Tuesday, January 23, 2018

Uncomfortably Numb. I Cracked A Crown And I Care.

I fell in love with popcorn when I was a child.  In spite of  being culinary challenged, my mother did make a mean bowl of popcorn.  I loved to badger her to make a bowl. My favorite trick was to wait until she was on the phone and mime out what  I wanted.   Between the phone in one hand, a cigarette in the other and talking to her friend with the phone wedged between her head and shoulder, whatever gesture she made I would naturally interpret as a go-ahead.  “But when you pointed the cigarette at me and exhaled smoke, I thought that meant yes.” More often than not she agreed. Boom!  I would race around the kitchen,  pulling out the large soup pot, small saucepan, butter, oil and the bag of popcorn.    Under her strict supervision, I would pour  3 TBLs of  oil into the pot. When the oil started to shimmer, I would toss in a test kernel (my favorite part), wait until it pops…, toss in the rest of the popcorn, cover, shake, and when the popping stops, dump it into a bowl, add some melted butter and salt and you have yourself a party.  And the best part, the very best part, were the un-popped kernels.  They had one job; to pop.  Not complicated, it’s actually your name.  John Wheelwright makes wheels, William Taylor makes clothes, popcorn is corn that is supposed to  explode.  But sadly, for some reason, known only to them, they failed in their mission.  Well, lucky for the un-popped kernels,  there are people, who love them.  I’ve loved anything crispy or crunchy ever since I was a kid so, unpopped kernels, lollipops, and fireballs were the best.

My mother and I would fight over them.  First off the partially cooked ones were always first to go. Then we would actually divide up the remaining un-popped ones.  My mother, being a mother,  would always give me the larger portion.  But,  if I wasn’t looking or paying attention she would try and sneak a few back.  It was her thing. She used to do these commando raids, actually crawling on the floor at night, to steal my father’s M&M’s which were locked in his night table, and then belly crawl back to her side of the bed.  So, from a tender age, I had a mother who was an original member of Seal Team 6 and a lover of un-popped popcorn kernels. 

My current tale of woe starts   at the end of the summer.  I happily spent a summer eating oysters, clams and  mussels in Maine and Cape Cod.  All summer long.  Yum!  I come home, go to my favorite pizza place, order my favorite pizza pie, white clam if you are wondering, first bite and CRACK!  Of course I chip a tooth on a stray bit of clamshell in a pizza joint 50 miles inland.  Go figure right?  So Ole’ Snaggletooth goes to the dentist, who puts  a veneer on my chipped tooth.   In passing I mention that my left molar is sometimes sensitive.  A few x-rays later, and drum roll please, a new crown is the diagnosis.  a fews days earlier I had innocently mentioned to my lovely wife that I should snack on popcorn because it is semi-healthy, and lovely wife goes out and buys  some microwave popcorn and I was hungry and well you know the rest.  

Novocaine.  Lots of it.  I mean lots.  The entire left side of my head is numb. Tongue? Can’t feel it.  Lips? Can only feel the right side.  Cheek?  Can’t feel them either.   But happily for me I can still; 
  1. Hear.  As in hear the screaming of the Dremel tool whirring at 10K RPM inside my mouth and reverberating in my skull along with the death rattle sound the suction straw is making as it sucks away all of the debris and,
  2. See. As in see the mist of finely ground tooth gently rising from my mouth as my dentist happily grinds away at the offending molar. Mercifully, it is over in just a few hours and I am now the happy owner of a temporary crown.  Temporary as in there  is more of this ordeal that I will have to endure, but lucky for me, I have three weeks to wait until the permanent one is done.  In the meantime chew on the right side and for obvious reasons avoid popcorn.  

I have often complimented my dentist on his technique.  I told him once he had the hands of a watchmaker, he quickly told me  his  father was one.  Great moment.   Anyway, on the way to my car I promptly cancel my gym plans.  The thought of bouncing on the treadmill, mouth numb, blithely gnawing away at my cheeks doesn’t interest me in the slightest.  No thank you. So back home and lie down. A refreshing nap turns into a freakin’ nightmare when the novocaine wears off, OUCH!  Everything hurts.   And while all of this is going on, my mouthguard, which I thought I put in a safe place, was found by one of my dogs who, chewed it up, and now I have another trip back to dentist, who did warn me in no uncertain terms to, you guessed it, keep the mouth guard away from pets.  

So, knowing me, I will swear off popcorn for about, oh,  a day or two and then back to my tricks.  Although, I will concede to not eating any more of  the unpopped. As I was listening to his instructions of what to do if the temporary crown comes off, which it won’t, but if it does, put it in a plastic bag, provided you didn’t swallow it, and let’s hope it won’t happen because he’s going on vacation, but if it does…  Anyway, within those instructions, root canal was mentioned twice not once but twice and trust me, once was enough.  So where in the world are my fireballs?  



Monday, January 1, 2018

It's Freezing Outside, At Least In New England

New Year’s Day in New England and it is bitterly cold and very windy.   The peel your face off if you are not careful, mind numbing type of cold.  The you could be wearing ten layers of clothing and still be cold kind of cold.    So I decide to stay in and do some e-shopping.  Cold weather for me means L. L. Bean.  Good stuff and they stand by their product.  I type in their address and off we go.  First stop: gloves.  I am notorious for ripping, tearing, losing, somehow ending up with two right hand gloves type of glove owner.  Needless to say, I use my pockets a lot.  But we are in the middle of a  cold spell with no end in sight and it is  tough driving a car with your hands in your pockets, so off I go looking for a new pair of gloves.  The men’s Carrabassett gloves look awesome in brown and gray, are incredibly warm, but their $89.95 price tag forces me to move on.  The GTX PrimaLoft has great reviews, but it’s got all these straps with pulls and things dangling from it, looks pretty complicated, big and puffy, and I really want them for going out and besides, I like leather gloves.  So the hunt continues.  Finally, deerskin gloves, cue angels, ahhhh! Light, warm, my size and on sale.  Boom! I’m in.  Drop it into the cart and hmmmmm.  It’s still pretty cold out and the weather guy just said we will be getting an “impactful” snow storm later on this week.  Well, that’s a blizzard where I come from, so lets go look at sweaters.  



 First up, Cardigans.  While I love the theory of the cardigan, in actual practice, at least for me,  it falls rather short.  I try them on and  think, “I look pretty cool.” Open, buttoned, sleeves up/sleeves down, nice.  However, when I try one on in the store  when my wife is present, she heckles me unmercifully.   “Looks good for a man in his nineties,”  “Do you want to be buried in that thing?”  “You look homeless.” That kind of stuff.  Needless to say I don’t own any cardigans. Next.  

Ah, the fisherman sweater.  I love them. Big, bulky, warm and good looking.  It must be  good looking because that is what I was wearing when I met my wife.  At least that is what it was according to my wife.  That was over thirty years ago. She also remembers the color and pattern of the accompanying shirt I wore.  I couldn’t tell you what I wore yesterday with a gun to my head.  Glad I didn’t wear a cardigan when I met her.  But here is the problem, the big, bulky warm and good looking fisherman sweater only comes in that off white, creamy color.  Which shouldn’t be a problem except for the fact that every time I have gotten a sweater in that color one of two things are going to happen.  I will either get a coffee stain or a tomato sauce stain on the sweater. Guaranteed. And just wait one second.  Fishing is a dirty, sweaty smelly, way to make a living.  Why the hell did they pick off white for the color of their sweaters which screams stay clean when we all know that is next to impossible?   

 I could be wearing an apron over a bib inside a level A hazmat suit, survive a breakout of ebola  and yet  sure as the sun will come up tomorrow I will somehow get a stain on my cream colored sweaters.  Never fails.  Last year I tempted fate, foolishly thinking that I perhaps grew out of that phase.  I bought a few moderately priced cream colored sweaters.  Sadly, they too succumbed to coffee stains.  What’s worse though is wearing a cream colored sweater and  not knowing it has a stain on it.  I would be halfway to work, look down and sure enough old coffee stain.  Shit!  Go to work with a coffee stain and suffer humiliation or go home and change.  Go home, change and call in late.  That damn highway, always accidents.  Yep.  Truth is out.  

V-necks? Nope.  Never liked them.  Ever.  Next. 

There it is; the Double L Cotton Sweater but, of course, they don’t have my size.  Big sigh.  I’m beginning to feel discouraged. It’s not getting any warmer and I can’t find a sweater.   I’m ready to cut my losses with just the gloves and go look for a sweater on the REI site, when I take one more look and there it is.  The Classic Raggwool sweater.  Charcoal grey. Perfect for hiding coffee or spaghetti sauce stains. Crew neck. One hundred percent lambswool.  All the bells and whistles.  Free shipping.  American Express and it’s on its way.  I check the email and confirmation and, oh shit, I didn’t take the discount.  A nice chat with customer service fixes my stupidity,  and it looks like the gloves and sweater will be here Friday; just in time for the impactful snow event that the weather people are talking up.  But, I’ll be warm in my new duds.   Sipping coffee and eating lasagna.  Happy New Year and thanks for reading this.