Tuesday, May 28, 2013

My Husband The Hobo

My father in law is a farmer. As a farmer he is rugged, masculine and stubborn. He is also called the silver fox by countless peri-menopausal women in the Northern Utah area. That fact has nothing to do with the story but I felt it was necessary since this post is, in some ways, all about him. 

His name is Sam. This is Sam.
(Names have been changed to protect the identity of the almost innocent characters in this story)


He even has a Tom Selleck Mustache.

Sam, the manly farmer that he is, is never less than diligent in the doing of farm chores. Thus, at 10:00 PM last sunday, AKA Mother's day, he decided to go out to change water on a 1980's motorcycle with low headlights. While charging along at 20 MPH on a water saturated skinny dirt road inches from a 3 foot canal - disaster struck.  


The front wheel hit a waterlogged piece of driftwood and threw Sam from the cycle.


The motorcycle went one way, Sam went the opposite way, and his lower leg went both ways. 
Sam was taken to the Emergency Room, after a hearty amount of pleading of prodding of course, and was given every test known to man. 


His X-ray showed two broken bones in multiple places on his right leg, his MRI showed extensive tissue damage and his CT scan showed no brain damage. 

His leg was splinted and he was sent home the next morning with instructions not to move and wait for the swelling to subside.



He did not like waiting. 
Two days later the family gathered together for a BBQ. Sam didn't go to the barbecue. Instead, he went trolling around checking his fields for sufficient water and ensuring the farm was running smoothly without him. Because his right foot is broken, Sam used his left foot to pressure the gas pedal.










 Did I mention he was also on oxycontin at the time?
 Yes, yes he was. 

Yet another two days after that, Sam had a Doctors appointment. Due to the prior driving incident and other unsuccessful attempts, Sam's lovely wife Cathy hid all keys. While Cathy was in the shower and his son, my husband, was on the way to pick him up - Sam found the keys. 
He drove himself to the Doctor.  
With his left foot.
On opiates. 

No one can say Sam is not tenacious.

He thought only happy thoughts on his way to the Doctor.


Well... Mostly.... 





Once Sam got to the doctor's office he realized he may have been more affected by the narcotics than he originally supposed.

As he was lumbering out of his truck he looked down to find he had driven there without footwear.


He contemplated driving back home, since he was uncharacteristically 20 minutes early anyway, but decided against it. 
(Clearly another decision influenced by drugs) 
He was going into a medical office shoeless. 

The Doctor removed Sam's splint and gave him a boot as a replacement. 
He drove himself home with his good, and now slightly dirtier, bare foot. 



Once he got home, Sam didn't like his boot. The lack of structure allowed his bones to crunch around and the crunching made him less able to break the rules. 

He was miserable. 

In comes husband. Up until this point you've probably been wondering how the title of this blog post ties into a broken father in law. 
Here is how. 

Since Sam was miserable with his new boot, he decided he wanted his old splint back. 
Problem - the Dr's office was closed by the time he made this decision. And it was friday. The office would not be open again until Monday morning - an entire 72 hours away. 

An idea was hatched.




Most logical people would say this: 


Husband said this:


 So Husband climbed in his work clothes and drove to the hospital to dumpster dive for Sam's old splint.

Once he got to the hospital he realized the Dumpster was not in some back alley as he expected. Instead it was on the parking lot side of an all glass building facing two sides of a heavily windowed hospital.

He strategically parked his truck so it blocked as much of the dumpster as possible, but a giant red truck is more conspicuous than most.


He exited the truck. 

Nervously, he glanced around for onlookers. The last thing he wanted was to be recognized rummaging through medical waste in his chore clothes. 

For those of you who were not raised on a farm, let me elucidate the nature of chore clothes. 

Chore clothes almost always consist of coveralls. Large, thick uncomely overalls made of a taupe canvas material that barbed wire can't cut through. 
Old clothing that most people give to goodwill - become chore clothes. Jaron's barn clothing largely consist of shirts from the 7th to 9th grade. These shirts are not barbed wire proof and are thus often riddled with holes and few sized too small. 
Long sleeves are a must - which usually means ratty old jackets are layered on top of holed t-shirt. 
Boots are steel toed, rubber or drenched in mud. Usually all three. 

Dip the whole outfit in manure, tractor grease and general smelliness and you have chore clothes. 

Farmers know how to work.  

Anyway back to the story - Jaron, in his chore clothes, was hesitant to jump into the dumpster.




When it appeared he was audience free he boosted himself up and into the dumpster. 




He immediately regretted his decision.


Medical offices do not dispose of the same things that, say, a paper office would throw away. 

Doctors throw away things that have been under, around, on or a part of the human body. 
Often a diseased, infected or broken human body. 

He found many things of this nature. 


He Found: 

Used Casts

Fungus growing on the used casts

Used Splints - one of which may or may not have been Sam's

Fungi growing on the used splints

Diapers
* ADULT diapers, not baby diapers.

Other gross things. 

He Did Not Find:

Drugs

Needles

Laughing Gas

Syringes

Any other thing the people passing by must have thought he was rooting around for. 


The next ten minutes went something like this:







He thought about this as he poked at a particularly fungus infested cast.



Then he obeyed. 


He buckled down, ducked his head so he couldn't be seen, and rifled through the entire load. Out of diapers, casts, bacteria and countless other health hazards he gathered all the Sam-sized splints, making a stinky pile just outside the dumpster. 


When his work was complete he hurriedly lept from the dumpster, ready to head home and take seven showers.  


But then the phone rang. 




He shifted the weight of the reeking splints to his other arm and managed to answer the call.


It was Sam. 










The End. 

Saturday, January 26, 2013

How I Broke My Wedding Ring

 It was a cold and dreary day in frigid Logan, UT. There was a winter storm advisory out for freezing rain, sleet and icy road conditions. While I would love to be curled up inside with a giant mug of hot chocolate under these conditions, I unfortunately had to work. Apparently I'm a grown up and apparently have to make my own money in order to afford ice cream and other pretty things. 

After a long day at the office I was finally ready to head home. Husband and I had date night plans for dinner and a church function, for which I was fully prepared. I had my adorable red pencil skirt, a white blouse and knee high Kenzie brown boots all packed up and ready for wearing. 

Husband wanted to wear a suit. Husband had no suits at the house. 
He did, however, have two suits being tailored at Mr. Mac. One, that would be ready on the 30th, and one that was ready on the 22nd. 

It was the 24th. 

Sensibly, I wanted to wait until both suits were finished.

Husband had other ideas. 


I looked out my window at the blizzard like ice storm. 

I did not want to go to Mr. Mac. 


But, as previously mentioned, I am an awesome wife. So I agreed to pick up the suit. 


I arrived at Mr. Mac with minimal sliding on the ice and parked my toasty car. I tentatively exited my heated Nissan and headed for the door of Mr. Mac.





From my parking spot the storefront looked nicely shoveled and free of sleet. I finally decided to traverse the dangerous parking lot in pursuit of the apparently clear sidewalk. 

I was wrong. 

The storefront concrete gave the illusion of solid ground but was in fact sneakily iced over. 
I took one step on the curb and my feet went out from under me, cartoon style.




I flew up in the air and landed decidedly hard flat on my back.

I stayed down for whole minute.




Then an old man poked me with his cane and asked me about my rump. 



My rump was okay. 


After gathering my dignity, I made my way into Mr. Mac. 

To be honest I more likely hobbled than walked due to the intense pain radiating from my now wet and throbbing "rump".

I was greeted by an awkward 18 year old with a CTR ring and a LOUD HELLO. I still don't know if his cheerfulness was due to witnessing my admittedly comical fall or if he's just a chipper guy. 

I sheepishly thanked him for this overzealous greeting and limped towards the counter, hoping his candor wasn't because of my current condition. 


In the course of my limping I happened to glance at my hand.




And I made a terrible realization. 



The prongs in my 1.5 year old diamond solitaire ring were split wide open and my hand picked trillion cut diamond was missing. 



Then I said a very bad word very loudly. Actually, I yelled it. 




And I happened to yell it in the general direction, and somewhat at, the awkward Mr. Mac 18 year old salesman. 

He looked very afraid. 

I literally ran outside to search for my diamond and tears immediately flooded my eyes. 

I threw myself on the ground and started mucking my way through the slush outside. 






Unfortunately the ice from earlier was still there and my knees were just as terrible at staying under me as my feet were. I slipped. 



I ended up on my belly inches from the sidewalk just crying into the ice and blindly feeling for my ring since I couldn't see a thing through the tears and mascara blurring my vision. 

I felt so low I was beyond caring what the random by-passers may have thought about me. One lady honked her horn at me and yelled from her mother SUV to see if I was okay, I ignored her. As she stared at me I simply continued to mourn, possibly more dramatically than warranted. 


While I was carrying on outside, the awkward store clerk made his way to the sidewalk without my noticing. Probably because of the ruckus I was making. 

He wanted to know why I was blithering on his sidewalk. And he wanted to know if I was okay. 



I was barely able to get out my predicament. This portrayal is most likely 100% more clear than what I actually happened to blather out. 




I sank lower and lower in my search my the diamond. 


I had almost given up. I was curled in a ball on the ice and the sleet when the glorious sales clerk found my diamond. 



He is my new best friend. 

I couldn't thank him enough for finding the missing piece of wedding ring. We went back into the store, he gave me a little bag to keep the remnants of my broken wedding ring in, and he fetched the suit for me. 

I apologized over and over again. 



I tried very hard to convince him that I was actually a good person. I even played the church card. Thankfully, I didn't have to lie about church going since I was actually headed in that direction, I doubt he believed me though. 


In the end I went away from Mr. Mac with my ring in 2 pieces, a few bruises on my rump and having offended a very sheltered employee. 

And, as if the day couldn't get any worse, I received the following text message on my way home:


It was from my mother in law. 

Did I mention that I had been on the phone with her immediately prior to entering Mr. Mac? 

I was. 

Apparently I had pocket dialed her back while verbally accosting18 year old gingers with curse words. 

I then had to explain to the future grandmother of my children why I was yelling expletives followed by bouts of snivelling blubber and sleet. 
It was an interesting conversation. 

And that is the story of how my wedding ring, and the day of a Mr. Mac employee, was ruined. 


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