Thursday, December 29, 2005

Sticky, sticky, sticky fingers

The news has been showing all these people dumpster diving the last couple days around here looking for paper cups from the hamburger joint that sports a freckled face girl. Apparently you can get free airline tickets with x number of these cups.

I love dumpster divers....god bless 'em. I've never "dumpster dived" but I have gone through my share of interesting garbage piles.

For instance.....

I did this in K.C. a couple years ago during a "large garbage put- out weekend" with a friend and IT WAS FABULOUS!!!!!!!! The neighborhood we went to was upper class so they were known to throw away great things.

It was on a weekend and we rented a van. We took off on that Friday night at about 6:00 pm and there were already people going up and down the streets looking for things. People were in their yards looking at all the attention their garbage was getting....sort of "my garbage is better than your garbage" I guess.WE PACKED THE VAN SOLID !! It got so comical at one point we were having to take things out of the van and leave them in another garbage to get "the new great things we found".

The best (and sadly, disturbing) haul we had that night:After driving around for about 7 hours, the other scroungers were few and far between. It was about 1:00 am and we were driving past this house that had these big refrigerator boxes taped up in their garbage. I told my friend that the only reason someone would go to so much effort in taping up some garbage is that it was really really bad (ie gross stuff like poopy diapers, litter box bombs, or used girly magazines ) or really, really TERRIFIC things (i.e. gold, frankincense and myrrh). It turned out to be the latter. Just not the wise men gifts. Better.

Evidentally there must have been an elderly lady that passed away (really nice house) and they just simply threw all her possessions in the boxes for the garbage. We're talking photo albums, papers, etc......and also....sterling silver jewelry (vintage), vintage hats and purses, clothing, vintage quilts, vintage dolls, and many, many antiques.......at one point we looked at each other and said we had better pull these boxes over to the van in case any other scroungers showed up....it was pretty cuttthroat...and sure enough...a group of people showed up. It was a free for all. They made a HUGE mess of everything.And we kept slyly(but quickly) pulling more boxes over to our van to investigate..and we were in a dilemma as we had already packed the van....we grabbed as much stuff and smashed it in where we could....and then did the right thing.....cleaned up after those other inconsiderate scroungers. It was the least we could do for all those great things.

We then took our van and our haul to a mall parking lot (it was about 3 am at this point and we needed some light) and pulled out everything. Then we divvied up what each of us wanted and what we were going to sell at the flea market the next day. We made about 150.00! Free money! And each of us walked away with a ton of fun, free stuff....I felt like a junkyard princess that day. Minus the tiara. I think I was wearing a trucker hat I found in one of the boxes.

I don't live in K.C. anymore. I don't miss the snow but I sure do miss their garbage up there.

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

Just leave it on the ground and back away slowly....


For the past three years my husband and I have taken hot chocolate and cookies to the local fire department on Christmas Eve. You might think we are one those "couples" that do cutesy things together. Not so. I'm just paranoid that I don't have enough money in my "karma" bank at any given time and this always seems like a pretty good deposit.

This year we moved to a new city and wanted to support the local fire department here. I made a big basket of snacks and got some of those cute "baby-size" bottles of Coke. As I was putting this little bundle of karma together, I thought that it might be better if we supported our local police department. Its a real small community and while we would like to think the neighborhood we moved into was safer....there is some riff-raff here and there. Plus we've already called the police twice in one month for scary dogs running loose in the neighborhood. We figured we owed them a little.

My husband and I piled into the car with all the offerings and headed to the police station.

In the movies and television, they always show the police station with a big burly police officer sitting at a tall desk when you walk in. They often lean over and say "What can we help you with missy?" or " Officer Friendly here, how can I help you?". So we were expecting something similar.

We walked up to the entrance marked Police Station. On the door there was a sign that said "Please press the intercom button after 5 pm for the police department". I looked at my husband and pushed the button.

Nothing happened. We both saw the security camera and stood up straighter, lest they think they were going to be dealing with two hunchbacks.

I pushed the button again.

A staticky voice came on.
"Police Department......use the intercom"

My husband and I looked at each other.

"Uh....we have some....uh...snacks here for the department for Christmas"

"Okay...hold on a moment"

We both stood up straight again. The intercom clicked on again.

"Uh...yeah....I'm the only one at the desk right now....all officers are patrolling. You can leave the package at the door on the ground."

"Oh...okay...uh...alright......Merry Christmas!"

"Merry Christmas....static,static....."

We looked at each other again. And then while we slowly placed the basket o'snacks and the pack o' Coke on the ground by the outside ashtray, we made sure we looked at the camera again and smiled.

As we walked back to the car somewhat letdown, we both couldn't help but think that the police department would indeed enjoy those snacks.....after the bomb squad probably checked them out.

Hey.....its still counts as a deposit into the karma bank. Just more like a wire transfer.

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Make it go away.....

I have a huge, giant, angry-looking mess in my living room.

Every once in a while I get the coloquial "bee in my bonnet" and feel like redoing an entire room. Sometimes its just PMS. Unfortunately for me (and my husband) when I get in these moods and move everything out of the room to begin my task, I'm already bored with the whole thing. Like now.

I've been "redoing" rooms since I was a wee child. I was "trading spaces" long before the show. And more impressively.....I had NO budget to work with. Usually every couple of weeks, my parents would hear the scraping of furniture across the hardwood floors, the pounding of millions of nails into their walls, and an occasional "CRASH!" coming from my room. No one bothered me about it. I guess they figured it was better than bugging them for something to do.

I was always coming up with weird concoctions for the bedroom setup. One time, I removed the double sliding doors off my closet and set my headboard side of the bed into the closet. That was kinda cool except the bar that hung the clothes was too low and I'd bump my head when I sat up. Another time I thought having the bed completely in the middle of the room would be groovy. Instead, it made the room look like an exorcism had just taken place.

Later in my life, I started using my creative decorating ideas at work. I was employed by an unfinished furniture store in my town while in high school. My job was to do the window merchandising as well as on the floor. One time I arranged all of the rocking chairs in the furniture section into a giant circle. While I thought it gave an interesting look, the owner told me to change it as it looked like the lobby of a nursing home.

Throughout my various dwellings in my life, I have also used my unique "flair" to spruce up the place. Having an obsession with thrift stores, garage sales, and enticing garbage piles, I have found an abundance of unusual decor. This obsession came from my mother who on a moments notice, while riding with her in the truck, would shout "Jump out and get that!". Where then I would race to said garbage heap , pull said item from the pile, and race to get into the car before anyone saw me. And while I would like to say how damaging it was to my teenage self esteem to have to do that ...I have now proudly passed the torch. My husband is now my own personal "jumper". Although, he does get what I call "selective blindness" when it happens.

Me (driving):"OOOhhhh....look! Grab that vintage cooler over there!"
Him: I don't see a cooler.
Me: There....the red one. With the light green bedpan and bag of old wrapping paper on top of it.
Him: Yeah....I still don't see it.
Me: Right there. Next to the potty with the bees circling around it and the bag of dirty sheets. You can't miss it.
Him: Oh....that one. Do you really need it?
Me: Yikes...get out....there's someone else slowing down!
Him: I think they are trying to pass you.
Me: Why isn't the cooler in the car yet?
Him: Where is it again?

Then comes the hour of OCD-like washing when he gets home. Its almost worth it for that show. Bless his little germ-free heart.

Well, its been 30 minutes since I've started writing. The mess is still out there and I'm no more motivated than I was before. Its a good thing my husband can turn off his vision at will....he's gonna need it tonight.

Wednesday, December 14, 2005

20 years of gifts....

Here's a list of memorable gifts I've received for Christmas through the years:

0-10 years old
Magic Shot Shooting Gallery: I was a tomboy and desperately wanted this mini plastic arcade for target practice. The "magic" of the Magic Shot was spoiled when I realized it was just a magnet that clicked fast.
Music Machine Greatest Hits: Ahhhhh....."You Don't Have to Be a Star", "Yellow Brick Road", "Car Wash"......I was living the life.
LifeSavers Book: That sucker was gone in two seconds....even the Wint-o-green.
Giant Candy Cane: Ditto.
Train Set: My dad enjoyed spending time "railroading" with the son he never had.....me.
"Denim" Record Player: All I needed now for my performances was a hairbrush, mirror, and my 45's. Rock on!
Bermuda Triangle game: Plastic cloud goes over gameboard picking up ships. "Magic" was lost when I found out the cloud was just magnets again.


11-20 years old
Hubcaps: What I thought (and prayed) was a typewriter in the big box under the tree turned out to be automotive supplies. My sister got a banjo the same year.
Clogs-The high-heeled kind. I looked like a junior high prostitute for a year.
Colorado Hiking Boots- I looked like a junior high forest ranger for a year.
Giant Candy Kiss: See Lifesavers book.
Clock Radio: You mean I can see what time it is AND listen to music????...That's just crazy!
Love's Baby Soft: Mmmmmm....baby soft. LOVE'S Baby Soft. BABY soft. What the hell does that name mean?
Chic Jeans: Now a high school prostitute.
High School Jacket: Not the thick kind you put varsity letters on. The old man windbreaker kind with my last name in giant letters on the back.....in case my "camel toe" jeans didn't let you know who I was.

After 20, I got the usual suspects. Mugs. Dishtowels. Potholders.
......And a street corner named after me.

Wednesday, December 07, 2005

Oh, Rapunzel!


My hair has always been a source of frustration. I am now at the age to accept the defeat of the battle that my locks have waged against me.

I have tried every kind of shampoo, conditioner, and hairspray. I've used every electrical device that curls, straightens, and dries. I've colored my hair every color and cut my hair in many styles. And in the end......my hair wins (insert hair victory song here).

Here are some of the historical hair battles I have experienced:
1975- Practiced blowing bubblegum bubbles out a moving car window. 12 inches hacked off.
Hair-1 Me-0

1977-My mother gives me the ultimate "destined for therapy" haircut for a tomboyish girl. The "Dorothy Hamil". I was told to tell children I had lice if they made fun of it.
Hair-11 Me-0

1980-Toni Tennille haircut received. Still have the scars from the curling iron burns on my forehead. But I did win 1st prize lip-synching "Love Will Keep Us Together" in the 6th grade talent show.
Hair-14 Me-0

1981-First of many really bad, half-fried, orange-tinted home perms.
Hair-34 Me-0

1982-My first girl mullet. Attractive.
Hair-54 Me-0

1984-Used Sun-in for the first time (insert circus music here).
Hair-60 Me-0

1985- Received professional perm. I looked just like a t.v. star...Mama on Mama' Family. Hello 1st year of college!
Hair-100 Me-0

1989-Dyed my hair platinum blond. Dyed,fried.... cried.
Hair-150 Me-0

1989-1999- 10 years of bad haircuts (both professional and do-it-yourself, PMS -induced home disasters), greasy conditioners, and empty wallets.
Hair-250 Me-0

2000-2004-Colored my hair every color imaginable. Crayola would be envious.
Hair-300 Me-0

2003- Cut my own hair by sticking it into a ponytail and cutting it. Read on internet that this creates layers "perfectly". Decide I should audition for Bon Jovi or Metallica to justify my new, big, 21st century.......MULLET.
Hair-400 Me-0

2004- Grew mullet layers out and was needing a trim for my new one length hair.......for my wedding.... 4... months.... away. I say"I grew out my layers, just need a trim".....Hairdresser hears "I sure love layers, wanna look like Jim"......my fiance' hides the guns in the house.
Hair-1000 Me-0

2005- I surrender. It can do what it wants. Whatever. It wins.

.......At least until I find my good scissors.

Monday, December 05, 2005

Don't Breathe!!

True...seriously.

When my younger sister and I were kids, my dad had the wonderful joy of being saddled with us most Saturday mornings. Most children were elbow deep in there Honeycomb cereal watching cartoons in their pajamas on the weekend. Not us. 7:00 am revelry came and we were up and at 'em. And the day had almost same routine each weekend.

We would pile into whatever jalopy my dad was driving at the time. Our trips were seen from the consistently foggy windows of a Rambler, Nova, or a Volkwagen. For some reason, the defogger in these cars never worked and the windows fogged up more than a Van Halen concert. At this point our dad would yell, "Okay....Quit talking.....you're fogging up the windows!". This was our cue to be quiet, cover our mouths with whatever we were wearing, and breath warm carbon dioxide back into our bodies until the windows defogged naturally.....which never happened. Worse was when it was freezing outside and the windows had to be lowered to provide some additional "natural defogging". I learned very quickly that I should practice better hygiene on the weekends, like brushing my teeth.

Our first stop was the bank. We would trapse in behind my dad while he went to look at his safety deposit box. This was always the "mysterious" part of the trip because we got to go behind closed doors and open this little box. It didn't have anything particularly interesting in it, just a bunch of papers, but the experience made me feel like a spy. And the "clicky" pen we would get at each visit insured a couple hours of irritating noises.

Next we would go to the Savings & Loan. This was both a positive and negative experience. Both my sister and I LOVED eating out. There wasn't a place we wouldn't eat at.....as long as it wasn't home food....it was dee-licious! When you pulled up to the Savings & Loan, the drive-in windows were right next to a hamburger joint we loved. The smell of onions and beef at 8:00 in the morning sent our stomachs into a tailspin. Each time, we would ask to go there, and each time it was met with the same deflating answer: "We have plenty of food at home". So we would then turn our attention to the bank teller. If we squished low enough in the seats. we could resemble very small children deserving of the "Saf-t-pops" displayed in a jar in the window. We would stare at the teller and silently chant "Red one, red one, red one....." It was a crap shoot though. Sometimes we'd score and sometimes we wouldn't. When we wouldn't, my dad would say "You guys are too old for suckers....". Which then would get us protesting loudly causing him to shout again "Shhhhhhh! You're fogging up the windows!".

The next stop was usually a trip to whatever store carried the supplies for the next mess he was building or making. Garden. Deck. Suit of armor. My sister and I would plant ourselves on whatever chairs were available and stare at any other kids coming in. We were great people watchers. We were also great at spotting any candy available in the store too. Anything from ancient burnt peanuts in a dusty bag to free mints in a bowl by the cash register. If it was sweet, it would be ours. We would usually have some coinage on us and if we were lucky, could get a couple of fistfuls of square,minty, stale gum out of a filthy machine. I think it helped some crippled kids in the process....a win, win!

At the end of the day we would always end up at the same place.....the library. For hours. This library outing wouldn't be so bad in the winter, but in the summer, depressing. In the back of the library was a HUGE pool with tons of kids playing all day. Rather than read, my sister and I would stare out the window at the fun the kids were having. And while I did truly enjoy a fresh issue of"Dyn-o-mite".....a dip in the giant pool would have been "heaven on a stick". But after a while we'd turn our pasty, white bodies back to the "kiddie section" and try to find a book we hadn't read. Or some candy on the floor.

We'd eventually head home and enjoy the loot from the day. Pens, candy, books...and of course.... "food at home".

Sunday, December 04, 2005

Howdy!


True....seriously.

Yesterday, my husband and I went to a well-known country restaurant that's named for impoverished people. I was instantly brought back to the days when I used to serve my share of "sweet tea" at the same establishment up north.

The year was 1987 and I needed a summer job before going back to college. I applied at this restaurant figuring who better to represent the masses of hungry, poor people than a real broke, hungry college student.

After acing the hiring quiz, which I believe had questions about catfish and dumplins'....I received the cherry to my already dreaded sundae.....the uniform. The uniform consisted of a lovely apron ala "Minnie Perle" and a kerchief ala "Mrs. Butterworth". I was to wear these goodies with a pair of jeans, white shirt, and plenty of country charm. The only thing missing was something to black out one of my teeth. But when you need a job, you need a job.

I went through training learning all the important life skills like:
How to make old ketchup "new" again.
What the lowest temperature butter can get and still be served.
And my favorite....how to test any foods warmth with just your fingers.

After a couple nights, "shadowing" another server, I was ready to go out on my own into the pine wood oblivion. My kerchief was on straight, my apron had my fresh ticket book and pen, and I had perfected the greeting "howdy" better than Mr. Doody himself.

That summer I served more country food to city folk than I care to think about. I perfected the "beat" needed by a server in order to achieve high customer satisfaction and usually high tips. Although I did get my share of "Jesus" cards thanking me for my service but tipping was against their religion. You never knew who these people were going to be until after the meal, so it was always like a game of "GOTCHA!" when you served them....the little devils.

One day I was asked to take on an entire busload of tourists. I was to have the back of the restaurant for this party of 40+. It was a mixture of young and old, women and men, thrifty and more thrifty. They took their seats and I began to take their order, wondering if they thought the word "split" was actually a food item. I believe at the end they ordered two entrees, two desserts, 40 waters, and 80 spoons.

When they left, I breathed a sigh of relief. Until I saw my tip. It had turned out to be the world's largest game of "GOTCHA!". I was more steamed than the okra I had been serving all day. But thats the breaks, I thought. And at the end of the day, I went home, took off the uniform and called it a day.

The next afternoon was my shift. I walked into the kitchen, armed with a new attitude. Until I looked up at this chalkboard.

On the chalkboard were two columns, Good and Worst. I kid you not. And my name was...on...the....worst.....list. What the heck is this? Worst what? I hoped they were grading "hickability"....but that wasn't to be. They were grading check averages. How much fried, smothered, topped, iced, globbed crud you could force into each persons gullet....and subsequently check. What the "list" did not take into account was the multitudes of bus travelers that thought restaurants were to get a drink of water and literally a "bite" of something. And I was always being asked to take on these buses because....well....I was low man on the greasy pine wood totem pole.

I marched into the manager's office, kerchief a'flyin', and demanded an explanation and the removal of my name. I immediately got a big country "No can do 'mam". And that was that.

So....I slowly removed my apron, took off my calico name pin, and put my kerchief on the hostess stand. I couldn't work at a place that made their employees feel like that...no one should be on a worst list....no one should be punished for trying their best....I was too valuable a person to take that kind of melarchy.....

That....and I had just seen what looked like two "Church of the Gotcha" buses pull into the parking lot.......Yeehaw!

We're Just 2 Dogs Having Some Fun...


True....Seriously

Last night I went outside to move my car to a different location at our house. When I opened the door, there were 2 very large black chows sniffing around a bush in our yard. I saw there was a long lead that was going out to the street. Because it was dark, I assumed it was another a-hole standing there letting their dogs use our lawn as a port-a-potty.

I called my for my husband to come and put our dogs up and take a look at the situation. I didn't know who was holding the dogs, but I wasn't going to be the one to confront this dog owner. I went back to the door and lo and behold, the dogs were walking together and NO ONE was holding the 100 or so feet of heavy cable that bound them. It seemed they had escaped. And judging from the lion- style haircut on one of them, not a moment too soon.

I went out and bravely surveyed the situation(I think my husband was still putting on his shoes). It, indeed, was 2 large Chows bound together with what looked like a bull chain. This chain was then attached to the large cable. I picked up the cable about 50 feet from them and held it. They were obliviously knocking down trashcans and lawn ornaments as they sniffed and explored.

I realize at this point that what I did was not smart. But they didn't seem too irritated when they felt the tug of their freedom ending in my hands. They just turned and looked to see who was restricting their fun. I felt if I didn't hold onto this cable, these dogs would meet a double-dog demise or someone would drive their car into the cable like a deadly game of Limbo.

My husband finally came out and called the police. I was now trying to keep the dogs from knocking down the neighbor's mailbox and keep myself from falling over in the process. I was having flashbacks of my losing 6th grade tug-of-war team.

Finally, the police showed up. One policeman to be exact. He asked if they were our dogs. Uh..yeah.....we just decided about a half hour ago that we'd play one last game of "crack the whip" for good times sake before we gave them up....God love 'em.

After we assured them they were not ours, the officer pondered on how to get the dogs. Meanwhile, my husband and I were losing cartilage in our arm sockets keeping them at bay. He finally opened up his car door and said "Wanna go for a ride?". This, of course, is a universal phrase for dogs. One dog seemed excited and jumped in, and because they were tethered like Siamese twins, the other dog was pulled like a sack of potatoes.

The new challenge was to get 100 feet of cable in with them. After winding the cable like a couple of deckhands, we got the bundle of line into the backseat. And after a couple of taxpayer "thank you's!", he eventually drove off with the two rascally varmints.

Well, we definitely are gonna miss those two......but honestly..... we've really been wanting a cat.

Friday, December 02, 2005

Let a little out....


True....Seriously.

I walked to school that spring day in my pink jacket. There was a light chill in the air and I was glad to be wearing this large hand-me-down.

I walked up the wobbly, wooden stairs to the portable and into the classroom. Everything was normal. Both teachers were there. Kids were arriving. And I took my place in the 4th row next to Zebediah(not his real name).

Zebediah and I would joke around in class a lot. He was also quite popular with the ladies. I was a tomboy at the time, so he was no use to me, except to borrow glue or pencils from occasionally.
The day proceeded as normal. Subjects were taught. Lunch was eaten. And recess was taken. But I made a huge error....the crime of all crimes.....and yes....I would pay.

It seems there was a law passed at this school that your bladder must be completely emptied during recess time. There was no gray area or excuses. Go then and that's it. Now when the said law was passed, they might have taken into consideration that when you have over 50 girls trying to use 3 restrooms.....well....it's Darwin at its best. And I was often at the bottom of the food chain. I usually held it all day so as not to enter the lion's den anymore than I had too.

But on this day, I really had to go. REALLY had to go....to go....to go. And recess had passed. Dagnabit.

I was sitting at my desk. My mind began to race as the two teachers began to teach something. I remember it had a juice can that they poured into a bucket. And if you can imagine the sound, you can imagine my increasing pain. I started to weigh my options in my head as it was getting excruciating.

" I could go up there, swallow my anxiety, take the yelling and go to the restroom"
No way. There's 40 kids in here.
" I could see if I could hold it for another hour."
Absolutely not. Won't happen. Not an option. Next!
" There's one more thing....but I don't know.."
What? What? Do tell!
"I could let a little out.....and then it won't be so bad"
Hmmmmmmmmm. Let me think. Let a little out. Let...a..little....out. Yeah....yeah!....that could work. My pants would be a little wet. I could save the rest until I got home. No one would be the wiser. You are brilliant, brilliant I say......!!

I stared straight ahead. Eyes focused on the teacher. I did a countdown and then it was literally full steam ahead. Nothing happened at first. I think I had to go so bad it took a moment for my bladder to say "Huh? What? Now? Here? Seriously?Okay...okay....give me a sec...give me a sec...."

And thats when things got ugly.

I assumed I could shut the valve off "so to speak" at any point. But I soon found out what a horrible decision I had made.

"Stop....stop....stop" my inner voice said to my inner bladder. I continued to stare straight ahead.

"Please stop......oh no!" It was all over my chair.

"Hey....what's that dripping from your seat?" my friend Zebediah yelled, suddenly bringing a new hell to the situation.

Still staring straight ahead and using the same quick thinking I would eventually use in my improv, I said the only thing that came to my mind:

" I had a bag of water in my back pocket and it must have broke!".

Yeah, I know. Really bad. But I was 10 and looking at total social annihilation.

"Ew....did you wet your pants?" Zebediah said again. Idiot.

"No way....I told you it was a waaaaaater bag. I should have taken it out at recess" I was digging in deep as the Amazon River continued to cascade over the wooden chair and into a growing stain below in the carpet. And for the love of Christmas, it wouldn't stop! It was unbelievable. I was like a frat boy at an all-night kegger.

I sat there in my soggy clothes and prayed for the end of the day to come quick. But it was not to be and as the minutes swam by (at least in my area), the odor demons began to punish me as well.

"It stinks over here."
"Ew."
"Phew."

Some kids were putting there shirts on their noses ala Jesse James. Enough already. It was only water. It must be the rug that stinks. I was buying into my story with every ounce of urine I had.

Eventually the teachers came over and excused me from class to the restroom . And I'm sure they gave the other students the old "let's be nice, everyone has accidents, everyone sometimes wants to let a little out" speech. Okay.Maybe not so much that last part.

When I came back, school had ended. I wrapped my pink jacket around my waist, gathered my books, and began to walk out.

The teacher stopped me. I figured I was due a "yelling at" as the classroom was beginning to smell like the elephant house at the zoo.

But she didn't.

She just said, " Let me know anytime you need to use the restroom."

I held in the tears. I wasn't even going to let a little out.

Thursday, December 01, 2005

The Fix


True...seriously.

As a kid, I was always on the quest for candy. Not a normal desire like most children, but one of a junkie in his 2nd day of recovery.

I was in 2nd grade at the time and hadn't scored a "fix" in a day or so. Mom and dad were dried out and I'd shaken my sister down too many times. I needed something....anything.

I saw my best friend was home across the street. This girl bogarted all her candy. Sometimes for years. But I was in no position to be choosy. If sugar wasn't in my system by the end of the day, there's no telling what I would do. Even my parents seemed relieved when I left. It had been a rough couple days.

I made my way over to her house and pounded on the door. This was no time for niceties. Her mother opened the door.

"Hi, are you......"
"Yeah, yeah, is Chrissy here?"
"She sure is, wou...."

I was already in her room.

"Chrissy, let me have 'em"
"What?"
"That box of Peeps you have in your dresser drawer, hand 'em over. I'm dyin' here"
"But they're so old, are you...."

The stale, yellow marshmallow ball was already in my mouth.

It was already taking effect. I wasn't shaking anymore. A calm was coming over me. But this fix would have a price.

Now I prided myself on my candy eating abilities. There wasn't a taffy I couldn't chew, a jawbreaker I couldn't crush, a wax soda flavor I wouldn't try. But this Peep was going to be trouble.......yes, it was going to be a challenge. A challenge I was easily in the mood for.

It must have been in my mouth for over a minute and still was not breaking apart. Unusual for a "fresh from the Easter basket" Peep, but not so from one that had dehydrated slowly over three years in a drawer. My molars ground, my incisors dug, but still it was a hard ball.

Out of nowhere, and certainly not by my choice my throat did an involuntary swallow. No...NO....NOOOOOOOOOOOOO! But it was too late.....it was stuck. Mid-throat.

I turned in fear to my friend who was staring at the yellow goo dripping from my chin.

"Are you okay?"
I shook my head.
She pounded on my back with her small , nail bitten hands.
Nothing.
I saw my life flash before me. Oh, why? Why? Why hadn't I just asked her for the orange tic-tacs her mother had given her last year? Why did I have to be so greedy?

Suddenly, I felt a harder pound on my back. The Peep flew out of my mouth and bounced onto her Holly Hobbie rug.

I looked up at her from my kneeling position. I knew what I looked like, it was obvious. She didn't say a word but looked over at the opened dresser drawer. We needed no words. I took the plastic case holding the three tic-tacs and walked home.