A little while ago, I had a weekend that can more or less be described as “hectic.” Not BAD hectic, but not calm-like-still-water
hectic either.
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| Looking back over this blog always makes me wonder if I'm doing too much but I don't really have time to think about it because I'm planning another project. |
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| "Andy's" dream weekend |
“Andy” went out of town on that Thursday morning. He was going to see dear wonderful friends
that we love and watch something like 1,000 slasher films at a Halloween themed
movie marathon. I was invited, and under
other circumstance, would have loved to have gone—but the two preceding weeks I
was on the road more than I was home, and had just finished that
odyssey when
go-time for final decisions about the trip
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| My dream weekend |
needed to be made, and I just…didn’t
have it in me. Even though there is a
lemur exhibit at the local museum, and I love our friends very much. I just couldn’t wrap my head around not being
in slobby pjs covered in cats, so I stayed home.
Having a few nights alone in the house is sort of fun and
sort of leaves me at over-ambitious but essentially loose ends. For example: that Thursday night I came home
and, within 2 hours, had touched every kitchen device in the house. Food processor, electric mixer, instant pot,
even the ol’
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| Reader, did you know that fruit leather, a healthy snack made through the use of a standard dehydrator, looks almost exactly like a puddle of cat vomit? |
dehydrator got pulled out.
After my whirlwind kitchen project extravaganza I was left with a savory
pumpkin-sweet potato puree (healthy and delicious! Perfect for making pancakes,
soup, or fritters! Which now I have to eat a lot of, before it goes bad!),
dried cucumber and onion chips (I refuse to explain myself), a new batch of
kimchi (I don’t have to explain myself), a mess of a kitchen, and a sense of
accomplishment that quickly turned to dread because it was only like 7:15, I
had finished the TV show I’d been watching (WHICH IS PERFECT), and I had
nothing else to do for my night.
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| The show is on Netflix. It's called Rookie Historian Goo Hae-Ryung and it is HILARIOUS. Set in ancient Korea. Worth the subtitles. So. Good. |
I restarted the TV show.
That’s how desperate it got.
The next day, I got out of the house in the evening and went
to see a friend. It was a lovely time. I also confirmed with my sister that I was
having her two tallest children over for a sleepover the following day.
Her oldest has been asking to come over for a sleepover like
every 20 seconds all summer, and the answer is always yes but also… I love these children more than my breath,
but finding a free weekend night has been a struggle. Low and behold, I had a whole free
weekend! No plans, because I’d
basically been holding the time for the trip that I ended up too frazzled to make it
on, then decided to fill it right back up!
So c’mon girls, let’s have a sleep over!
I spent the morning doing ridiculous things like vacuuming
my car and mowing the lawn as though it was my Dowager Countess-esque mother coming over and not a 6 and 8 year old. They
got here in the afternoon and we discovered we had each, separately, made a
list of fun, meaningful, memory making activities with which to fill our time
and symbolize our love for each other.
So we def set out to ambitiously make it through these lists
and—if I do say so myself, we did a great job:
Going to the garden and harvesting collards for dinner? Check.
Grocery store trip to get ingredients to bake cookies? Check.
A healthy dinner consisting of whole, homemade ingredients including
herbs the girls picked from the yard. SO
check.
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| Is this child just...eating a raw collard green leaf? Yes she is. |
Decorating the whole house for
Halloween? Super spooky check.
Building a tent out of blankets and
sheets? Double check—one in the guest
room, and one in the master bedroom.
Fashion show where I have to explain to my niece she can’t pick out
which dresses I will wear from my closet because those are my THIN dresses that I only keep out of stubbornness and nostalgia? SO MUCH CHECK.
In the morning we made those cookies, and then like a sane
and reasonable person I pulled out a circular saw and some house paint, and we
made personalized tombstones for them to take home and decorate their own
yards. Tis the season.


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| True story, I could have just let them chase the cats around the whole time and they would have been just as happy. |
They left around noon and I was like, I don’t even know who
I am right now. It is NOON and I have
BAKED and SAWED and my house is a WRECK and IT IS ONLY NOON.
So I sort of reclaim the house, rearrange some of the
decorations because the short people have very strong opinions when they are
here and I can’t make them understand why you can’t stack pumpkins in front of
the TV or move the lamp off of the end table, but then they leave and turns
out, it’s my house.
I decide I’m going to make soap, because I’ve been intending
to make soap for a while and I still have that high voltage urge to DO, plus
some time, plus an innate inability to sit down and chill like a normal person.
I make the soap. I
find somewhere to cure the soap. I pace
a little. I am still in my pjs, which
absolutely are now sporting evidence of the day’s baking, sawing, painting, and
soap making on them, which I find inspirational. I see the couch. I see the cats, the promise of my dream
fulfilled. I crash out, put on Netflix,
and heave a sigh of contentment.
This last about 3 minutes before, while trying to turn up
the volume, I accidentally hit some other button and the whole system of the
television realizes its true master is not at the helm and abruptly reminds me
that *my* tv watching station is outside on my tablet and NOT on the couch. It shuts down my show and refuses to get back
to Netflix.
I have all the appropriate feelings about this, and may or
may not have sent “Andy” a series of texts using words like “EMERGENCY” and the
lord’s name in vain, but he, as mentioned above, is in a movie marathon.
I glance outside, but it’s raining. FINE. I
AM UNDETTERED. I get out the book I’ve
been meaning to start, and curl up on the couch, finally relaxing, finally
chill, finally in my slobbiest pjs covered in cats.
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| This is how I imagine myself. |
At some point, I notice my phone tell me that an Amazon package is on the way. Earlier Amazon had told me my package would not be on the way today, because reasons, but I am delighted at this new turn of events. I have ordered an adorable cloche hat and am looking forward to wearing it with style. The tracking tells me only 8 stops before mine! Fabulous. I go back to my book.
A while passes and I decide to check the porch—then, come to
think of it, when did I last check the mail?
That’s usually “Andy’s” job, I did check it at some point, idk when, I
might as well. I step onto the
(package-free) stoop, shut the door so the cats won’t get out, take a step, and
realize-
I have locked myself outside.
I have turned the handle lock out of habit, like when I
leave for work. I have pulled the door
shut—can confirm, Reader. Definitely
locked. Definitely shut. I tried it like 15 times.
Ok, I think, let’s assess this situation. It’s dark out, it’s raining…but I don’t have
to poop or anything, so we can get through this. The back door might be open, let’s start
there. Of course we have a big privacy
fence around our back yard, tall and not built for climbing—well, let’s just go
check it out.
Turns out the fence is super easy to scale when properly motivated, especially
when once you’re in the air above it, you realize exactly what this looks like
to any curious neighbors and you go fast-like-a-bunny to make that a limited
viewing option.
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| Assessing the situation. |
The back door is of course locked, because I am a
responsible adult who believes in safety.
Also the dog was deeply confused and really sad, because here I was at
the back looking like I was opening the door for him to join me in his favorite
place, the outside, but I wasn’t opening the door, I was just cruelly taunting
him.
Fine, door’s locked—more assessing. Maybe the windows? We open those sometimes, maybe one is
unlocked? Then I hear a noise—over the
fence and across the street, someone is loading their car up like they’re going
out. “Perfect!” I think. “I’ll call to them over the fence, and ask for
help!”
J/k. No I don’t. That is absolutely not what I
do, Reader. Rather, I hide in the shadows and wait for
them to entirely pack up and leave, because I don’t want them to see me doing
shady ish like peering into the windows checking to see if they’re locked. I literally waited in the dark, in the rain,
hiding in my own back yard—the one I am in RIGHT NOW as I type this, NOT
hiding, with no sense that anyone might think I am a home invader.
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| Hahahahahaha No. |
I start to process this home invasion angle—what if someone
does call the police, I think? “Well,
then maybe they can get the door open,” replies the naivest part of me,
“Surrrre, with their state issued lock-picking tool sets that they always carry
on their Batman utility belts to home invasion calls,” finishes the thinking
part of me. Also this entire tragedy is
figuring heavily in my mind. Right, ok,
back to assessing. First let’s get back
to the front door—but this time over the shadoweyest, tree-coveredest part of the
fence that goes to the alley between our house and the neighbors. I go back to my stoop, to get out of the
rain.
“FINE,” says naïve voice again, “but maybe they have tools
for this at the station, and it’s not a far walk!”
This is when it really sinks in that I’m barefoot. I mean, I’ve been barefoot the whole time,
but this is when the significance of that sinks in.
Well, I know how to pick a lock…I just don’t have
lockpicks. I start to assess again—this
time assessing the environment. There’s
the Halloween decorations we’d just put out, and there are wires on them, but
none of the right strength and size. Not
a bunch of hair pins just sprinkled around the yard, it turns out. My car is there—wait, didn’t I see once that
you can use the wire in a windshield wiper to pick a lock? There’s some way to do it, I saw it on a
youtube video one time….
And this is when it really sinks in that I don’t have my
phone. It's true, you can make lockpicks with a windshield wiper wire. But I
would need one other thing to really do it right and that thing is a tutorial.
So let us continue to assess. I am barefoot, in my shabbiest pajamas, locked out of my house, in the dark, in the rain. I do not have my phone. There is not a hidden key; there is not an unlocked window. I do have “Andy’s” phone number memorized, but he is in another state, in a movie marathon.
However. He has his mother’s number, and she lives about 15 minutes away and is, as far as I know, the only possessor of a spare key. Gotta get to “Andy,” thinking part of my brain says.
I consider the neighbors I know—or more specifically, the
ones who know me and are least likely to shoot this hobo looking person coming
up to their house at night. I start
knocking on doors, but no one I know is home.
I’m on the verge of knocking on other doors, when I see, in the
distance, a woman walking under an umbrella up a side street. And then, like a character in one of the
horror movies my husband was surely enjoying at that very moment, I follow
her.
Reader, I know I look like a stalker, and a homeless one at
that, but it made sense to me at the time.
She’s way ahead of me though (in retrospect, hopefully far enough ahead
that she didn’t even know I was coming after her through the rainy night like a
crazy person) and makes it into a house before I’m close enough to call
out. Now I’m at the end of a cul-de-sac
in our neighborhood and I’m realizing it’s time to knock on strangers’
doors. In fact, there is a house down
there with lots of lights on. Lots of
cars in the driveway. Their glass door
is shut but the real front door is open.
I start to approach…
And this is when it really sinks in that I’m not wearing a
bra. It’s chilly and rainy out. I do NOT want to walk up on a party. Look, it’s an option, Reader, I know it’s an
option, but....
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| We're just not there yet. |
I start my way back toward our house—and low and behold, a
car has pulled into our driveway. A
woman gets out in an orange safety vest, and I call to her:
Hey, are you the Amazon lady?
Hi—I live here, this is my home. I locked myself out, could I borrow your phone to call my husband??
Now let us take a moment for her to asses. I come, out of the darkness like a forlorn
spirit, from across the street, wet, barefoot, no bra, dirty clothes, hair
every which way, saying I live here in this house I was not just at and
please could you interact with me and in fact hand me your phone, I promise I
am not a vagrant.
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| I looked like this, Reader. |
And, god bless her, she does.
I call “Andy” from this unknown number while he is a movie
marathon two states away, planning to leave a message then send a text but, god
bless him, he answers.
I try to explain my situation which he broadly gets because
this is not a moment that calls for specifics, and says he’ll call his mom and
call me back—but he can’t call me back, because I’m on this lady’s phone and
she has deliveries to make. So I say
good bye, and hand her back the phone.
She hands me my package, says good luck.
She drives away.
I go back to sitting on the stoop.
She hands me my package, says good luck.
She drives away.
I go back to sitting on the stoop.
It occurs to me that I should make a decision about how long
I’m going to just sit and wait before I find another phone—what if his mom is
asleep and doesn’t get the call? What if
she’s out of town? What if something
else?
It also occurs to me that I have no idea what time it is, nor how fast time is passing, nor any way to figure those things out.
It also occurs to me that I have no idea what time it is, nor how fast time is passing, nor any way to figure those things out.
I consider what a good job we did with the front yard
decorations.
And then, god bless her, “Andy’s Mom” comes. She lets me in and is very sweet. She leaves and I sit and think about my
life. All this happened because life
doesn’t have a 20 second rewind button, and I decided I was going to check the
mail.
The mail doesn’t come on Sundays.























I need you to stop criticizing my wife's decisions because she's perfect.
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