Tag Archives: Manners

Pass the Grave…er, I Mean Gravy, Please?

I’ve just walked in our house, home from a visit with our daughter in Philadelphia.  I had great hopes that in a six-day period something Crazie enough would come up to post on my blog. The opportunities were limitless.  Upon arrival, Ash showed me the list of items we would be cooking for Thanksgiving.  The checklist was huge, including such items as smoked turkey, sausage & sage stuffing and macaroni & cheese.  She’d even decided to make homemade cinnamon rolls.  You know, the kind where you let the dough rise and everything!

It made me shiver with delight to think of all the things that could go wrong, thereby giving me the ability to post The Best Blog Ever for Thanksgiving.  Instead, it was like a Hallmark movie.  The dough rose, the turkey was moist and all twelve items were done simultaneously.  The smoke alarm didn’t even go off for pete’s sake.  On top of that, even though the dinner guests involved both sides of in-laws we all, frustratingly enough, got along like perfect ladies and gentlemen.  Really, Ash?  Help a writer out, would you?

I see the way people look at me when I recount a Crazie Town holiday, like it’s, well, Crazie.  But, to be honest, I thought everyone had the same kind of Crazie family, they just didn’t share it with the world.

The last time I was at a Crazie Town Thanksgiving dinner, I asked my Aunt Betty Lou to pass the gravy and she accused me of throwing away her father’s grave marker.  I was speechless.  I mean, I do have a reputation for tossing things out.  In fact, I once found a box at my father’s house and written in black magic marker on the side was “Do Not Teresa This Box!”  But a grave marker?  Even I wouldn’t Teresa that…well, probably not.

The misplaced grave marker was just the final blow in my poor grandpa’s death.  He’d never once stepped foot inside a Catholic church but his children decided that’s where they’d hold his funeral.  As is the tradition in Catholic services, with great pomp and circumstance the casket is rolled down the center aisle while the family slowly marches behind.  Unfortunately, ten steps into the march the front wheel on Grandpa’s casket cart went all wonky and started squeaking.  So for every step forward we made, the casket wheel responded.  Step…erka!  Step…erka!  The priest never hesitated and we continued our noisy step-erka way to the front of the church.

After the service we drove out to the cemetery.  While the priest gave his final prayers a buzz of conversation went on behind us.  The crowd had noticed that the funeral home dug the grave on the wrong side of the plot, so instead of lying next to his wife, they were lying head to head, with Grandpa’s feet sticking out into the walking path.

My Aunt Betty Lou, whose brain is…well…a bit pickled, upon hearing the word gravy, thought of grave, which lead her to remember that her father’s had no headstone.  Because Grandpa was a veteran, they’d sent the family a beautiful bronze plaque to be secured to a piece of granite for the headstone.  Unfortunately my father and his two sisters could never agree on what kind of headstone that should be, so Grandpa had been lying in an unmarked (although correctly re-aligned) grave for fifteen years.   Evidently, since there hadn’t been any arguing at the Thanksgiving table for a few minutes, Aunt Betty Lou decided to accuse me  of the crime.

As I spend more and more time with my husband’s drama-free family, I wonder, just how Crazie is Crazie Town?

 

The Wicked Witch of the Wedding

I’m sitting at my desk looking at a picture of myself at our son, Phinias’, wedding.  It’s reminded me of the scary tale of The Wicked Witch of the Wedding

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One day a child announces they plan to marry the love of their life.  Immediately a spell is cast upon the mother – an evil spell.

In the beginning stages, right after the engagement, euphoria rains down on her.  But then, her hair begins to turn grey and her fingernails sharpen into claws.

“I know you said it was a small wedding but why can’t we invite all my friends?  They’re like family.”

Then bit-by-bit, her sparkling eyes turn dark and bloodshot and her previously clear skin begins to sag and wrinkle.

“What do you mean you want to choose your own place for your wedding?  I thought we’d have it our back yard.”

Before the mother knows it, the wedding day has arrived and she’s found screaming at one of her loving brothers who’s graciously volunteered to be the photographer.

“What are you thinking?  Stop everything!  There’s a shadow on the bride’s face.”

Ten minutes before the outdoor ceremony is to begin, the farmer in the field across the road begins to work in his field.  And, although no one else seems to notice, the roar of the combine screams through the her ears.

The mother/witch careens around on her broom demanding that “Some…One…D0…Something!”

She’s finally seated and the ceremony begins.  One of her brothers points out that the bride’s train is slightly askew.  He convinces the mother she should get up from her seat and yank the offending fabric into place.

“Sorry.  Excuse me.  This will just take a minute.”  And the transformation is complete.  She’s become The Wicked Witch of the Wedding.

Somewhere in the Universe, a good witch sends out another spell that travels through a twister and lands on the Wicked Witch, striking her down with a debilitating migraine.  As her punishment she must spend the entire reception vomiting in the ladies room, unable to participate in the long anticipated mother/son dance.

The spell is finally broken and she is able to drag her weak and sweat-soaked body out of the bathroom in time to see the blissful couple head off to live happily ever after.

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Note to our other son, Ferb:  If you’re reading this – know that I’ve learned my lesson and I’m certain that when you’re ready to marry I’ll be much better behaved.  I realize now that our backyard is no place for a wedding, but (cackle, cackle – I mean cough, cough) would it be okay if I invited all my friends?