The day before

Tomorrow I will get up early and take Alison to work and then I will come home and put the blasted polyurethane on the floor. It is water-based; it can be re-coated in two hours; with luck, it will be dry enough by noon that an errant foot will not stick to it like honey. We are going to keep Colin up and hope he sleeps in most of the morning; pills and chilled drinks and bread and peanut butter will be set out in the dining room tonight.

We have a 50% chance of rain and thunderstorms today and then tomorrow is supposed to be sunny. That will be good for drying. I suppose I will turn on the exhaust fan and have regular fans blowing in the two doorways. It is advertised as low-odor so I will not have to have a magical pole attached to the applicator – you know, the kind that twists around corners, goes upstairs, goes through closed doorways.

THEN, after a break of a few days, I will lightly screen sand the floor and put on two more coats. Or, if this first outing is a disaster, I will not. My sources assure me that once all the coats are cured completely, we can, if we so wish and can find a time when the place is almost empty, apply oil-based polyurethane. But I am getting sooooo far ahead of myself.

Some people put white rugs down in the public areas of the house and then ask guests – you know, people who are invited into the house – to take off their shoes. I have always found that annoying. However, the thought has crossed my mind to charge a toll for walking on it when it is done. Of course, Sydney would be exempted and thank heavens I have one of those doggie nail grinders. It was one of those products I almost ordered from a TV pitch and then walked into CVS drugstore and saw some for sale.

For some reason talking Christmas trees popped into my mind. Were they on TV ads years ago? You know: call now and we will send you TWO – just pay shipping and handling. When the grandkids were quite little, I bought one in some store and listened to it go off all day long . . . and then an eyelid fell off, and eventually, the eyeball itself hung down. Something happened to the mouth – but it still sang. Gosh, I felt so sorry for it, I couldn’t call it pathetic . . . until I bumped into a box in the attic one spring and heard its little tune filtering through the cardboard. I don’t know how I finally put it out of its misery. In a way, I miss it: the clacks and clicks of the mechanism when the electric eye spied someone passing by.

Perhaps it is my spirit of Christmas past. Cripe, Scrooge had a pretty young girlfriend and I have a short, singing tree?