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Serious Whimsy » Jolana Malkston » Page 36
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Dec 102013
 

Jolana Malkston 2I loved the Christmas season as a child. Christmas back then was merry, mystical and marvelous. My anticipation grew in proximity to the big reveal on Christmas morning. I couldn’t wait to participate in our family’s annual rituals—watching the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade, going to Radio City Music Hall to see the annual Christmas show, making my Christmas wish list, writing my letter to Santa, visiting Santa and his helpers at Macy’s, shopping with my Aunt for Mom and Dad’s Christmas gifts, picking out a live Christmas tree with my dad from a local tree lot, decorating the tree, singing Christmas Carols, watching “A Christmas Carol,” reading “The Night Before Christmas,” going to midnight mass, getting to put Baby Jesus in the manger under the Christmas tree, and then waking up on Christmas morning and going berserk to discover Santa left me exactly what I wanted under the tree. My favorite gift of all—a toy typewriter. Merry, mystical and marvelous.

I was fond of the Christmas season as a young adult. It was still fun and festive. My friends and I would meet and go together to midnight mass. There was always a crowd at that mass, and inevitably we well-bred young folks gave up our seats to the elderly folks who arrived after we did. You would think that after the first time I had to stand for an hour during mass, I would learn to wear boots instead of pumps to the service. Oh, no. It was Christmas. It was a festive time. I dressed accordingly. After mass, my friends and I would trek through the neighborhood stopping off at one another’s homes where our parents had spreads of Christmas goodies for all of us. Between stops, we had half-hearted snowball fights—half-hearted because we all wore our good “Sunday go to Meeting Clothes.” At the last home of the night—early morning, to be accurate—we had a group breakfast, and then we scattered to our own homes to thaw out and then sleep in on Christmas morning. Fun and festive.

I wasn’t quite as fond of the Christmas season as a young parent. I wasn’t the one having all the fun anymore. I was the one providing all the fun and excitement. I was the one convincing a kid not to scream and cry on Santa’s lap so the photographer could take a decent picture. O joy. I had no idea how much work was involved. It looked so easy when my mother did it—the decorating, sending out the Christmas cards, the gift shopping, the grocery shopping, the cooking—so much cooking—and the baking (Did I mention that I cannot bake worth a darn?). And then there was the gift wrapping, the gift hiding where Firstborn and Little Brother couldn’t find them, being a kid wrangler for my two boys who couldn’t sit still during Christmas Eve service, and cleaning up the mess after the Christmas morning gift unwrapping frenzy. After a few years of this, I stopped looking forward to the Christmas season. Christmas equaled stress. I began to dread it.

I believe I know when I became a Christmas Curmudgeon. It was the last year we had a huge live tree—one of Firstborn’s friends dubbed it “The Christmas Sequoia.” On Christmas morning, I looked under the tree to see that Baby Jesus was missing from the manger. I alerted Macho Guy and the boys, and the hunt was on. We eventually found Baby Jesus behind a sofa in the family room—gnawed almost beyond recognition. The perpetrator of this desecration, our American Eskimo devil dog, had gone into hiding. We flushed him out and scolded him but the damage was irreversible. Of all the figurines under the tree, why did that wicked little monster choose to chew on Baby Jesus? I was appalled. It was sacrilege, no doubt about it. The boys, who adored the evil four-legged assassin, broke up laughing at what they felt was the absurdity of the situation. It was about then that I snapped. It was Baby Jesus’ birthday and instead of receiving a gift, he was chewed up by an unrepentant four-legged, white-furred spawn of Satan.

It struck me then that this incident was only one indication that the true spirit of Christmas was missing in action, replaced somewhere along the line by a secular white-bearded icon in a red suit who came down the chimney to become a symbol of crass commercialism. A holy day had become a holiday instead.

Until Christmas is once again the way it used to be, the way it should be, and the way it was meant to be, just call me Scroogette. Bah! Humbug!

To be continued next week.

Dec 032013
 

Jolana Malkston 2Every so often, Macho Guy complains that my home office becomes so, well, messy that it needs, oh, let’s call it decluttering. That’s probably being kind. Actually, I know it’s being kind. In fact, it’s being too kind.

My family thinks of my home office as the local landfill. The bottomless pit. The Michigan Triangle. Macho Guy once offered to help me declutter with a blowtorch.

I accumulate stuff—books, old magazines, CDs, magnets, photos, certificates, plaques, souvenirs, conference materials, an overflowing source file, the empty boxes the stuff I bought came in, bills, receipts, unopened junk mail, newspapers, sections of manuscripts, binders filled with research material, and little scraps of paper upon which I scribble notes and ideas that eventually become buried under most of the other stuff.

I procrastinate. I don’t follow through with tasks immediately if I can help it, especially if those tasks involve paperwork and filing. I hate to file. Most of my stuff piles up in stacks on my desk and worktable so I have to import TV snack tables to expand my work surface—to even have a work surface.

Sometimes the stacks spill over onto the floor. Somehow that stuff grows in size making entry to my office a challenge in navigation. I suspect said growth is the result of reproduction by mitosis.

Things seem to disappear into my stacks of stuff never to be found again, but occasionally I do discover buried treasure, usually when I’m searching for something else. [Firstborn is convinced that one day I will uncover Jimmy Hoffa’s body.]

I have difficulty finding something in my office on short notice. It is imperative to give me plenty of advance warning. My mind goes blank the moment I hear a request for me to find something ASAP. It takes a long, long while for me to recollect which stack of stuff I might have set the requested item on, about how long ago I set the requested item on the stack of stuff, and on what strata in the stack of stuff the requested item might currently reside. It’s emotionally and physically exhausting.

Macho Guy once offered to help me organize my office. I panicked. I thought he was armed with the blowtorch. He wasn’t. He was armed with an organizational plan that he expected me to follow. He decided to be my organization coach. O joy.

Macho Guy laid down the law. Never take unopened junk mail into my office. Whenever I opened mail, I was to make an immediate decision on its disposition. I should either respond or toss it. I was to handle paper only once. I was to file important papers immediately—and not lay them on my desk or any other flat surface. Then Macho Guy began to demonstrate how it’s done. He started going through my stacks of stuff. He took a quick look at each item and tossed most of them out. My blood chilled. I felt violated. I broke out in hives. When he was through, I did not recognize my own office.

Something about a tidy office had a negative effect on me. I felt ill at ease. I couldn’t concentrate. I was blocked—my creativity took a hike.

For me, there is something comforting about being surrounded by clutter. I missed it, so I did my best to restore the status quo. I succeeded. The clutter is back. I even found another magnet that speaks to me, and I stuck it on my file cabinet. It says, It’s my mess and I love it! Read it and weep, Macho Guy. The Queen of Clutter is back. 🙂

Nov 272013
 

Jolana Malkston 2I was reorganizing my file cabinets a few days ago, when I came across article clippings from my days as a reporter for a local newspaper. I decided it was time to purge the files and only hang onto my columns and the really interesting stories I covered.

My home office floor was littered with piles of newspaper as I sorted, separating the wheat from the chaff, and then I spotted it, a column I wrote about three months after I started working for the paper. I started grinning the moment I recognized the headline. It brought back some fun memories.

One of my neighbors at the time was a busybody who took life much too seriously. She called me at the paper’s office, breathless with outrage, and claimed she had uncovered a horrible injustice being perpetrated in the local school system.

I practically swooned. I got chills. I even drooled. I had my own “Deep Throat” and was about to investigate my first scandal.

I insisted on an exclusive, of course. I urged her to tell all and she did. She had in her possession a copy of an official memo to all school system employees from the facilities coordinator. The memo contained the school system’s revised restroom policy.

According to the memo that she read to me over the phone, the revised policy involved the following.

A trip bank will be established limiting to twenty the number of trips to the restroom each employee will be permitted per month. The restroom doors will be locked and entrances to each restroom will be equipped with computerized voice print identification stations. Two voiceprints will be taken from each employee, one normal and one under stress. When an employee uses up his allotted trips for the month, he will be denied entrance to the restrooms for the remainder of that month. In addition, the restroom stalls will be equipped with timing devices limiting usage to three minutes, at which time stall doors will fly open automatically.

BUSYBODY NEIGHBOR: What do you think of that?

ME: [trying not to laugh] I think it’s a joke.

BUSYBODY NEIGHBOR: It sure is a joke. Can you imagine anyone treating employees that cruelly?

ME: [still trying not to laugh] No, you don’t understand. It’s not real. It’s a gag. Think about it. Do you actually believe our school system can afford computerized voice print identification? That’s the kind of high tech they have at the Pentagon. Somebody wrote that memo as a joke.

BUSYBODY NEIGHBOR: [not yet convinced] But it’s on school stationery. It looks real. It even sounds official.

ME: [still trying really hard not to laugh] Why don’t you bring it to the office and I’ll have a look at it.

She brought her copy of the infamous memo to the newspaper office, eager to have me authenticate it. I read it again [still trying so extremely hard not to laugh], and I managed to persuade her that it was indeed someone’s idea of a joke. She felt a little foolish, tossed the memo into the wastebasket, and then we both laughed about it. Good thing. I didn’t know how much longer I could keep from laughing.

After she left the office, my laughter died and I wanted to cry. There went my first opportunity to investigate a scandal and quite probably my one big chance to win the Pulitzer Prize for investigative journalism. All my drooling went for naught.

It occurred to me that I could ease the sting of my disappointment over not having a scandal to expose by having a bit of fun at the school superintendent’s expense. My next assignment involved covering the groundbreaking ceremony for an addition to the high school and interviewing the school superintendent afterward. I plucked the memo from the wastebasket.

ME: [approaching the superintendent at the end of the ceremony] I just uncovered a major scandal brewing in your administration, sir.

SUPERINTENDENT: [looking aghast] Scandal? What scandal?

ME: [wearing the same expression as Geraldo Rivera about to enter Al Capone’s underground vaults] How do you explain this? [I handed him the memo.]

SUPERINTENDENT: [staring at the memo] That’s my stationery. What’s this? Restroom policy? Facilities Coordinator? We don’t have a facilities coordinator. [He read on and his mouth began to curl into a smile.] This is a joke. [He was laughing by the time he finished reading.] I wonder who wrote this. Where did you get it?

Naturally, I did what any good reporter would have done under similar circumstances. I sought the protection of the First Amendment and refused to reveal my source. I had to protect her identity. It was entirely possible that little busybody might actually uncover a real scandal some day.

Nov 202013
 

Jolana Malkston 2My first grandchild turned 15 today. Wow. Only yesterday, he was a cute little toddler learning to walk. I have fond memories of him staggering around like a peewee version of Boris Karloff in Frankenstein, albeit much better looking than Boris.

Walking anywhere is the last thing on his agenda these days. He passed Driver’s Ed and has a Learner’s Permit, the last obstacle in his quest for the Holy Grail of Adolescence—A  Driver’s License.

He is already shopping for a car of his own, wavering between a Ford Fusion (for better gas mileage) and an extended cab pickup truck (to haul the lawn mowing equipment he is using to earn money to pay for either vehicle).

The car shopping talk brought back more memories. When Little Brother [First Grandchild’s uncle] turned 15 and became eligible for his learner’s permit, he made no bones about the fact that he wanted wheels. Not just a car, mind you. His wheels had to be serious. His wheels had to be sweet. His wheels had to fit his jock image.

Macho Guy threw our young jock a curve. He dictated that until such time as Little Brother was experienced enough and reliable enough to rate his own set of wheels, he would have to share mine. That was a low blow for Little Brother and for me.

Little Brother was appalled. Drive Mom’s car? No way. Mom’s car was practical, serviceable, ordinary looking, and desperately in need of a paint job. Everything about it screamed Mom Car. He would rather be a pedestrian than be caught behind the wheel of something so boring—so mom-like.

And so Little Brother’s campaign began in earnest to talk Mom into trading in the ugly duckling for a swan. He dragged me through every car lot in the area looking for The Perfect Car.

We each had our priorities. I wanted a small car that was easy to park, got great gas mileage, wouldn’t break down and wouldn’t cost much. Little Brother wanted a looker. I wanted power steering, power brakes, power windows, power locks, and air conditioning. Little Brother wanted a powerful AM/FM, CD stereo surround sound audio system with equalizer and front and rear speakers. I wondered at the time if he planned to live in the car and that was the reason he was hunting for one with a built-in home entertainment center.

Macho Guy and I tended to shop on the conservative side. We spoke about Tempos, Chevettes, and other economy compacts. Little Brother’s vocabulary was sprinkled with words like Tracker, Grand Am, Camaro. His vocabulary words were all spelled the same way: e-x-p-e-n-s-i-v-e.

Little Brother reasoned that car prices wouldn’t be so high if the automakers thought people couldn’t pay that much. He was sure we could afford the more expensive wheels because like most teenagers, he was convinced that his parents were made of money. Really? I guess he didn’t notice that I almost fainted the last time I paid for his tennis shoes.

Eventually, Little Brother set his heart on a Grand Am. He pleaded, he begged, he cajoled. Macho Guy and I, who live in the real world, bought a Tempo, thus retaining our title as The Meanest Parents Ever, and Little Brother awarded us the additional title of The Cheapest Parents Ever. Ha! If we were really that cheap, we would have bought him a scooter.

I decided the little ingrate needed a reality check. I asked him if he would prefer to ride the school bus since he found the Tempo so offensive. The blood drained from his complexion. All of a sudden, the Tempo started looking awfully good to him. I thought it might. After all, I was once a teenager who had to ride the bus. 🙂

Nov 132013
 

Jolana Malkston 2Instead of going back to the small town where they graduated high school, and where there isn’t a whole lot to do even before they pull in the sidewalks at dusk, Macho Guy’s classmates voted to hold a recent class reunion in Branson, Missouri. They reserved a block of rooms at a group rate in a very nice motel for a four-day weekend, and everyone planned on having a roaring good time seeing all the shows and visiting all the attractions.

There was one little hitch in the plans. They scheduled the reunion in summer. In the month of August. In scorching, sweltering, steamy Missouri in summer in the month of August. After experiencing August in Branson, Missouri, it is my considered opinion that air conditioning should be written into the U.S. Constitution as an inalienable right of citizenship.

I distinctly remember that the day we arrived in Branson was the last day of the reunion on which I elected to wear makeup. It reached its melting point and slid right off my face the moment I stepped out of the car at the motel.

Damn, it was hot in Branson in August. It was so damn hot, anti-perspirant/deodorant failure was rife—and ripe. The directions on my anti-perspirant/deodorant’s label read: “Apply a thin layer to underarms.” I tried that. It didn’t last five minutes once I stepped outdoors. I tried applying a thicker layer the next day. Ten minutes, tops. The third day, I slathered it on like cake frosting.

Despite the heat, Macho Guy and three of his classmates decided to play a round of golf. I reminded him that the expected high for the following day was 101 degrees. He said it wouldn’t be a problem; they reserved an early tee time. The next morning, we had a very early breakfast together. Macho Guy left to golf in the oppressive heat, and I went back to our cool, comfortable air-conditioned room to shower before getting in some writing time on the old laptop I brought along.

I finished showering and opened the glass door to step out when in my peripheral vision I caught a somewhat blurry creature crawling across the tile floor to my right. Since my glasses were on the vanity, I had to squint at it to get a better look. I thought it might be a large insect of some kind, but it was a creamy, off-white color and it didn’t look like any insect I’d ever seen. I thought about stepping on it and squashing it. Not a chance. I was barefoot—I was bare, period—so I couldn’t bring myself to do it.

Good thing I didn’t because I wouldn’t be writing this and you wouldn’t be reading it. The creature was beginning to look oddly familiar, more so the closer it came to the shower stall. When it climbed onto the fluffy bath mat, I got a good look at the distinctive upward curl of its tail. My flesh broke out in industrial-size goose bumps. Even without my glasses on I could see that I was in very deep doo-doo. My unwelcome visitor was a small but deadly scorpion.

A SCORPION? OH, MY GOD!

I was alone, I was dripping wet, I was in the altogether, and I was freaking out because a scorpion was right outside the shower stall.

HELP! SOMEBODY, HELP!

No one heard me, of course. Then I had a brilliant idea. One of Macho Guy’s female classmates had a sign on her motel room door that read: “I’m out of estrogen and I have a gun.” She could shoot the blasted scorpion for me—if I could get past the scorpion to get to the phone and call her.

HELP! SOMEBODY! ANYBODY! HELP!

The scorpion looked as if it was turning in my direction. Not good. Maybe it heard me yelling for help. Too bad no one else did.

I was on my own. I had to kill the scorpion before it killed me. Also not good. I freak out if I have to kill a spider. Where was Macho Guy when I really needed him? Oh, right. He was playing golf.

I took a frantic look around the shower stall for a weapon. Let’s see. One bar of soap the size of a credit card. One tiny bottle of shampoo the size of a tube of lipstick. One tiny bottle of after-shampoo conditioner, same size. One wet washcloth. Some arsenal—I was a dead woman.

The scorpion drew closer while I decided which of my weapons of miniscule destruction I should throw at it first. I decided on the tiny shampoo bottle, but then I hesitated. If I hit it and didn’t kill it, I’d probably make it mad. I did not want to make it mad. I didn’t even want to annoy it. There had to be something I could do that would prevent that scorpion from sending me to the Great Publishing House in the Sky before my time.

The wet washcloth. Of course! I could trap the scorpion under the wet washcloth and then escape. Why didn’t I think of it sooner? No, don’t tell me. I’ll get the answer myself . . . got it! I didn’t think of it sooner because I was scared spitless.

I knew I would have only one chance. I had to land the wet washcloth right on target because I wouldn’t be able to retrieve it if I miscalculated. With knees knocking and teeth chattering I leaned out and held the washcloth a few feet directly above the scorpion and dropped it.

Bullseye! I trapped the little beasty right under the center of the washcloth. I leaped over it to freedom and wrapped myself in a warm, dry fluffy towel.

As soon as I stopped shaking, I called the front desk and informed the desk clerk that there was a scorpion in my room. She made me repeat it twice before she realized she heard me correctly. She said she would send someone up to take care of it.

All the while I patted myself dry, I never took my eyes off that washcloth to make certain its prisoner did not escape confinement. Then it occurred to me that the desk clerk would probably send a man to take care of the scorpion, and I was still in my skin suit.

I was in a warm up suit when the scorpion wrangler arrived with his pincers and specimen box. I showed him where the unwelcome visitor was being detained. He reached down to lift the washcloth and I gasped. Was he insane? I asked him if he wasn’t afraid of being stung by the scorpion. He straightened and apparently thought better of lifting the cloth. He lifted up one boot-clad foot and stomped on the washcloth. He then peeked underneath. He nodded and said, “Yep. Scorpion.” He gripped the washcloth and the scorpion’s corpse with his pincers, deposited them in the specimen box and left. Whew! Close one.

I spent the rest of the morning writing and constantly looking over my shoulder to be sure no more scorpion intruders were sneaking up on me. I wouldn’t sleep in the bed that night until Macho Guy removed and shook out the bedding to be sure no scorpions had taken up residence there. We checked out the following day.

I thought we might get a partial refund because of the scorpion incident. I mentioned the scorpion to the desk clerk checking us out. She sure was quick on her feet. In a bright cheery voice, she said, “Oh, don’t worry about it. We won’t charge you extra for having a scorpion in your room.”

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