I’m here today to commiserate with those of you who may be thinking that The Most Wonderful Time of the Year always seems to have some small slip-up that knocks a bit of the sparkle off.
I suppose is happens to us all, but once you become a repeat offender, you tend to get somewhat of a reputation. Family members in attendance at gift-opening time are known to ask outright if one of their gifts happens to be from last year. Or, they lean forward with a raised eyebrow and inquire, “Are you sure that’s all?”
They’re not greedy. They’re just offering me an opportunity to right my wrongs. I take a little comfort in the fact that, though this seemingly unshakable tendency of mine irritates me to no end and adds to the general mirth at the festive gathering, at least it’s not dangerous. Unlike Smuffy, no matter how many times this has happened to me, I never run the risk of being drowned, impaled or dismembered. So far.
Are you ready for my Christmas confession? Are you longing to learn of my annual downfall?
I am a lover of gift-giving! My brain is an idea factory! I am a super-shopper and, most of all, I am a master-hider! My skills at the latter are my nemesis, however. All year long, I scrounge, I create, I store up and I stash. I make lists of things I’ve bought, want to buy, want to make and need to assemble and still lack parts. I am in my element at thrift stores, garage sales, online, clearance aisles, craft stores and, yes, retail establishments.
I blame it on the house. Limited storage causes me to scatter my treasures to the four corners, layer them between other stashed away items and wiggle them into cubbyholes already occupied by other items which then serve as camouflage.
Then, the tree goes up. Then, wrapping begins. Amid oven timers and cooling racks, when everyone’s backs are turned, out come all my treasures to be boxed, wrapped and fancied up with hand-made bows. Except one.
I always miss ONE!
Smuffy’s been known to receive a cozy cardigan in May when I’m on a closet cleaning binge. Poor Pookie has learned that she, too, is likely to be handed something in mid-summer that was intended for the Christmas stocking. This has been going on for more years than I care to count. I swore I’d turn over a new leaf when I got a son-in-law, but he’s been around long enough now that when I handed him his last gift this year, he smiled and asked if I was sure about that.
A grandchild is on the scene now, causing me to repent afresh and overcome this tendency. Leaving out something intended for Little Snookie would be unpardonable!
I’ve been known to misplace a paper list. This year, I installed a new app in my phone to help me list each family member and each gift. I had my act together. I cleaned out one spot and one spot only and collected my stash there. I did all the wrapping at once and checked it off again on my phone.
Ah! Christmas went like a dream. I took all the ribbing with a smile, informing everyone that I was 99.9% sure that there wasn’t a single thing that didn’t make it into a stocking or under the tree.
Then, it happened. Christmas festivities wound to a close. The house seemed strangely quiet – too much so – as the car pulled away with Pookie and her loves, leaving Smuffy and me (and Phoebe June and several bags of paper and cardboard boxes). I went into the entryway, checked the front door and turned out the light.
As I turned around, thinking nothing was the matter, what to my wondering eyes should appear, but a tuft of tissue amid red and green over there. For behind the TV there sat a small bag. I rolled my eyes and felt my shoulders sag. I knew what it was – there was no denying. I merely chuckled, walked past and refused to start crying.
Pookie will love it! She’ll think it’s just right – when I place The Un-given Gift into her hands tonight!
I know exactly what happened. It was small and easily crushable under the tree with all those bigger gifts. That little bag would be safer tucked away just behind the edge of the TV. Well, wouldn’t it?
What can I say? It’s a tradition.
Happy New Year! May you change the things you can and learn to laugh about the things you can’t.
Any true Christmas confessions? Just leave those in the comments. I can’t be the only one. Can I? Hello? Hello? Anybody out there?
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Lest you think all Smuffy does is renovate the kitchen, let’s get back to what the man does in his off hours. He doesn’t get too many of those, so he likes to jazz them up as much as possible. I remember closing out Episode 6 of Life With Smuffy by giving thanks that there are enough angels to go around.
If I am to be honest and share the little phrase that floats through my head most often lately, it is this: “Poor Smuffy”. Living in an old house means constant upkeep and what isn’t actually broken needs updating. Then, there are acts of God, nature’s tendency to descend from order into chaos and the animal world to contend with. Because Smuffy knows how to do everything, he does everything. Why call the man when you can be the man?
We try to take a bit of leisure on Saturday mornings before we plunge into the mammoth project of the day and discuss the plan of attack, sighing a lot as we exchange looks that tell us that we are of like mind in wondering when and if this will ever end this side of Heaven. A couple of weeks ago, we were doing just that.
I took a sip of tea and snuggled more comfortably into the sofa. Smuffy, while never having contracted the Boogie Woogie Flu, has had a severe case of Rockin’ Pneumonia all his life and I’ve had to train myself to hold my head still when conversing with him while he’s in his rocking chair lest I get whatever it is people get in their necks from sitting at tennis matches and whipping their heads from side to side all day. I hoped against all hope that I wouldn’t be losing my kitchen contractor for the day. Nature, in the form of a once orderly tree, had descended into such a state that the whopper just to the south of our driveway would soon be causing plenty of chaos should the next big storm send it crashing onto the vehicles or the house.
“What’s the day look like, Dear?” I asked.
“Well, I’ve been thinking about that tree,” Smuffy sighed, taking another sip of coffee and making me wonder, yet again, how he can sip the hot stuff while moving so fast. He can hold a plate of hot food and eat an entire meal while rocking at top speed, too, but that’s another story.
I stifled my own sigh and the groan that threatened to escape me. Smuffy didn’t have any business up in that big old tree, but I’d never known that bit of common sense to stop him. In addition to the danger of plummeting from a great height, the day promised to be hot enough to cause a heat stroke.
“The more I think about it,” he went on, “the less I want to climb it. I’ve decided I’m just gonna call somebody and have it taken down.”
I could have jumped off the sofa and gone into a buck and wing dance right there in my jammies, but I refrained, lest it send him into one of those so-are-you-saying-I-can’t-get-that-tree-down-by-myself? attitudes.
We spent a few minutes discussing who we might call for the job and I actually began to feel like we were getting a little posh just for calling anybody for anything. Smuffy listed off a few smaller outside chores he wanted to attend to before getting to work on the kitchen and then we each went our own way with him heading outside while I set about to get dishes, laundry and a few other things started before I got dressed and plunged into serious cleaning.
Just as I grabbed some clothes and headed for the bathroom, the phone rang. Smuffy’s voice on the other end came slow and measured.
“I’m on the roof.”
Before the “Why?” that trembled upon my lips could escape me, he continued.
“There are wasps. I have agitated them. They are between me and the only way down. I need you to bring the wasp and hornet spray out and throw it up onto the roof so I can spray them and get down.”
“Okay,” I said, “but I hope you realize that I’m the last person you want throwing something at anything. And I’ll have to find it first.”
Smuffy tried to tell me where the can of spray was, but I knew he naively spoke of where it was supposed to be. When we’d moved and reinstalled the reverse osmosis for the kitchen, I’d had to empty the shelf that held all that sort of thing and disperse the items around the basement wherever they’d fit. On the way to the basement, I shed the robe, knowing it would hamper my (as I loosely referred to it in my mind) throwing arm. The neighbors, if they didn’t get too close, would interpret my nightie to be a sundress, or so I told myself.
I don’t know if you have one of those “old house basements” that looks like a game of “Where’s Waldo and How Long Do You Think He’s Been Dead?” but locating the can nearly had me weeping at the thought that by the time I finally found it Smuffy could be sliding off the roof, a swollen mass of stings. Laying hands on it at last, I imagined this must be how Sherlock Holmes felt every time he searched through cigar ash and discovered a speck of something that could only have fallen from a gentleman of independent means wearing a scarf of Shetland wool and carrying an Orpington hen.
I ran outside and around to the back of the house to find Smuffy perched near the highest point of the roof. I thought this might be the proper time to ask him why he was up there. He reminded me that he’d been wanting to adjust the antenna for a while now. He explained that he couldn’t come any closer without agitating the wasps further and that I needed to back up and fling the can with all my might.
It went just about like I had expected. In fact, it went that way three or four times. Finally, Smuffy suggested that I go around to the northwest corner of the house to higher ground so I wouldn’t have so far to throw. He could then climb over the roof and most of the way down and be ready to catch the can. I didn’t balk at this, but I do admit to having the unpleasant awareness that I would now be much nearer to the street in my nightie, flinging myself about while being hollered at by a guy on the roof. Oh, well…
While sound in theory, I had no faith in this new plan of Smuffy’s. The last thing I wanted to see was Smuffy scrambling up, down and sideways across a steep roof trying to catch an oblong metal object launched by a woman in a manner which was bound to convince passersby that she’d been having a couple.
I scrambled in amongst the petunias and boxwood, tightened my grip on the can and drew my arm back in preparation to let it fly.
“It’s not a shot put!” Smuffy yelled. “Here, watch me.” Instructing me to back up, he stood up and motioned with his arm, instructing me how to hold the can, how to swing my arm and when to release. Then, crouching as near the edge of the roof as he could safely get, he cupped his hands and squinted as though he fully expected to receive a concussion.
Well, you can’t call me a slow learner! I’ll have you know I landed it near enough to Smuffy that he managed, with a few interesting dance steps, to grab the can on my second attempt. I ducked inside out of public view and he slithered over the top of the roof and down the other side to tackle the swarm. Watching out the dining room window at the back of the house, I asked myself if this was the kind of thing I’d traded the tree job for and if it might have been wiser to save the money for hospital bills. I gave thanks that there are enough angels to go around and went to get dressed.
A short while later, with the washer and dryer going and now the dishwasher, I finished dusting and pulled out the vacuum cleaner and continued my mission to get the basic chores done before I started my list of extras. It was then that the earth moved.
The whole house shook with the crash. The windows rattled. The floor moved under my feet. Phoebe June did a little shaking of her own. The force was such that I looked around to see if cracks were snaking across the plaster on the walls and I wouldn’t have been surprised to find that the foundation had shifted. Had some huge explosion occurred on the other side of town? Sirens would probably sound any minute. I raced around to the south kitchen window and my eyes followed a tall ladder as it stretched up into the very tree we had just decided not to cut down ourselves. The gutter dangled off the east end of the porch and the fallen portion of the tree wouldn’t let me get down the deck steps. I spotted Smuffy at the top of the ladder before I ran back through the house and out the front door.
I still couldn’t get anywhere near him for the tree lay over the front lawn, flower beds, driveway and the yard on the other side of the driveway, not to mention a portion of our truck.
Seeing me, Smuffy pointed at the truck. “I thought I parked the truck far enough away,” he yelled. “Guess not.”
I looked at our dangling bumper – a nice match for the gutter. Turning to the house, I gave it the once over. No broken windows and the porch remained attached. Shingles seemed to be in their places. Now I gave Smuffy the once over.
“What are you doing up there? What happened to calling the man to come cut down the tree?” I yelled.
“Well,” Smuffy replied, and I’m not sure he didn’t give his chin a thoughtful rub. “I just decided I wasn’t going to let this old tree beat me.”
I resisted the urge to scream that for two cents I’d be happy to beat him.
“I suppose it never occurred to you to tell me in advance that you were going to climb up there and cut down that tree?”
At this point I threw my hands up in the air and went back in the house, figuring that his logic must be that after the wasp incident, this was mere child’s play. Your mind can’t help but take some sort of stab at Smuffy’s reasoning.
Once my heart stopped racing and the urge to strangle Smuffy subsided a bit, I stopped to give thanks again that there are enough angels to go around.
The scary part about it is that Smuffy only took down a third of that tree. Maybe he’ll give me a while to recover before the next chapter in this story.
The answer is “yes” in case you are wondering – Smuffy has always been this way.
Dig those socks!
Life With Smuffy does, indeed, have its ups and downs. I’m glad that his angels specialize in bringing him down gently.
As the years go by, I find that events are often recalled in association with something Smuffy has done. In mid-conversation, one of us is bound to insert, “Wasn’t that around the time that he…?” As we near the close of August, my mind returns to the events of August 29, 2015 and, I imagine, they always will.
It was a leisurely Sunday afternoon – for some of us. Pookie had asked if she could come by and have my assistance with an artsy little project that took four hands – well, maybe six, but we had four. I was happy to oblige. She wanted to put a fun, fabric cover on a new planner and, like her mother, she aims to be chic at all times. Why sit at your desk and look at leatherette when a bright and modern print is just a can of spray adhesive and a pair of pinking shears away? Being the end of August, it reminded me of the good ole’ days when we would prepare for a new year of homeschooling by caressing our shiny new books and covering our binders and folders – a pleasant way to stave off the inevitable fact that anything, even if it’s interesting, takes on a certain dullness when the day-to-day routine really gains a foothold.
I had worked really hard the day before at deep-cleaning the carpets and had claimed this day as my own for rest and rejuvenation. A craft project, followed by a mug (or two) of my fabulous Not Apologizin’ Hot Chocolate, sounded pretty much ideal. (The recipe, by the way, can be found here.)
Smuffy, that
love of my life, didn’t have it so easy.
One of his summer goals had been to pour a concrete pad under our porch
steps, an area that had been nothing more than dirt ever since we’ve lived in
this house. That would’ve made this
project overdue by…hmm…let me
see…do I need a calculator? …oh yes, that’s right, thirty-six years. Not that he’s a procrastinator – I’m always swift
to admit that Smuffy fixes everything almost before it’s broken – but that in
itself, my Dear Readers, is a story for another day. Feel free to request in the comments, as a
reminder to me, to tell the tale of how my furniture was nearly bolted to the
walls.
Smuffy
prepared the area and built forms in the evenings after work and on Saturday he
poured the first part of the L-shaped pad.
Everything went smooth as silk, but the bigger portion remained
undone. He’s learned over the years that
Sunday as a day of rest is a glorious and life-restoring gift. Sometimes, however, a job requires more
attention that he can give it in the hours he has after work, so there he was,
on this fine afternoon, outside mixing concrete.
Our peaceful
measuring and cutting was soon interrupted by the sound of feet rushing up the
basement steps, through the hall and into the bathroom. Nothing unusual – after all, sometimes you’ve
really gotta go! It was the YELP!
that followed that pricked my ears. Smuffy
doesn’t yelp. He always professes, no
matter what the injury, that nothing hurts.
A mild stomach flu and he’s practically lost his will to live, but
injuries never seem to faze him much. He’s
actually commented in the past that he could probably handle being an amputee
with greater grace than if he were afflicted with ongoing nausea. Hold that thought.
I stepped
into the hallway to have a look. There
he was with his hands in the sink.
“What
happened?” I asked.
“Get me some
paper towels.”
“But what happened?”
“I need
paper towels!”
I ran for
the towels.
“What
happened?” asked Pookie as I flew past.
“He wants
paper towels.”
“What did he
do?”
“I don’t
know.”
Then came
the stand-off. I had to know and he had
to, for whatever reason guys do so, act like it was no big deal. After a good deal of snappy dialogue we
arrived at –
“Is it bad?”
“Pretty
bad.”
“Do we need
to go to the ER?”
Round two of
snappy dialogue occurred as I followed him down the basement steps. Where
is this man going? He’s messing with
concrete and blood is going everywhere.
I tell him to drop everything and let’s go to urgent care or the ER.
“The very
least you need is probably stitches. How
bad do you think it is?”
“Do you want
to see it?”
Florence
Nightingale I am not, but at least I
have a nurturing gene that enables me to take care of my own. As soon as he began moving the wrapping away,
my arms and legs physically ached and did their best to curl up and drop me to
the floor. I took my obligatory
look. My gaze didn’t linger long. Logic tells me that if it is something beyond
my range of skill, the person’s life is not in immediate danger, and skilled
personnel are nearby, there is no point in looking! The idea here is to tell what happened, not
to give you nightmares, but if Stephen King ever runs out of ideas, I suppose
he could write a book about a crazed lunatic who attacks people with a potato
peeler. You know that pointy thing on the
end that really enables you to get those eyes out of that potato? Well, inserting the potato into the gears of
a concrete mixer would have a similar result, I suppose. The end of the pinky finger was – never mind! I promised not to give you nightmares!
“You have to
go to the ER!”
“I have to
finish this concrete.”
“You CAN’T
finish this concrete!”
“Do you want
this big, wet pile of concrete to dry like this and have to stare at it the
rest of your life?”
“Ughhhhh!”
“Help me
wrap it up and we’ll go as soon as I finish.”
“When will
that be?”
“I don’t
know. When I’m finished! We’re wasting time!”
With lots of
gauze and tape and a latex glove stretched over the whole thing, he went out to
pour the rest of the concrete while Pookie and I stared at one another, wondering
how to stop the madness. She was filled
with frustration at knowing that her husband would run to our aid if she called
him, but he was too far away to get there in time to do any good. She busied herself by running in and out and
holding one end of Smuffy’s leveling board when necessary. I busied myself with glancing out the window
and muttering under my breath, “Jesus, You know my wonderful man and You know
when he’s being a dope! You’re going to have to take care of this
one.” I made calls to the local hospital
and two urgent cares to check on how our new insurance worked with this type of
thing. You don’t really get good answers
to those questions on weekends.
Time marched
on and we thought the man would never come in the house. Each time we questioned him we got the same
answer, “When I’m done!” After a while,
there was really nothing else to do but go about our business and wait it out.
Finally, I
looked at Pookie, exclaiming, “I feel ridiculous! I’m going to be telling people, ‘Smuffy
mangled his hand in the concrete mixer!’ and then they’re going to say, ‘Oh
my! Then what happened?’ and I’m going
to say, ‘Oh, we finished up a craft project and made hot chocolate!’ This is CRAZY!”
At one point
we actually lost him. Pookie couldn’t
find him out by the concrete job and I couldn’t find him in the basement. We found him, at last, in the back yard
sitting in the swing – just chillin’.
That was when I should have gone back in the house and started calling
mental hospitals.
Two hours
after the accident, we pulled out of the driveway, but not before Smuffy had a
concrete pad that looked perfect, had taken a bath and changed clothes, eaten
some supper and rewrapped the gruesome digit, all the while saying he felt fine
and that it didn’t hurt a bit.
This is when we had our third round of snappy dialogue, which concluded with me saying, “No, you will NOT drive, you BONEHEAD! I’m driving! GET IN THE CAR!”
We pulled
into urgent care first, which was a waste of time, as that doctor took one
look, informed us that the finger was 7/8 amputated and we needed a hand
surgeon. We sped on over to the hospital
and were very pleased with the experienced surgeon who brought his operating
kit to the ER and, perching his glasses with their attached microscopes atop
his nose, did a two-hour delicate surgery, reattaching Smuffy’s finger and each
of the tiny nerves and sinews inside. His
experience and expertise led him to estimate that the precise location of the
injury would miraculously enable the regrowth of the nail, which I would have
said was impossible. I had to admit that
when I saw it after the surgery was complete, I thought it looked very good in
comparison to the mangled mess I’d seen six hours earlier.
Smuffy, of course, assisted with surgery any way he could and chatted away with the doctor the whole time about hobbies, vocations and grotesque injuries that belonged in the category of “Truth is Stranger than Fiction.” I stayed in the room, sitting by my man with my chair strategically positioned to avoid the slightest glimpse of the action.
Despite his brave front, when it was all over I thought he looked as though he’d lost a bit of his polish.
Smuffy went
back to work the next day, and it’s not a desk job. “Yes, Lord, he’s being a dope again, and
You’re going to have to take care of my sweetie.” He took no pain killers, either prescription
or over-the-counter, aside from what the doctor administered in order to perform
surgery, because he said it didn’t hurt.
I followed
up the whole incident by doing a Google search on “people who have their pain
receptors turned off”. Sometimes there’s
no escaping it – you just have to shake your head at Smuffy and admit that something
is wonky here.
Smuffy is endowed with swift and thorough healing and if you’ve been keeping up with my“Life With Smuffy” here on the blog, you know how much he needs it!
Just last
week, he carried a couple of water heaters down full flights of stairs by
himself because, you know, somebody had to do it and just to refresh himself,
came home with a new motor scooter. Ever since, I’ve heard him muttering about
how all it needs is a little more power – as if all I needed were bigger hills
to stand upon in order to phone an ambulance!
I think of
Smuffy sometimes when Pookie and I sit down for our favorite movie, “The Sound
of Music” and watch Maria and Captain von Trapp gaze into each other’s eyes and
muse that somewhere in their youths or childhoods, they must have done
something good – for, somewhere in my youth or childhood, I must have asked for
a dynamic prayer life and by doing so, had it enhanced when I received the Gift
of Smuffy.
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