Adventures in an Urban Backyard

The divorce decree has been rescinded, and I am now allowed to share with you the incredible (and hilarious) story of Liam and his beloved (despised) weed trimmer.  Pop some popcorn, sit back, and enjoy.  I feel some film rights coming for this one.

To begin the story, you should understand that my husband has no love whatsoever for the outdoors.  Tennessee summers make him cringe, and that begins in February when we have our first fifty-degree day.  He starts grumbling about mowing the yard in ninety-degree weather at the beginning March–even if there’s still rare snow on the ground.  The poor man, with his Irish constitution, just can’t handle the heat and humidity that Tennessee (and many other parts of the United States) is known for.  When you add to this disdain for summer a disdain for most things green (What?!  The man is from Ireland!  He should revere green!), you get a stressed out mess, and that’s before the first flowers of April arrive.

In the past, we have been lucky enough to live in houses where most of the yard work was included in the rent.  Such is not the case with our new home.  By the time we moved in, the grass was already pretty high, and Liam got to use our lawn mower for the first time within a week of moving in.  Since we moved in May, you can imagine the sheer joy he must have felt pushing the mower around in eighty-some degree heat.  It was then that he realized the mower wouldn’t touch the weeds near the fences and steps.  With a solid determination, he decided that he would get a weed trimmer–after summer.

Of course, the weeds did not have the decency to stop growing until we could get a weed trimmer.  In no time at all, our weeds became more like…trees.  It became clear that the weed trimmer purchase would have to come sooner rather than later.  Cue Irish-boy excitement.  It is, after all, a tool, and men do love their tools.  Just…Liam wanted to love his new weed trimmer in October–or January, if at all possible.

Cut to the day he arrived home with his new weed trimmer.  He’d spent more than an hour getting a tutorial from the guys at Home Depot and felt like he was ready to go.  He handed me the box and asked for help putting it together.  I took that as he meant it and put it together for him.  After all, it wouldn’t do for him to throw it across the room in frustration before he’d even used it once.  In just a few minutes, he was dressed in his yardwork shoes, shorts, and protective eye gear.  I patted him on the back and sent him out to do his thing while I cooked dinner.

In five minutes, he was back.  Apparently, he’d managed to tangle the string already, and he needed my help to fix it.  Otherwise, it would be going over the fence into the neighbor’s yard.  I took the thing apart, re-spooled the string, and then returned to cooking.

You guessed it.  Five minutes later, he was back again.  Instead of having me work on the weed trimmer for the night, he decided to give up until he could get a different head for it.

Cue weeklong break between yard wars.  Liam then comes home with the new head and new string.  This one, of course, was supposed to be the answer to all of our problems.  Except, he was sure it was throwing the string every time he started it.  This particular head had two strips instead of a whole spool of string, and it was supposed to be much easier to handle.  After thirty seconds, however, he would look down and the string was gone.

By this point, I couldn’t possibly imagine what was going on to destroy so much string, so I ventured out to watch him in action.  He’d managed, in thirty-second bursts, to take care of most of the fence line, but the area around the concrete steps was really giving him fits.  I stood back at first, scared that flying string would take my eye out.  He got back to work, ruthlessly attacking weeds for thirty seconds at a time before replacing the string and going again.  I could hear the angry grrrrrrrrr as the weed trimmer attacked the tall grass around the steps.  It almost sounded like he was cutting through trees with a chainsaw (see previous post about Liam wielding a chainsaw for an excellent visual).  After a few minutes, I got brave enough to watch a little more closely.  It was then that I realized what he was doing.

“Honey…the string would probably last a little longer if you weren’t trying to cut the concrete steps in addition to the weeds… Just a tip.”

Visual aid submitted by MD Laidlaw.

Misadventures in Moving

As many may know, my husband and I just moved about a month ago.  We do this quite often, as we’re pretty much gypsies at heart.  This time, the move was less than two miles.  Considering the many things that have (humorously) gone wrong, I shudder to imagine moving across the country.  I would probably be a blubbering, mumbling mess right now.  If you’d like to sit back with a bit of popcorn or your favorite movie snack, I’ll go ahead and detail the amazing, head-shaking, (sometimes) laugh-out-loud misadventures of our latest move.

Getting into the house was easy enough.  Our new landlords are attentive and thorough, and they made sure we had everything we needed well before our move date.  As the previous tenants had never mentioned any problems with the house, save for a “funny noise coming from the dryer,” they assured us that everything should go smoothly.  We helped the moving company load and unload, sent them on their way, and then set to work unpacking in our new home.  (For those who are curious, it’s a Victorian built somewhere around the turn of the century with a complete remodel inside that did nothing to threaten the history of most of the fixtures.  We love it.)

A few days passed, and we were cruising along.  Then Liam started sweating.  If you know Liam, you know he just can’t handle the summer months.  His delicate Irish constitution just doesn’t allow it.  I told him to stop being a wimp and went on about my business.  He checked the thermostat.  It was almost eighty degrees in the house.  Whoops.  Quick call to the landlords, and an hour later cool air was once again surging forth through the vents.  Liam didn’t pass out, so all was good.

The first time I did laundry, the washing machine worked just fine.  Then I moved everything to the dryer, ready to hear this “funny noise” so that we could decide if it was something we could live with.  Let me tell you; this dryer emitted a wailing, screeching, ear-splitting shriek that would make a banshee sound like she was singing a sweet lullaby.  Funny noise?  FUNNY NOISE?  We laughed so hard we cried, and then called the landlords to play the “funny noise” for them.  These beautiful people had our dryer fixed within twenty-four hours.

While all of this was happening, I was engaged in the battle to end all battles with Comcast, the cable company.  The first guy arrived the day we moved in and promptly told us he couldn’t do anything to the historic home without permission from our landlords.  Of course, because our landlords are amazing, they handed it over right away.  The second guy came out and said he couldn’t do anything to our historic home period.  Furious, I called Comcast to ask them to send someone else out, only to find that the job had been marked complete.  They took a few days to get something or someone organized and then sent a “special team” out to take a look at our hundred-plus-year-old Victorian.  The “special team” said nothing could be done.  I tried one more time while Liam was threatening to start packing again to move somewhere else.  Finally, the company managed to find one employee there who wanted to actually do his job.  Two weeks after moving in, we finally had cable and Internet installed.

We went on vacation, probably just to get away from the craziness for a few days.  We came back to 83-degree temperatures inside the house.  You got it!  The air conditioner broke again.  About this time, we’re wondering why none of these things ever happened to the tenants before us.  Was it just time for things to start breaking?  Or is it really just my luck?  My husband says yes to the latter.  I do leave a trail of destruction behind me.  I’m writing a book about that, actually.

A/C fixed and on we go, right?  Right.

Then things just get weird.  These are a few moving pains that might happen to anyone, I guess.  Maybe.  Perhaps.  Where it moves beyond the normal is when the electric company showed up and cut our power for non-payment, insisting that we owed over six hundred dollars in past bills.  I couldn’t convince the guy that we hadn’t lived here long enough to rack up six hundred dollars’ worth of electricity usage, so I had to convince the electric company instead.  Has this ever happened to anyone else?  Anyone at all?  I didn’t think so.  It has to be just me.

On the very same day, after the electricity was turned back on, the washing machine punked out right in the middle of its cycle.  At this point, I’m starting to feel really sorry for our landlords.  They’re sweet people who really want to provide us with a great house, and my bad mojo is shutting everything down left and right.  Within a few hours, they had a new washing machine and dryer purchased (they figured they might as well, since we’d already had some trouble with it) and delivered.  We waved them off, threw in some laundry, hit the start button, and nothing happened.

Since I’m the technical genius in the house (hah), I checked the breaker box and noticed that one of the switches was flipped.  Hmmmm…  Seemed I just needed to flip it back into place and we’d be in business.  Only, when I did, every light in the house went out.  Truly.  I can’t make this up.  I blew every fuse in the house, and then Liam blew his.

This brings you up to speed on our moving adventures, but I can pretty much guarantee there will be more.  I might have to make the Adventures in Moving a regular feature, even though we’ve now lived here for about six weeks.  I can happily report that I finally found the shower curtains tonight, as well as the box of The Kingdom books and iPod dock I’d been missing.  I think that might be everything broken and then fixed again, and everything lost now found.  Knock on wood.  And then again.

What are some of your most outrageous moving adventures?  Or just outrageous adventures, period?  Do you ever feel like the things happening to you just couldn’t possibly happen to other people?  Let’s hear it!

What I Know about Soccer…

Sorry, Liam–football.

Almost every weekend for the past few months, I have been glued to the television (which many know is not a normal occurrence for me, anyway) to watch the boys of Manchester United play.  I’m the first to admit that I know one thing, and one thing only, about soccer–sorry, football–which is a ball in the net equals a point.  Simple enough, since the same basic principle also works for hockey (another sport about which I know one thing, and one thing only–sorry, M.)

I grew up in the southeastern United States–Tennessee, to be exact.  My blood runneth orange and all that stuff.  I cheered for football and basketball throughout high school, so I can tell you enough about those sports that I don’t look like a blathering idiot.  Football (American football [wow, this could get confusing]) is pretty much a way of life, especially if you live anywhere in the general vicinity of Knoxville.  I’ve been in living rooms where grown men have flung themselves to the floor and stomp or cry over whatever play just went wrong.  I’ve watched grown men dance in victory when a player they’ve never met does something spectacular.  I understand the love of the game, whatever the game may be

After five years of marriage to a man from Europe, I’m well aware that this same love translates well to soccer (sorry, football [real football, according to my husband.])  It’s only recently that I’ve begun to really pay attention to what’s going on during the game instead of burying my head in my laptop with my headphones in.  His favorite players are slooooowly becoming my favorite players.  The amazing feats of athleticism have me jumping out of my seat with excitement, even though I’m not entirely sure what just happened.  I’ve watched the table with interest to see how many points separate Manchester United from the second place team, feeling those tiny tendrils of joy in my belly when it looks like none of the other teams have a chance of catching up.  Suffice it to say, I’ve become a Manchester United fan, and I’m actually quite okay with that.

Now, since I’m late to the game, so to speak, I’m constantly saying and doing stuff to make myself look pretty stupid.  Of course, I have no idea that I look stupid.  I’m trying to show a little enthusiasm for my husband’s favorite thing in the WHOLE WIDE WORLD.  This means I ask questions sometimes, and that’s where the real fun begins…for him.  A sample of conversation, if you like–

Me: What just happened there?

Liam: Need me to rewind it?

Me: No, no.  I saw it.  I just don’t know what happened.  Why is that guy getting a yellow card?  He just fell.

Liam:  He fell into someone.

Me:  But he just fell, right?  He didn’t do it on purpose. 

Liam:  You’re so cute.

So, I don’t quite understand the rules, as I previously stated.  I know what puts points on the board, but the rest of the time I’m just trying to follow the ball around the field (sorry, pitch.)  Instead of trying to show my superior knowledge and interest by spouting the rules of the game, I tried to learn something about the other teams.  It’s good to know the enemy, right?  The only thing is, while I’m really turning into a true Manchester United girl, I’ll always have a soft spot for the underdog.  When you add to this the fact that I just don’t get it (and by it I mean IT), it’s like I’m begging for even more giggles from my husband.  A conversation from this morning, if you please–

Me: Oh, look!  It looks like the Wolves aren’t going to be relegated! (Wolverhampton is my underdog team of choice this season.)

Liam: You’re so cute.

Me: What did I say now?

Liam:  They aren’t the Wolves.  Just Wolves. 

Me: That’s stupid.  We call the Vols “the Vols.”

Liam:  Wolves isn’t the name of their mascot.  It’s the name of the city.  It’d be like saying the Manchester, or the Nashville.

Me:  I thought the city was Wolverhampton? 

Liam:  You’re so cute. 

Doesn’t matter.  I’ll learn.  And I’ll keep wearing my (husband’s) jersey with pride and spout off player names when anyone tries to challenge my devotion to my (new) favorite sports team.  I’ll still cheer when they score and ask stupid questions when I don’t know what’s going on.  Most of all, I’m pretty sure I’m gonna keep on loving Manchester United.

Congrats, boys, on your nineteenth English League championship!

In a Bizarre Turn of Events…

Things are never normal in the Barry household, but yesterday was one of those days were regular “abnormal” looked downright boring.  If you live anywhere in the Southeast, then you’re aware that the temperatures were nearing eighty degrees.  Yet, somehow, we ended up with a roaring fire in the fireplace.  To get to that point, we should start at the beginning.

Over the course of two weeks, Nashville has seen three wicked storm systems pass through.  During the first, six large trees in the neighborhood were entirely uprooted.  Now, because we rent, absolutely nothing happened to our own trees.  There is no doubt that our house would have burned down the day after we signed the papers if we bought it.  That’s just how my luck goes.  Instead of our house blowing down along with the trees, we just lost a pretty large branch.  It lay in the ditch through the next two storms, during which three more trees fell.

That still doesn’t explain the fire on a gorgeous, warm spring day, though you might see where this story is going.  You just can’t yet see where it’s coming from.  For everything to make sense, you’d need to know that we noticed a bit of water damage above our fireplace about six months ago.  The landlord sent in workmen to fix it, and after three days of tearing out the drywall down to the studs, replacing it with new, sanding, and painting, everything seemed peachy.  Until the first rain.  That was when we noticed that whatever we thought was wrong with the chimney wasn’t fixed.

More workmen.  More drywall removal.  More drywall replacement.  More water damage.  Finally, the vicious cycle seemed to be over.  There was still a lot of moisture in the bricks, and only a super-hot fire could fix that.  We hoped.

So, to really appreciate the whole scene, you must picture my city-boy husband wielding a tiny, electric chainsaw (which made a very unsatisfying “brrrrr-brrrrr-brr-brrrrr noise) as though he were a logger from the Great Northwest.  In the time it would have taken another man to cut up six branches, my handy husband showed that branch who was boss.  It was then city-girl’s turn to get a fire going in the fireplace without the help of newspaper or lighter fluid (I did really, REALLY want the lighter fluid.)  After a good hour of struggling, we had a wimpy little fire going.

I’m not really sure how it happened.  I guess I can understand now how a cigarette can cause a forest fire, because that tiny flame that I got started eventually burned white hot, and we had to open all the windows in the house to keep from fainting from the heat.  When that didn’t work, we pumped up the air conditioner.  I wish we’d thought to cut up that branch on Saturday, when a fire might have been a bit more welcome.

Suffice it to say, if there’s moisture left in the bricks, it wasn’t for our lack of trying.  Hard.  Really, really hard.

Edit:  My husband likes visual aids.  He humbly submits to you a photo of the fruits of our labor.

Language Barrier

Anyone married to someone from another country knows how frustrating the language barrier can be, even if the spouse in question in from another English-speaking nation.  You know what I’m talking about–those slang words from England, Ireland, Scotland, or even Australia.  Right in the middle of a perfectly normal conversation, it seems as though you enter the Twilight Zone and nothing makes sense anymore.  You know, like when someone asks for “chips,” and you bring him a bag of potato chips, or when he wants “crisps,” and you have no clue what he’s talking about?

Yeah.  That’s what it’s like in my house all the time.  Granted, my Irish husband has been in the States for ten years now, and he’s pretty Americanized from all of his television time.  On occasion, though, he’ll throw a “knackered” or a “banjaxed” into the conversation, and I’m left scratching my head and wondering if he’s lost his.  After five years of marriage, I’ve picked up my own bit of Irish slang, but not nearly enough to keep up with his sisters when we visit Ireland.  I spend most of the time wishing I had a dictionary so that could ask the way to the “jacks.”

It’s caused a fair few fights in the Barry household because neither of us can understand why the other can’t follow a few simple directions in English.  It’s not like I fire off instructions in French, and he’s never tried to ask for something in Russian.  Yet, there are times when we both stop and stare at each other with blank looks while our brains try to process what was just said.  Don’t even get me started on the tirades of incomprehensible Irish slang when Manchester United is playing, either.  I can’t keep up, so I usually put in headphones and write (as I am now…though I looked up in time to see Chicharito score!)  I just don’t have the mental capacity to watch the game and translate the Irish slang in my head.

What kind of language barriers do you hit every day?  Sometimes it’s even a matter of differing regions in the States.  Do you have a friend or a spouse that leaves you confused half the time, even though he or she is speaking English?  Let me know!