Showing posts with label # laughter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label # laughter. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Funnies by Konnie Enos


Recently I had some funny events in my life brought to my attention. The first three happened in the same hospital. Twice I was “the patient”. All three times my stepmother, an employee there, was involved. The other nurse was different each time.
The first one happened while I was still in high school. Margo (stepmother) took Bonnie, our niece, and me to where she worked and introduced us to a co-worker. (Let’s note here that she and our Dad were attempting to adopt our niece and Bonnie and I are only TEN years younger than she is.)
Margo introduced all three of us as her daughters but her colleague didn’t react. She didn’t even twitch when we talked about our family members were coming to town to celebrate our graduation. 
She finally asked if we were graduating from sixth or seventh grade.
“No, high school. We’re nearly 20!” (Yes, we were behind and graduated less than a month before our 20th birthday.)
“You can’t be Margo’s daughters!”
“Well, duh. She’s married to our father.”
Then there’s the time I had surgery. Yes, anesthesia was involved. Margo brought me to the hospital.
After I was in the recovery room, a nurse was talking to me and I asked, “Is mom still here.” Yes, I did ask for mom.
“I can check. Would you like her to come in?”
I must have said yes because a short time later Margo was in the room with me.
The nurse came back. “Is this your mom?”
“Yes.”
“I thought so. You look like each other.”
Under the throes of anesthesia, I started laughing uncontrollably. “That’s impossible. We aren’t related.”
Margo had to explain she was my stepmother.
The third time, she wasn’t even in the hospital. Understandably, because it was the middle of the night she’d spent half the night and most of the day with me while I was in labor with my second child. Now Margo, Jerry, my mother-in-law, and two nieces who’d been with me were all at home in their beds. (One niece was the one Dad and Margo raised but never managed to adopt. The other one was Jerry’s niece.)
I crashed right after delivery and I woke up in an eerily empty room. I assumed my daughter was in the nursery because I’d been dead to the world.
A nurse walked in and was surprised to see me awake, but also clearly hesitant to tell me where my daughter was. Somewhere in her stumbling, tentative rambling, she managed to mention Bilirubin counts.
I interrupted her. “So is my daughter single or double-banked?” The poor nurse nearly dropped her jaw, while I continued, “I’m Margo Westover’s daughter.”
Recognizing her name, she sighed with relief and had no problem explaining the situation since I wasn’t going to panic about a high Bilirubin count. After all, I knew what it was, and how to treat it. I even somewhat expected it. My husband and I are different blood types. Yes, all five of our children had at least mild jaundice.
Mostly, I just find it funny that all three happened in the same hospital and involved the same employee, at least indirectly.
I did have another funny exchange with a nurse. This one happened after the birth of our oldest child.
I was tending my daughter when a nurse came into talk to me. As he was preparing to leave, he commented. “There used to be a guy working in Central Sterilizing with the same last name.”
“I know. This is his daughter.”
“I had no idea he was married. How long have you been married?”
I pointed to the infant in front of me. “Long enough to have her.” She was born a month before our first anniversary.
Now for one last exchange.
I had taken Royce to the eye doctor’s to pick up his new glasses and as we left, he asked me, “Do I have a grandma?”
Considering his two biological grandmothers are dead and he never sees Margo, my now ex-stepmother, the short answer was no, though technically, everyone has grandparents. His are just dead.
“What brought that on?”
The tech who assisted him told him to go back to his grandma.
“I am not that old.”
He shrugs. “I have classmates with grandparents about your age.”
Yeah, I know I’m an older parent, but that’s ridiculous.
Smile. Make the day a brighter day.

Wednesday, May 1, 2019

Laughter is the Best Medicine by Konnie Enos


One night as we were sitting down to dinner the phone rang. One of our then teenaged daughters answered it. It was a reminder about an activity that evening. Taking into account travel time, it gave the girls about 10 minutes to eat. We began dishing up while I turned to my husband to figure out who was driving them. It soon became clear their dad wasn’t any more eager than I was to go anywhere for any reason.
I finally offered my excuse on the assumption he, as usual, had his on. “I don’t have shoes on.”
About this point, Royce, who was at most in kindergarten, possibly first grade, appeared to be in the act of crawling under the table, he most certainly ducked his head under it.
“Neither do I.”
Royce pops back up. “Nobody has shoes on.”
Yes, we all laughed.
Anyway, since that day Royce has found it rather fun to see if he could get people to laugh, though there are so many times he manages without ever trying, just by being him.
Something that happened only a couple months into this school year is a case in point.
Due to recent events on area campuses, the school district instated random backpack checks. Since he has and will carry, concealed knives (preferably when not in school) I spoke with him about it.
His response? “The way to get through a backpack check is to be super compliant." He then mimicked going through his backpack, one item at a time. Considering he has at least four back up chargers, not to mention everything else, usually with spares, in his backpack, I was sure someone would give up fast, that and he had me cracking up.
What was even funnier is this February some girl at school got mad at Royce because she didn’t want to go to class, but as an office aide he had to make sure she did go to her class. To get away from him she told an adult my son had drugs on him. Mandatory backpack check.
I was laughing even before he described how they didn’t even finish one pocket before they declared my son wouldn’t have drugs on him.
Then there is his constant need to not be bothered when he is doing something he wants to do, like watching a show. I, however often need assistance and my children are handy people to ask for it.
One evening I wanted some help. I carefully considered who might be up and would respond. The obvious choice was Royce. I knew if I texted him he would come right in.
Within a minute he is in my room. "Why me? Why can't you ask my brother once in a while?"
I look at him for a moment. "Because I know you'll answer."
He throws his arms up. "Why do have I have to be the responsible one?"
I asked him because my very helpful daughters weren’t awake.
He still finds ways to make us laugh.
One morning my son was just entering the bathroom to get ready for school. I verified with him when he needed to be to school that day then told him and his sister to remind me at a quarter to eight to get dressed.
My son: "Why?" His eyes got big. "Are you taking me to school?"
"Of course."
He clasps his hands together and looks heavenward. "Thank the Lord!"
I assumed he was just glad he got to ride in our sedan rather than Dad's old rattle trap truck.
His sister adds: "You do realize what she's really saying is I'm driving."
He points heavenward. "Screw it!" He then slams the bathroom door shut but we can still hear him from the other side. "But I like talking."
His favorite thing right now is regularly calling his Aunt Bonnie and seeing if he can get her to laugh. He succeeds, amazingly.
But one of my favorite interactions with him happened over a year ago, about a month after his brother’s birthday.
He’d ordered something and expected it to be delivered that day. The only problem he found with it was the directions said an adult had to sign for the package. He full out panicked.
Several times he made sure I knew it was coming and that I was still there to sign for it.
Each time I told him I wasn’t the only adult in the house.
About the third time he did that I said, “You’re the only one in this family who isn’t an adult.”
“Wait a minute! You mean Tony can sign for it!”
“Yes. You’re the only one who can’t.”
Well now, as of today, my sweet lovable, and funny baby of the family can sign for his own packages. Happy 18th birthday Royce.
Smile. Make the day a brighter day.