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lemonpulp

lemonpulp
Location
California,
Birthday
February 20
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writing my way to sanity, one post at a time. you can also find me at pulpyprose.com

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JULY 12, 2010 3:41PM

Just Call Me Grace

Rate: 23 Flag

Sometimes I wake up and wonder where the hell the bruises came from. Do I have some ghost haunting me that takes pleasure in leaving little blue and green marks on me? Am I sleepwalking into objects in the middle of the night? Nope, it's just that I'm a little on the clumsy side and tend to forget about all the times during the day I run into things.

Yes, I have a propensity for injuries and accidents. I blame it on having some depth perception issues. My sister says it's because I was born blonde. The years have turned my golden (and sometimes green) locks into a generic brown that helps me blend into the furniture. Convenient camoflauge when you want to avoid being seen by your household. So, what has me going off on such a random topic?

The large, green bruise on the top of my right thigh. How did it get there? As I was tipping the very heavy yard waste container back last week so I could move it to the curb, I underestimated just how strong I was. I gave it one giant push down, helped by my right foot to push it a bit, and the knuckles of my right hand came crashing down into my leg. F@$*! Yep, that hurt. It still hurts a bit. And there is a small knot under the crayola colored mark.

This is nothing compared to some of the things I've done over the years.


One day, my friend Joanna and I went to visit her boyfriend. He lived in a fraternity house, which was a health hazard in itself. It was the middle of the afternoon and we had been there about an hour. We talked as we left the house and I wasn't really paying attention to where I was going. After all, I'd been in the house many times, so walking out the front door shouldn't be a problem.

Unfortunately, there was a disconnect between my brain and the rest of my body. Foot one stepped out the door, quickly followed by foot two. Problem was that I stepped out into air, forgetting that I needed to step down when leaving the house. I looked like Wile E Coyote dropping off a cliff. Landing on both knees, I quickly jumped to my feet in the hopes that nobody but my now-hysterical friend saw me. She still brings up the fall when she sees me. 


 I used to have a horrible, and I mean HORRIBLE, backhand. It took many years to perfect the form I now have, and I spent many years running around the tennis courts avoiding having to hit one and look like a spaz. On those rare occassions that I did try to hit it, before it just miraculously became good, I cringed. I'd see the ball coming and think to myself "Well, this point is about to be over."

 One fine, summer morning, my mom and I were out playing on our usual court. The one next to the fence where my spastic backhand wasn't at risk of drifting into other courts or harming innocent players three courts down. My mom returned my shot and as the ball approached, I wound up for my backhand...and shot it off the edge of my racket straight up into my left eye.

Temporarily blinded, embarrassed, and pissed off, I threw my racket down in rage and swore under my breath. That was the end of that game. We went home and I iced my eye, rinsed it out, and got ready for work. My vision was blurry until the next day. Today, my vision in that eye is fine, save for what appears to be a small piece of tennis ball fuzz that has never left my vision.


 Some of you have read my tale about monsters under the bed. You know how it ends, but I think it's so funny that repeating it for the unknowing masses is worth the time.

I have always feared that something is going to grab me from under the bed when I get up at night. Even at my advanced age, I still get a twinge of this now and then. The feeling is worse in strange places. Many beds have been subject to my flying neurotic reaction to this fear. If I can jump onto a bed and stay out of reach of whatever creepy little claws might be waiting for my poor ankles, I will. 

On a family vacation to Colorado, we found ourselves making an unexpected stop. We didn't make the hotel we had planned on staying at, and found the closest one we could at a very late hour of the night. With my parents and aunt in an adjoining room, my sister, her boyfriend, and I settled in for the night. I was the last one to use the bathroom, so the lights were out in the room. My fear of the monsters came at me like a runaway car. With the bathroom light on, I took one last look at the path between me and the safety of my bed. It wasn't a long jump, but it required some careful manuevering so at to not run into the wall. I flipped off the light switch, took a quick step to my left, and made the leap onto the bed...

and slid right off of it headfirst into the nightstand. Fortunately, my years of playing softball kicked in as I realized I was in a slide I couldn't stop. I put my hands out in front of me, saving my head from the corner of the nightstand and keeping me from tumbling off the edge of the bed altogether, where I'm sure the monsters were waiting to pull me into their lair. My sister and I started laughing hysterically, so much so that neither of us could breathe, or talk to my mom when she came busting through the door between our rooms. "What the hell is going on in here? You're going to get us kicked out!" My sister tried to answer, but only squeals came out. I'm pretty sure my mom rolled her eyes at us in the dark as she turned around and shut the door, but I can't be sure.

By the way, did I mention I was in my 20s when I did this?


The next installment will bring tales of man-eating green waste bins, demonic shopping carts, and goldschlagger.

 

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Comments

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Hah! This was fun. I had so many broken bones as a kid my mom asked the doctor if I could just wear a permanent cast. Great Post!
Oh, I'm dying my hair this evening if this could be true! "Convenient camoflauge when you want to avoid being seen by your household."
I love this as much as I lopve Wylie C. ! r.
I bruise if someone talks to me I swear.
Rated with hugs
Great and funny, but I felt the fear right along with you! AAAH!
This was so much fun to read! I am still a little afraid of what's under the bed too--thanks for bringing it up.
Your pain is our gain - this is one funny post!
Great read lemonpulp. My son has been known for someone who can trip over a blade of grass. Seems both of you have survived somehow.

r)
Stop whacking your blonde self into little lemon pulps, k? ha, you are so warm and honest and witty... you know that? Nothing to fear but fear itself... remember that next time you feel monster antsy xx
Sorry to have had such a laugh at your bruisings, but you made me! At my house, there's the bruiser spring loaded storm door. Trying to get grocery bags inside is a contest it almost always wins.
scanner - glad you enjoyed it. amazingly, only a broken toe over the years, and that was my dog's fault.

mark - thanks! i've always been a fan of saying a lot in a little:)

terry - wouldn't it be nice if it were! i could use an invisibility cape some days. imagine what i could overhear...:)
Talk about taking life's lemons and using them to make lemonade!!!! This was great!!!
I'm still chuckling
R for rowdy roust-about
Can't write badly! Can't write badly! Can't write badly! Can't write badly! Can't write badly! Can't write badly!
Did kids taunt you with this as a child?
(R)ated because you can't write badly!
jon - i've been a fan of the coyote for years. now i know why:)

linda - i definitely bruise too easily. maybe i need more vitamins!

mawb - i really should be past some of those fears by now...but i'm not totally:)

sophieh - i don't do the jump too often anymore...i'm afraid i might break something now!

kit - if you can't laugh at yourself...:)

joy - wait 'til you hear the stories for next week. you'd think i need a helmet to prevent further head injuries.

amanda - aw, thanks! i'm afraid it's the monsters in my head that are giving me problems today...

greenheron - i know the storm door thing. we've got one and it's always hitting me because it's missing the little thingy that keeps it open.

pw - glad i could give you a good laugh! i still laugh about these stories:)
I've always thought of those morning discoveries as "mystery bruises." Had quite a run of them during my sophmore year of college . . . and yes, of course alcohol was involved during that period of time.

And yes . . . I was laughing beginning to end, including the slide that you couldn't stop - thank goodness for sports reflexes!
owl - if i had a nickle for every mystery bruise and injury acquired during my college years, i'd be rich. too bad i killed off those brain cells and can't remember everything...
fred - they taunted me, but it had nothing to do with my writing:) i think they were just jealous of my good looks and smarts!
I shouldn't laugh. In my household, accidents are only serious if they're named after me. But hitting a tennis ball into your own eye, that takes some major skills.
cranky - i've got more skills than you can shake a racket at:)
It's a good thing you didn't fall off the bed. We might not have you here today. When monsters are after you, they don't go away just because you stop believing in them.
rated- for the tennis story

Jim & Buffypova
I'm cracking up over the tennis part. I had a doubles partner who feared the backhand and would run around it every time. By the end of the game, she had run at least twice as far as everybody else, but she was also very good at it. Your own served ball in your own eye, Lemon? Seriously?

Lezlie
Rated in sympathy by a fellow klutz who doesn't even have funny to compensate for clumsy.
ok, enough comments have chimed in that i'm not the first one, so i'll say we should have a klutz club. my nickname was grace, too, and said with dripping facetiousness. and the backhand -- if you only knew how i related to running around every single damn one of those to smash a forehand ... great post, lemon, really freaking hilarious from start to finish.