if you think you've got your sh*$ together, check under your frige
I moved out of our apartment last weekend and went back over tonight to help Em clean it out for when she finishes moving out tomorrow. We had been renting our refrigerator and washer/dryer from a (heinous, horrible, should-be-reported-to-the-Better-Business-Bureau) rental company who was scheduled to pick up our appliances, oh 6 days ago, and decided to show up today shortly before I arrived. They removed the frige and the washer/dryer and GREAT HEAVENS ABOVE, you would NOT believe the carnage left wallowing in the footpirnts of our appliances.
Bearing in mind that we had two cats for awhile, one of which sucked in every way except that she thought she was a dog and loved to play fetch with wadded up lumps of tin foil and wine corks, the hollow space beneath our appliances had become a graveyard where cat fodder had gone to die.
Left in the wake of our food-chilling and clothes-cleaning machines was all manner of fright. You name it: plastic pieces to things we never knew were broken or missing (and some we did), an eye dropper, the remains of a Cadburry Egg so old it had disintegrated into a lump of fine chocolate-and-faux-egg-middle-esque powder (we are certain we have acturately ID'd this as a Cadburry product as part of the wrapper was still intact), a chewed up tampon (feline tooth marks, I assure you), balls of tinfoil, and ungodly wads of hairy, dusty lint mixed with dark gooey stains of laundry detergent that had seeped under the washer and congealed in a glorious blob of adhesive goo akin to the amusing sticky stuff they use to fasten credit cards to advertisments that promise 0% on balance transfers for 6 months and a 7.9% fixed rate after that.
Oh, and of course, one of Em's favorite thongs which I regret to inform you she pulled from this nasty rubble with glee proclaiming, "I LOVE that thong! It's like the best color ever!" and then, seeing the horror on my face, "Dude, I'll totally wash it" - something I had hoped would have gone without saying.
But when faced with such filth and scum lurking in the kitchen we formerly thought to be hygenic (minus the omnipresent cat hair, of course - something that had just become a part of the landscape), what do you think we did? Cleaned it up quickly before it made us vomit? Doused it with bleach and cleaner to sanitize it before the horror could possibly spread?
NO.
We waded through it on our hands and knees and picked and pilfered with our bare fingers in desperation to salvage memories of immeasurable value.
See, in our house for the last six years we've had a tradition of signing the corks from bottles of wine we drank with friends or for special occassions or just with dinner for no particular reason at all. And buried in the mess of grime and dead spiders and hair and dust left under our over-priced rented appliances were gems we could never get back unless we dove in after them. Gems like "Christmas Party, 2000", a remnant from our first grown-up Christmas party in our very first apartment out of college, "Shari Friesen Graduates" from the bottle of champagne we toasted to Emily's sister upon her college graduation, and my personal favorite, "1.8.2003 - Good Day at the Office", a tiny peek into a time of turmoil for both of us at our respective workplaces when coming home to soak in the hot tub and moan about our bad days was habit. A time when reverting to school-girl silliness, cracking stupid jokes and talking about boys from the hours of 5pm until bed instead of pretending to be the suit-wearing professionals we mascaraded as by daytime was all either of us had.
So dive in, we did. We salvaged a good many treasures and then returned them to their rightful home...the box with all the other signed corks which, of course, we had to pull out and read through all over again and every single one was sweeter than even the best bottle of wine had tasted.
After considerable reminiscing we remembered all the cleaning we had to do and started to rally ourselves to get going. But then Em came up with an alternative plan that sounded much better than scrubbing bathrooms or sweeping up the appliance catacombs. So instead we opened a bottle of wine, poured two glasses, turned on a sentimental cd (okay, it was Ricky Martin but I promise this has significance to us) and we played cards on the floor of our half empty, half stacked with boxes living room.
For what do broken-hearted girls have to do to console themselves but to drink wine and play cards and pretend that everything hasn't just changed around them so fast that the way it was is already hard to grab onto and it's suddenly hard to breath?
In an attempt to be brave, optimistic, forward-looking women, we signed the cork:
We have all the corks ahead of us.
Emily
Abby
June 30, 2005
8 days before Abby's wedding
But I know that's not was either of us was really thinking. We were thinking about the funeral we had just held over a heap of dusty garbage on the floor of our kitchen. We were mourning the loss of the only way we have ever known our friendship - as roommates.
I know there is much greatness and joy ahead but saying goodbye to what came before it is proving much more difficult than I was prepared for.
Posted by Poka Bean at 12:48 AM
4 Comments
This made me cry! Having girl roommates is so much fun. (especially if you are allowed to borrow their clothes.) You will love being married, but I know you will always miss living with Emily because of how many years of roommate-hood you shared.
You've just motivated me to make some phone calls.
You are the BEST friend ever! Thanks so much for writing all that down -- I never want to forget the glory of that night.
You really had me with this post -- I was seriously cracking up! I already forgot about that thong -- SERIOUSLY a great one that I've been unknowingly missing for God knows how long. Your far-too-accurate reinactment of us digging through that crap-trash... well, let's just say a little pee came out. :)
And all way well and good until you went and made me cry.
Abs, you have been the best friend and roommate of all times. I'm just sure of it.
Today as I closed the door for the last time to dear old 78 Sea Star Court after it's final cleaning, I had the strongest sense that my life from here on out will never be the same. Not that I'll never be happy again, I'm sure I will :) But that even though our friendship will remain, it's not going to get to be exactly the same friendship we've shared all these years.
I'm still trying to figure out how I'm going to get through the weeks you're away on your honeymoon -- I don't think it's really sunk in yet that you aren't coming home after that.
Shhh don't tell me. You know that I do much better living in my own happy world.
I'm just going to keep telling myself that you're just down visiting Jon for the night and that you'll be home tomorrow. :)
Although, if I had to lose you to someone, I'm sure glad it's Jon.
love you.
This post makes me weep for my BFFs.
I love you girls. I know it's hard to see things turn upside down on you, but never fear...this is the stuff of life. If good things like your roomate-dom lasted forever, they wouldn't seem nearly as sweet.
Marriage will be the joy of your life, Abby. And though your friendship with Emily will change, it will change in a way God intended (as He obviously intended you to marry Jon). And though my heart breaks to think of you not living across the street, you are not EVEN that far away. My sweet ride gets good gas mileage, baby!
I've never had a roomate I've had to say goodbye to, but after seeing the bond you and Emily share, it almost makes me wish I had gone to college.
Almost.
I love you both.
WHERE THE HELL ARE YOU?!
I get the 3 week honeymoon. I get the moving. But you're back now.
Ultimatum: Post by Monday or get dropped from my "simply must read list".
I'm sorry it's come to this. Consider it tough love.
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