Category Archives: So that happened…

Tales of woe, wonderment, self deprication and mockery from the life and times of Hope.

So that happened…Warrior Dash!

Warrior Dash!

by Hope Madden

George participates in life. Me, I like to sleep late, eat a burrito, take in a movie. It’s all part of my “Sleepin’ Late and Feelin’ Great” philosophy, as opposed to the “Gettin’ Up Early and Feelin’ Surly” approach to life.

George can sleep late/feel great only so many days in a row before he has to go wrestle a bear or something. God help me, he always drags my ass with him.

Last weekend, he pumped and ran with Arnold. You know this one? You bench press your body weight, and then run a 5k. After lifting your body weight.

Which would involve a public weighing, so I’m out.

Not George, because he just looks for stuff to do.

It was for this reason that we got up bright and early one Sunday and drove to Logan, OH – about halfway between Lancaster and Athens. Rolling hills, strawberry patches, barns and assorted other rural whatnot. It’s like a little slice of West Virginia right here in Ohio!

Why head into the hotbed of nothing much? Warrior Dash – George’s second annual bout with mud, ropes and turkey legs.

He’d go on to tougher mudders than this, but it was really this Episode #2 that made me wonder what in the hell is the matter with people.

funky monkey

Warrior Dash is a 5(ish)K. You start running straight up a steep and muddy hill, then crawl through more mud, this time under barbed wire. You cross rope bridges, mount several climbing walls with nothing but your slimy, muddy hands and a rope to get you over. Then you wade chest-deep across a pond and pull yourself up to a platform, haul yourself over another wall, try not to slide ass first down a mud hill using a tow line to lower yourself, jump over a pit of fire (I swear to God), then drop into another mud pit and crawl on your belly to the finish line.

For your efforts you’re awarded a turkey leg, a beer and a Viking helmet.

Batman was there. He left his utility belt behind apparently, running in his mask, shoes and not much else. He did not perform as well as you might expect from a superhero.

Lots of people run in costumes, actually, which makes you wonder why people choose to invest so much time and effort in an outfit they will have to burn later.

When George Dashed the previous year, I had the excellent excuse of a walking boot to keep me from participating. Year two, it was just good old common sense that kept me sidelined.

George enjoyed the challenge, though, and performed well, as always. You cannot imagine how filthy he was as he finished. Words cannot describe it. Nasty – I guess that’s a fairly adequate word.

I snapped some shots as the mud caked and hardened. Post-race, we followed signs for Warrior Wash to tidy him up. The previous year they had a fire hose kind of set up that power washed the mud into submission. This year, warriors were offered more of a bath.

Signs led to a filthy brown pond. Warriors swam through it and, voila, clean! Because nothing cleans like pond water.

Gross!

Then the shuttle/school bus back to the car. There’s nothing quite like the aroma of a bus full of warriors: humans who’ve just completed a 3.5 mile obstacle course ending in a mandatory army crawl through a mud pit.

Smells like victory!

Sounds awesome, right? George enjoyed it.

You might, too! All you need to compete in Warrior Dash – aside from masochism and a few bucks – is a pair of running shoes you never hope to wear again, shorts you can tie (because wet, muddy shorts want to come off you as you run), and that nutty desire to participate in life.

And may I recommend some hand sanitizer?

Chirper Swan Song has Inappropriate Lyrics

 

I swore after my last write up on the Chirpers – those humans whose pod of cubicals sits directly outside my office door, where they allegedly sell my company’s product – that I was done. Relaying these stories makes me feel catty, judgy. Old. But the Chirper stories are like the mob – as soon as I think I’m out, they drag me back in. Plus, in a few weeks, the whole lot of them will be moved to another spot in our building, so this may actually be my last opportunity to report on the chirping. Unless I want to start lurking around with a note pad.

It turns out, though, that the Chirpers will not go quietly. It was a big week, and not just because it is the height of selling season – which it is. And you’d think that would mean more telephone sales time for the Chirpers, but apparently not. No, these ladies had other things on their minds. Let’s listen in, and let me say in advance, I swear to God this is what happened. And please keep in mind, their little cubical pod sits in the dead center of an entire sea of cubicals filled with people actually doing work. I have a door. I could close it and avoid this entire catastrophe. (I mean, I didn’t. I’m not made of stone, people!) The point is that loads of perfectly normal people were unable to avoid the following.

Chirper #1: Gotta call Vatch.

Chirper #2: Sounds like vag.

Chirper #1: Yeah. (giggle)

Chirper #2: Vag. Heh heh heh.

Chirper #1: Dirty vag! Heh heh heh.

Chirper #2: Yeah, my husband will never let me forget my bachelorette night.

 

NOTE: Here’s where I began to really worry. Any tale that was brought to mind by this whole “vag” thing is, I’m assuming, not meant for public sharing. Surely Chirper #2 will either stop talking now, or will quietly walk into the cubical of Chirper #1 to commend her choice of stretchy leggings for pants today, and quietly tell her personal bachelorette dirty vag tale, so as not to broadcast whatever it may be to the dozens of people within ear shot. Right?

 

Chirper #1: It’s such a funny word.

Chirper #2: The only reason I’m not totally embarrassed by it is because I can’t remember anything.

Chirper #1: Got to go clean the vag.

Chirper #2: I was so bad. I was totally throwing up and going to the bathroom all over myself. My husband had to clean me up. He never lets me forget.

Chirper #1: Big Bang is the worst. Like, literally.

Chirper #2: They said it was acute alcohol poisoning, and I said it was not acute, it was really bad. And he was like acute just means it was not prolonged, that it happened one time. And I said they were making it sound like it wasn’t really bad, but it was. It was aw-ful!

Chirper #1: You can’t move, you can’t breathe, you can’t get a drink.

Chirper #2: It’s hard, because you have to try really hard to have this really crazy night, but if you’re in Columbus, you’ve already done everything.

 

Recap of my favorite moments:

1)      That the phrase “dirty vag” immediately made #2 think of her bachelorette party.

2)      That C#1 was so unphased by this conversation about needing to be cleaned up that she just jumped to our lack of good local spots for bachelorette parties.

3)      And that she still keeps misusing the word “literally”.

4)      Oh, right, and that this vag-tastic conversation took place in the most central and public spot in my crowed office.

You stay classy, Chirpers!

So That Happened… Chirpers, Episode 3

 

I realize that I have neglected to keep you up to date on the breathlessly fascinating world of the young telephone sales folk in the pod outside my office door, affectionately known by me as The Chirpers. The negligence! So, rather than work five full days last week, I spent most of one day eavesdropping. Before you  judge remember– they sit right outside my door and talk incessant inanities. I’m not made of stone.

Anyway, here’s the blow by blow.

 

9:40 am:

Chirper #1: I’m really trying to lose three pounds.

Three pounds. A conversation about three pounds. Hey, I know! Maybe walk away from my office to burn off those lbs!

Chirper #2: No you don’t!

Chirper #1: I’m really super stoked about it. Look! It’s a power hot yoga.

Chirper #2: Let me have that website!

This looks to be a productive day all around.

 

10:20 am:

Chirper #2: I got home last night and everything was gone. Every cup, every bowl. I mean, the china bowls, but even the plastic. I mean, it was hers, but she just got married and she got all this free stuff. She doesn’t need it. I was such a good friend to her. I did so much for her. And now she does this.

Oh my God, the tragedy! After getting all that free stuff for getting married, she pulls something as heinous as packing her own belongings and leaving the chirper without plasticware! Honestly, how did she even manage to face the day? The courage…

 

11:00 am:

Chirper #3: The stuff is so cute. Aqua, purple…

C#1: My gosh, look at this…

C#3: The dresses are so darling!

C#1: Uch, an hour and a half of shopping. I just don’t really get anything done before noon

I’d insert a snide comment, but I have also gotten nothing done. Damn their fascinating idiocy! 

 

11:15 am:

C#1: Wait, do you have nuts over here?

C#2: Yep. In those clear drawers there’s walnuts and almonds.

C#1: Thanks, babe.

Forgot those three pounds already? Oh, well, hot power yoga and all, babe.

 

1:10 pm:

C#1: Three of her kids’ birthdays are today.

C#2: How many does she have?

C#1: Five

C#2: And wait, three have the same birthday? I didn’t know that.

C#1: Yep.

Wait, I hear something in that “yep.” This is going somewhere.

C#2: So, what is nine months before that that they always do it?

C#1: Let’s look. So it would be nine months to the day, right?

Mischievous AND biologically unaware. These two are hot today.

C#2: Ha ha ha ha. The guarantee day.

Those imps!

 

2:40 pm:

C#3: What is it you say, it’s like pushing a watermelon through something? It’s a saying. People say it. It’s like pushing a watermelon through something. It’s like an analogy or something. I can’t think of it. I’m bored.

You tell me, how am I expected to concentrate with monologues like this one unraveling outside my door?

 

3:30 pm:

C#2: No. They’re doing it wrong. Your leg should be level. You’re doing it the right way. I have to say, this is very cheerleaderesque.

C#1: I cannot even deal with you. You are the skinniest little….

C#3: I know. You are.

The three of them were looking at images online and physically mimicking whatever it was they were seeing, striking poses (hot yoga?) and congratulating each other for looking better than the image. During the work day. Within eyeshot of everyone in the office. You have to almost admire them. 

 

4:20 pm:

C#1: Oh my God, I have been literally on the phone all day!

C#2: I know!

I’m sorry – what? Do you mean that you were sitting on top of the phone itself? Because that is actually possible, given the amount of work you’ve accomplished, but it is not what you mean, given that you do not understand the definition of the word “literally”. 

 

She Bangs, Albeit Unintentionally

Big Bangs

Bangs are very in, I’m repeatedly told as I throw a mild fit in front of friends and strangers. Michelle Obama, Zooey Deschanel and others have brought them back into fashion. But since I’ll never be accused of fashion trendsetting, I don’t care. I didn’t want them.

I just wanted a trim. That’s what I told the lady, assuming that meant she would take basically the same length off every hair on my head, leaving me with more or less the same haircut I’d received the last time I visited.

Sure, I’m not very up on cosmetology jargon. And I can see where it might be hard to figure out what a style is supposed to look like once it’s lapsed as horribly as mine had. Still, who thought “I need a trim” could be interpreted as “Please give me a dramatically different hair cut. One that will be terribly difficult to grow out. And if you could, please make me look exactly like I did in 1987.”

Who would want that? No one – no one – looked good in 1987, least of all me. I should just put on a Warrant tee shirt and some acid washed jeans and pretend I’m the ghost of Tiffin, Ohio past.

So I have bangs. Again. Big, thick bangs.

Like when I was 1.

12 months

 

And in preschool (the glasses only enhance my beauty)…

3

 

High school (not everyone carries their sunglasses to commencement, but given my pallor, I obviously was unused to bright light)…

highschool

 

And on into my adult life. (A super cute baby distracts a young mother from her awful hair.)

parenthood

 

Indeed, of my many years on this planet, I believe I have lived bang-free for maybe a total of a decade. It’ s not like it takes months and months of relentless hideousness to grow thick bangs out to match the rest of your stupidly long hair or anything. No one over 9 years old should be wearing barrettes, is what I’m saying.

And now, through no honest fault of my own, they are back.

Before long I’ll be ordering in tomato soup every time it rains!

Curse you, Zooey Deschanel!

 

 

 

So that happened: Wahoo Woes

By Hope Madden

It is officially baseball season. As a Cleveland Indians fan, I know that this will likely mean pessimism followed by spurts of joy and confidence, crushed mid-season and turned to heartbreak. (The difference between being a Tribe fan and a fan of any other Cleveland team is that tiny glimpse of optimism and joy.)

I can remember when those positive feelings followed the whole season long. Hell, I can remember when we did well season after season. Sigh. Now it’s mostly heartache and embarrassment, and sometimes it doesn’t even have to be baseball season.

Like, say, that time years ago when I visited my dad in Alabama. He’d arranged for me to meet up with his friend Randy Trailwalker one afternoon.

Randy made a living selling handmade goods at pow wows around Alabama and neighboring states. My dad had promised my son Riley I’d bring him back one of Randy’s coolest items. Dad thought Riley would be excited.

He was correct – Riley, then about 7, wanted a dreamcatcher.

I welcomed the chance to escape Dad’s place for an afternoon. I’m not saying I’d grown tired of the Game Show network or anything. I can watch Match Game episodes from 1960s at top volume all day long. But a few Gene Rayburn-free hours to talk at normal volume and peruse handmade arts sounded great.

Randy was awesome – incredibly nice and eager not to sell me ready-made gifts, but to teach me how to make them so I could teach Riley to make his own. Fun!

I made a dreamcatcher and I did not suck at it. We used really nice materials – turkey feathers, handmade beads, assorted groovy whatnot. Randy patiently walked me through the steps, then bagged up identical materials so Riley could make his own. Then we made a bravery bracelet, and bagged materials up for Riley. We also made some kind of fantastic necklace. Basically, I got carried away before I thought about price.

Randy insisted on taking no payment because he was so fond of my dad. I’d been warned this would happen, and my dad made me promise not to take advantage of his friend and to insist even more strongly that he accept payment. Which I was prepared to do. Sort of.

Randy was not about to tell me how much all this was worth, but even a dimwit like myself realized we’d far outreached the $20 I’d brought along. I decided to quietly leave a check behind.

Classy, right?

Then I remembered.

I have Cleveland Indians checks. Big ol’ smiling Wahoo face right in the center.

It really does sometimes feel like a curse.

So that happened…MaddWolf meets HorrorHound

It’s HorrorHound Weekend, a convention celebrating terror cinema … in Cincinnati. Dude! With too many local commitments this year, we had to skip what would have been our second annual trek. One year ago, a different kind of March Madness gripped the MaddWolf household, as the convention landed in Columbus for the first time. And while OSU gear was in short supply, I counted three different Motel Hell tee shirts. Nice!

It was Saturday afternoon. In a short few hours, Ohio State would take on Syracuse in the East Regional Finals, yet my husband George was sporting the only OSU T-shirt in the sea of humans at the Crown Plaza North hotel.

I don’t think I’ve ever ventured outside my home without seeing at least several OSU tees. What gives?  As I pondered, I turned the corner and blurted, “Oh my God, it’s Pinhead!”

It was Doug Bradley, the actor who’d brought life to the iconic villain from Clive Barker’s 1987 film Hellraiser. He was sitting nonchalantly, wearing a Mansfield Correctional Facility tee shirt and signing autographs for $20 a pop.

Many of those attendees not bedecked in their Evil Dead/Halloween/Friday the 13th finest showed off an even deeper commitment to their fandom, coming costumed as their favorite characters. The Bride of Chucky milled around alongside the Bride of Frankenstein. Jigsaw squeezed past the Wolfman on his way to the bar. I saw many Elviras – some of them women, even. The zombies were countless.

There were also an awful lot of Ghostbusters in attendance, which seemed weird. Maybe they’d been called in case things got out of hand.

Left your Army of Darkness tee at home? No worries!  Vendors shucked tee shirts, jewelry, face painting, and costumes. Booths offered gear from Blacula, The Shining, Shivers – nearly every film you might think of – as well as obscure DVDs, posters, and wildly tacky paintings.

You could even go home stained with a brand new, horror-inspired tattoo, courtesy of on-sight tattoo artists Screaming Ink.

Many such customers, freshly inked with Elvira’s likeness, shuffled directly into line to meet the actual Mistress of the Dark (Cassandra Peterson). For just $20 you could get your photo, Elvira hanging off one arm, her face forever etched on the other.

Twenty was the going rate for most photo ops.

I paid it. I’m not made of stone.

Stuart Gordon, director of many genre classics including Re-Animator, pocketed a bill of mine, as did Tippi Hedren from  Hitchcock’s ornithophobic classic The Birds. But she kicked in a prop raven for free. Now that’s the kind of theatrical panache that lures in suckers like me.

I dropped a lot of cash, I’m not going to lie to you. But how else was I going to get a picture of me standing between Gunnar Hansen and Marilyn Burns, killer and survivor from the 1974 original Texas Chainsaw Massacre? How?!

Across from Bradley’s table was a booth crowned with a banner reading: Are you a horror film freak?

Um, yes. And I was in my element.

In the ballrooms, lobbies and corridors of the Crown Plaza gathered thousands of the most ardent consumers and prolific purveyors of all things gore. Along with Pinhead, you might run into Jason Voorhees (Steve Dash), Michael Myers (Tyler Mane), or Leatherface (Gunnar Hansen).

If you just read that paragraph and objected that Dash, Mane and Hansen are not the only actors to don a hockey/Shatner/human flesh mask onscreen, you, too, may be a horror film freak.

This is not exactly George’s element. He enjoys a good horror film, but only a good one. Still, he embraced the opportunity to let me absorb all the horror-nerdery I could handle. He took note of the many and varied costumes bedecking the convention attendees and suggested we return in our Halloween get-ups from last year – blood soaked prom-goer Carrie and her date Tommy. God bless George, he does participate in life.

In a few short hours, the Buckeyes would earn their place in the Final Four, but here there was a different kind of madness afoot. Such is HorrorHound weekend, the convention where the man who changed the face – whole head, even – of horror might be right next to you, and the only scarlet you’re likely to see on a tee shirt is the blood dripping from the words “I like boobs and murder.”

So that happened…Chirpers 2: Electric Boogaloo

There’s been much hubbub around LinkedIn’s decision to blast an email congratulating “elite” members with notifications that their pages were among the site’s 1, 5 or 10% most viewed profiles. This notification coincided with LinkedIn’s celebration of breaking the 200 million member mark.

Many have pointed out that 10% of 200 million is a lot of people, which could make one feel less special, until they realize that the bottom 90% is even more people, so whatever. LinkedIn really just wanted to make you feel good about yourself so you’d subscribe to another of their services – one you pay for – but honestly, more people look at your profile than mine, so congratulations.

I bring this up, though, because of my office neighbors, the Chirpers.

These are the young telephone sales women who sit in a cluster of cubicles just outside my office door.

Chirper #1 (Alpha Chirper) announced loudly from her cubical, into the open workspace around her – teeming with people actually doing work – that she’d received such a notification from LinkedIn.

“Hey! LinkedIn just told me I have one of their top 5 most viewed profiles.”

It’s 5%, but you know, who’s picking nits here?

“Wow, that’s really great!” responds Chirper #2, with practiced awe.

“Yeah?” Chirper #1 retorts, full of indignation.

Again, let me point out that these humans do not stand up, visit the other’s cube, and converse. They shout over their mini-walls so loudly that I, in a neighboring office with my door closed, cannot help but hear them.

Especially when I am clearly eaves dropping.

“What?” Chirper #2 queries.

“Well, if that’s true, then why do I still have this job?!” answers  the miffed #1.

You are not in private, ladies.

Indeed, you are in a public space at the very job you apparently would like to use LinkedIn to escape.

Plus, has C#1 forgotten her important role as chief inspiration for our Department of Mockery?

Stay classy, Chirpers, and may your insatiable lust for attention forever draw eyes away from those countless hoards who do their slacking in secret.

Like, say, behind a closed door…on a keyboard…writing a blog.

But did you see what she’s wearing???

 

So that happened…A Dead Guy at Shake Shak

When my twin sister Joy and I were high school freshmen, our older sister Ellen – by then a teacher in another town – got us jobs at the ice cream stand where she’d worked throughout high school, the Shake Shak.

For a couple of high school freshmen, working at the Shake Shak was about as dreamy as dating Johnny Depp in his 21 Jump Street glory. We were almost entirely unsupervised and were, therefore, free to consume soft serve, hot dogs, and shredded chicken sandwiches until the preservatives leaked from our pores. And we did.

The gig also had its negatives. The criminally meager pay, for one, but the primary flaw was the odor. Walking inside the door of the building’s tiny metal back end doomed you to reeking of coney sauce until showering. Forget about picking up your check and then heading out for the night. One foot in, and the clothes had to be burned.

That back half of the building – concrete floors surrounding the giant freezer; metal tables supporting vats of the saucy meat product – stunk the worst. The front half benefited from a breeze via the sliding-window openings in the three walls of glass where patrons placed the orders – decisions they’d come to after pondering our wares from dozens of fading, grime-covered fliers taped to the window fronts.

Joy and I worked evenings and weekends, which, coincidentally, were the shifts owner Jon Drummer was too cheap to stock with a manager. No, sir, strictly teens being paid well, well below minimum wage.

Joy and I worked with scary Cara, the high school senior who sold drugs from the drive thru window and filled her pockets with every twenty dollar bill in the register before leaving work at shift’s end. I began smoking at 14 because of Cara Bloomville. She handed me a cigarette one day and I obeyed.

Cara loved Iron Maiden and, therefore, hated everything else the 80s vomited forth as metal. She used to sing a song to herself as she worked, one she’d written to the tune of Bon Jovi’s “Wanted Dead or Alive”:

I’m a faggot

and my name is Jon Bon Jovi

and I got AIDS

and I’m gonna die

 

Aside from hair metal, Cara hated Dawn, this cheery, pastel-wearing co-worker who beamed with an earnest sense of accomplishment and high self concept. She was easy to loathe.

I had the great joy of working the shift where Cara, apropos of nothing, called Dawn’s name in an unusually cheerful tenor. It was the chipper tone that caused me to put down my Star Hits magazine featuring a new Duran Duran foldout and take note.

Dawn spun about with her trademark effervescent zeal, only to face a double barrel onslaught of condiments. Cara wielded a catsup in one hand, a mustard in the other, and squeezed those bitches like their contents might put out a raging fire.

Or one super sparkle smile.

But Dawn simply skipped back home to change, her house sitting beyond the large yard out back where Jon kept a couple of rickety picnic tables and a rusted green dumpster. On lucky days, Jon – shirtless, sweaty, and unmistakably obese – would mow that patch of grass between Shake Shak and Dawn’s house. I would Brillo that image from my very eyeballs if only I could.

Filling out the cast of characters was another set of twins – hillbilly sisters. One sister was constantly scarred up with hickies. She was a redhead and for the life of me I can only remember her as Reba. This is not her name, but I somehow replaced her name in my head, and so, now and forever more, Reba it is.

Her sister was just an idiot. I don’t remember her name, either. Idiot will work. Reba I liked, but Idiot was intolerable. She pinched off chunks of shredded chicken sandwich and then put her sandwichy fingers in her mouth. She smiled with the seductive naivety of an adolescent with pubescent hormones and pre-school brain function. I found her repellant.

Her friends, though – the half dozen or so that loitered in front of the building eating ill-gotten treats whenever either sister worked – they were a riot!

Idiot’s boyfriend got into an argument about Monster Trucks (presumably), in front of our glass-encased building and eventually pulled out nun-chucks. Nun-chucks! How awesomely white trash is that?! He was even wearing tube socks and a wife beater. That part is probably inaccurate, but he totally had nun-chucks. And a mullet.

So he hit some guy and blood slapped across the window front like something from one of Cara Bloomville’s condiment guns. At which point the group out front scattered like cockroaches, but it was glorious while it lasted.

And so it was, a smattering of rubes congregating in front of the order windows, one day as I shared a shift with my sister and Reba. The lesser sister stood outside the open order window pilfering free food, when one of her buddies said, “Do you know there’s a dead guy out by the dumpster?”

I responded with the contemptuous grimace I’d been working on, which would eventually become my go-to response to all queries. He mistook it for a quizzical, perhaps ignorant, expression.

“Out back. By the dumpster. There’s a dead guy.”

I tried again to chill him with my withering glare of superiority and hate, but the others had heard, and so the situation suddenly required investigation.

Several more members of the Free Food Rabble moseyed to the back of the building to have a look while, indoors, Joy, Reba and I began to wish Cara Bloomville were working. Just in case. Surely it was a lame joke, or else there was a passed out drunky. No doubt he’d take off with the approach of the mob.

Still, Cara probably knew what to do with a dead body.

“Yep,” informed Jimmy Slackjaw. “He’s dead. I burped in his face and everything.”

OK, his name is not Jimmy Slackjaw, but I swear to God, that’s what he said.

Idiot concurred. “No, seriously, you guys…” she began, with her trailer park sultry overemphasized s sound. “He’s dead.”

The overfed, under-appreciative group looked to us to take charge of the situation. We chose not to respond. They eyeballed us with disdain. We closed the order windows and hid in the back end of the building with the meat vats.

The Hick Posse got bored and wandered off, but the three of us couldn’t quite enjoy the taste of our Oreo blizzards or butterscotch dip cones. What if we really were trapped inside a glass building while a corpse rotted in the summer sun out in our parking lot?

Surely it wasn’t so.

Joy, Reba, and I opened the back door and, clinging one to another, peered around it to see how much of the mysterious body we could glimpse.

None of him.

Nobody was there. We were sure of it.

How could we really be sure of it, instead of lying to ourselves as we clearly were doing at this point?

We called Dawn. Our strategy was to lure her over under the pretense of friendship. She’d have to walk right past the dumpster on the way.

Dawn wasn’t home. She was at synchronized swimming lessons.

Of course she was!

We’d have to do this ourselves. It would require leaving the building.

We stepped as one teal-wearing, coney-smelling body toward the dumpster. Reba saw a shoe.

We screamed, arms flailing, and stumbled over each other back inside.

Should we have phoned the authorities at this point? Undoubtedly, but this is why you don’t leave your business in the hands of three Tiffinite teens.

“We should call Cara,” Reba recommended.

“Go ahead,” I tentatively agreed.

“I’m not calling her. You call her,” she told me.

“Fuck that.”

“You should call her, Hope. She’s friends with you,” Joy counseled.

Really? Did Cara Bloomville like me?

“She’s lying,” Reba clarified. “Everybody likes Joy best.”

But Joy wasn’t calling. And at no point did it occur to any of us to call the shop owner.

Based on what amounted to my experience with similar situations, I explained to Joy and Reba what was bound to lie ahead.

“Dawn will stop by on her way home from synchronized swimming. She’ll see him and tiptoe in closer, hoping to help. He’ll reach out with the cold grip of someone returned from the dead, and he’ll kill her.

“We’ll hear the screaming and open the door, only to see his limping, tattered rage as he turns his attention to us.

“We’ll slam the door, but he’ll begin pounding relentlessly. He’ll circle the building. We won’t be able to go near the window. He’ll slap wildly at the glass out front, and then all will go silent.

“Terrified, we’ll lock ourselves in the freezer, but eventually we’ll hear Cara at the back door, wanting to get in for her check. She’ll curse and bitch about how slow we are. We’ll hear her voice trail beside the building, out around front, and then we’ll hear the wet thump of her mangled body against the window. We’ll scream and scream, utterly incapable of saving ourselves as he uses her lifeless corpse to bust through the glass.”

“Let’s go back out,” Reba whispered.

We gumptioned up and headed back out, this time with a small amount of air between each body. I took the lead, but would walk only so far ahead of Joy that I could still reach back and grab her. She kept a similar distance from Reba. We inched forward.

There was definitely a whole guy attached to those dirty Converses. He was on his side, wearing ratty athletic shorts and a green tee shirt. He was freakishly pale. Fishbelly white. Nasty white.

We threw a stone. Nothing.

We called to him. Nothing.

We called and threw more stones. We offered him ice cream. We asked him to please, please get up and go away. We huddled desperately together and decided one of us had to touch him.

We had to know for certain to intelligently determine our course of action.

It was the obvious next step.

I would be the one to go.

Why was it me? Why was it always me?!

I made my move toward the heap of dude. I crouched. I looked back at the clinging JoyandReba mass behind me in the parking lot, the door to the building behind them ajar and letting out waft after waft of coney stench. I looked back at the dead guy at Shake Shak.

His eyes were open.

“You didn’t call the cops, did you?”

 

So that happened…George OK’s clubbing one particular seal

by Hope Madden

I got up last Valentine’s Day morn to a package containing two tee shirts. One was a Leonard Cohen tee. I love me some Leonard Cohen, and George had long heard my complaints that I’d been too cheap to buy a shirt the last time Cohen performed in Columbus. Our son Riley had splurged on one, and every time I saw him wear it, I openly coveted the garment and bemoaned my cursed frugalness. So last February, George rectified the issue nicely.

There was also a bonus garment: a white tee shirt that read “I’m fine” above an enormous blood stain. Nice!

I donned the bloody tee shirt and marched off to work. (Since it was not Casual Friday, I naturally paired the shirt with a respectable blazer so as to broadcast my bone-deep professionalism.)

I was pleased as can be, but it turns out the shirts were only a diversion from the real gift.

Do tell!

George and I had planned to meet for a lunch date at 1:30. George called around noon to confirm. I confirmed. George sounded mildly distressed.

I picked him up at 1:30.

He continued to seem distressed.

As I pulled in to park, my phone rang. George asked, “Is that my phone?”

This struck me as odd. I have, as a ringtone, the theme from the movie Halloween. If you’re not me, you don’t hear that song and think, “Is my phone ringing?” Instead, you might think, “When was the last time I saw our butcher knife?”

My ringing phone was in my purse, which was on the floor in front of George’s feet, so I ignored it. George, however, did not. He fumbled madly through the purse to hand me the phone, which I’d previously had no intention of answering, but did so now.

It was my colleague Christie. She thought I should call our boss. She was cryptic at best. She seemed amused, even.

I hung up, and immediately our receptionist called me.

George took the phone.

“Put him on….That’s not what I said…Your email said 10 am…I don’t see how that’s going to help anything…Great!”

Perplexing. Why the hubbub?

It turns out that George had arranged for the Columbus Clippers to send a Valentine to my office at 10 that morning. They were tardy. Apparently, they had e-mailed a notice of the time change but that e-mail, now a full year later, has yet to arrive.

At  2pm, both Clippers’ mascots – Lou Seal and Krash the pirate parrot – plus several other pep squad types, arrived at my place of employment bearing a basketful of flowers, baseball tickets, snack treats and balloons, and, of course, a great deal of spirit and pep.

As you know, I was not there. Instead, I was about to partake of a lunchtime sub with my incredibly thoughtful, wildly disappointed husband.

The Clippers posse made a little circuit around my office, entertaining everyone and, frankly, making all the other husbands in the place look bad.

Oh, did you get flowers? I had balloons delivered by a guy in a seal suit who mimed sliding into home plate in front of the Editor in Chief’s office door.

The fact that all this was done in vane only made George that much more tragically romantic to my officemates.

So, what does my exuberantly romantic husband have planned for this Valentine’s Day? There is a new Die Hard movie releasing this weekend, correct?

Well, you can’t slide into home every year.

So That Happened…Searching for Good CLit!

 

By Hope Madden

 

My company recently wrapped up its national sales meeting, which reminded me of the best story ever about our sales meeting and the world’s sweetest person.

I had the amazing good fortune to work for the nicest lady on earth for the first ten or so years of my career in publishing. People in the office refer to her as Mrs. Claus. She is the dearest, kindest person I think I’ve ever met. She’s also pleasantly naïve. Take, for instance, that time she put together her presentation for our national sales meeting.

It was a few years back, and she was planning to present her children’s literature list to our sales reps, explaining what they were selling and the best way to sell it. She’d already left for the meeting. She left me a stack of her printed power points to peruse and copyedit, as necessary. I was to send my hand written corrections to her with another colleague, who’d be flying out the next day.

Yes, it makes no sense at all to hand write changes on print outs of power points. She has since adapted to the electronic age.

Her slogan for the presentation was: How do you find good children’s literature? But, she couldn’t get that to fit properly in the power point, so she abbreviated.

HOW DO YOU FIND GOOD CLIT?

Oh, my.

This was the theme of her presentation, to be given several times to several roomfuls of seasoned sales people, who, come to think of it, might actually perk up and start taking notes.

The slogan was followed by several bullet points for the balance of her speech:

HOW DO YOU FIND GOOD CLIT?

  • What is good CLit?
  • Who is looking for good CLit?
  • How do you sell good CLit?

Obviously, I found a handful of changes to make to the presentation.

Indeed, I felt a bit of urgency about the changes. Unfortunately, the colleague who was to hand-deliver the changes just in time for my boss to update her speech had decided to take an earlier flight.

I tried calling my boss at the hotel. No answer.

She didn’t yet have a cell phone.

I was desperate. Panicked, even. I couldn’t let this dear, wonderful woman present this particular speech in public, in front of all her colleagues.

Luckily for us all, I flipped out in my office, drawing the attention of another editor who had not yet left for the sales meeting. Thank God! This particular editor was less naïve and, honestly, less good natured than my boss. She absolutely relished the idea of breaking the news to her. And, of course, thereby saving the day.

Whew.

As I ran this blog past George, I admitted that I couldn’t quite find an ending.

He said it was OK, sometimes you just couldn’t find it.

I disagreed. How hard could it be? It just didn’t seem right to stop without finding it.

He seemed baffled by this idea and nodded off.

Sigh.