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Complex Numbers #482605 added January 20, 2007 at 9:08pm Restrictions: None
Furniture
I was hoping to stay home today. As you know, that's my preferred mode of existence, anyway. I've been known to get sunburns walking from the door to the car. But my wife had other plans.
Oh, I'm not resentful or anything. In fact, I figured we'd do it as early as possible so I'd have time to do my Daily Writing Challenge (increasing to 1900 words today) and a blog entry and some reviews I'd promised a while back and a whole bunch of other stuff, not excluding some time to play Oblivion.
The first step was to remove Kirstin's old dresser, a long, low number with nine drawers. We took the drawers out - okay, she took the drawers out and we emerged, me blinking and squinting in the unaccustomed sunlight, to tilt the bloody damn thing into the bed of my pickup.
To the Salvation Army we went - sadly. I despise the Salvation Army, not least because I can't go to the grocery store between Halloween and Christmas without hearing, "ding ding ding ding ding ding..." But the Goodwill around here doesn't take furniture, and there was no way I was going to pay to take it to the ducking fump. So to the Army we went, me squealing tires so I wouldn't have to hear them ask God to bless me.
Then it's up to the furniture place to get Kirstin's new piece of furniture, a much narrower and taller thing that fit better in her room. Yes, we have separate rooms - though all she uses hers for is keeping her clothing and various bellydance supplies. One of the advantages of not having kids - our modest four-bedroom house has exactly one room to sleep in. Anyway, I'm in the driver's seat when the thing gets dumped into the bed, and I swear my front wheels come up off the ground for a moment as it bounces in.
On the way back, I'm having fun hoping the brakes continue to work - what is it about a sunny Saturday afternoon that brings out a load of crazy drivers, anyway? When we finally get home, we try to take the bloody thing out of the truck.
It's not budging.
I go get the handtruck, and together, we manage to tilt the thing up on its side, maneuver it over the tailgate (fortunately, the truck is parked facing uphill, else that would have been impossible), and onto the dolly. Then we wrap bungee cords around the thing to secure it to the dolly. These turn out to be useless, since even though we'd stretched them to the limits of our strength, as soon as I tilted the hand truck backwards, they stretched even more.
Still, we managed to get the assembly tilted onto one corner, maneuvered it up over the curb, up the lawn (yes, uphill), past two steps onto the front stoop, and over the threshold.
It's the foyer stairs that become our nemesis.
We live in a split-foyer house, and it's all we can do to lift the dolly up over the lip of the lowermost step. Then it's wait to catch my breath, and we manage to get it up over the next step, though I end up overextending my elbow. Ow.
And that's it. It's not budging. That's when I finally look at the weight stamped on the side of the carton:
90.6 kg.
That's, like, 200 pounds. And that's not counting the hand truck, or the force necessary to have the hand truck's wheels clear the stair lips.
So we do what any couple with severe, chronic back issues would do: We call my brother-in-law, who fortunately is no more than five minutes away. Meanwhile, I'm upstairs, and my wife is in the foyer trying to keep the thing from slipping backwards. Just for fun, I let go of it and go get something to drink. "Mmmm, that's good!" I exclaim, downing some fresh, icy water. "Damn, I needed that drink!"
Remember, all of this is HER fault. Yeah.
Anyway, finally her brother arrives, and we manage to get the bloody damn beast up the rest of the stairs, out of its carton, and into her room, without dinging up the walls. Go us. The thing has more drawers than Victoria's Secret, by the way. Dozens of the little buggers.
So now I'm sitting here with my back in spasms and my elbow all swollen, causing me pain every time I hit the keyboard. So why am I telling you this on top of the 1900 words I've already written?
Beats me.
Tomorrow, her mother is taking us all out to the local fancy steak house (Aberdeen Barn), so at least I get a free meal out of her family for all this. But until it's time to get dressed and go out, hopefully after sunset, I'm going to sit in the house. Playing my video game. In my underwear. |
© Copyright 2007 Robert Waltz (UN: cathartes02 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved. Robert Waltz has granted InkSpot.Com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.
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