YOU'D THINK OWNING A DOG WOULD HELP ME GET OVER MY OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE TENDENCIES. NOT!
I can't imagine the amount of fuel I've wasted going home just to "make sure".
Wooden floors drive me nuts. If there's a smudge in the shine, out come the
damp mop and a soft towel. Flecks on mirrors will be disposed of promptly. Do
not leave the cap off the toothpaste or silverware/dinnerware lying around the
counter space. Dirty dishes in the sink? Not in my house. Pictures must hang
evenly, rugs in a straight line, knickknacks and books aligned just so. I
vacuum floors every day and sofa cushions every other day. Bathrooms are scrubbed
three times a week. (That last one shows I can be helped, right?) Once a week,
I do what my daughter and her friends ironically call "spring cleaning". I
wish.
Then we got a dog which has now grown to three more and becomes four when my
daughter, Meghann, breaks up with her boyfriend. Which seems to happen every
other week. I figured dogs would be a sure-fire cure for OCD. They track in
dirt and mud, shed fur all over the place, drool water from the water bowl,
smudge penis snot and real snot on floors, doors and walls, carry fleas and ticks
in, chew up shoes and plastics, shred paper, steal food off the counter, and
generally make an OCD day hell.
Our Weimaraner is a stay-in-the-house dog. He doesn't shed too much and his
worst vice is trailing water from the water bowl. I keep him occupied by giving
him his favorite toy, a three-foot stuffed grizzly bear. He spends hours
humping that bear. Poor thing. But when it's hot, I let our other two dogs in the
house. Well, also when it's cold outside or raining or thundering and
lightning. Okay, I admit it, they're probably in the house 90% of the time. Maybe one
month out of the year they are actually outside. One is a black lab who sheds
worse than a cat and the other is an Australian Blue Heeler, who is a really
good dog, except he likes to beat up on our Weimaraner. Imagine a dog 1/4th the
size of a very large dog, snarling and snapping and the large dog crying like
a baby. I break them up and the Weimaraner goes back for more. Go figure.
So, basically, that's my life - breaking up dog fights, cleaning, and hiding
the three-foot grizzly when my Weimaraner's eyes roll back in his head. No
wonder I never finish a manuscript.
At night, the dogs sleep in our mud room. Confined to one space, they can't
cause too much work for me, right? Nope. Every morning, there are smudges on
the French doors, so I get out the window cleaner and clean glass. There's also
dog fur and dirt and who knows what else on the floor and their dog pillows.
So I vacuum and mop the space to get all that crap up. Of course, once the
vacuum's out, I go ahead and vacuum the other floors. And since the damp mop is
out, mop the wooden floors. And there's always a window or mirror or glass door
that needs a touch up.
I give up!
During the day, dog prints mysteriously appear on that danged wooden floor. I
do not know how in the world they do that! So I'm constantly trying to get
those smudged prints up and, if not, I'm worrying about it.
I am so sick.
But one good thing: our Weimaraner chewed up the fringe on an Oriental rug,
leaving a gap. That rug drove me nuts; I was always lining up the fringe just
right. But what relief. After he created the gap, out came the scissors and I
cut off all the fringe. Now I don't have to worry about it. So, one less thing
to deal with. Which probably took up one minute of my time each day. But, hey,
it's a start.
by Christy French,
2006
Okay, I admit it. I'm obsessive-compulsive. I check to make sure doors I know
are locked are still locked. Like there's a gremlin hiding out in my house
whose sole duty is to unlock the doors after I've locked them. I get halfway to
work, wonder if I turned off the coffeepot and head back home only to remember
it's the kind that turns itself off. But I go home anyway just to make sure.
Same with the iron. And my calculator. And don't forget the garage door.
Although it doesn't close on its own, I panic, thinking I forgot to shut it. And
somebody might break into the house and carry my computer away. With my beloved
manuscripts, most of which have sat idle on the hard drive for years. Like
they're gonna want those! Anyway, when I get home, the door is always shut. But I
check to make sure someone can't manually raise it. Then I go inside just to
make sure the coffeepot, iron - well, you get it.
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Christy Tillery French P.O. Box 297 Heiskell TN 37754 E-mail: readermail@ChristyFrench.Com |
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