WORD PLAY
I always made
it a point to take my blood pressure pills before I called my hearing-impaired,
92-year-old, I’m-living-alone-in-my-home-until-they-drag-me-out mother to see
how she was faring. At my emotional
level of thinking, I felt it was a matter of life and death to take my pills
before dialing. Having downed the pills,
I bravely made my call.
After five
minutes of convincing her I was her daughter, not the Telecare woman, I began
my housework, wrote a few letters, and made a scrumptious omelet breakfast
while Mom rambled on about Betsy and her job--all of which I had heard
before--and fed me other newsy gossip of the day. (I learned that
the Methodists were exorcising the cat neighbor's house with buckets of paint,
etc.) Needless to say, I got a lot done during her monologue.
When I finally
heard a brief pause quite awhile later, I offered my own special news of the
day about my four-day trip to Albuquerque
with a friend of mine to attend a conference. Why couldn't we stay longer, she asked,
so that I could visit my sister and brother-in-law who lived there? I responded, "Mom, we're going for a
conference."
"A
contest?"
"No, a
CONFERENCE."
"What
contest?"
As my blood
pressure began rising with my voice, I responded louder and slower, "A
C O N F E R E N C E."
"Oh, a
concert."
"No, Mom.
I'm going to a conference," I managed to say with my last gasp of
sanity. She finally got it. My blood pressure went down.
After finally establishing the fact that it was not a vacation trip for me, and that the school district really did plan on my return within a
reasonable time period, Mom & I parted company.
In the
meantime, Gary
overheard (who wouldn't when I'm shouting at the top of my voice?) our
conversation. When I hung up, he asked about the concert in Albuquerque . I told
him there was no concert, which I knew he knew. If it wasn’t a concert,
then he wanted to know what the contest was about. I told him to shove
it, and to leave me alone. He continued, "I really wish I could go
to your concert."
SHUT UP, GARY !"
It was quiet
for all of two seconds before he got in the last word, "Well, at least Dea
& Ken will hear you play."
The pharmacist was my only friend that day. She
renewed my prescription immediately.
(Beth Good - 2012)
No comments:
Post a Comment