Barb, Carolyn, Bev, Pat on one of our annual sisters' trips
You remember “Golden Girls,” right? And how Sophia
often said, “Picture it: Sicily, 1925.” Well, one year--two-ought-ought-three,
to be exact—we four Couch sisters, two of whom were 50-something and two who
were in our 60s, settled into a time-share condo shared by the out-of-state sister.
No husbands, brothers, children or grandchildren
allowed. Or parents. One husband always got knots in his knickers every year
when this trip was planned. “It’s
just not right for you to go off without me,” he whined to his wife, but she
pulled her five-foot-five frame up to his chin, locked her wide eyes onto his
and said, “I’m going!” Sixty-somethings with strong sisterly ties can do this.
Before the trip, the host sis had sent the rest of us
an email: “Let’s do a white elephant exchange. Bring the grossest, most
ridiculous, silliest thing you can find. Wrap it in brown paper.”
When we were ready to exchange, the brown blobs were
arranged on the coffee table. The eldest got to go first. That was moi. I selected what turned out to be a
nine-inch tall, cone-shaped candle of the art deco style (I suppose), where
various brown shades of wax were mixed together, shaped, then while still warm,
sliced downward all around the candle. Like fondue pots, this candle had
enjoyed limited popularity. Barb said she’d hidden it in the cupboard over her
fridge for many years, just waiting for the perfect . . . uh, event.
Next to draw was the youngest sis, wife of the
Pulaski County judge (at that time). She chose my elephant—heavy and round.
(Aren’t elephants always heavy and round?) Like a child, I could hardly contain
my glee. Her new hobby was flower arranging, and when she peeled the paper
back, she found a brown glazed clay pot with an unfinished neck, strings of
unglazed clay fired onto the bottom, willy- nilly. I would imagine that art
student got an F for his work.
Let me digress to tell why I had the ugly, deformed piece.
While living in Arkadelphia, I tried to walk Feaster Trail daily after taking
Billy to school. One spring when the wildflowers were in bloom, I was drawn to
the Mill Creek bank on the southwestern edge of Henderson State University’s
campus. I noticed what appeared to be an art studio dump—pieces begun but
broken, perhaps abandoned after grades were posted. I picked out several things
to decorate my own flower garden. They didn’t have to be whole, just
interesting. At home, I laid the round pot on its side so it couldn’t catch and
hold water. It was truly the grossest elephant I had. We shall see what Sis
does with it.
Barb unwrapped a low-slung rabbit with grapes on its
head and ears like Dumbo’s. “A bunko prize,” Teacher-sis explained. It elicited much amusement. Then she had to take the final elephant. From a lunch
bag, she drew out a small, pink, unopened square package and held it out for
all to see. Such raucous, tears-inducing laughter you’ve never heard from four
women who were thankful they’d out-grown the need for that “gross, ridiculous,
silly” feminine hygiene product.
Next time: fleas.
1 comment:
People we can laugh until we weep with are the best.
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