It’ll be a blizzard, nope all rain storm, oh no, it’s a rain storm with winter weather and snow on the backside. Tornado, anyone want to take tornado? My job would be less stressful if I had this kind of room for error. I’m going over the weatherman’s head.
My dishwasher backwash line will just start overflowing on the counter out of the blue; despite the fact my kitchen drain is always clear. The mend is simple, at least in theory. Loosen the hose clamp, remove the hose, clear the blockage and replace everything, right? Except the fucking hose is so ‘on’ the pvc and so supremely inflexible, near hulk like strength is required to remove it once the clamp is loose. *reaches for the spinach and sighs* After ten minutes of swatting at Homer as he tries to investigate the open cabinet and making the ‘shit of the century’ face while wrestling the hose off the pipe on one meager cup of coffee and no breakfast, I find, per fucking usual, there really is no blockage. I stab around with my screwdriver, scrape the insides of the hose and the pipe, and replace the hose and NO MORE LEAKING.
What is this trickery, you ask? So what exactly is the problem? I don’t know. I imagine a thin bubble of scum over the opening of this hose, built over time by the last bit of wet cat food gravy rinsed out of the empty can, a drop or two of grease left behind by Sunday’s bacon, the backwash of the half and half that is too sour to use, all woven into a few strands of my hair like a white trash dream catcher waiting to be stabbed from existence by Early Morning Angry Alison wielding a screwdriver. I can think of no other explanation. Add this to the list of puzzling home owner WTF’s.
Life 1
Alison 1
I am calling this repetitive incident a tie only because the confounded hose is so hard to remove I will use towels to sop up the water for at least two weeks before breaking down and handling the problem.
Deciding to disassemble your pool table which has not hosted a game in over a year: Weeks of consideration
Disassembling your pool table: 3 hours, patience and one great friend. Two more great friends to relocate the slate.
Realizing you already own enough furniture to appropriately fill the resulting empty space without making a single purchase and it’s been cluttering up other rooms all this time: Fucking awesome and maybe a little sad because….
Refusing to admit this endeavor was only possible because you precariously prance along the fine line between saving and hoarding and you must learn to let the phrase ‘but that was moms’ leave your reasoning when choosing what to keep: Just look at all the stuff I’ll be making better use of now!
Over the weekend, I replaced a shower head. No problem, right? I even found the tape with the note to tape in reverse on the threads. I am so bad ass. I’m going to plumb. I replace the shower head, I turn on the water, it’s all good. Cue my Monday morning shower….you guessed it. Leakage. I’m quite sure in all my radiant independence it just needs tightened. *crack* *sigh* Now it’s spraying on the wall. Monday, really, what did I expect?
Because in my home repair zeal I failed to use the ‘extra’ seal ring on the connection to the source, I over tightened and cracked the threads off a metal pipe. My bad. Time to pay the piper….literally.
So I texted my neighbor before I left for work this morning. I am required to endure suggestive and inappropriate conversation for assistance, but he’s handy(not handsy) and he fixes things properly:
Me: I think I cracked the pipe the shower head attaches to trying to swap it out.
Neighbor: You need pipe? I can help, I think the plumbers handbook suggests you should hand me tools while testing the absorbency of white cotton and not wearing a bra.
Me: You know it’s not going down like that.
Neighbor: I’m not helping if you are going to be sour. I know it’s not going down like that.
Me: Right now, you are focusing on the phrase ‘going down’. Lol.
Neighbor: Text me when you get home. I’ll bring gloves, in case I need to do an emergency insertion, oops, I mean inspection. Lol.
Me: *sigh* A plumber may be cheaper after all…
So he comes over this evening with a little bucket of tools and a spare pipe, because he’s ‘that guy’. I’m thinking I need to get a new pipe, cut the wall, and swap this piece out for CPVC. Nope.
Me: Leave it to me to screw up a head swap. There you go. I said screw and head. It’s like paying you twice.
Neighbor: *lewd hand gestures explaining how pipes fit together*
Me: Ok, bring your pipe along, you know, I broke the last one I got my hands on.
Neighbor: *assesses situation* Yup, I really need to give you some new pipe.
Me: *does not want to tear out the wall, forgets all about the necessary game of double entendre* Oh crap, do I need to get a drywall saw? Should I pull out the stove? (My bathroom plumbing access is a big hole in the wall in the kitchen behind the stove, of course, because that makes sense.) *swears like a sailor*
Neighbor: *unscrews fucking pipe from wall like a bottle cap* *laughs maniacally*
Me: Are you fucking kidding me?
Neighbor: *laughs maniacally* That will be $150. *laughs maniacally*
Me: That pipe just screws out of the wall? I think I just paid you overtime.
He fixed that shit in five minutes and had the part I needed. No glue. No cutting broken pipe. No ‘we have to swap that for CPVC and glue the ever loving shit out of it’.
Me: *shakes head* *cries for all she does not already know*
Neighbor: Damn, I forgot my bill pad.
Me: I’ve said pipe and screw in at least ten different inappropriate variations in ten minutes, you owe me time.
I’ve received notice of your continued impending severe weather. I’d like to point out that I have roughly 3 hours of clean up from last night’s storm damage completed with at least another hour of removal, in addition to the bits of winter damage still lying about I’ve yet to get to and thought I might catch up on this week. I took time off to clean up the winter bits.
I recognize and appreciate your efforts to ensure I do not run out of firewood or logs for cross country jumps. You’ve saved me a ton of money on firewood and kept me quite fit. My outside jumping course grows more robust every year. I’d give you a thumbs up for timing too, since you always seem to catch me when I’ve taken time off to work around the farm. I must extend my sincerest thanks to you for gently laying the tree on my shed last night and not just slapping that ass.
I’ve taken a careful stock of what remains to be cleaned and accounted for your latest addition to my wood pile. I’ve determined I have what I need to get through the winter 2014/2015. If trees were double wides, my farm would be a trailer park. Frankly speaking, I’m falling behind trying to keep up with you and the place is looking rough. I’m quite sure you will agree, we can’t have untidy homesteads about the land. It’s a reflection on you as well as me, so I will have to ask kindly if you could find it in your windy, lightening littered heart to ease up on the acres until I can achieve a respectable level of clean up.