Broke Wife, Big
City
Hoarders on a
Road Trip
By Aprill Brandon
Indulge me for
a second, if
you will. I want you to close your eyes and picture the following:
You're driving
down the
Interstate, minding your own business. Perhaps you're heading home
after a long day of work or maybe you're picking your kid up from
soccer practice. Or it could even be that you're on your way to
dinner reservations with your in-laws, which you're dreading because
Phil always has too much to drink and then plays his favorite game of
"Insult His Daughter's Husband Until It's Time for Dessert,"
after which you will go home and get in a huge fight with your wife
because she never stands up for you, oh no, she could never stand up
to her ultra-macho, conservative father. No one stands up to Phil.
Phil fought in the war, for crying out loud. And what have you done
with your life, Shirley? He calls you Shirley. Just another way for
him to emasculate you. Ugh. Phil. You hate Phil. So much.
Or whatever. I
don't know.
I don't know your life.
But the point
is, you're
driving down the Interstate.
When all of a
sudden you
pass a tin can painted red that is disguised as a car (a Hyundai
Accent, to be exact). Upon closer inspection of this "car,"
you see a man, a 7-months-pregnant woman and a neurotic dog with
abandonment issues squished up against the glass and surrounded by
what looks like every single thing they have ever owned ever.
And for a
second, all your
troubles are forgotten since you can't help but ask yourself "What
the hell is going on in there?"
Well, let me
tell you what
the hell is going on in there. This past weekend, a man, a
7-months-pregnant woman and a neurotic dog with abandonment issues
all thought it would be a great idea to take a 14-hour road trip to
Ohio.
And it
technically was a
great idea.
In theory.
Where things
went horribly,
horribly wrong was on the way back.
See, the reason
for the
trip was so that the couple could have a baby shower with the
majority of their family and friends. And granted, I've written in
the past about how much I hate baby showers but let me tell you, it's
a whole new world when it's being thrown in your honor. Turns out
it's just like having a birthday party, the only difference being
that getting drunk, making out with someone and then crying on the
bathroom floor about how old you are is generally frowned upon at the
baby shower.
Now, they say
it takes a
village to raise a child. I don't know if that's true but I do know
that it takes a village to afford one. And our village was EXTREMELY
generous (big shoutout due here to all the future grandparents, great
aunts and my 52 female cousins). This kid will truly never want for
anything for at least the first year of his life (wanting a mom that
doesn't sing "Close To You" off-key before he goes to bed
every night notwithstanding).
And we couldn't
be more
grateful to everyone who came. However, it left us with the following
dilemma:
How do you
squeeze 1,000
square feet of baby stuff into 20 square feet of car?
Luckily, all
those years of
my husband blowing off doing anything productive and eschewing
socialization with actual humans to play Tetris instead paid off. He
managed to get it ALL in there. Well, almost all. At one point, there
was a fear of damaging the structural intergrity of the car so he had
to stop.
However, this
meant we had
to drive over 800 miles with a dog sharing the passenger seat,
limited visibility in all the windows and boxes hitting the back of
our heads even though the seats were pushed up as far as they could
go (which was SUPER fun for the 6'2" daddy to be).
And even that
wouldn't have
been that bad if it weren't for the fact that I am not the world's
greatest driver and that it had snowed the night before (Weather: If
you don't like it, you are probably in Ohio). For example, within 30
minutes of leaving we encountered construction (Construction: If you
are dealing with it, you are probably on Ohio). It was pretty
straight-forward construction but I nonetheless managed to go the
wrong way and we spent the next 30 minutes trying to find the
Interstate again from back country roads that had their very own
banjo soundtrack.
Somehow we did
it though.
We made it back to Boston in one piece. Even the baby, who was
squished for no less than 400 miles by a highly excitable dog. And I
now have a new sympathy for hoarders.
I'm just
dreading finding
all those dead cats once I finally build up the stamina to put
together the nursery.
Can’t get
enough of
Aprill? Can’t wait until next week?
Check out her
website at http://aprillbrandon.com/
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