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Fiction, Food, and Foolishness
LIFE IN A SMALL TOWN
LIFE IN A SMALL TOWN
There are some definite benefits to living in a small town. Just today, my husband experienced another one.
He was going to gas my car…one of the many things I love about him. Besides, once a woman learns to take out the trash and gas her own car, she’s eliminated two-thirds of the reasons she needs a man in the first place!
Sorry, I digress. Anyway, he went to gas the car and decided he’d pick up supper at a local restaurant while he was out.
Before he left the house, he set a timer and told me when the timer went off to call the order in…yes, there’s a method to his madness. Anyway, he got to the gas station and realized he’d left his wallet at home. However, since there should be an order waiting for pick-up at the restaurant, he went there, got in line, and called our son who lives near-by. He could get him to come and pay for the order. A good idea. Too bad our son wasn’t home.
So, my husband, told the restaurant person of his dilemma. The guy says not to worry. Take the order and we can come back and pay later!!
How great is that? Only in a small town. Life can’t get any better!!
TALKIN’ TWANG: Fat people are harder to kidnap. #redneck#comedy
UNFORGETTABLE
UNFORGETTABLE
We all forget things now and then. As we get older, it seems to happen more often. Personally, I think we set ourselves up to forget. We say, let me write that down, so I won’t forget. Telling ourselves we will forget, unless we note it. I’ve found, if I tell myself I WON’T forget to do something, chances are, I won’t.
The problem I have with remembering is I’m having to do it for two. My husband can’t remember a lot of things, yet depends on me to remember for him. I’ve shared my theory with him. He says he’d really like to put it into practice, but can’t recall the theory when he needs it!
He loses the tape measure, fly swatter, remote control, and he can never seem to find a pen or pencil. There’s also the problem of the screwdriver and hammer never being in the right place. I admit, with the grandchildren
having access to the toolbox, I really can’t put all the blame on him for the missing tools.
He never seems to be able to find a deposit slip, envelope, or postage stamp without help. I haven’t mentioned keys, because that’s the one item he can always find! Maybe he should just put all those other items with them. Hmmm…
The number one item he misplaces is his glasses. I have to wear glasses all the time, so I never lose mine. He only needs them to read and that’s where the problem begins. We have more pairs than I can count. Well…I could count them, if I could find all of them!
He keeps a pair in the truck. At his work. On the desk. In the bathroom. You’d think with all those locations, he would never be without a pair. Think again.
We go to a restaurant and I have to read the menu to him, as well as the ticket at the end of the meal. Reading a medicine bottle is out of the question. With recipes, it’s a different story. He loves to cook, so if he can’t read the directions, he improvises, creating a whole different problem.
I know it won’t be long until he will have to wear his glasses all the time and until then, I should be thankful for the memory he has. It could be worse. I recently heard the following story. I hope you enjoy it as much as I did.
Two old men were talking. The first man says, “My wife and I went to a restaurant last night and it was wonderful. I would highly recommend it.”
The second man says, “What was the name of it?”
The first man says, “Well…oh…oh…well, let’s see. Ahh…ahh…what is the name of that pretty red flower?”
The second man says, “Poppy?”
The first man says, “No, that’s not it. It’s the pretty red flower that smells good.”
The second man says, “Carnation?”
The first man says, “No, it’s the one with thorns.”
The second man says, “Rose?”
The first man says, “Yes, that’s it,” then looks over his shoulder and yells, “HEY ROSE! WHAT’S THE NAME OF THE RESTAURANT WE WENT TO LAST NIGHT?”
I really should be thankful.
TALKIN’ TWANG: My #Texas daddy always said, “I can tell you a thing or two ‘bout a thing or two.
REMEMBER WHEN
REMEMBER WHEN
Remember when a refrigerator was an ice box…the hair salon was a beauty shop…a sofa was a couch…and men and women could tease and flirt with each other and nobody filed a sexual harassment suit? I think it was back in the sixties.
Well, during that time, I worked at a drug store…now known as a pharmacy. My boss hired a high school senior, (I’ll call him John) to sweep and clean-up after he got out of school each day. He was a big flirt and loved teasing me. He loved to walk up to me while I was with a customer, shove a dollar bill toward me, and say “This is for last night.” It always got a laugh. Remember, we lived in a small Texas town, so most everyone knew it was a joke.
A few weeks ago, I was back in that small town in a local restaurant and who should come in, but John. I didn’t recognize him. I’d not seen him in forty years. My sister pointed him out and asked if I knew who he was? When she told me, I recalled how he had tormented me. He was sitting alone, so I asked my husband for a dollar.
I went over to his table and placed my hand on his shoulder. When he looked up, I shoved the dollar toward him, and said “This is for last night.”
Everyone turned their attention to us. John’s mouth dropped open. I smiled and said, “Do you remember how you use to do that to me when we worked together?” He couldn’t speak. I don’t think he recognized me either, so I told him who I was. We all got a good laugh.
Now, looking back, I don’t know if I should have been more upset about John embarrassing me in front of people…or the fact he thought I’d only be worth a dollar!
TALKIN’ TWANG: XXX In the #south we say, don’t name a pig you plan to eat.
DON’T TRICK MY CHERRY (short story)
It was happy hour at Sonic and five cars back in the drive-through, I looked out my window and watched the vapor of heat rise off the pavement. Until recently, it seemed reflective of my life, burning off into the atmosphere, day by day, with not much to show for it.
I could hear my dad’s voice in my head loud and clear. “Come on, Maggie. Don’t be a ne’er do well. Photography is a hobby, not a career.”
It wasn’t true. I wasn’t a ne’er do well. I was a ne’er do well enough. At least, my dad thought so. I knew he was disappointed in me, because I’d always been a good kid and listened to his advice. I’d made good grades. I was popular. I’d said no to drugs.
So, I took a job as a nanny and paid my own way to college. Okay . . . it took me eight years to finish a four-year degree. Big deal.
“Do you really want to spend your life taking care of somebody’s snot nose kids? What’s wrong with you, Maggie? You used to be so sensible.” His voice boomed in my head.
Regardless of what he thought, it was the perfect job. Dr. Robert Starling, and his wife Jennifer, a lawyer, paid me well and furnished me a car, fully loaded right down to a personalized plate which read, NANE25. I also lived above their garage, rent free. I kept their kids during the day and went to school at night, and I was finally done. I was a bona-fide photographer with a degree to prove it.
As part of my final, I had to choose a subject and do a series of photos showcasing it. I chose hands. I took pictures of working hands, baby hands, elderly hands, caring hands. Every kind of hand I could think of. My professor was impressed. Especially with the one entitled “Five Generations.” It had the hands of a great-granddaughter, granddaughter, mother, grandmother and great-grandmother, all presented slightly touching, back-dropped with black. The picture, along with one featuring twenty-six students, all displaying a letter of American sign Language, got me featured in Eye of the Camera magazine.
I inched forward in line. Even though I had a full crew, I tuned them out. It was a feat I’d mastered. Four girls and one boy, all blue-eyed and beautiful, ranging in age from three to nine, talking at the same time and I didn’t hear a word.
Shaking my dad’s voice from my brain, I came back to reality.
Seven-year-old Caleb was sputtering, grunting, and slapping out a rap beat on the back of three-year-old Katherine’s seat. “Stop Caleb, Stop!” she wailed, as she kicked the seat in front of her, where nine-year-old Elizabeth sat.
“You stop, Katherine. Stop kicking my seat,” Elizabeth snarled.
I pulled the whistle from around my neck, brought it to my lips and blew. A hush settled. It was one of my best nanny tricks. It worked much better than yelling.
“Please stop kicking the seat, Katherine. And Caleb, stop making those annoying sounds and stop kicking Katherine’s seat,” I said.
“Maggie, you know what? You know what, Maggie?” Katherine asked.
I had just picked her up from swim lessons. She was wrapped in a bright yellow terry cover-up, her big blues eyes peeking from beneath an orange duck bill.
“What Katherine?”
“I want to tell you something.”
I turned to look at her. “What?”
“You know what?”
“What?”
“At swimming, I could touch the ceiling on the bottom.”
Elizabeth laughed. “That’s silly. The ceiling is not on the bottom.”
“I did too touch the ceiling on the bottom. I did. With my foot,” Katherine snapped.
Pinching my lips tight, I shot Elizabeth a look. “That’s great, Katherine. I bet by the end of the week, you’re gonna be swimming like a fish.”
Five year old twins, Caroline and Clara were dressed in full princess regalia. Well, Caroline looked more like a hooker than a princess. She was wearing a red-sequin skirt left over from a devil costume, with a light blue top from a Cinderella ensemble, showing plenty of five-year-old midriff. She had finished off the outfit with a mismatched pair of high-heel play shoes, one pink and one red. Clara was wearing a lovely green and yellow frock from the Princess and the Frog and matching yellow shoes. Both girls had crowns and wands.
Caroline was the leader. Clara was the follower unless trouble arose; then she sprang into action and became the protector.
“Do you want to come to our Mermaid sacrifice?” Caroline wanted to know.
“You’re going to sacrifice a Mermaid? That doesn’t sound like it would be very nice,” I said.
“Oh, oh, oh,” Caroline stammered. “Yeah, yeah, well, we only sacrifice old Mermaids.”
I tried to keep from laughing. “I see. But, that still sounds like it would hurt. Exactly how do you sacrifice her?”
“Oh, well, we throw her into the volcano.”
“Wait a minute,” I said. “That sounds awful. I don’t think we should be throwing anyone into a volcano.”
Clara chimed in. “She doesn’t stay in there.”
“No, no. First we throw her in, then she rises back up and she’s young again and we have to bow down to her,” Caroline quickly added.
“So, it doesn’t hurt her?” I asked.
“Well, it just hurts a little,” Clara said.
“Yeah, yeah, kinda like getting a shot or your ears peered,” Caroline declared.
“Oh well then, maybe I could take part in the sacrifice, I guess. What do we have to do?”
“First we have to do a Mermaid dance. We need music for that. Find a song on the radio,” Caroline instructed.
While I started to scan the channels and Caroline and Clara talked about choreographing the dance, Elizabeth looked over at me and asked. “What’s a whore?”
Elizabeth was a fashion plate. She wore denim shorts, a bright pink top and flip-flops to match. She had bracelets on each wrist, two necklaces and earrings. Her blonde hair was in a side pony-tail.
“What do you think it is?” I asked calmly.
Nanny rule number one, don’t answer a question, especially that kind of question, until you find out what they know. I learned that the hard way. When Caleb was five, he asked me what sperm was. By-passing the mechanics, I had given him a rather long, awkward definition, finishing with “Why do you ask?”
To which he replied, “My teacher said tomorrow we’re having a program about Sperm Whales and I wanted to know what that was.”
Ah-oh. Lesson learned.
“I don’t know what it is, that’s why I’m asking you,” Elizabeth said.
“Okay. Can you use it in a sentence?”
“Shirley Miles is a whore. That’s what it said on the bathroom wall,” she said.
“Well, a whore is a woman who dates a lot of men at the same time.”
“Oh,” she said.
From the back seat, Caleb yelled. “What’s a tampon?”
“It’s something for women,” I replied, hoping it would be enough. No such luck.
“I know that,” he said. “What’s it for?”
I took a deep breath. “You know what a suppository is?”
“Yeah.”
“Well, it’s like that.”
“Oh,” he said.
“That one! That one!” Caroline yelled as the radio found a station playing a lively song, in Spanish.
“Okay, everybody dance,” Clara said.
She and Caroline started moving their arms up and down in a swimming motion.
Elizabeth and I joined in. I really got into it. I swam to the right. I swam to the left. I held my nose with thumb and fore finger and waved my free hand in the air as if I were going under. We were all grooving to the beat, which turned out to be a religious song. But hey, we were sacrificing an old Mermaid, so a hymn seemed appropriate.
We moved forward two cars and the Jeep in front of me got my attention. The guy was adjusting the rear-view mirror on his door in order to get a better look at our sacrifice dance. He was laughing his ass off. His hand was nice, tanned with no ring line. I felt my face start to burn, but managed to smile at him.
He leaned his head and both hands out, looked into the mirror and applauded. He had really nice hands.
I focused on the back of his Jeep. I smiled, realizing I could tell a lot about him just from reading the five bumper stickers he had plastered across his tailgate. Texas needs Perry for Governor. Hidden Hills Club member. NRA member. Texas Tech Alumni Association. Sunset Baptist Church. He was a Red Raider, gun-toting, Christian Republican golfer…with really nice hands.
“Okay, everybody, what do y’all want?” I asked.
One by one, I got their choices. Elizabeth wanted a cherry slush. Caleb, a root beer. Katherine wanted a small lemon-lime drink. Caroline wanted sweet tea and Clara wanted her regular order, a cherry lime-aid.
As the Jeep disappeared around the corner to the pick-up window, I placed our order. When I got to Clara’s, she started to shout, “Tell them don’t trick my cherry!”
Yesterday, on our daily happy-hour run, they failed to put the cherry in Clara’s cherry lime-aid and she wasn’t gonna let that happen again.
“Tell them Maggie. Tell them, don’t trick my cherry. Tell them. Tell them!” she screamed.
“Okay, okay. I need a medium cherry slush, a medium root beer, a small lemon-lime, a small sweet tea and a small cherry lime-aid.” I ordered.
Clara started to scream hysterically. “Tell her! Say it! Say, don’t trick my cherry!”
I leaned into the speaker. “Oh, and don’t trick my cherry,” I said.
“What?” the confused order taker asked.
From the backseat, Clara was still screaming over and over. “Don’t trick my cherry. Tell her, Maggie. Tell her!”
“Please don’t leave the cherry out of the lime-aid,” I explained.
I could hear laughter from more than just the order taker. I pulled around to see the Jeep still at the window. Again, he was laughing his ass off. I gave a-palms-up shrug.
He pulled away, and I took his spot and offered my money to the girl in the window.
“You don’t owe anything,” she said. “The guy ahead of you paid. He said to give you this.” She handed me his card.
I looked down at it. Joel Brandt, Detective, Tyler Police Department. He had written his personal phone number on it and the words, I hope you’ll call.
I smiled. I didn’t have a picture of a policeman’s hands.
TALKIN’ TWANG: Texas wisdom-Never slap a man who’s chewin’ tobacco.
SNAKES ON A PLANE
Yesterday, my husband decided to burn a pile of tree trimmings. Yeah, that’s right, country folk have burn piles. If we wanted to make it fancy, we could call it a bonfire and dance around it.
Anyway, he started the fire, and a little blue-striped garter snake ran out from the pile to escape the heat.
Our six-year-old granddaughter was spending the day with us, missing school due to pink eye. She was very excited.
Tom, put some gloves on and caught the little snake and I got a box ready. It was actually a plastic Cascade dishwashing box. It had a nice lid and was plenty big, so the little snake wouldn’t be cramped. I poked holes in the top, Reese (granddaughter) got some grass and we introduced the snake to his new home.
When Rebecca, my daughter-in-law came to get Reese, she took the box with her knowing the other three kids would be excited about the new “pet.”
This morning when I got to their house, the box was sitting on the entry table by the front door. Caleb was the first one up, so I asked how they liked the snake and if they’d fed it anything. I pointed out, if they had not given it something to eat, we would need to set it free today.
He said, “It got out.”
“What? In the house?” I asked.
“No,” Caleb said. “Mom opened the box so we could take a look, and the snake jumped out in her car!!”
They haven’t found it yet.
You’ve heard of Snakes on a Plane…well, we have a…Snake in a Beamer!!
Talkin’ Twang for today:Never get into an argument with an idiot, you’ll just lower yourself to their level and they’ll beat you with experience.
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{I hope you enjoy this sweet, short-story romance!}
