Broke
Wife, Big City
Gee
thanks, Obamacare
By Aprill Brandon
Well,
I can officially check off that whole
"through sickness" marriage vow.
(That's
how it works, right? You do it once and
then you're off the hook?).
Although
technically, it was more of an injury
than a sickness but the point is, when my husband busted his head open
last
Friday after slipping in the kitchen, I didn't run away. I didn't roll
over and
go back to sleep, ignoring his yells (even though I was like, SUPER
tired). I
didn't even pass out at the sight of gallons and gallons of blood
casually
leaving his head.
Instead,
I calmly and maturely assessed the
situation and swiftly took the appropriate action.
Ha!
Just kidding. Considering I'm married to a
member of the male gender, it went down more like this:
(Loud
series of bangs and yells)
Aprill
(running into kitchen): "AH! What
happened? Are you OK?"
Ryan
(with blood and brains spurting out the
back of his head): "Yeah. Fine."
So,
what exactly happened, you ask? The
official story is that he turned around to close a kitchen drawer and
slipped
on our dog's toy, falling backward and hitting his head on the world's
hardest
ceramic dog bowl. But the unofficial story, the much more sexy
conspiracy
theory story, is that my dog is trying to murder my husband.
I
mean, the dog toy, a stuffed squirrel we had
nicknamed Jedediah, just happened to appear right under his feet? Out
of
nowhere? At the perfect distance to make him hit his head on the dog's
water
bowl? Not to mention, we're expected to believe Buffy isn't holding a
grudge
against us because we removed his manhood when he was still a puppy?
And also
named him Buffy? And maybe once dropped him on his head as a puppy?
(Oh, calm
down, I said once...twice tops).
Yeah.
Coincidence, my patootie.
Luckily,
my husband, as you can probably tell
from above, is one of the most calm and laid back dudes in a crisis
that you
could ask for. So while I was running around like a chicken with its
head cut
off, trying to find socks and my car keys and yelling for him to "Just
hang on, baby! Don't die on me! You have so much to live for! Stay away
from
the light!" as I ran from room to room in the house, he was being
practical, looking up the closest hospital on his phone while
simultaneously
trying to staunch the blood flow from his gaping head wound. He even
called the
hospital to double check they had an emergency room:
"Hi,
yeah, I was just wondering if you
guys had an emergency room? You do? Alright, well, I'll be seeing you
real soon
then."
Meanwhile
I was in the bedroom, helpfully
yelling things like "If you see Grandma, stay away from her! Do not let
Grandma lead you to the afterlife! Tell that old biddy to shut up!"
while
putting on two different shoes (both left shoes, by the way).
And
then, if you will indulge me, I'd like you
to picture the following:
My
husband is in the passenger seat, gently
giving me directions from his GPS while blood and brains are spurting
from his
head (OK, maybe I'm exaggerating just a little). I'm a wide-eyed
lunatic with
crazy bed head in the driver's seat yelling obscenities at red lights
and
making lewd gestures to the only other three cars on the road (sadly, I
am not
exaggerating). When all of a sudden we encounter one of Greater
Boston's
infamous "roundabouts," a fun marvel of modern road design that I
nicknamed "Traffic Circle of Death."
Ryan:
"OK, you'll want to take the second
exit."
Aprill:
"Second!?! What the hell does that
mean!?!"
Ryan:
"Just get in the right lane and then
take the second road that veers off the circle."
Aprill:
"Which way is right!?! I can't
tell my left from my right!?! Oh god, we're going to die!"
Ryan:
"It's OK. Breathe. Just turn right
here."
Aprill:
"AHHH! There's another car! What
do I do!?!"
Ryan:
"He's like 100 feet away from us,
babe. You're fine. You're doing great."
Aprill:
"I can't do this! We're going to
die! Did I mention we're going to die!?! Oh my god!...Oh...OK, we're
off the
circle. So just go straight for another mile, then?"
By
some miracle (and no thanks to me) we made
it to the ER in one piece and three long hours later, Ryan's head was
stapled
with the world's most intimidating stapler and we were sent home with
the
instructions that I was to wake him up every two hours to make sure
that he
wasn't, you know, dead.
Terrifying
as this whole experience was,
however, it did teach me a good lesson about marriage. And that lesson
is that
when it comes to sickness, my husband is actually better off on his own.
Can’t
get enough of Aprill? Can’t wait until
next week?
Check
out her website at http://aprillbrandon.com/
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