Skip to main content

Imagine a Spa Day.

Last night in the shower I sang these words to the tune of John Lennon’s “Imagine". Apologies to John. 

Imagine there’s no virus/
It isn’t hard to do./ 
Lots of san-i-tizer/
And toilet paper, too./ 
Imagine all the people/
Going out to eeeat/
E-E-EEE 
. . . 
Everyone is a little tense now. As I said before, we are collectively experiencing a traumatic event; no one is calibrated, no one is really secure, and here we are trying to navigate with no real leaders because they are also traumatized. When 9/11 happened, the whole country changed. But it was different because most people's lives were not directly affected. It’s not like the pillars of smoke were in every town. But this virus is in every town. Everywhere. What a beautifully unifying thing. 

Fr and I are having stupid arguments. He’s working from home, and I’m sure that’s claustrophobic. I’m mostly working from home, but only for about half the day. So I take walks, go to the store when we need anything (which we don’t), write, text my mom, walk some more, read the news, clean . . . I don’t know which is worse: his claustrophobic day, or my listless one. 

This morning we took a loaf of banana bread to Rich. I hung the bag on the door knob and Fr said it wouldn’t stay. I said yes, it would. He said no. I smiled like a brat, put the bag on the door knob, and walked away. Fr went back and moved the bag so it wouldn’t fall. This is a dumb thing to fight about. I think I’m right, but that’s not the point. 

After that situation we got our morning drinks, then Fr went home and I went to the store. I went to get “spa stuff" and came home with my intended items PLUS 4 lbs of butter because butter was $1.99/pound and I’m not going to NOT buy that. It will go in the freezer and enable my baking hobby for the next few months.

A few teenage girls were standing much too close to me in the check-out line, chattering away and open-mouth breathing like they haven't heard we're in the midst of a pandemic. Either that, or they fancy themselves invincible and special and rules don’t apply to them. This is age appropriate. I should have compassion since I used to be a teenager (once as a teenager I rode an escalator in Macy’s singing a song while wearing rolled denim shorts, a floral body suit, beige knee highs and black clogs. AND a choker.), but I’m not that good. I wanted them to breathe somewhere else, or not at all. I distanced myself until finally I had removed myself from the line entirely and had to go to the back. This was fine with me. I used the extra time in line to construct a “Personal Space Contraption" in my head. A large hoop with a 6 foot radius that I will attach to suspenders and wear every time I must go out. 

Anyway, I bought spa stuff so I could fix my armpit situation. Armpit hair is normal for human adults like myself, and while I believe that bush is beautiful, I do not enjoy armpit hair. The last time I waxed was January, and I wasn’t waxable again until last week and then the salons closed. So I bought Nair wax strips. Anyone who likes to be smooth is foolish for paying $38 to have someone else pull their pit hair. The box came with 40 strips (equivalent to 20 armpit waxes) for $9.76. That’s .48 cents per wax. It took less time and hurt less than a salon wax. Plus I got to look at the hair roots up close when I finished, and that’s always interesting and fun. 
The hair pattern on the wax strip looked like a framed leaf. I took a picture. I want to post it here but I'm afraid I'm not yet so liberated, or cruel. 
...
I walked out of the room and Fr was making dinner.
“How were your chambers?”
"I fixed my armpit situation."
He asked to see the wax strips.  
"REALLY?!" I quickly procured the strip and showed Fr my handiwork, like a toddler proudly pointing to her poop in the toilet.
"I really wish I hadn’t seen that." 
"LOOK AT THE ROOTS!"
"I see."
"I worked today. I also got 4 pounds of butter."
"Good." 
. . . 

Tonight on Step By Step, Cody cures Karen’s hickey and Marc is addicted to video games. JT is in one scene which I think greatly improved the show. Marc is my favorite character. 

I’m not feeling inspired today. 

Comments

  1. I feel to be a voyeur, your personal revelations, overrunning my brain space.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

The Soft Apocalypse

Fr calls this The Soft Apocalypse. He stands in the kitchen where he just finished making Thai chicken for dinner and I am currently baking scones. Last night we ordered Ethiopian food from a restaurant in Columbia City.  He feigns distress, “Ugh. I’m mildly inconvenienced.”  My brother Seth (who by the way did not have Covid-19, just the regular pneumonia) wrote in our family text thread, "We're soft, and ill prepared, and have become used to luxurious comforts that even the most broke of us enjoy.” It’s true, we are weak. A month ago my only goal in life was to go home, and now I’ve been ORDERED BY THE GOVERNMENT TO STAY HOME as much as I can, and I’m upset because I can’t go to the Mexican restaurant. The last time I was in a grocery store I saw a child eating a bag of Cheetos saying, “I have to sit down. MOM! I HAVE to sit down.” His mother was hurriedly trying to find somewhere for her mildly uncomfortable child to sit with his Cheetos. We are a people who HAVE...

A Wart on the Face of Nature.

If it wasn’t happening world wide I would definitely think Covid-19 was an elaborate misdirection designed to distract us from that thing in November. Joe who?  Today we donned our light blue face masks and ventured downtown. It was too cold for bikes, so we drove, crossing the Lower West Seattle bridge because the upper bridge is broken. This is not allowed, and on weekdays t here are no fewer than FOUR police officers handing out tickets on the lower West Seattle Bridge.  But this is Saturday, and we are Bonnie and Clyde.  Parking downtown is free and limitless during a pandemic. These feel like insincere apologies for a situation that is not the fault of the city. Like when you tell someone you didn't sleep well and they say "I'm sorry."  The waterfront is typically teeming with tourists and today it was surprisingly empty. I worry about the hotdog vendor and I buy a cider and a cookie. This cider is the type you get at the mechanic for free while they ch...

Happy Easter, Quarantine.

Today I sang this song in my head  (to the tune of Neil Sedaka's "Happy Birthday, Sweet 16"): "If I should cry/ In great despair It's cause it's nice outside, and I can't go out there./ This is the worst beginning of spring I've ever seen!/ Happy Easter, Quarantine!" I do not enjoy the holiday of Easter. It bothers me that the miraculous resurrection of the Messiah has been reduced to candy filled eggs and matching Easter ensembles. Let's be real, most people who feign devastation about missing church this Easter Sunday were regularly and voluntarily missing church before the pandemic. Tangentially, I find the symbol of the cross to be tacky, because that was not the point. He suffered in the Garden of Gethsemane, bleeding from every pore for the sins of mankind. He allowed Himself to be crucified on Calvary. And He was resurrected ; the reunion of body and spirit never again to be divided. Which of these is the most important?...