Recently a good friend fell down in a public place and I feared she was quite embarrassed (though bumped and bruised, she was OK). In an effort to assure her that many of us have this malady, I share a piece here that I wrote many years ago. Sadly, not much has changed - while on a walk a few weeks ago I was splayed out on the sidewalk near my home, having tripped over a...a...well, OK, over not much of anything. Enjoy, even if you're not my daughters.
COMEDY CENTRAL,
MOM-STYLE
Moshe Waldoks (Who? I don’t really know who he might be but
I do know he was right about one thing) said “A sense of humor can help you
overlook the unattractive, tolerate the unpleasant, cope with the unexpected
and smile through the unbearable.” Unfortunately, there are a lot of us like
the folks author/speaker Garrison Keillor describes: “God writes a lot of
comedy…the trouble is, He’s stuck with so many bad actors who don’t know how to
play funny.”
That would be me. My husband has often said I do not have a
sense of humor. (I actually suspect it’s just that I do not have his!) But it is true I have a little
difficulty laughing at life’s ups and downs – especially my downs, my falling downs, in particular.
No, I do not have an inner ear problem or weak ankles or
anything of that nature. Objects simply appear in my path that were not part of
my plan. And that proves to be a bit of comic relief for my daughters.
After I tipped over onto the floor in a local Walmart aisle
while trying to see some bottom shelf prices (40-somethings just can’t squat
like they used to), tripped over a mop handle while working at McDonald’s and
fell into a (really!) well-concealed hole on Sea World’s lawn my girls were so concerned. “Did anyone see you?” they gasped. At least I think
that’s what they said. It was quite hard to tell amidst all the giggling.
Mom, the “techno queen,” is also a good source for a laugh.
The daughters won’t even let me near the VCR remotes anymore. (Why are remotes
all different anyway – is there a Nobel Prize for electronic creativity?)
Eyeballs roll as I frantically attempt to push the “pause” while the TV
characters run on in fast forward. And the rewind button? Much too close to the
“stop.” Well, maybe I like watching
the same part of the tape over and over again, did they ever think of that?
Want a good picker-upper? Try watching me find my car in a
parking lot. I have been known to insert my key in the door of my car, all the while wondering what all
that baby stuff was doing in my back
seat (it’s been a long time since we had a baby, mind you). And that startled
man waiting for his wife at Target’s door? He must have been quite perplexed
when an unknown-to-him female entered his van calling him “Bob” while three
young ladies stood by, doubled over with glee.
We won’t even go into my “ability” to distinguish the
difference between the men’s and women’s public restrooms. (You know, really,
the lines at the women’s lavatories are always so long, anyway.)
All this used to upset me. Part of me did know it really was
amusing, but I just could not laugh at it. I was annoyed that others were “laughing
at me.” (But, come on – how could they help it?) I didn’t know how to “play
funny.” Slowly I am learning to not take everything quite so seriously,
remembering the Proverb “a happy heart makes the face cheerful” and that “a
cheerful heart has a continual feast.” At this rate, I’ll have no trouble
providing a perpetual family banquet!