It’s funny how a random thought or event can trigger a completely
unrelated memory. A recent conversation
on a trip to Ikea brought to mind a family gathering I attended a number of
years ago.
It was my aunt’s 65th birthday party, and they were having a big family gathering at a hall in Lawrenceville, which is about an hour and a half drive from my place. At that time, she was living in a senior home, and the invitation suggested a gift card because they took frequent outings to the local Walmart.
Perfect, I thought, saves me racking my brain wondering what to buy. Better yet, I can leave camp a little early and pick it up on the way, since I knew there was a Walmart not far from the party.
If experience is the best teacher, I am a bad student. I had everything planned to the minute. 10am: leave the office to go home and get ready. 10:15: shower 10:30-11:00: blow dry my hair (yes, my hair takes longer than the shower) 11-11:30 dress and apply makeup then out the door by 11:45. Arrive at walmart by 1:15, grab a gift card and back in the car heading to the hall by 1:30, to arrive at party at 1:45, fifteen minutes ahead of the guest of honor. A piece of cake, I said to myself proudly as I wrote my itinerary down on paper the night before.
I had not planned on the record heat and humidity when I bought my outfit, which consisted of a long sleeved top with mandarin collar and slacks. No worries, I thought confidently, I allowed a little extra time to blow out my hair, and I would be in an air conditioned car, store and restaurant.
The first lesson I never learned from experience is that something always happens at work that prevents you from leaving the office at the anticipated time. That day, it was the unexpected throng of nearly 100 wolf watchers that descended on us at 10am, just as I was about to walk out. Remaining, calm, knowing I can shave minutes off my shower and apply makeup as I drive; I proceeded to go back in the office to help register each car as quickly as possible.
I tore a page from the registration book and started a second line at the other counter to speed things along. It’s always when I am in a hurry that I notice how excruciatingly slow everyone else is moving. How long does it take to write a name and address down? I wonder, as I watch the next person in line pick up the pen and start to write. I am screaming “hurry!” in my mind, and I concentrate on the hand with the pen as I try to will it to form the letters faster. I quickly hit a button on the register and state the amount they owe. Then it happens-just like in a movie. Everyone and everything around me shifts into slow motion, and I watch from what seems to be another dimension. I stated the price two more times before the sound waves reached the customer’s ear, and I can almost visibly see her brain slowly processing what I wanted from her.
The woman slowly reached in her right jacket pocket then the left. Coming up empty, she checked her two front pants pockets, taking what seemed forever to feel around and realize they too were empty. As she slowly reached further down her leg, I quietly cursed whoever invented cargo pants. Seriously, do we really need to have pockets halfway down our legs as well? Then the light bulb finally went on, albeit dimly, and she remembered she left her money in the car. She slowly turned to make her way through the crowd to her vehicle, and I wondered why she would get in line to buy a ticket without money on her in the first place. I quickly hit cancel on the register so the person at the other counter could ring up their customer, and I motioned for the next person in my line to sign in. I looked up and wondered how the second hand on the clock can be sweeping around its face so fast, while everything else was moving so slowly.
Finally, I peeled out of the parking lot at 1030 and headed home to get ready. After a frenzied shower and struggling to get my clothes on over a semi dried body, I tried to force myself to control my breathing and blood pressure as I plugged in the blow dryer. My hair is like a barometer; if the humidity is over 45%, my hair will literally start to shrink into ringlets of curl and frizz, so sweating would be counter -productive. I tried to retrieve the lost half hour at the office by only applying my eyeliner, and throwing the rest of the makeup in the car, intending to apply the rest while driving, knowing it won’t be the first time I did that.
Now on the road, I am reminded of the second lesson not learned through experience. Posted speed limits to the average driver are open to interpretation. On parkways and interstates, they are interpreted as the minimum speed required for survival. On secondary roads, which my route required I take, they are interpreted as warnings of certain death if your speedometer gets within 10 miles per hour LESS than the posted speed. Having preprogramed my gps to the address of the party, I felt my anxiety rising as the ETA became later and later.
As I still hadn’t reached Walmart to buy the gift card, I tried to distract my mind from the stress of being late and started thinking about the event I was heading for. My aunt was my father’s youngest sibling. My father, one of twelve children, had passed away several years prior, and knowing he hadn’t been the first to die, I tried to recall how many of them were still alive.
Let’s see, I thought to myself, there is Mary and Junior and Samuel and Morris, Jeannie and Puggy and Pat - suddenly the lyrics for Rudolph the red-nosed reindeer popped into my head, and I smiled as I slowed down for yet another red light.
Ten minutes later, I noticed the clouds had gone from white to dark gray, and as I pulled into walmart, the first raindrops began to fall. Panic began to rise again, as I found the closest parking spot was nearly a tenth of a mile from the entrance. As I closed the car door and hit the remote lock, the sky opened up and it began to pour. I ran as fast as I could, but apparently, another lesson that I did not commit to memory was my lack of agility in anything other than sneakers. I burst through the doors, nearly colliding with a group of seniors aided by walkers and canes. I headed straight for the rack of gift cards grabbing one marked $25.00. I stopped short before getting in line for the register because I realized how long it had been since I had seen any of these relatives and how long it might be before I may see them again. Why didn’t I think to bring a camera, I chided myself. I made a quick decision to buy an inexpensive camera to commemorate the occasion. I was nearly soaked to the skin with rain, and I glanced up to scan the department headings looking for the word “electronics”. Of course, it was way at the back of the store, and I breathlessly hurried to the camera department. I scanned the posted prices and chose a camera that was reasonably priced, but to my dismay, they were locked in a cabinet under the glass case. I raced to the person working the register in that department, pacing impatiently while he finished with the customer ahead of me. “I’d like to purchase a camera over there please”, I said to him.
That’s when it happened for the second time that day. You know - the slow mo thing; that parallel dimension that makes everyone look like they are moving through water against the current. The salesman slowly raised his head and looked up at me, then even more slowly, swiveled his head down towards the end of the aisle. He had to be at least 350 pounds, and I was mentally screaming when I took in his girth and estimated the speed at which he would likely be able to move. I was breathing faster than he was moving. It must have taken a full two minutes before he was able to rotate his body and reach for the key hanging on the wall behind him. I was in agony watching him struggle to displace the air in front of him and make his way down the aisle. I was telling him the make and model of the camera I wanted when I realized that, although I had taken only a few strides and the legs on my five foot four inch body were not all that long, they had put a greater distance between us than I had thought possible. I walked back to him, turned and proceeded in front of him trying to displace the air and create a draft that might pull him up the aisle quicker. When we reached the cabinet, I could see him gauge the distance down to the little shiny padlock that kept the cameras from being poached by shoplifters. It was all I could do to keep from becoming hysterical, as I watched him ever so slowly give a tug on his right pants leg to bend the right knee slightly, and then slowly reach with the other hand to do the same with the left. Inch by inch, he repeated this motion as he slowly maneuvered himself into a squatting position, panting heavily from the exertion. He reminded me of a Sumo wrestler, and I was tempted to partner up and wrestle him to the ground for that key. After what seemed an eternity he was finally able to lower his massive body enough to reach the lock. He slowly inched the sliding door open only to discover they had no more of that camera in stock. I quickly suggested the second cheapest camera. He slid the panel open a fraction of an inch more which caused a shift in balance and his knee dropped all the way down and came to rest on the tile floor. Damn I thought; now he’ll never be able to get back up! Every muscle in my body began to twitch with desperation, when he slowly spoke up and said they were all out of that one too. “Never mind then” I said quickly, “thanks anyway.” I waited there, muscles twitching like a race horse at the starting gate, while he slowly rocked back and forth reversing the motion that got him to his current position. Finally, he stood up and began to slowly shuffle his way back to the register.
“I’ll just get this gift card” I said and handed it to him. He slowly reached for the card and tried to swipe it through the machine. Still in slow motion, he tried a second swipe before suggesting I take it to one of the front registers. I snatched the card from his hand and quickly raced toward the front of the store.
Perspiration was beginning to form around my hairline, which flanked the top hairs already wet from rain. The top of my head was beginning to itch as each individual hair surrendered its position and recoiled like springs that have been stretched beyond their limitation. I made a quick detour to the health and beauty department and grabbed a travel sized blow dryer, remembering I had a converter still in my car that we had used to plug the computer into the cigarette lighter while traveling cross country. Seeing that it was still pouring rain, I also grabbed a mini umbrella and made a bee line to the register that had the shortest line. I dropped everything onto the conveyer belt and dug in my purse readying myself for a quick payment. An audible whimper escaped my lips when I realized the person in front of me had a blouse that had no tag, and a call for a price check went out over the loud speaker.
What else can go wrong? I asked myself, as I finally paid
for my purchases, grabbed my package and hurried toward the exit. I promptly retrieved the umbrella from my
bag, opened it up and began a mad dash to the car. Just before I got there, a gust of wind
answered my last question and turned the umbrella inside out. Struggling to hang on to it, I unlocked the
car, and threw myself onto the front seat and tossed the inside out mangled umbrella
onto the back seat. I was gasping,
trying to catch my breath as I tried to tear open the package on the blow
dryer. It was sealed in hard plastic and
I was using my keys to frantically cut it open. Once I got it punctured, I
clawed at it viciously while praying that I wouldn’t slice my hand open.
By now, I was sweating profusely and wishing I had purchased some deodorant as well. Finally the dryer broke free, and I took a deep breath as I plunged it into the converter and flicked on the switch. There was a faint …whew… of air then a pause, followed by another faint. ..whew. It was then that I realized a hair dryer draws more power than the cigarette lighter was capable of giving. I would have gotten more drying power blowing into a bendy straw pointed at my head. I angrily yanked the dryer by the cord and threw it behind me with such force it landed with a crash. I cringed, and then let out a breath of relief when I saw I had not broken the back window.
I slammed the gear shift into reverse and hurried to the hall. As I parked the car, I glanced down at the makeup I had brought with me but never applied. I decided I had moved beyond caring and then thought, well, maybe just lipstick. I grabbed the silver cylinder, gave the lipstick a quick twist, and flipped down the visor to access the mirror. My hair was a mass of frizz and curls, taking on the appearance of a Berber carpet that was clawed by a cat and the eyeliner was smudged. I looked down at the lipstick in my hand and threw it in the direction of the blow dryer. It would have taken a whole lot more than that to fix what was staring back at me in the mirror. I was exhausted and spent and frankly no longer gave a damn about what anyone would think of how I looked. I stepped into the hall and mingled among my relations. Perhaps it was because I looked like I’d gone through hell and back that they all seemed to be impressed and in awe of the fact that I came all this way and planned to return all in the same night. “”I couldn’t do it” I heard one of them say. The past few hours flashed through my mind as I smiled and calmly said, “It’s no big deal”. With that, the last piece of straightened hair surrendered its position and coiled backward to join the rest.
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