January 30, 2020

A Sophisticate Eats Library Paste

What’s on my mind? Unread magazines.

Tossing them is kinda like putting down the dog. I know it’s necessary, but want no part of it; don’t want to see it; don’t want to hear the details.

Several years ago, a family member gave me a 1,000-year subscription to Gourmet and Bon Appétit magazines. I’m hardly a gourmet (at a younger age, my choix de cuisine was library paste), but I like to eat.

The magazines were a welcome gift. Each month, when they arrived, I marked the recipes I intended to make. 

Someday. 

I soon stopped marking recipes. Or even opening the magazines. I was going to “sa-a-ve” reading them as a special treat for when I had “ti-i-me.”

Over the years, the pile grew taller than Mt. Everest. When I struck out for a trip to Arizona, I brought the magazines. The plan: Read every one, clip the recipes likeliest to win friends and influence people, and host amazing dinner parties.

It never happened. When I returned home, my friend Hezzah peered into the peanut-sized trunk of my peanut-sized car to say: “This is ridiculous!” She then chucked every magazine into a gigantic recycling bin while I averted my eyes and pretended it wasn’t happening.

Several years ago, with best intentions and the knowledge that New York is one of my favorite cities, Himself gave me a subscription to The New Yorker. When we invited the neighbors over, I’d spread them (the magazines, not the neighbors) on the coffee table. This meant that every idiot (sorry, Mr. Harris; sorry, Mrs. H) would see them. They (my collection of New Yorkers, not the H’s) made me feel ... well,  sophisticated.

The New Yorker is Gourmet and Bon Appétit on steroids. The pile of New Yorkers grew higher and broader, teetering dangerously in the closet as this sophisticate selected her sweatshirt and jeans du jour.

One day, Himself said: “I’m going to recycle those %$#@! magazines!” It was an empty threat. Himself knew I’d divorce him - better yet, murder him - if he did.

“No-o-nooo!” I cried. “I’m going to re-e-ead them!” True to my promise, I read one New Yorker cover-to-cover, devouring every page. The rest conspired to procreate in the closet, the stack taller every year.

(Himself knows all about best intentions and unread magazines. He once had a subscription to National Geographic - say n’ more, say n’ more).

This morning, as I carried a piffle of paper out to the recycling bin, I saw a pile of New Yorker magazines - my New Yorker magazines - hidden under the local newspaper and the weekly grocery flyers.

I briefly morphed into the Incredible Hulk before deliberately looking away. I knew tossing the New Yorker had to be done, but could never do it myself.

They say revenge is best eaten cold. Himself had no idea I was aware of what he’d done.

Sauntering into the kitchen, all bright and sunny (me, not the kitchen, which desperately needs remodeling), I said: “Sweetheart ... I think I’ll pull some of those New Yorkers from the bedroom closet and read them today! I’ve been so-o-o looking forward to it! I’ll get them from the closet right away!”

I heard Himself suck wind. And then I laughed.

“I saw what you did! I could never have done it, myself. It needed to be done. Thank you!”

And then we gave one another a big hug. And a long, smoochy kiss. And I peeled off my sweatshirt. Say n’ more, say n’ more.

©  Nicole Parton, 2020

January 27, 2020

The Blue Light

2016, 2017, 2018, 2019: Me to Himself: “Himself … What exactly is that blue light near the garage?”

Himself: “It’s a light. It’s blue.”

Me: “But what …?”

Himself (again): “It’s a light. It’s blue.” Subject closed.

January, 2020: Last night, we hosted a Thai dinner party. We’d never given a Thai dinner party, before. Himself, who as usual, took on more than he should have, rushed around the kitchen making rice and two types of curried chicken. Our guests fried the naan; Thai Coconut Prawn soup burbled on the stove.

A light haze hung in the air when suddenly …WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP!

Himself, who wears double hearing aids, calmly stirred the chicken as he called: “The timer says your soup is ready, Nicole!”

Allow me to take you into our kitchen to tell you what happened next. 

Always calm in a crisis, I say: “You idiot! That’s not the TIMER! That’s the SMOKE ALARM!” 

WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP!

Because he doesnt hear well, Himself has no idea how loud the alarm is. In fact, I’ve never heard it louder: WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! 

I run around the living room with a towel, trying to fan the haze out the open door: WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP!

I pull my “I don’ know nothin’ ’bout birthin’ babies …” routine, but Himself is cooking Thai and overseeing the guests frying naan, and says “DEAL WITH IT!” through gritted teeth. 

He gives our guests a look that says: “Nothing to see, folks! Move along! Move along!” Unfortunately, they want to.


WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP!

An ever-so-jovial alarm company guy phones: “Everything okay over there?” 

“I CAN’T HEAR YOU OVER THE ALARM!” I scream.

WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP!

Our guests have the look of frightened animals, afraid to move, wanting everything just to go away. The naan and our moods darken.

WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP!

“Ho-kay … Well, you’ll sort it out. Gimme your name and password. Ho-kay …” concludes the alarm company guy. Click!

HELP ME, HIMSELF, HELP ME …!”

“CAN’T YOU SEE I’M BUSY?”

Dragging the ladder into the living room. I recall how Himself twists some thing-a-majig to stop smoke alarms. So I do. Easy-peasy.

WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP!

Until this moment, I have no idea there’s a second alarm in the laundry room - this one, ear-splitting. I can’t disconnect it.

The WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! is now joined by a GRONK! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK! sound like an electric bullfrog; a sound so loud Im certain every neighbor on the block will call the police, the fire department, an ambulance, or all of them. 

Panicked, I run outside. The sound and an urgent blinking are coming from the blue light near the garage. All the more reason for the neighbors to rush to our aid. Naturally, not one of them budges from the comfort of their TV sets. Perhaps they, too, wear double hearing aids. 

“CALL THE ALARM COMPANY!” Himself yells from the kitchen.

I do. A soothing computerized voice says: “Welcome to Blankety-Blank! Always there! Proud to be serving you!” The voice repeats this in French. By the time a live agent comes on the phone, I could have died from smoke inhalation.

And then I hear a soft, calm, lilting musical voice. I dont remember exactly what this woman says, but its something like: “What may I do for you, Miss-Mrs.?

“I CAN’T GET THE (WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK!) ALARM SYSTEM TO STOP!”

“Do not worry. I will help you. Push the hashtag key, then the asterisk key, then the … key, then the … key, now the … key … and the … key. Ahhh! There you are …”

WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK!

Our guests shift nervously in the kitchen. I sense they yearn to go home. With false bravado, I shout: “WON’T BE LO-O-O-NG!”

“HOW LONG?” Himself yells.

“NOT LONG!” I lie.

I tell the disembodied musical voice that: “THE ALARM IS STILL -”

“Do not worry. I will help you. Push the asterisk key, then the … key, then the … key, now the … key … and the … key.” 

Different numbers than those of moments ago. “Now enter your code number.”

WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK!

“THE ALARM! “THE ALARM!” I scream.

WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK!

“Do not worry. I will help you. Push the reset button.”

“The reset button … the reset button … I study the alarm panel. There’s no reset button …” Apparently the guy who installed our system forgot to label it.

“Do not worry. I will -”

“GIMME THAT PHONE!” Himself wants to take over.

WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK!

“I CAN’T HEAR YOU!” he yells into the phone, and to me: “I CAN’T HEAR ANYTHING SHE’S SAYING!” 

“GET YOUR HEARING AIDS CHECKED!” I shout.

“WHA-A-AT?” he booms.

Meekly, I say: “She told me to push the reset button. I can’t find it.” My lower lip starts to quiver. 

Reading both those lips, Himself pushes an unlabelled button. The WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! WHOOP! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK! GRONK! instantly stop. So, as I quickly discover, does the intense blinking of the blue light.

Guys know these things. It’s in their DNA. Fluffy-brained women like me really don’ know nothin’ ’bout birthin’ babies.

Himself hands me back the phone. There's no one at the other end of the line. The woman with the soft musical voice has bolted. Wise decision.

©  Nicole Parton, 2020

January 18, 2020

Sing a Song of Sixpence

Although I did say I wouldn’t write further, resistance was futile - NP 

Next to Wallis Simpson, jumped-up commoner Meghan Markle is about to become the most reviled woman in modern Britain history. 

Husband Harry - once a Prince of a guy - is about to become the “Duke of Sussex.” Period. Full stop. Markle will remain the Duchess, a title she gained through her May, 2018 marriage.

Dukes and Duchesses may be a dime-a-dozen in the UK, but they’re a curiosity in North America, where the couple intends to live part-time. 

Today finds Meghan huddled in a $35 million mansion in British Columbia, awaiting Harrys return from a tête-a-tête with his grandmother, the Queen. Doing his best to negotiate the couple’s future, he was out-played.

Welcome to the Wet Coast, H&M, but don’t be surprised if you meet a chilly reception.

Last June, the couple submitted an application to trademark “Sussex Royal” - the “brand” they intended to apply to hundreds of items under the categories of printed matter, clothing, campaigning, charitable fundraising, education and social care services. The word “tawdry” springs to mind.

Just think! “H&M HOME Interior Design & Decorations” … Ooops! Can’t license that! The name’s already been taken.

If, as reported, Markle has already inked a deal with Disney, her new starring role as a Disney Princess won’t enhance her (soon to be former) real-life image as the leading lady to the man formerly known as Prince.

Through the routine publication of pending trademark applications, the couple’s attempt to establish their “brand” became public in December. I’m guessing hell hath no fury like a Queen sandbagged, and that the news did not exactly “droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven.”

It was shortly after this that H&M expressed the wish to celebrate the holidays apart from the Royal family. And shortly thereafter, that H&M announced their intent to “step back” from royal duties and "transition into a new working model" that would make them "financially independent.”

Be careful what you wish for.

“Stepping back” from the Royal family is like “stepping back” from a puddle; you may land on terra firma, but your boot’s still wet.

And so it was, that however politely expressed, Elizabeth gave these nitwits that same boot. They want “financial independence”? Done: No more public funding. No more public appearances as Her representative. No more use of the HRH designation. No cashing in on Harrys “Royal” lineage, and Meghans by association. And no more official military appointments for Harry, or being a royal ambassador for children - roles he reportedly loved.

And oh, yes, please cough up 2.4 million British pounds ($3.1 US or $4 million Cdn), to repay adoring British taxpayers for the renovations to Frogmore Cottage! The couple intends to live in Frogmore (and will now pay rent) whenever they happen to visit the UK.

Shouldn’t be too difficult to repay the money spent on those renovations. The rebate to taxpayers matches Prince Charles’ annual stipend to Harry, whose estimated net worth already stands at $25-to-$40 million. As the former star of TV’s “Suits,” Markle’s net worth is $5 million.

I sincerely hope the newly minted H&M succeeds in its quest for happiness and self-fulfillment - long-term as well as short-term. The comparisons to throne-wrecker Wallis Simpson aside, it won’t be easy.

It’s said history repeats itself. Well, well ... 

The Rolls-Royce that bore American socialite and divorcée Wallis Simpson to bury a King, is the very same Rolls-Royce that carried American actress and divorcée Meghan Markle to marry a Prince. 

The former King drank too much and partied too much as the Duke of Windsor. The life path the soon-to-be-former Prince follows will be determined when he becomes the Duke of Sussex.

As for that wicked Wallis Simpson? Dead, of course - laid to rest in the small cemetery on the grounds of (wait for it!) Frogmore Cottage.

Buckingham Palace gave H&M the Royal send-off “as they embark on the next chapter of their lives.” Will this heart-wrenching love story end well? Stay tuned.

©  Nicole Parton, 2020

October 29, 2019

Unzipped and Unhinged

What’s on my mind? Claustrophobia. 

As any claustrophobic knows, being inside a car (locks down; windows up), a small, windowless room, a stuck elevator, or any physical situation with no means of escape can provoke an immediate, severe, anxiety attack. Welcome to my world.

“He-e-y, baby … Try on these fur handcuffs …”

“EEEEEK!”

(“He-e-y, baby … You’re a froot loop …”)

A few days ago, I said I’d nap in the car while Himself went shopping. With claustrophobia bigger than Donald Trump’s ego, it wasn’t long before I bounded from the car to breathe the clean, fresh, and very cold air of the upper parkade of a Big City shopping mall. It was such a frosty day that I brought my ski jacket and - having gained a little (heh-heh-heh) weight, tried to fasten it. 

The zipper stuck just below my crotch. I panicked. 

(A medical note: I suffer from an advanced condition known as Mature Woman’s Hips, Boobs, and Upper Arms. There was no way, no how, no where I could slip outta that jacket, especially in the upper parkade of a Big City shopping mall.) 

Hyperventilating, I paced around the car, consciously suppressing the desire to scream because I was imprisoned in a 20-year-old Helly Hansen ski jacket with stuck zipper. It was then I saw my prince, the man who would free me from this claustrophobic nightmare.

He had a broom. And a step-on dustpan. And a glassy look in the eyes of his very bored face. I guessed him to be 19, marking time until he could achieve his true calling as a nuclear physicist. 

“Help! Help!” I cried in my Weak Little Woman’s voice. The sleeves of my jacket flapped feebly, my Mature Woman’s Upper Arms being pinioned inside them. The kid gave me a dull look and continued sweeping.

“H-E-E-LP!!!” came my feeble cry. “H-E-E-LP!!! H-E-E-LP!!!” That got his attention. “My zipper’s stuck! I can’t get free!”

Staring at the frozen zipper just below my crotch, he handed me his broom and his dustpan and furiously set to work. UP-DOWN-UP-DOWN-UP-DOWN! The zipper didn’t budge.

“What do you want me to do?” he asked.

“GET IT UP!” I screamed, upon which I instinctively realized that anyone passing by (which thankfully, no one did) might get the wrong idea about the kid’s zealous UP-DOWN-UP-DOWN-UP-DOWN motion near my crotch. 

In a parking lot. With basically no one around. As I carried a broom. Presumably to return the favor. 

“What time is it?” he asked. 

“One o’clock,” I snapped, upon which he wordlessly took back his broom and his dustpan and trotted off to lunch. I stayed stuck until Himself returned from shopping. With the deft hand of a man accustomed to - well, never mind what he's accustomed to - Himself unstuck my zipper. This is a true story.

But what if … what if … I’d called 911, sobbing and hysterical as someone (we won’t name any names) with claustrophobia can easily become. And what if …

“911! Ambulance, police, or fire?”

“Fire Department! Hur-ry! Puh-leeze! I’m stuck in the upper parkade of a Big City shopping mall! I can’t get free! I’m trapped! H-H-H-H-HE-E-LP!!!” And then I’d faint, the phone slipping from my limp hand as my Weak Little Woman’s voice trailed off to nothingness. 

Which is the when, why, and how the 10 burly fire fighters would have come running. Sadly, that part of the story isn’t true. 911 would never have dispatched the fire department for such a flimsy request. They would have sent a therapist.

© Nicole Parton, 2019

October 28, 2019

Things That Go Bump in the Night

What’s on my mind? This being the haunting season, I’ll spit it right out: I believe in the paranormal. Weird as this may sound, I’ve seen a lot of places and done a lot of things, but will probably never forget these two ghostly experiences - each of which was also experienced by a second person with me. 

Some time in the 1980s, my late spouse and I spent a night in the Oregon Caves Chateau. We jerked awake to the sound of a woman pacing above us. Back and forth, back and forth she went. Which was strange, because we were on the top floor, with nothing above but the roof. Too nervous to leave the bed, we spent the night hiding under the covers and eventually fell back to sleep.

When we commented about this at breakfast, our server called the manager, who pressed us for every detail. In the 1930s, he said, a bride named Elizabeth hanged herself on her wedding night when her new husband took up with a chambermaid. Elizabeth is said to haunt the chateau - especially room 310, the one in which we were sleeping.

The server also said staff who set the breakfast tables have learned to duck when knives, forks, and spoons sometimes fly from the cutlery drawers. 

“Want to see something extra spooky?” the manager asked.

I said yes.  Having seen my “morning face” without makeup, I figured I could take anything. The manager took me to a light-filled room without furniture the chateau never rented. The moment he opened the door, I stood at the entrance, frozen with terror. I couldn’t even go into the room.

“That’s everyone response,” he said. 

Thanks to the modern-day magic of Google, I’ve found a version of what we experienced on a National Parks website:


The second haunting? In 2003, my adult daughter and I stayed at the Empress of Little Rock in Arkansas. We weren’t aware the hotel had a reputation for being haunted. As it was, we were the hotel’s only occupants, and had our pick of its many sumptious rooms.

After we’d settled into sleep, I awoke to hear loud snoring pour from the walls and from the other side of the bed. The inhalation and exhalation immediately beside me were so loud and so prolonged, it would have been impossible for any person to have done this. 

I heard the snoring in the middle of the night; my daughter heard it in the very early morning, while it was still dark. With no one else in the hotel, she assumed I was asleep in the next room, but the room I’d chosen was several rooms away.

Checking the pillow, the mattress, and the walls, I found no sign of any device, so did what any mature, intelligent women would do, which was to hide under the blankets.


We heard at breakfast that three or four apparitions sometimes climb a non-existent ladder, passing through the ceiling into the attic. When a staff member dashed into the through its proper entrance, he found the ghostly apparitions as a table playing cards.

True? False? Who knows? The story certainly sounded interesting over bacon and eggs, and what each of us had experienced was couldn’t be explained.

©  Nicole Parton, 2019

October 25, 2019

Anyone Want a Boob-ectomy?

What’s on my mind? Medical referrals. Like gold, they are. These days, no one gets anywhere without a referral. 

So there I was, clutching mine as I sat in a specialist’s office with really not one clue where I was or why I was there, except that I had a referral. 

For reasons not worth mentioning (Hint: Oversized body parts. Further hint: Ma-ny, ma-ny oversized body parts), I assumed I was cooling my oversized heels waiting to see a plastic surgeon.

Visions of butchered bums danced in my head, but I was nervous. No woman wants her ear accidentally grafted to her nose.

My doctor had simply said: “See this person,” and scrawled an undecipherable name. So here I was. Unfortunately, my doctor was rushed, and neglected to elaborate. 

The specialist was located in a bank of sleek, modern, glass-and-steel Big City offices. Wow! The only offices I’d ever seen this fancy belonged to divorce lawyers born with gills, fins, and razor-sharp teeth. Given all the youthful, wrinkle-free faces and stick-like upper arms in the anteroom, I guessed that every doctor in these gazillion-dollar offices was a gazillion-dollar plastic surgeon.

As I sat waiting, a Barbie-Doll beautiful woman walked in. She must have had a lot of “procedures,” I thought. 

Only those of us familiar with the lingo of plastic surgery know this surgical term. I, myself, have never had any procedures, but after seeing this woman, whatever it is in the plastic surgery department that might be half-price this week, I want it! 

I felt an overwhelming desire to leap up and tell that woman how great she looked, but thought better of it because she might slam me with a #metoo suit.

My guess was that she’d been suctioned like a milkshake and carved like a turkey to look “young.” She was probably an old broad who’d had a lot of “work” ... another surgical term. 

(Ooops! No one uses the word “broad” today. I should substitute the more medically precise term “old woman.” Hell, she was probably in her late 60s.) 

To compliment or not to compliment? I was about to open my yap to say: “I know you’re an old woman in your late 60s who’s had at least one face lift, but the surgeon did a really good job! How much did it cost?  Will you also be getting a boob-ectomy? It looks like you need one ... or two, heh-heh.”

She was massive on top. Hu-u-uge. She could have put Stormy Daniels to shame. 

(It later dawned on me that my words may have made me more of a social pariah than I already am for past transgressions such as talking with my mouth full of single malt scotch, picking up sidewalk nickels that are actually hardened gum, slipping my grocery list into my bra and needing an archeological dig to find it, and plenty more.)

Fortunately, just as the words were about to fall from my face, a woman in a white smock poked her head from a doorway: “Come on in, Julie!”

As the ginormously endowed Julie tap-tapped down the hall in her tight skirt and stiletto heels, I stage-whispered to the receptionist: “How many face lifts has she had?” 

The receptionist narrowed her eyes, saying nothing. Plastic surgery could fix those droopy lids, I thought. I plowed on. “How much does a face lift cost, and how many plastic surgeons work in this office?”

“You’ve been referred to a dietitian,” she said. Some patients need to gain weight ... and others (she gave me a hard look) need to lose it.”

“Like Julie in the boob department?” No answer.

“Dietitian” was what she said. But her look suggested I could use a boob-ectomy, gut-ectomy, bum-ectomy, and (yes, sad to say) a tongue-ectomy.

©  Nicole Parton, 2019

October 22, 2019

Pie in the Sky

What’s on my mind? Get thee behind me, Satan!

It’s raining. It’s cold. It’s bleak. I need comfort.







But then ... I don’t want anyone to see my behind. 

©  Nicole Parton, 2019