Thursday, August 7, 2014

Keep your fingers out of the clippers


 See those clippers? Their cousins bite if you're not careful

 

                When you’re left-handed and you slice open the top part of your left-hand pointer finger. . . well, there are a few things it’s hard to do with it wrapped in a tissue that makes it twice its size. Like type. But it’s doable. Typing my password with one hand is possible if I watch the keyboard. Wiping my nose is a breeze. Working the crossword puzzle is impossible.

                This is not the first time I’ve gotten some part of my anatomy too close to the vine or privet or sassafras sapling I was cutting out of the yellowbell hedge.

For all its heavenly aroma, honey suckle is the devil to deter. It wraps itself around the host so tightly it’s hard to nudge the clippers between vine and host. But it’s hard to fathom how—while I’m holding the clippers in my left hand, how I can get a finger of that hand between the blades. But I did, and because I take a doctor-ordered baby aspirin daily, I bled like a stuck hog. I was never that close at hog-killing time, but it’s an expression I’ve heard since Hector was a pup.

I remember (back when Hector WAS a pup) my grandma Flossie severing the tip of one of her fingers while doing something at the well house. She—smart widow woman that she was—took the piece of flesh inside, dipped it in sugar, replaced it on the cut and probably wrapped a handkerchief around it. Then she walked up the lane to catch a ride to the doctor. Compared to that, my injury is nothing.

When he was five or so, my dad got too close to his dad’s table (planing?) saw while it was winding down and lost three fingers on his right hand. Granddad tossed the severed flesh away, even though Dr. Jones’ office was nearby. With time, scar tissue grew over the stubs – the size of my tissue-wrapped digit—but with his thumb and pinkie, he still was able to do his carpentering jobs as an adult. I presume the result of that accident is what kept him out of the war. Though he couldn’t be a soldier, he did help build Fort Leonard Wood.

Many’s the time I’ve jammed my hand holding a washcloth down into a glass or a fruit jar only to have said piece break. There are several scars on my dominant hand for proof.

One time while living in Arkadelphia, I cut a gash into my pinky, and white stuff oozed out. I took Billy (6 or 7) years old and we checked in at the emergency room. When the triage doctor saw it, he delivered the most withering look anyone had ever laid upon me—except Mama. We must have skedaddled because that’s all I remember about the event. The ooze was fat, I suppose. I should have known better and seen to it myself in the first place. Like Grandma Flossie did with her fingertip.

In the sequel to “A Journey of Choice,” one character falls into a puddle of glass and pretty well messes up the side of her face.

Warning: be careful when wielding clippers, saws, knives, and use a brush to wash jars and glasses. Our ten fingers are one of God’s greatest gifts to humankind.
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5 comments:

Dot said...

Good post and too true. Have to have all ten working to get anything done.

pat couch laster said...

I think sometimes we don't consider how well made we are. Thanks for commenting.

Dorothy Johnson said...

Sorry about that sore finger. One of Terry's fingers is a tad shorter thanks to a table saw. That mishap really got his attention.

T. Adams said...

Very interesting stories about your Grandma and Dad. My hand in a glass has broken a few also. Yes, complications with fingers/thumbs all come from being productive! I've had problems with the same finger and thumb over the years with many mishaps also. Hope your finger heals soon.

pat couch laster said...

Thanks, ladies, for reading and commenting. Guess we can all claim either doing something to our hands or we know someone who has, like Terry. BTW, my finger has pretty much healed. I can use it again w/o it bleeding.