12/19/08

On the Lighter Side--True Story (except for "minus 30)

OK, I just have to tell someone this: Yesterday, I was sort of drowning (as you see from last post), but I was so busy writing in my journal to keep from jumping up and screaming every obscenity I know, and some I've forgotten, from the back porch that I was only vaguely aware of Cat (who hasn't got a 'real' name yet) running up and down the stairs and furiously round and round the kitchen. I thought Patch was chasing her because he does that when he's bored, but I looked up once (when the noise got a little out of control), and he was sitting by me watching the kitchen intently.
The noise IS unusual at this point, and somewhere far in the back of my mind I'm thinking of a discussion I had with Jacob on Monday about the woman in Ammon who was almost robbed recently. A man, posing as a book sales person (how dare he), shoved a gun in her ribs, tied her up, then started grabbing computers, video games, etc. and piling them by her front door. But, someone honks a car horn outside, so this guy runs out without taking any of the stuff. (What an idiot. I swear the IQ of thieves is dropping daily.) Her kids find her tied up when they get home from school--how traumatic for them. So, Jacob and I are discussing visits to locksmiths, since, let's face it, I'm never going to remember the safe place where I've hidden the key to unlock my 22, and because for some reason I've always wanted to shoot a thief (now, no gasping, please--just in the arm or leg). It's a secret dream of mine because HOW DARE THEY? I paid for my stuff, and no one, not even PresElect Obama is going to take it--unless I say so! But, hey, I'm busy writing my book to stay off the blog, like Matt Esq suggested I do, so who cares about creepo, probably meth-induced robberies, right?

OK, so I get up around midnight to hunt through my kitchen for some chocolate, and right there--between me and the kitchen--is not a thief but a mouse. Now, mice are not like snakes with me (a dead snake on my rug would have had me dialing 911), but I'm gagging, and this mouse looks like it's just faking dead. I don't want to pick it up because what if it starts squirming. The thought makes me gag twice, but I also don't want the cat throwing it up in the air again, and Patch is moving through my legs to sniff. And where did it come from anyway? I'm sure I've been "mouse-free" for years even though I know this is impossible when one lives in the middle of trees by a river, for hecks sake. But, I'M NOT PICKING THIS MOUSE UP! ... Yet, I have to get to the kitchen. Suddenly, I'm laughing hysterically, doubled over the back of the couch, because this is sort of a gift from God--the death of a rodent--to break my depression. Get it? It's so symbolic and I'm laughing so hard at myself that now I have to go to the bathroom, which means I have to pass the mouse, so I might as well pick it up, since I don't dare go upstairs and leave this dead thing down here with Patch and Cat, who sits by my feet, looking indignant, like, "Hey, I brought you a Christmas present and you dare laugh?" (I'm trying for the world's longest sentences, though I'll never beat Henry James.)

So, I edge by, carefully watching for signs of movement, wanting to call my mother, for some reason, to ask what to do, but she is terrified of mice and once stood on a kitchen chair until my dad got home because one was under our sink, and it's now past midnight for hecks sake. I grab almost a full roll of paper towels, but that's not enough, so I pad them into an old cloth towel I won't mind throwing away, while the whole time, I'm screaming at Patch and Cat to stay by me: "Don't you dare go near that mouse, or you'll be as dead as he (or she) is," but that's the problem--is this mouse dead or a great Hollywood actor in disguise? I mean his legs (I'm sure it's a "he" now, since who else would dare interrupt my depression in the middle of the night. Females know instinctively that we all work it out on our own. They quietly sympathize, then leave us alone, bless their hearts. And, no fair jumping on that sexist remark) are sticking straight up, and his eyes are closed, but...who knows? So, I loosely cover him with a mountain of "stuff," and gingerly gather him up--because I swear if he's faking it and starts moving around, I'll throw him and towels and run for Canada, which means he could land stuck on the ceiling and stay there clear through Christmas (remember, it's past midnight, and I'm not thinking too clearly, nor would you under said circumstances).

Now, I'm carrying him--with my head turned sideways--convinced he's suffocated by if he truly wasn't dead--and head for the garbage can; but wait, I can't leave him in a can inside my house! But, how can I put him down to find shoes because he could still be faking death and suddenly run out from underneath the towels? I mean who knows? There’s been a lot of fake stuff happen in my life. So, I open the garage door, with two fingers, my head still turned sideways, and walk out in the snow to throw a dead rodent into my garbage can-- whose lid is frozen shut. I kick the can hard with my bare feet and bang my shoulder against it, because I'm not putting this mouse down for anything. And do you know how stinkin' cold it is here? Minus 30 without wind-chill (slightly exaggerated for effect). I finally run clear to the fence behind the shed and throw him--towels and all--into the big gully, and on my frozen run back, I'm wondering, "Is that littering?" which my dad taught us never to do.

I LOVE CAT. She is now playing with the colored lights that swirl around my floor from the crystals hanging from the windows (like in Pollyanna). She is truly one of the Great Females in my life right now. She's resting. I'm saving the rest of the mice (such as there is) for Em to catch, so she won't ever be bored living here in Ice City.

8 comments:

Emily G said...

And I'll catch them, too! Ah, Sharon, on such a crap day like the one I'm having, this was a good story to read. Very animated. I could see you telling it from here. It's going to be so cold. I've been wearing only light sweaters down here so when I move to Rexburg with real coats, it will feel comparable.

I like Cat as Cat, by the way. It's a good name.

Also, I probably won't have a boyfriend after this week, or next week, or if I do, he probably won't want to visit much, so no worries in the dept. for unwanted visitors. huzzah!

S.Morgan said...

No boyfriends? Are you killing them off snake spit? However, that is somewhat comforting. I hate running into strangers in my own house (I'm enoough of one to myself), so you'd have to hang out in the sunroom.

Hey, I forgot how bad these winters are. You should try one more time to find something in town.

Emily G said...

UGH!!!! NOOOO!!!! THERE IS NOWHERE!!!!

But I'm getting snow tires. And I figure when it is really bad, I will just go to my Rigby office the day before, do some work, sleep under my desk in the sleeping bag I keep in the closet, and be on time for class the next day, go home when the sun is shining and the roads are groovy.

What do you think?

S.Morgan said...

Hey I've done that. I have a thick blanket and pillow in back room, but it's so annoying when they come in to clean at 4 am, turn on all lights, & open all doors. I'd run, wash my face, and pretend I am an early-rising, dedicated do-or-die faculty. But, one morning the freshman (how will they fix this sexist language?) girl riding the vacuum cleaner ran into the water fountain, and it was a little too much drama for me so early in the morning.
What about those trail walkers I put you in touch with?
Here's the rules: 1)Always keep a full tank of gas (in case you run off the road, and they don't find you for days. Joke, but not joking about the gas). 2) Keep fresh clothing and make-up in car, but don't park in the Clark building lot where I've now got five tickets for parking 1 am to 4 am--like there's really a crowd then). Actually, forget about clothes. I've worn the same thing on the next days after sleeping under my desk, and not one person noticed. 3) Buy you some good-tread-but-hip boots--lots of them, so you can wear thick socks always; good long coat--forget stylish; and three pairs of gloves (one for car, one for use, one for when you lose the other two pair). 4)Get the best ice scraper you can find. 5) And, finally, let's talk Joelle into letting us stay there if we get in trouble, or I have actually gone to Taylor's and flopped on his couch for a night or two; he never minds (though, hey, you might get let in the big new PAPWORTH house with your connections, who knows?)
I'm kidding. I like it when it gets rough. The blizzards pull something out of me that normally lies around--moaning and dying--at the pit of my stomach. We Idaaaaahions just don't mind nothin' rough. In fact, we've had a blizzard up here for daaaaaays just now, and I didn't even notice.
Really, if you're prepared ye shall not fear--though the high temp today it 1+--not kidding.

S.Morgan said...

Whoops. I forgot to tell you that none of the times I stayed all night in my office were related to weather. I just got working on projects, don't relate to time, and then it was too late to go home and just drive back again. YOU'LL BE FINE.

Emily G said...

Hahaha, you are full of so many mixed messages. Those trailwalkers are so noncommittal about everything. Plus, these are the ones that were better friends with Price than with me.

I am living with you and we are going to not die on the road. I am getting snow tires. I'll be invincible.

Unknown said...

Gillz,

Are you living with Sharon during your return to Rexburgia? That sounds like a hoot.

Sharon,

I'll have to tell you my mouse catching story in full detail sometime. I can't do it justice in writing. You have to see me reenact the jump I performed only using my butt muscles to escape said mouse.

God really has a great sense of humor doesn't he? That's how I stayed interested on my mission. He constantly sent me crazy people, tarantulas, and polygamists to keep me sane. Because missions can be a real yawnfest sometimes.

tatum said...

is this really you? Sis. Papworth? it's me, Tatum, one of your old Ricks College writing assistants from, like, 2001-02 or something like that!! so i am old now. working and writing. i actually was thinking about you this morning on my way to work about how if, randomly, anyone ever asked me where i learned to write the way i do, i would have credited it all to you and my time as a tutor at the Writing Center and those blood papers. ha! come visit me: www.turnitdownathousand.blogspot.com