And waited. And waited some more. Nothing. Not a peep out of that part of my brain. Either it’s asleep, on a long getaway vacation, or something finally killed it off for good. I knew alcohol was good for something — I just have no idea why it’d take so long to kick in.
I decided to test the waters, and see whether the little bit of brain was lying dormant, or just being lazy. With one sweep of the hand, I jumbled all the orderly little stacks of coins into a single amalgamated mess. No objection. No protest, not even a whimper.
My cockeyed coin-stacking bit of brain appears to be kaput. A little part of me has died — not a part that I expect to miss, especially, but still. We coexisted for years together, stacking and restacking, obsessively lining up and carefully piling, and now it’s gone. Today, there’s just this big metal gemish on my desk — maybe six or eight bucks’ worth — and I’m perfectly okay with that. All the different kinds of coins are touching each other, and I don’t know how much is there or how many piles there should be, and there’s no inner voice shrieking at me to make it right, lest the heavens open up and swallow us all for my coiny transgressions. It’s kind of a load off, really.
Now, then. If someone could just remind me how to tie my shoes, which order the days of the week go in, and where the hell I parked my car this morning, that would be super. Maybe that little brain-killing dealie wasn’t quite as specific as I’d hoped for.
Permalink | 3 Comments(First off, a quick program note.
While I’ll be keeping up my every-weekday-once-on-weekends writing schedule, baseball season is upon us. Or almost upon us. Or approacheth. Something.
Anyway, some days I’ll be penning posts over at Bugs & Cranks, as opposed to over here. For you baseball fans, I’ll post a link the next day, so you can catch up. And for you non-fans… well, you’ll get the occasional day off, then. Enjoy it. Work a crossword. Take a nap. Write a poem or something. Knock yourself out.
Like yesterday, for instance, when I didn’t write here but I did offer Like Father, Like Ken? over at B&C. Or today, when I more or less contradicted everything in that piece with So Much for Symmetry.
Normally, that’d count as two full days of writing. But I figure the contradiction cancels one post out, so here I am tonight. Plus, I had to explain the whole sordid thing somewhere. And what kind of a post would this be if it cut off right now?
If you answered ‘A typical one, but mercifully shorter‘, then I’m giving you the finger right now. For the rest of you, I’m simply pointing further down the page, where the latest bit of fluff is waiting to be read. Carry on, then.)
There are times — lots and lots of times — when I’m glad that my wife isn’t nearly the smartass that I am. Like this Monday afternoon, for instance, at about a quarter past two.
“On Monday, I was off work for President’s Day. Or Abraham Lincoln’s birthday, or George Washington’s wedding day, or Chester A. Arthur’s bar mitzvah anniversary, or whatever the hell we’re supposed to be celebrating in the middle of February.”
On Monday, I was off work for President’s Day. Or Abraham Lincoln’s birthday, or George Washington’s wedding day, or Chester A. Arthur’s bar mitzvah anniversary, or whatever the hell we’re supposed to be celebrating in the middle of February. Me, I was celebrating being home from work. Dead presidents had very little to do with it, really.
What did have to do with it was sitting on the couch wearing sweatpants and a T-shirt of questionable cleanliness, eating stale Chee-tos and watching Futurama reruns in the middle of a Monday afternoon. Which is what I was doing, and enjoying quite immensely. Until the dog walker arrived.
The dog walker comes on Mondays. To walk the dog, as her job title might imply. She always arrives in the afternoon, when I’m at work, so I’ve never met her before. And it’s my wife who always leaves her a check, or calls to cancel when one of us will be home. Except for Monday, when apparently, she didn’t.
So there I am, sloppy, slovenly and orange-fingered, watching cartoons, when I look through the window and see some strange lady standing on the porch. She was facing away from me, talking on a cell phone, sort of whispering into it. I put two and two together and figured she was probably the dog walker, but didn’t really have time to make myself presentable. So I didn’t. And just in case she wasn’t there to walk the dog — that is, in case she didn’t have a key to let herself in — I scrunched down on the couch out of sight, so I wouldn’t have to answer the doorbell. And I was sure to crunch my Chee-tos very softly for the next few bites.
A few minutes later, I heard the key in the front door and she stepped in to say hello. I wasn’t much of a pretty sight — rumpled sweats, unshaven cheeks and orange stains on my pants, and probably the couch. Quite possibly the dog, for that matter. We exchanged greetings, she introduced herself as the dog walker, and then said something rather curious:
‘I saw a car in the driveway, so I called your wife to ask if I should walk the dog today. She said her husband was home, to just come on in.‘
I assured her that she’d done the right thing, and that the dog could certainly use a walk. And maybe a quick hose-down, to get the Chee-to dust off her coat. The lady retrieved the leash, buckled up the pooch, and they left me to my puffed cheese snacks and cartoon marathon. It was while they were gone that I realized once again how lucky I am that my wife isn’t a smartass like me.
Because I thought about what would happen if the roles were reversed. If I were the one signing the checks, and talking with the walker, and I was the only one she’d met in the past. And if my wife were home one Monday, slumming it up — not that she ‘slums it up’ quite as entirely as I do, but still — and I’d gotten a desperate call from the walker, after she’d seen a car in the drive and a strange woman lying on the living room couch. Because I know what I’d say to her:
‘Oh, sure, please go ahead and walk the dog. But I don’t know anything about the car or the woman — I don’t have a wife. Thanks so much, bye! *click*‘
Now, I don’t know what would happen if one of us told the dog walker that there’s a stranger in the house with the mutt she’s about to escort. Would she call 911? Might she barge in and try to strangle us with a poop bag? Would said poop bag be used already, or fresh from the box? I don’t know those answers. I only know that, as a card-carrying smartass, I would have been obligated to find out.
Luckily, my wife carries no such card. So I was spared all of that, and had only to deal with being caught by a stranger at my scraggly, sweatpantsed, cheese-fingered worst. Of course, I was in my own house, with no expectations of visitors at the time. That dog lady’s damned lucky I had pants on at all.
To her credit, she walked the dog, brought her back, collected her check and left without so much as a derisive snort or a ‘Good god, man, how do you live like that?‘ And I went back to my cartoons and Chee-tos until six o’clock or so, when I cleaned up a bit and shaved and put on a pair of jeans before the missus got home. Not that she hasn’t seen me at my worst before, of course. But I didn’t want to make her too jealous of me on my Monday off, when she had to work a whole day.
Because she’s not especially a smartass. But if I really cheese her off, next time she’ll sell me out. And nobody wants to be strangled with a poop bag. Used, or otherwise.
Permalink | 1 CommentThey say marriage is all about compromise. It’s the give and take, the equal distribution of responsibilities, the separation of church and state… or something. I zoned out a little bit while the preacher was talking. Anyway, marriage is a partnership, and so the missus and I long ago divvied up our chores, so that we might have a harmonious and long-lasting relationship. And things have been one hundred percent complaint-free ever since.
Except that one time. After which, things have been one hundred percent complaint-free ever since. Because I’m scared out of my freaking pants. Here’s how it happened:
It didn’t take us long as a couple to figure out which sorts of chores we were each good at — or which ones one of us was more comfortable handling. Take paying the bills, for instance. My wife handles that — not because I can’t, exactly. Sure, math was never my strongest subject, but the credit card people tell you your annual percentage rate right up front these days, and all the tickets and citations have the fine amount in big bold letters, so I’m sure I could figure things out.
“That woman knows where the buttons are, and she’s not afraid to push them.”
But she never agreed with my ‘Price Is Right‘ approach to bookkeeping, which I used before we got together. Any time I had an expense, I’d write it down in the checkbook — but it was an awful pain being too specific, so I’d always round up to the next dollar or ten or hundred. That way, when I balanced things out, I knew I had at least whatever the book said in my account. As long as it stayed above zero, I could budget out cash. I just had to be sure I didn’t ‘go over’, or there’d be trouble. Like overdrafts and bank fees and losing the sweepstakes with the new boat and those fancy end tables. Nobody wants that.
My wife, though, apparently likes to actually know how much money we have at any given time. Or every given time. And my ‘well, I had a hundredish and I spent tennish, tennish, and then twentyish, so I probably have enough left for pizza‘ ways didn’t suffice. So she handles the checkbook now.
And I take out the trash. Fair’s fair. Once a week, she sits down and wades through receipts, bills and ‘THIRD NOTICE: DEADBEAT ALERT!‘ letters, trying to reconcile inflows and outflows. And once a week, I lug thirty pounds of banana peels, unread magazines and used Q-tips down to the curb, trying to avoid spillage, seepage or breaking my back in half. We call that a wash.
Meanwhile, we’ve divided up all the other little bits of stuff that have to get done around the house. She walks the dog — but I shuttle the mutt to ‘doggie day care’. I set up the computers and the wireless network; she tells me what I should wear to parties and reminds me which names belong to which people. Most everything else — going to the grocery, changing a lightbulb, cleaning up dog pee — happens when one of us desperately needs it to happen before the other does. If we’re out of bananas, it’s her trip. If it’s graola bars, it’s mine. If the dog whizzed on her couch, that’s her thing. If the dog peed on mine — well, my first thought would be to string the mutt by her tail from the ceiling and play ‘pissy pooch pinata’. But when I’m done seeing if I can knock candy out of her butt with a big stick, then cleaning the pee is still my job.
And the stick thing? It hasn’t worked yet. I’ll keep you posted.
Like I said, neither of us have ever complained about our little jobs around the house. We’ve either chosen them or figured it was in our best interests — by avoiding bankruptcy, say — to tackle them ourselves. That doesn’t make them any more palatable, but complaining isn’t going to get either of us anywhere.
Which I found out the hard way, the time I groused about getting stuck with the laundry.
I didn’t pick laundry; I don’t even remember how I wound up with laundry. But every weekend, I dutifully gather up the baskets of dirty togs, toss the clothes in the washer, forget about them for a day or two, throw them in the dryer, let them sit for a while and lug them upstairs. Somewhere in there, I fold the wrinkled-up clean clothes from last week’s loads, probably. Usually. Unless there aren’t any left, after I pick clothes out the laundry basket for a week to wear. Which is always.
Anyway, I don’t mind doing the laundry. But I don’t love it. And one day, a few years ago, I made the mistake of being a little too vocal with my under-the-breath mutterings about it. My wife heard, and asked what my problem was.
Me: Oh, the laundry. It’s just such a chore.
Her: Well, yeah. We’ve both got our chores.
Me: Yeah, but laundry’s so hard. It takes so long.
Her: Hey, so does the budget. And walking the dog. And making out Christmas cards. You gotta deal.
Me: Aw, but it’s just relentless. And I don’t even wear half of those clothes. So far as you know.
Her: Look, we both have things we have to do. Laundry’s one of yours. That’s just how it is.
Me: But I don’t want to. Why do I have to do all the hard things?
Her: Hey, balancing the checkbook is hard!
Me: Pffft. Not as hard as laundry.
Her: The way you half-ass it, maybe. Walking the dog is hard.
Me: Yeah. Not like laundry, though. I don’t see you sorting the mutt’s turds into pairs and folding them.
Her: Ew. And hey, you think laundry is hard? Well, lookee here — I can make babies.
Me: But… I don’t want any babies.
Her: Then you’d better shut your yap and do the damned laundry, then, hadn’t you?
She had me there. So I did shut my yap. And I’ve been keeping it shut and doing the damned laundry, every week, ever since. That woman knows where the buttons are, and she’s not afraid to push them. Maybe if one of my chores was working out the lovemaking schedule, then there’s something I could do about that baby thing she’s hanging over my head.
But it’s not. Lovemaking schedule making is one of hers. That’s just how it is.
Or so she tells me. And at this point, I’m too afraid to question it. Pass me the fabric softener and don’t make any waves, man. I’ve got chores to do.
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