I’m highest bidder!

A few months ago, I melted the charger for my Sonicare toothbrush. (I used the outlet behind the refrigerator and stored it on top of the stove. We had electrical issues.)

I would have just chucked the whole Sonicare system, but I had an unused brush head and when I moved, I discovered a second base. So I searched ebay for a new charger.

I bid on one that was $3 with $4 shipping. It came with yet another base, but it was a better deal than the one listed for 99 cents with $9.75 for shipping. Bidding escalated and I think the thing went for $29. So I bid on the 99 cent one, and found myself in a bidding war in the last 3 minutes of the auction (with two people scheduled to come to my office for a meeting at the precise moment the auction closed). I won. And am paying $16.50 plus $9.75 for a new charger. It’s cheaper than buying a new electric toothbrush, right?

Rob has used my ebay account to list items that were (ahem) shut down under his account, and I bought an answering machine from my last address, but for some reason, ebay still had my account registered at my Chicago address. Dude, New York had a World Trade Center when I lived in Chicago.

Stupidnova

Ugh. Every time Tommy Lee leers at one of the female contestants on Rock Star Supernova, I wonder, do they even want this job? Cree-py.

Yesterday I established that I am not yet a true Northwesterner in that I couldn’t think of something appropriate to wear to a volcanic, glacial mountain in August. I struggled and settled on a cardigan and my stylish black Value Village jacket. (It’s worth noting that I was there as a professional person and wasn’t going to be trekking more than a few feet from the car. I’m not totally stupid.)

When I saw the vulcanologist who was driving me, I inwardly slapped my forehead and thought, “Fleece!” I also remembered that last winter I vowed to get one of those Northface-ish jackets, so I better get myself to REI posthaste.

At Target last night, I put the employees to a little customer service test. While trying on sunglasses, I overheard a walkie-talkie buzzing with repeated requests for assistance to various parts of the store. This was followed by an automated voice reminding the crew that there were outstanding requests that needed attending to. For this reason, I decided not to bother asking for help lifting a 5-shelf oak-finish bookcase off the shelf, even though the box warned against injury, had a “Team Lift” sticker on it, and advised employees to call for assistance before attempting to maneuver the box by themselves.

I pushed the long box off the shelf and onto the bottom rack of the shopping cart (where the six-packs usually go). I balanced it horizontally across, making the cart too wide to fit through a standard-sized aisle. I slowly wheeled the thing to the checkout lanes, and made my way to the one cashier whose lane would accommodate me. I overheard another checker say to an old couple, “Would you like some help out to your car?” I thought, “Good, someone will help me with this.”

I paid for the bookcase (and sunglasses and impulse-purchased 3-pack of pocket Kleenex) and the cashier said, “Have a nice evening.”

I attempted to move the cart through the automatic doors, but misjudged my positioning and got the corner stuck in the doorframe. An employee with a large dolly saw this, and rushed forward to help dislodge the bookcase from the door. Then he said, “Have a nice evening,” and allowed me to continue to make my way to my car, unassisted, with a six-foot long box clearly labeled, “Team Lift.”

At the car, I slid the box off the lower cart rack, tilted it to its full height, and then leaned it on my back bumper. With the car now supporting the weight of the box (Way to go, team!), I shoved the bookcase into my SUV.

This was quite simple, physically and emotionally, compared to the time I arrived at my Alexandria, Va., apartment to discover there was no elevator and I couldn’t carry my TV up three flights of stairs, so I had to grab the first dude I could catch on the stairs. However, once when I removed the box from the shelf and once when I pushed the thing into my car, a finger got compressed under the full weight of the bookcase, and it felt a bit like I’d dropped a scuba tank on it.

Think I’ll wait for Rob to get home before I attempt to bring the thing into the house. Although I bet his Herculean mother could carry it with one hand.

Identity crisis

I’m receiving conflicting signals here. On the one hand, I want to live a clutterfree, Zen existence. If I’m not using a half-empty bottle of face cream, throw it away! No sense filling my cupboards with stained Tupperware and ill-fitting lids.

Then again, I live on a stream and work for an eco-friendly institution. Must recycle, recycle, recycle. (The stream has nothing to do with anything, except we have so much trash from moving that it’s sort of piled next to our garage door because we haven’t yet received our trash bin. Yesterday when I got home from work, there were sheets of newspaper in the trees and a piece of styrofoam — from the new microwave, I think — halfway down the slope to the stream. Styrofoam! Think of the salmon!)

My Scaling Down book tells me to throw away all empty margarine cups. My Conservative Sustainability newsletter tells me to provide my own containers when picking up take-out.

The last newspaper where I worked had a column called “Where do I take my …” It offered advice for disposing of sheet metal, old VHS tapes and the like. Every time I read the word “landfill,” I heard it in my head as “LANDFILL!” A personal attack.

Perfect life

When I first moved in with Rob, I’d get really excited at about 3 o’clock every day, because that meant I got to see him in a few hours.

Right now, I’m giddy because I get to go home to our house!

Clorox v. Tide

I love love love the Clorox bleach pen. It cleans the grout on my kitchen counter so nicely. Not so impressed with the Tide to Go pen. It does not satisfactorily remove food stains from my clothes.

This is why employees should not eat lunch at their desks. Not that I haven’t been known to drip salsa on my pants while at the cafeteria. But yesterday, it was a splash of pomodoro sauce on my white button-down blouse. Today, salad dressing on my khakis. Oil and khaki do not mix.

So, homeownership rocks. I’ve been eating at my desk so I can leave work at 4 and rush over to Lowe’s. (Actually went twice yesterday, because I got the wrong kind of kitchen faucet at first. Also got three trellises for the roses on the first trip and a showerhead on the second.)

The house is beautifully decorated with tons of my grandmother’s furniture and pieces of Asian art. Rob returned Friday to find many an unfamiliar item in his new home. Fortunately he likes all of them. Or at least hasn’t complained.

The aforementioned (below) photos will have to wait til we get our internet hooked up Thursday.