You know in Aliens,
when that hard-corps (see what I did there?) Sergeant Apone wakes the marines
from their suspended animation, and announces, "Another glorious day in
the corps! A day in the Marine Corps is like a day on the farm. Every meal's a
banquet! Every paycheck a fortune! Every formation a parade!"
That's how I feel at
work. Well. Except that I don't think the days are glorious. And it's not
exactly like the farm, except that I DO hear animal noises on occasion. And the
meals certainly are not banquets, unless the culinary tide has surged towards
cardboard and Styrofoam. My paycheck is not remotely a fortune, unless you're surveying a four-year-old making Kathie Lee Gifford's clothing line. And each member
of the parade marches to his own drummer. But except for all that, yeah, that
quote is EXACTLY how I feel.
Lately, each day is
like an Easter egg hunt. Except that there are no eggs, and no prizes, and no
chocolate bunnies. But I DO have to find my doorstop every morning. Alas, I was
so spoiled all those years when the custodian left Stoppie right there in my
room, in the corner under the thermostat, just a leg stretch away from snagging
him under my toe and shooting him out the portal and under the edge of the propped-open
door. Now Stoppie may be laying out in the open no-man's-land that is the
lengthy hallway. Or on the other side of the inner sanctum, behind the alcove
by the cabinets.
But there ARE
surprises! Like maybe I hid some Easter eggs last year, and nobody found them,
and now they're like new again, and not even stinky, because they were plastic.
Inside my cabinet is a roll of black trash bags. I don't remember putting a
roll of black trash bags in my cabinet. Those things stay in the bottom of the
wastebasket, under the current bag. Then the custodian needs only to pull out
the used bag, and tear off a new one right there. Not anymore.
We have a revolving
door of cleaning crew now. One of our major players had an accident, broke two
bones, and is out of commission. So we borrow from other buildings. Not just
one person, but three at last count. Of course each has their own way of doing
things.
One day my personal
desk wastebasket was missing. I looked EVERYWHERE. Except under the extra
student chair that holds the blue cardboard box full of textbook accouterments
behind my desk. GOTCHA! No wastebasket can hide from me for long. And TODAY, a person
came in with a MOP and started on my floor while I was still sitting at my
desk. Gimme a break! Why don't you just paint me in a corner next time? Hope
they understand rhetorical speech.
Yeah. I might as well
have The Pony bring along his old Easter basket that he used to collect the
chicken eggs in. Never know what I'm going to find.
A tisket, a
tasket…Mrs. Hillbilly Mom's about to blow a gasket.
I find old peanut butter jars hidden by Toni Louise as I am doing my winter house cleaning. A true testimony to the amount of peanut butter eaten by He Who loves peanut butter.
ReplyDeleteKathy,
ReplyDeleteWell, thank the Gummi Mary that Toni Louise did not get her head stuck in a jar! And HeWho, either.
Oh, I have seen her walking around with a jar on her snout as she tried to reach the bottom of the jar. He Who has Mickey Mouse ears, so they would prevent that. Our grandson has them, too.
ReplyDeleteHis mom is getting married in September and he and his Papa will be giving her away. Gavin chose bow ties for them instead of regular ties. I suppose he wants to accentuate their ears ....
Kathy,
ReplyDeleteI will rest assured that HeWho and your grandson will not be walking around wearing peanut butter jars on their head at the wedding.