Thursday, February 16, 2012

KITCHEN FRIGHT

I was putting away the dishes this evening.  Most modern women do this when they empty their dishwashers.  Since I am some kind of peculiar relic who has never fully departed the 60s (and since I happily use my dishwasher for the alphabetical storage of spices) I was pulling damp plates and glasses from my well-worn dish rack. As usual, there was “dish overflow” spilling out onto the toweled surface of my kitchen counter.  To any naysayers reading this particular post, I will say here that I stand FIRMLY by my dishwater theory. And I challenge any of you staunch automatic dishwasher supporters who believe that scraping, rinsing, arranging, processing, hearing incessant hum and sputter for an inordinate amount of water and heat-wasting time, and then finally arriving at emptying- only to discover ill-shapen plastic storage lids (and just narrowly escaping injury via loosened and relocated knives and other assorted sharp implements….) ...ahem... I defy you to consider that plunging ones hands therapeutically into hot soapy dishwater is a more effective process and an excellent remedy for most of the things that ail.  Wow, that was a long and unnecessary sentence.

Back to the story at hand…. I lifted a glass from the aforementioned overflow counter towel.  Said drinking glass had been resting upside-down for drainage and needed a quick swipe of my dish-towel.  But first, as if by reflex, I dislodged a foreign body which had mysteriously appeared and was somehow pressed onto the rim of the glass.  A pause.  Something was amiss. My dislodging finger was a beat or two ahead of my mind because as soon as I touched the foreign body, my mind snapped to horrified attention. A WORM.  A “c” shaped segment of EARTHWORM.  I shuddered and flicked with all of the flickiness I could muster and sent that worm sailing into the remnant bubbles in the sink.  But my overreaction was not finished.  I jumped up and down several times in complete disgust at having seen and TOUCHED a segment of worm.  A WHOLE earthworm would have been bad ENOUGH.  But a SEGMENT of earthworm that had been pinched in the center by the rim of a DRINKING glass was enough to skeeve me out COMPLETELY.  I began to retch and gag.  (I mean seriously, WHO dry-heaves from an earthworm segment?)  I continued my ridiculous display of shivering and jumping up and down, trying not to puke.  And with these calisthenics, my brain began to engage.  It is February.  I do not live in a mud hut.  My house could be accurately described as clean.  How could a worm have been strolling across my kitchen counter?  And if indeed this clever worm-pilgrim were journeying on my very own Hatfield kitchen counter in February, pray tell me WHAT has he done with the rest of his wormy segments?  

My eyes flew back to the worm carcass in the sink.  And that’s when I saw them.  The telltale freckles.  The worm was decidedly freckled.  He had salt freckles.  This dastardly worm which had so suddenly invaded the peaceful therapy of my dish detail was really….in fact….a stray piece of my snacking husband’s thin pretzels.  The offending pretzel “c” had swollen to a ghastly size due to the water draining from the drying glass.  I tell you, this pretzel was sporting a distinctly wormlike form.

I braced myself and exhaled.  And then in a grand and sweeping relief (and a nearly as grand and sweeping disgust at my own foolishness) I began to laugh until my daughter came out to discover what new nonsense had befallen her mother. 

There is never a dull moment.  And if you find you are having one, stop on by and I’ll put you to work washing some dishes.   Things are not always as bad as they seem. 


FORGIVE THE ATROCIOUS PHOTO - This was from Christmas and is the only dish-washing photo I own (Note: I do not wear sparkly Christmas tree t-shirts to wash dishes on a normal weekday evening...)