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Charlie Hatton
Brookline, MA



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HomeAboutArchiveBestShopEmail Howdy, friendly reading person!
I'm on a bit of a hiatus right now, but only to work on other projects -- one incredibly exciting example being the newly-released kids' science book series Things That Make You Go Yuck!
If you're a science and/or silliness fan, give it a gander! See you soon!

The Washed-Up Washer

I mentioned a while back that my wife was out of town last week on family business. What I didn’t mention is that on the Saturday before she left, our washing machine went kaput.

Well, maybe not “kaput”, literally. I wasn’t around to hear the exact sound it made when it died. But considering that I found it with fourteen pairs of waterlogged socks and underwear swimming in four inches of grayish water, I’m guessing it probably went more like “kersplat”. Or “glugglugglug“.

The point is, the washing machine went down. Hard. I was able to wring out and dry all of our unmentionables-I-just-totally-mentioned, but no more laundry was getting done in that washing box, ever. It being Saturday, there were loads of dirty clothes all basketed up and ready to go. Clearly, I had a problem.

I was told by the missus to get on it, and call the number on the little tag on the washer for help. Then she left. So at the very first available moment — around noon on Tuesday, I believe — I called in to the repair shop. They sent a guy last Friday morning. He told me to either give the washer a good burial or to slap an air filter on it and make it an aquarium, because it wasn’t good for anything else any more.

“If, when I’m finished with them, the toilet isn’t cracked and the blender’s not on fire, then I’ll be sorely disappointed.”

(On the one hand, this was a great inconvenience. On the other, it’s kind of nice to know you’ve gotten your full money’s worth out of an item. If the guy comes in and fixes it with a new gasket and some WD-40, then maybe I haven’t used the thing to its full potential.

But if he pulls a blanket over its head and gives me scrap-metal estimates for the shattered husk that remains, then I know I’ve used it. Really and truly USED it.

I take this attitude with all my household appliances. If, when I’m finished with them, the toilet isn’t cracked and the blender’s not on fire, then I’ll be sorely disappointed.

Unless they get that way at the same party. Then I’ll have to adjust my margarita recipe.)

When the missus returned on Sunday, our first order of business was to buy a replacement washer. We’ve bought a lot of things together over the years — electronics, furniture, living spaces, semi-domesticated pets — and usually one or both of us will do our homework up front. We’ll hop online and pore over reviews or compare features or preview models in little magnifying-glass pictures until we know what we want.

That didn’t happen this time. She didn’t look, because she was on airplanes for much of the weekend. I didn’t look, because it’s a frigging washing machine, and unless it plays Pandora or has an extra hard drive or comes with an eight-button controller, I don’t so much care about the details. It’s a box where clothes go to get wet, before they go into the box to get dry, before they get dumped on the guest bed until ten minutes before company arrives, when we half-fold most of them and stuff the unmatched socks under the mattress. All it has to do is work. And not be an aquarium.

So we hustled out to one of the big home-supply stores an hour before closing, worried that we wouldn’t have enough time to make a decision. This anxiety was for naught. We arrived, were promptly glommed onto by a salesman, and had the following exchange:

Salesman: So, what are you folks looking for today?

Us: A washing machine.

Salesman: Okay, well, here’s our wide selection of brands right here.

Us: They all look the same. Are there any you recommend?

Salesman: This brand.

Us: Okay. How many models do they make?

Salesman: Two.

Us: And what are the differences?

Salesman: This one’s smaller. That one’s bigger.

Us: Bigger fits more clothes?

Salesman: Yup.

Us: Does bigger act like an aquarium?

Salesman: Not for the next ten years or so.

Us: We’ll take bigger.

Salesman: Deal. Sign here and swipe your card.

To be fair, there was a little more to it. I remember something about a “steam function” I’m never going to use, and lots of shiny buttons I probably won’t be allowed to touch. But we were in and out of the store in ten minutes, and I’m not even positive it was a washing machine we bought. The delivery guy comes on Saturday, and if he brings a car washing machine or a golf ball washing machine or maybe an automated poodle washing machine, I won’t be especially surprised. And I’ll still stuff my underpants into it, and set the thing for “Extra Suds”.

When it comes right down to it, I don’t have a lot of choice at this point. Once I found out the old washer had spin-cycled its last, I made a beeline for my dresser. And counted out underpants. If you have enough underpants, you don’t have to do laundry. Which in this case would avoid a trip to the laundromat and all sorts of uncomfortable college dorm flashbacks.

Happily, I had enough boxers to last just over a week. That gets me to Saturday — with some measure of sacrifice. I’m nearly down to the ‘novelty underwear’ portion of the drawer; when the delivery guy carts our new washer in, I’ll very likely be clad in a black silk number with red Valentine hearts patterned throughout. My fervent hope is that I still have clean pants at that point, so I can cover my heart-shaped shame.

On the other hand, he’s a washer delivery guy. He probably sees those things every time he carts a unit in.

At any rate, this is shaping up to be a laundry weekend to end all laundry weekends. Both our undies reserves are gone. I’ve got a lime-green T-shirt I haven’t worn in three years slated for Saturday, and I have to pray it fits. Even if it clashes with the hearts. The clean towel supply is holding, but heaven forbid we need an unscheduled shower. We’ll have to dry off on Kleenex, or by rolling ourselves naked on the living room drapes. Which we told the neighbors we definitely wouldn’t do any more. Not before sundown, anyway.

In short, we’re anxiously awaiting our new favorite toy, which neither of us looked into and gave little thought to. I suppose the cliche thing to say is that you don’t notice the little important things until they’re gone. But what I really notice is the nine piles of dirty clothes that were never there before, and now block the way to the closet where my last few clean shirts are. If the new washer works, I’m throwing it a party. And if the dryer doesn’t break before Monday, I’m buying it a fucking medal. Come hither, yon Saturday — let the washing begin!

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State of the Blog: 2013

It’s one day short of the end of April, and there are milestones aplenty on the horizon for this site. I thought I’d take a quick moment tonight to mention a few. Because what the hell else do I have to write about, eh?

One day less than one year ago — meaning, 364 days, or May 1, 2012 — I started the Eek!Cards series of ecards that are mostly terrible ideas to send to people, and were probably equally awful ideas to have written down on the internet. With pictures.

Last night’s Eek!Card was #265, and I’ve used them as placeholders on every day I don’t post something else, which means in the 365 days (minus one day) since I started, I’ve also written 100 (minus one) blog posts. Not so shabby. And a nice round number.

(Minus one. Godammit.)

Of course, that’s not all I’ve written in the past year. There were also 44 “Zolton” Facebook prank articles over at ZuG.com, whose plug was sadly pulled on April 1st. I’ve managed to salvage those — and yes, I’m well aware that nobody asked me to, thank you very little — and repost the entire series right here. So that’s a thing.

“If my post count were the year, we’d all be driving space buggies and making out with aliens by now. Eat yer heart out, Commander Shepard.”

(I also wrote the last of the series of Zolton Amazon prank articles, which came before the Facebook set, in early May of last year. Those are in the hopper, too, though I’ve got a long way to go in reformatting those. I’ll keep you posted on the progress.

Whether you want me to or not. So nyah.)

Meanwhile, in six-and-a-half weeks, the blog turns a full ten years old. I won’t quite make it to two thousand “main” posts in ten years — this will be #1931, according to the software — but with the article series, my old “100 Things Posts About Me” and other random bits of fluff, the number is well over 2k.

Over 2150, even. If my post count were the year, we’d all be driving space buggies and making out with aliens by now. Eat yer heart out, Commander Shepard.

I’m not sure where I’ll go from here, exactly. The ZuG work (minus cleanup) is kaput, and perhaps a year of dubiously useful ecards is enough. Or more than enough. To paraphrase a movie line, “you had enough at ‘hello’.”

I’ll keep posting nonsense here, sure, but maybe not every day. Or maybe there’s some new series of thing or other I can get into. I tweeted a lot for a few weeks; that’s a lot of fun. I could cross-post from a fake Twitter account pretending to be Ned Flanders’ mustache. Or maybe I’ll start vlogging humorous interpretive dances based on Fawlty Towers episodes.

Also, I’m open to suggestions. Because those ideas are idiots.

At any rate, there’s a lot going on. At least, a lot has gone on, and will no doubt continue to do so. When and how often and why — for the love of god, whyyyyyyyy? — I can’t really say. Tune in and see. We’ll keep the blog on for ya.

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A Man, a Fan and No Plan

I have fans.

Not fans of my writing. Obviously.

I’m talking about ceiling fans. In the condo my wife and I share, there are no less than three ceiling fans — one each in the living room, spare bedroom and main bedroom. These fans are all from the same manufacturer, appear to be the same model, and presumably were installed all at the same time by one of the previous owners.

So naturally, they all behave wildly differently. Because why wouldn’t they?

The living room fan, I suspect, works properly. It has a ‘low’ speed which is noticeable, but only mildly effective. There’s also a ‘medium’, which is fairly refreshing, and a ‘high’, which feels — and often sounds — as though a military-grade helicopter is preparing to land on the sofa. I like ‘high’. ‘High’ is good.

“Standing under this thing is like being strapped to the cage of a bayou fanboat flying through a blender set to ‘super-frappe’.”

The fan in the guest bedroom doesn’t have these speeds. Maybe it once had these speeds; I’ll probably never know. Mostly, it doesn’t have any speeds at all, and instead beeps rather unhelpfully at you when you press the button on the wall that should cycle the fan. If you’re a bit more forceful — and diligent and lucky — with it, the beeps may finally give way to the fan’s insanely fast speed setting, which makes the helicopter thing look like a goddamned pinwheel. Standing under this thing is like being strapped to the cage of a bayou fanboat flying through a blender set to ‘super-frappe’.

I’m not saying that’s a bad thing. I’m just telling you the fan speed.

The fan in the main bedroom — our bedroom — is more like the first, only if it had gotten a good talking-to from Eeyore for the last several years. On ‘low’ speed, the fan blades can be tracked by the naked eye. Or a calendar. ‘Medium’ is something akin to a sane person’s ‘low’, and ‘high’ is fine, I suppose, but it doesn’t exactly evoke ridiculous metaphors of dangerous vehicles or overpowered blending devices. So what is it good for, really?

I bring up these fans and their grossly unpredictable behavior to tell you this: as I mentioned earlier, my wife is out of town this week, dealing with some family business. Like a lot of couples, the two of us have very different internal thermostats — she likes things warm and toasty, while I’m more comfortable in chillier weather. Or air conditioning. Or blenders. And both our preferences are strongest when we’re least able to enjoy our optimal temperatures — i.e., when we’re sleeping.

As a good and reasonable couple, we like to compromise when it comes to these sorts of things, so that no one will ever get what they want or be truly happy or fulfilled in life. It’s just what we do. We’re in wuv.

So the fan in the bedroom comes with hard and fast rules for usage. When she goes to bed — usually a bit earlier than I do — the fan stays off. When I join, I may turn the fan on, but only on ‘low’ — which is just frigging pointless — or ‘medium’. Which is basically ‘low’, but still counts as a compromise because it’s not ‘high’. Which is really ‘medium’, in fake-o ‘high’ clothing.

When my wife gets up — always before I do — she turns the fan off, or at least down a notch. We make exceptions, of course — when the temps are eighty-plus, all the fans might be going, and on days we break ninety, she’ll even turn them up herself. Or would, if I weren’t sitting on a pile of ice cubes, willing them to spin faster. But always in the morning, she turns the fan down.

But then there’s the other exception, which I already mentioned. When she’s out of town, all bets are off. So you can bet your sweaty bedsheets that bedroom fan has been on high every night this week. When I’m ready for shuteye, I shuffle to the switch, give it a quick punch, and hear the oh-so-sweet triple beep that tells me the fan’s about to take off:

*brrrrttt brrrrttt brrrrttt*!!

If I were to hit the fan again, I’d get two beeps and ‘medium’; another touch and it’s one beep and ‘super-slo-mo turtle’ speed, for some reason. Those mean nothing to me. I’m strictly here for ‘high’.

I also mentioned that the missus sometimes turns the fan off or down when she wakes up. So I’m used to hearing these beeps in the wee morning hours, when she’s up — and presumably chilly — and I’m still snuggled under the covers. So my brain didn’t immediately skip a snore this morning, when in a hazy half-awake stupor I distinctly heard:

*brrrrttt brrrrttt*!!

Rather, it took a few seconds to realize: “Hey. Stupid. Your wife didn’t turn the fan down. She’s a thousand miles away, fraternizing with your in-laws, bless her little heart.

In the thick of my grog, it was another tick or two before it occurred to me that the switch for controlling the fan was just past the foot of the bed, mere inches from my feet.

Finally coming to, my synapses locked into place with the question, “WHO THE SHIT IS STANDING IN MY BEDROOM, TURNING DOWN MY FAN?!?

The rest of my body wasn’t quite as quick to catch up, and I learned that in the “fight or flight” response, there’s a third alternative, “flop headfirst onto the floor”.

(Come to think of it, it’s odd that instinct would have survived long enough to get to me. I imagine most cavemen with the ‘flop on floor’ gene would have been eaten by a saber-toothed something-or-other pretty early on.)

I managed to extricate myself far enough from the covers and shame to peer over the mattress, where I saw… nothing. I tiptoed into the hallway, nearsighted like a Magoo without my contacts — truly, I’m farting in the face of evolution with every minute I manage to survive — and again found nothing. I retreated to the bathroom and put my eyes in, craning to listen for any floor creak or door slam an intruder might make. Nada.

So I did a perimeter check, like any sane person alone in a house would do. Closets. Behind shower curtains. Under beds. And eventually, the truth became clear. There was no one in the condo but me. So I schlepped back to the bedroom, wondering if I’d only dream-heard the beeps — but the fan seemed slower than it should be. I pressed the button once, which would have taken it from ‘three-beep speed’ to ‘two-beep speed’, if it were all a bad dream. Instead:

*brrrrttt*!!

I came to the only logical conclusion. The fan, after four years of turning up in the evening and down in the morning, has gotten used to the routine. This fan obviously comes with some rudimentary artificial intelligence — probably the same sappy bit that Eeyore-jacked the speeds in the first place — and it’s accustomed to routine. So in the morning, by god, come hell, high water or temporary spousal displacement, that fan speed was coming down. Hard.

And in the process, I almost shat my own bed this morning. Which is something I’d rather be alone in the condo for, I suppose, but still not on my “list of things to do while the wife is away”. Also not on that list? “Sweep the place for home invaders”, “battle a depressed OCD-riddled AI module” or “exorcise a poltergeist that apparently has control of large metal blades that spin above my testicles while I’m sleeping”. Which is the other possibility, and I’m not even going to go there.

I mean, what’s the point, really? Even if I knew how to fix that, it would just throw the holy water back in my face. It’s a ceiling fan, for crissakes. If that’s the problem, the thing can stay possessed, for all I care.

Just as long as it stays on high until morning. I can live with that. At least until the wife gets home. One compromise at a time, you know?

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