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I curled up fetally on the bed in mid-afternoon because there was a kangaroo inside my head, kicking me to death from the inside. I moaned a few times and asked Flip if he could squeeze out a tear or two, even if he didn't mean it, for me.
I get disgustingly maudlin when I'm sick.
"It would have to be a matter of life or death. If you were dying, I would cry," he said.
"Man, you strike a hard bargain," I said. "Presbyterians got no soul."
I am normally the stoic one around here; he is the whiner. Everything I know about whining I learned from Flip.
Here is how many times I have sneezed today: 4,579,563. 4. 5...
It seemed a good time to make a last feeble attempt to cram a lifetime of unfulfilled wishes into what was undoubtedly my last few days. Hours, maybe. I really hate that I've left so much 'til the last minute.
I told Flip of my lifelong desire to be given a surprise birthday party. I suggested that my next one would be a good place to start.
He said, "You could die on your birthday. That would be a surprise."
Bad move on his part as his birthday was last month, and he didn't die. Yet.
We are no longer speaking. Which he may not have noticed since I have laryngitis and
can't speak. I just hope he realizes that if I could, I wouldn't. Not to him, anyway.
When I was five, I had the only birthday party of my childhood. Arlene Davin from down the street was not invited as she was six years older, my brother’s age, but she came anyway and demanded a piece of cake for her mother, the shut-in. She grabbed a knife and took half of my birthday cake, which was beautiful.
My mother had ordered it from George’s Bakery and it had sugary white icing with pink roses and crushed, toasted almonds smooshed all around the sides. There were no leftovers. I had hoped to live off that cake for months. I couldn’t understand why my mother didn’t protect it.
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Sometimes I accompanied my mother to a chicken store next to the bakery where they did their own butchering. The floor was thickly covered with sawdust, which I kicked around to entertain myself while my mother interviewed dead chickens for our dinner.
Here's what I have eaten today:
Healthy Choice Chicken Noodle Soup, one can
Red Oval Stoned Wheat Thins, one box
One orange
One banana
Cough drops of every flavor known to woman. (My last cold was in January.
This link will explain about the cough drops.)
I am wearing my red flannel pajamas, the only ones I have. My traditional sick gear. By an incredible coincidence, Crankster at
Cranky Old Bastard has awarded me the Blog Most Likely To Inspire Pajamas Award. Or something.
He envisions me in something black and dark green with red sequins. Slinky, naturally. Of silk.
Trust me, there is nothing slinky about my old red flannels which get hauled out, moth holes and all, as soon as a cold reaches life-threatening proportions, my fever soars like an eagle, and I am called upon to debate whether I want to be buried or burned.
The CEO of
The Morning Meeting has also awarded me the pajama award. There must be something in the air. (Germs.) Wow. Two pairs of pajamas, just when I need them most. Thanks, guys.
I think the idea is to figure out what kind of pajamas would be appropriate for other bloggers.
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Chani at
Thailand Gal - that's easy. Her pj's would be Thai silk with contrasting scarf over one shoulder, tucked out of reach of the Farang Satay.
Claudia at
On a Limb With Claudia would wear her Wonder Woman togs, which I suspect she wears under her street clothes anyway to avoid changing in phone booths.
Josie at
C'est La Vie would retire dressed as Botticelli's "Venus on the Half Shell." And she'd look damn good in it, too.
Eslocura at
Eslocura's Asylum would wear baby doll pajamas in wine silk with matching ashtray for that ubiquitous cigar.
And David of
Witnessing Am I, lucky dog, as the only man at the slumber party, would be in maroon-lined black silk smoking jacket, Gatsby elegant, worn with gray sweats from Gap.
If I don't survive the night, it's been great and I will
haunt miss you all.