For Frying Out Loud (16 page)

Read For Frying Out Loud Online

Authors: Fay Jacobs

February 2009

CRYING Wii Wii Wii ALL THE WAY HOME

We got a Wii. If you don't know what that is you are older than I am, which is sad.

Bonnie said she wanted the snazzy video sports games because it would be good exercise. I know she just wanted to play. This is a woman who celebrated her 40th birthday on a roller coaster and spent most of the following decade still squatting behind home plate. While other folks were getting first colonoscopies, she celebrated age 50 speeding along the wrong side of a winding road in the English countryside. The rest of us in the car wanted to see sheep, but not splayed on the windshield. Bonnie and the sheep survived that birthday.

For Bonnie's 60th she wants to do a zip line. I'm lucky I can still zip my pants.

So we got a Wii, no easy task itself. The Big Box Store was always out of the big box of Wii. Then we heard rumor of a truck arriving the next morning.

“I can't believe you're making me get up at 6 in the morning to stand in line at Walmart for my own Hanukah present,” Bonnie hissed at me, as I pulled the covers over my head.

“Pretend it's a game,” I said.

So she put on her cleats and jockeyed for position as the sun came up over the Walmart parking lot. When the terrified greeter opened the doors my spouse was first off the starting block and I am proud to say she came in by a nose to the electronics department without trampling anybody.

So we got a Wii.

The first time I Wii'd as an adult it was at a friend's house, where I was tapped to go Wii bowling with three former PE teachers. Oddly, I could simulate in the living room what eluded me in the bowling alley and, strike after spare after strike, I beat the pants off all three women. They smiled, but I know these jocks were humiliated to beaten by a klutz like me.
I should have retired my Wii controller and jersey number right then and there.

But now, in our home bowling alley, I roll on, standing in front of the TV, swinging the game controller, and letting go of the button to throw the bowling ball. It's a lot lighter than a real bowling ball, you can't get your thumb stuck in the socket and you don't have to wear somebody else's stinky bowling shoes. Then again, getting athlete's foot is the closest I come to being an athlete.

You do get to hear the delightful echo of bowling balls being mowed down. Wii sound effects rock. And there is applause for strikes. I love applause.

Of course, every time I pick up the controller, Bonnie begs me to secure the wrist band, certain I will eventually launch the device through the 42-inch flat screen Sony.

The good news is that gutter balls are much harder to execute with Wii than in reality. The bad news is dropping your hand too far without releasing the button sends the virtual ball rolling behind you into the cartoon crowd, who scream and sneer at you. I remember that all too well from high school.

And speaking of cartoons, my favorite part of Wii is putting together the cartoon characters resembling you and your friends. There are choices of eyes, ears, noses, hair, eyeglasses, the works. I love that you have no choice of thighs, boobs or butts and everyone looks similar from the neck down. This is not a reality show.

So far, the most Wii fun I've had is cross-dressing my friends and endowing them with inappropriate eyebrows and facial hair.

Last week we invited friends over so we could replicate them into little cartoon avatar figures and have a tournament. I was in the midst of throwing a ten pin split when I put a little too much oomph behind it and pulled a groin muscle. In my living room, in front of the TV. That's a new one.

After bowling, Bonnie challenged me to softball, where she got to throw the ball at ninety miles an hour and I got to flail
wildly and miss it. Flashbacks of summer camp. Bonnie now has a right biceps like Popeye's and my rotator cuff is unglued.

Then there's golf. You are supposed to hold the controller like a golf club, but we've not figured out how to do that without squatting and looking like Quasimodo. Hunched and ready, it turns out I'm just as lousy at Wii golf as I am on the course. Although, the way the game is set up, you can only take a certain number of strokes before a disembodied voice tells you to “give up.” If somebody told me that in 2005 I could have saved myself a lot of humiliation, not to mention greens fees.

Part of Wii golf is to read the greens, looking at differing shades of the color green to determine the angle of the terrain. Please. I can't even tell my blue turtlenecks from the black ones anymore. Six shades of video green are just cruel.

I've yet to try Wii tennis because I watched Bonnie virtually smashing the ball over the net and figured, first, since it takes two hands, I'd have to put my drink down, and second, it looked like too much exercise. The only thing my backhand is good for is to give compliments.

Now that it's nearly Spring, Bonnie wants to get the new Wii Fit exercise routine. If she makes me participate I might have to throw a wee fit to get out of it. I understand you enter your vital statistics, including your weight and the little cartoons are drawn to more realistically reflect each participant. Can't wait.

The game checks your Body Mass Index, tells you your Wii Fit age and keeps tabs on your weight. Let's face it, Wii might want to be fit, but there's no way Wii (the Royal Wii) are having any part of that.

As Bonnie says, “Wii shall see about that…”

Wii shall overcome?.

March 2009

SCHNAUZERHAVEN UNDER SIEGE

Schnauzerhaven was invaded by an alien. Undocumented, but she did have papers. All over the house. We babysat for a puppy.

Frankly, my dogs, my spouse and I never knew how old we all were until our twenty one days on puppy watch. Actually it was only three days, but it felt like dog years.

First, the visitor was not a Schnauzer-American, which immediately alerted my terrier immigration squad. She was a ball of white fur with a floppy tail – something else very foreign – and entirely relentless. Running, rolling, crouching, kissing, snuggling, sniffing, peeing, pooping. For the puppy Olympics we didn't lead with a torch, but thought about torching the house by closing ceremonies.

You should have seen my 11-year-old dog cavort with the puppy. They crouched, facing off, butts high, circling, then running outside, lapping the back yard twice and racing back towards the porch. As the puppy crossed the finish line, the oldster stopped to lie down. I swear I heard him ask for an Aleve.

When 10-year-old Paddy turned his back on the pup, she took it as a challenge and nipped at him until he agreed to grab the soggy end of a rawhide bone. The two of them ran around the house, each with an end of the rawhide in their mouths until Ms. Puppy ran under the bed and Paddy got clocked in the head for being too tall to fit. I swore I heard him ask for an Aleve.

In the meantime, another Schnauzer relative of the boys arrived for a sleepover, setting up a classic three dog night plus the interloper. It's 11 p.m. Do you know where your canines are? Just about everywhere.

We had Paddy the Jealous under the covers mid-bed and Ashley the Rotund up top between the pillows, with Penny the
Puppy lying where my feet should have gone. Moxie the Elder retreated to his doggie bed escape module on the floor.

I've had a better night's sleep in U.S. Airways Coach.

Although “night's sleep” is inaccurate. Cirque du Soleil began at 4 a.m., long before Soleil rise. Usually, I can sneak out of bed, go to the bathroom and be back under the covers without blowing reveille. But this time, when my feet hit the floor they were followed by sixteen paws and a chorus of yapping. You can tell a 10-year-old dog to shut up and go back to sleep, but tell that to a puppy and you'll be tip-toeing through turd tulips in the morning.

So we all got up and went out. Now here's the thing about the puppy. She doesn't come when called. Or sit on command, or do anything else requested of her by any human. Dog trainer Caesar Milan needs to give her an extreme makeover.

It's a good thing those Cypress trees surrounding my house are good and thick. Passing motorists should not have had to look over the fence to witness two women of a certain age loping around the yard, clad only in our t-shirts and underpants, trying to lure said puppy back into the house.

Finally, when everybody was indoors, we divided the troops. Bonnie bunked on the sofa with one Schnauzer and the Puppy from Hell, while I retreated to bedroom headquarters with the other two. It didn't stay that way long because while I nodded off, one canine must have grown opposable thumbs and managed to open the bedroom door. The pack ran back and forth for what was left of the night, popping up and down on the bed like Whack-a-Moles.

When we finally gave up trying to sleep, I got dressed and left for work. Bonnie, who goes in later than I do had an easy time getting the regulars into their crates. Not the puppy. The little devil ran under the bed and Bonnie crouched down to coax her out. The puppy crawled on her belly to the far side of the bed, so Bonnie stood up, walked around to the far side, squatted and called the puppy. That's when the infuriating little creature reversed gears and retreated to the original side
of the bed. Bonnie walked around and crouched, the puppy fled; Bonnie changed sides, so did the pup. Staggering to her feet, my mate concluded that the squat and run dance could go on all day so she gave up and took an Aleve.

The three caged Schnauzers spent the day watching a perfectly good carpet being defiled by the fuzzy weapon of mass destruction.

By that afternoon we were all really dragging except, of course, you-know-who. Yet another Schnauzer dropped by for a few hours of doggy daycare, so now there were four mature dogs being chased around the house by a six pound nipper. She was so determined to sniff every butt in the house (except mine and Bonnie's thank god), I was afraid one of the dogs would stop short, with the resulting rear end collision turning the puppy into a pug.

The next morning, feeding the pack presented its own problems. We separated the bowls to the four corners of the kitchen. One with puppy chow, one with weight loss kibble for seniors, another with lamb and rice kibble for sensitive stomachs and the last a kibble and green bean happy meal.

Well, nobody was happy. They each wanted what the other one was having and we humans had to stand guard, keeping everybody out of everybody else's business, no easy task with dogs or humans.

After breakfast, since the sky had turned black, we all went back to bed. There was a succession of lightning bolts, followed immediately by some of the loudest, most frightening thunder since last Tuesday's Rush Limbaugh show.

En masse, the dog pack leapt onto the bed, shaking and quaking from fear. They had the mattress jiggling so much from the panting vibrations I felt like I'd just put a quarter into the bed in some sleazy motel.

Just before it was time for puppy love to go home, I had a panic attack. I counted noses and hers was missing. I knew we hadn't opened any doors, I had seen her just moments before, but a thorough canvass turned up nothing but Schnauzers. We
called, we looked under beds, we peered into closets (nobody there except a few Republican politicians) and searched like Google. No puppy.

Frantic, I paced to the coffee table to grab the remote to turn the TV off–I wanted to hear Penny if she made a noise. As I picked up the remote, I peered through the glass coffee table to the shelf below. There, between the pile of gift books and a stack of DVDs slept one tired little puppy. Adorable when asleep.

She's gone home now. All visiting Schnauzers have departed as well. We're down to our happy household of two humans, two dogs. I'm sure that if enough time elapses we will be up for puppy duty again. Make that puppy doody. I just found a souvenir in the corner.

I need an Aleve.

Other books

Jacquie D'Alessandro by Loveand the Single Heiress
Old Sins Long Shadows by B.D. Hawkey
The Madonna of Notre Dame by Alexis Ragougneau, Katherine Gregor
Pride and Consequence by Altonya Washington