Local survives wife’s absence
SHERWOOD KIRALY
My wife Patti Jo was out of the country for four days last week, so I
was solely responsible for our daughter Katie and the house.
I didn’t panic. In fact, when Patti Jo leaves, there’s usually a
one-day period during which I’m pretty full of myself. I survey my
domain like Lorne Greene used to do during the opening credits of
“Bonanza.” It’s a lot to ride herd on, but it’s all mine -- the
driveway, the kitchen counter, the pillows.
And the first night wasn’t too bad. The window-open, window-shut
controversy was a forfeit in my favor, although I forgot to open it.
I’m more inclined to notice it’s shut when Patti Jo is here shutting
it.
About those pillows: It’s possible that Patti Jo appreciates at
least the first night sleeping without me. I have a tendency to flip
my pillows throughout the night because the near surface gets hot and
I want the cooler side. For Patti Jo it’s like sleeping next to a man
making pizzas, so ordinarily I try to curtail it, but when she’s gone
they’re flying all over the place.
After the first day and night apart, we get to missing each other,
or at least I get to missing her. Aside from her all-around appeal,
there are things she does that I can’t do.
When Patti Jo is gone, there’s no one to talk to Katie about the
things that Katie won’t talk to me about.
There’s also no one for me to complain to. I like to expound on
the latest raw deal I’m getting and Patti Jo gives me more ear time
than anyone else.
There’s no one to sing the breakfast song with Booker, our dog. He
howls along with Patti Jo when she feeds him every morning, but when
I sing the song she made up he just looks at me and waits for the
food.
My own food is a bit of a problem. I don’t have to cook for Katie,
because she’s presently on a rice-cake and Healthy Choice diet, but I
have to choose my meals without spousal input. It’s not like I can’t
do it; I can bring home the bacon and fry it up in a pan. That’s part
of the problem, actually.
I’ve been trying a new system where I eat only what I really like.
It’s similar to my bachelor diet, only without the cigarettes and
alcohol and with more food. Its drawback is that it isn’t what Patti
Jo and most dietitians call “balanced,” and after three days it
leaves me more or less incapacitated.
But I don’t want to make it sound as if everything falls apart
when she’s away. Each time she returns there are the same number of
living creatures in the house as when she left, if not more.
And if, as she said, I looked a little haggard when she got back
this time, well, you’d be haggard too if you’d been eating fried
foods and flipping pillows for four days.
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