The ________ needs _________.

I used to be self-sufficient. Hang a picture; assemble furniture; check the oil, fill the tires, change the wiper blades. I stripped the wallpaper off the walls of a 3-story staircase and repainted by myself. I put up curtains and blinds. I fixed leaking toilets and rewired a phone jack (with help from the Internet). I was a homeowner and basically took care of my house and the things in it.

Now I just say, “The______ needs ________.”

The oil needs changed; this picture needs hung; the cupboard door needs fixed (yes, I say that bit of Pittsburghese, dropping the “to be”); my tires need air; the screw came out of my glasses; the faucet is leaking.

My handy husband usually takes it from there.

I still remember the first time I experienced this luxury. We were newly dating. I needed new wiper blades on my car. He went with me to buy “the right” new blades and installed them. I was hooked, thanking him and telling him no one had ever taken care of me like that. He said, “I’ll take care of you.” And he has. He’s a fixer — not just for me, but for his parents, friends, at work, you name it.

Just recently, though, I’ve come to the realization that it’s not just that he wants to take care of me. Or that he’s good at fixing things. It’s more that he doesn’t trust me (anyone) to do it myself (themselves). That’s why any fix-it task more complicated than changing a lightbulb at our house is typically met with a swift, “I’ll do it.”

A week or so ago, I threw caution to the winds and “installed” my new vanity license plate he got me for my birthday. (Of course, we first had to buy a clear protective cover. And I had to buy new screws since the old ones are always rusty, and there were only 2 instead of 4.) Full disclosure: It was a bit of a pain and took me longer than it should have. But I did it, and really, no one will ever see the scratches I put in the paint under the plate. 🙂

He, of course, commented in surprise, “You put that on yourself?” (Seriously, 4 screws. I’m a genius.)

A day or so later, I thought nothing of it when I saw him head outside with a screwdriver in hand. Then I glanced out the living room window and saw him just standing up after bending over the back of my car. Wouldn’t ya know, he had obviously checked my work and likely “adjusted” the screws, never saying a word to me, of course. (Much like Marie “corrects” Deborah’s mashed potatoes on Everybody Loves Raymond.)

I laughed. It’s so him.

A few days later, I had the inspiration that I didn’t need to buy a new, armless desk chair to replace my current chair, which kept getting stuck under the keyboard tray on my desk — I could just take the arms off. Much to Mike’s alarm, I started to do it myself. Of course, after much insistence that “I can do it; I’m not an idiot.” I discovered that instead of taking a normal flat or Phillips screw or typical nuts & bolts, it takes a hex-head — one thing I didn’t have in “my” tool bucket (which he has raided regularly over the last 8 years, by the way, because I have good stuff, and I always put things away.) So, he ended up doing that job for me, too.

I’m not complaining, exactly. It’s just that I’m pretty much at the point where I’m afraid to do anything because I’ll do it “wrong” and he’ll have to “fix it.” I’ve regressed from “I am woman, hear me roar.” to “Quick! My smelling salts!” in a frighteningly short time.

Come to think of it, though, I may have unwittingly stumbled on what I and women everywhere have often suspected is the quintessential male avoidance strategy… the Clueless Maneuver. As in, ask them to fold the laundry and you get backwards, inside-out clothes. Load the dishwasher? 2 cracked plates and a newly handle-less cup. Help clean? Ummmm, ever thought of running the sweeper AFTER you dust, not before? (DUH!)

I noticed this morning that the nightlight in the hall is messed up — the timer hasn’t been adjusted to the time change, and I nearly killed myself in the dark at 5:00 a.m. this morning stumbling downstairs to feed the pesky cats.

It would take about 30 seconds to adjust the timer. But in the interests of marital harmony (and cluelessness), I think I’ll just just say, “The timer needs reset.” and leave it at that.

Learn to…be what you are, and learn to resign
with a good grace all that you are not.

~ Henri Frederic Amiel

Shark teeth and other obsessions

If all 5 of you who read this blog wonder where I’ve been, I don’t have a good answer. I’ve been mostly here, with nothing to talk about. Except for that lovely week at the beach a few weeks ago. There it was all about having my feet in the ocean as often and as long as possible. A warm ocean at that! The North Carolina coast is a decidedly warmer place in September than in May when we’ve gone in the past. And the beach was all but deserted — maybe 40 people on average in the mile-and-a-half between the condo we rented and the pier that made a good landmark and destination.

It wasn’t all stress-free, though. We were somewhat haunted by a new obsession — searching for fossilized shark teeth. I had never even heard of such a thing before, but the friends whose son owns the condo we stayed at educated us before our trip. He’s a bona fide (I was so tempted to write bonified, because we’re talking about fossils and all) shark teeth hunting expert, and he showed us the ropes, and the hundreds of teeth in his collection.

Basically, you walk head down for as far as you possibly can, gazing at the billions of tiny pebbles and shells along the beach and in the surf, looking for anything remotely pointy or triangle-shaped and shiny black. Out of the billions of possibilities, maybe 2 million are pointy, triangle-shaped, and shiny black. About a dozen of these will be actual shark teeth. (At least that seems like the right proportion — billions of possibilities; very few real-deals.)

So, you start out reaching for 2 million pointy, triangle-shaped, shiny black things whenever you see one. A million of those possibilities will be instantly washed back into the ocean the second you bend down to pick them up, never to be seen again. The other million possibilities will be nestled amid the billions of other shells and pebbles, safely beyond the surf (at least at low tide). You pick up 279,549 of them as you walk along, only to realize they aren’t actually shark teeth, but bits of shells or pebbles. How can so many things be shiny black, triangle-shaped, and pointy?

Scattered among those millions are the dozen or so that are shark teeth. It’s a classic needle-in-a-haystack pursuit. If you’re lucky, you find maybe 2 or 3. (One of the ways you know it’s a shark tooth is if you can’t break it. They’re hard as a rock, no matter how slender and pointy or how small the fragment.)

It qualifies as an obsession, this shark teeth hunting thing. You see people scanning for them all along the beach — including pro’s who have nets to scoop up and sift through the piles of pebbles and shells that stretch just where the waves break. Instead of a relaxing walk along the beach, you find yourself searching, bending, reaching, sifting, discarding — and maybe sticking a tiny find or two in your pocket and hoping it doesn’t wash away when you get slapped by a wave.

I wonder why it’s such a thing — why I and many others can’t stop the incessant searching — for shark teeth, sea glass, sand dollars, star fish (“sea stars” as I learned at the aquarium), shells — whatever “treasures” the sea might offer up. Is it the thrill of the hunt? The search for something free? something beautiful? something unique? Is it to feel connected to creatures so different from ourselves? Or just the peace — albeit stressful peace — that comes from focusing your eyes and mind on one thing, just one thing, for as long as you can stand it.

Our week-long search yielded 70 or so treasures — most bits and pieces rather than perfectly formed teeth. By contrast, our friend has found well over 200 in one week. His wife calls it his “shark teeth OCD.” I’m sure if we had the opportunity, Mike and I would be out there daily, sloshing along in the surf, head down, scanning.

Just thinking about it has me jonesin’ for it.

Powerful stuff, these obsessions.

Cure for an obsession: Get another one.
~ Mason Cooley

Welcome, friends

This little guy showed up on the patio one morning and hung around for a while. I thought he was ill or injured — he let me get close and didn’t flutter. I sprinkled some food, knowing finches are hangers not ground feeders, because I couldn’t not do something. I left him alone for a bit, and he was gone when I checked back. Hope he made it wherever he was headed.

He’s a perfect bird for the ’Burgh, as is this beauty. I thought she was getting ready to spell out “SOME TEAM” before the Steelers opener — or, as a Facebook friend suggested, “WIN.”  But given how that game turned out, she was probably spelling “WHAT THE…?”

I’m just glad they dropped by.

The ornaments of your house will be the guests who frequent it.
~ Author unknown

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