Tuesday, March 29, 2011

Why do bad things happen to good pickles?

Last year I quit my job so I could devote myself fully to being the Community Pastor at our church. It was a great decision but like any great decision, there are trade-offs. We've had to make a few lifestyle adjustments as our income has dropped. This has meant many things. The first of these ancillary comforts to go was my YMCA membership. Sometimes a person, moved by faith, has to lay their ripped abdominals at the foot of the cross and give up temporal buffedness for the hope of bigger biceps at the resurrection. I wish I could say that giving up the YMCA membership was difficult but in reality it meant that I had a couple extra hours for watching Man vs. Wild and The Deadliest Catch each week.

And then something far worse happened - my cable TV was dropped. I cried out to the Lord, "Why would a benevolent deity take away my Pawn Stars and Ace of Cakes?" But that wasn't the end of the fiscal responsibility measures. I was informed by my wife, "There will be no more going out to eat unless someone is born, someone dies or someone is willing to keep the thermostat at 55 for the next three weeks." And the slash and burn continued. We had to cut back on gift giving - I actually gave a guy a meatloaf for his birthday a few weeks ago. We stopped buying paper towels, going to first run movies and going on coffee dates. Along with these small "sacrifices," my lovely wife placed a moratorium on the purchase of all non-essential food items. There are a ton of things in everyone's fridge that are non-essentials that they take for granted on an everyday basis. Let me give you an example: hot sauce. For the last six months I have gone without my Louisiana Hot Sauce and it has been a bland existence. Olives, wax peppers, bacon, garlic, to name a few, are non-essential food items. But the one item that impacted me greatest was the pickles - those briny submersibles of cucumbery concupiscence. I love kosher dills like Charleton Heston loved firearms, if you want to take my pickles away, you'll have to pry them out of my cold dead hands. But not wanting to cross my better half, I gave up the green denisons of the salton sea in order to avoid a fate worse than death, an unhappy wife.

Last week, we went to a new grocery store where they sold pickles in a 2 gallon jar for the meager sum of 4 dollars and 19 cents. I looked at the jar with the smiling cartoon stork with the funny hat, then looked back at my wife with a pouty face and she nodded. And for the first time in the new year, pickles were placed into the cart. A half hour later, I was unloading the groceries from the back of my truck. The last to go - the pickles. Now, I'm not sure what 15 year old bagger decided to place a 2 gallon glass jar of pickles in a single plastic grocery bag, but when I picked up the bag, the entire jar of pickles jumped through the bottom and smashed onto the concrete slab behind my house. Glass and Pickles intermingled in an unholy puddle at my feet, the plastic bag still firmly in my right hand with nothing in it. Pickle juice was on my feet and on my pant legs. For about thirty seconds, I just stood there - the smell of salt and capers wafting up from the glassy mess. "Maybe I could wash them off," I reasoned in my madness. "Maybe I could eat just one." But they had all been impacted by the fall. And then a theological truth ran through my head. I couldn't know why this all occurred. Maybe sometimes bad things just happen to good pickles and there isn't any real explanation for it.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Really? My Snowshovel?

Our porch giveth and our porch taketh away. And last week my porch tooketh my snow shovel. Porches and snow shovels seem like peas in a pod. According to my observations they have what Biologists call a symbiotic relationship - like Rhinoceri and that little bird that picks food out of their teeth. They help each other out. But apparently this evening the porch and the snow shovel must have had some irreconcilable differences and in the morning the snow shovel had packed its things, and had left the porch forever. And of course, that very afternoon, it snowed. So I went to the garage and introduced the porch to my hole-digging shovel. She wasn't all that interested.

We live in the city and sometimes not everything that makes its way to the porch stays there. People steal strange stuff from our porch all the time. Last year my friend dropped off a pound of whole coffee beans and in the 2 hours it took for me to get home, someone had stolen it off the front porch. It made me wonder about the street value of a kilo of Ethiopian Yergicheffe and if I had been so naive that I was unaware of the yuppies driving through inner city neighborhoods trying to score some cheap beans. Maybe I could find my stolen coffee in an alley or the back of a full size van with no windows and then rebuy it at a fraction of its value. I imagined a tough looking dude smoking a cigarette opening a large trench coat and showing me a selection of fine coffees sewn into the lining. I then envisioned a group of wayward young men, coming together after a long day of thieving and showing each other their loot and then French pressing a little of the beans to check the purity and quality. Whoever got the coffee, I hope they enjoyed it.

Then there are the flowerpots. For some reason, the flowerpot fairy seems to be unusually active on my street. Apparently 30 pound second-hand gardening notions attract thieves like a black Labrador to a drooly tennis ball. Sometimes we assume mutual exclusivity in ethics and aesthetics but outdoor decor and banditry often allide. I guess it would behoove us to remember that Martha Stewart is the queen of the gardener thieves. Every one of my neighbors has had their flower pots jacked at one time or another. My neighbor Greg is always asking me questions when I do yard work in the spring, "You're not going to put those flowers in that pot for everyone to see are you??" and "Those solar powered path lights are nice. You're not going to put them on the path to your house are you? Somebody stole mine two years ago." It seems like a lot of risk for a small payoff I guess. Most of the flowerpots are worth 10 bucks or less new. But people seem comfortable taking big risks for small payoffs around here. It's almost admirable - like an extreme sport.

But it can be annoying too. I always have to give special instructions to company's when we mail order stuff. One time our kitchen mixer broke and they sent us another one in the mail. I asked them to try and deliver it when I was home. The lady was from Iowa and she told me, in that Mrs. Poole voice, "Oh you worry too much, No one's going to steal your mixer hun'" I didn't take comfort in her guarantee. And no one called me about the delivery.

There are some rules in the hood that everyone follows. And high on this list is the don't let the whole neighborhood know that you've got a brand new 300 dollar mixer on your front porch. A stainless steel Kitchen Aid mixer sat for 8 hours on my front porch and no one touched it. It was one of those fancy mixers with optional attachments that no one ever buys - the kind that people register for when they get married and proudly display on the single square foot of kitchen counter in their studio apartment while they are in graduate school. The packaging had a large full size glossy color image of the mixer on the front and the Fed Ex dude hadn't even hidden it behind the railing. It sat there in plain view, on a sunny weekday for all to see. For some reason, it didn't meet the criteria of the thieves in my neighborhood that day but I'd like to think the porch was looking out for me - this time.

In the absence of my blue, low-quality, Chinese snow shovel, I began to wonder, "Why would someone naturally averse to work, steal a snow shovel at all?" Snow shovels are almost a symbol of hard work in the Upper Midwest. Mystery upon Mystery. I guess it tells us something about people - Sometimes we miss the good stuff and take the junk instead. Time to buy another 8 dollar blue snowshovel.