I have a high tolerance for disorder. My desk says so; my car screams it. I consider it Zen-like – something to be
admired. But then I got a dose of my own
medicine.
My wife, we’ll call her “Jen,” is the kind of person who
likes laundry to be put away. You know
the type – always with the folding and the finding a proper place for
clothes.
I do not share her obsession. I’m okay with clean clothes sitting in a
laundry basket at the foot of the bed.
I’ll find what I need. And if
what you need is a laundry basket, just dump the clean laundry on the bed. Have I napped on, or under, clean laundry? You better believe it. And if the clothes are straight from the
dryer and nice and toasty? I’m getting
drowsy just thinking about it.
But my rationale for not putting away my laundry is two….fold.
First, in some ways it’s very practical. It saves me time. I have two dressers – nine drawers. I have an armoire with two shelves and lots
of hanging space. I also share another large
closet with that wife I mentioned. The
shirt I’m looking for could be anywhere!
To open and sift through all those drawers and potential hiding places
for my long-sleeved Legoland t-shirt (a favorite) would take literally
minutes. But the laundry basket is like a
wide-mouthed drawer – open at the top, and with holes in the sides. I can peer down into its maw, or circle it and
find the shirt in seconds. Seconds! Consider that I get dressed every single day
– that time will really add up.
Second – and this is key – I know that if I don’t put my
clothes away, at some point, “Jen” will have had enough, or she’ll need the
basket, and she’ll do it for me. More
time saved.
This symbiotic relationship has served us well for the past
17 years of marriage, but apparently all good things must come to an end.
As our family has grown, so too has the sheer volume of
laundry we generate. Out of necessity,
we’ve acquired an absurd number of laundry baskets. And this means she doesn’t need mine
anymore.
We have at least six in use in the house. And right now four of them have my clean
laundry in them. They sit lined up
between the closet and one of the dressers, mostly out of the way, clothes
folded (by her) within.
It would seem “Jen” has developed her own high tolerance for
this particular brand of disorder.
Actually, one day she was struggling to put away my
laundry. She had a basket-and-a-half of
clean clothes to go and absolutely no drawer space left. She threw in the freshly-laundered towel. She told me I’d have to go through my clothes
and donate or toss that which I don’t wear anymore, and until that was done, she
was done worrying about it.
I told her I understood and supported her decision. Later that weekend I was walking through
Target and saw t-shirts had been reduced to $3.
I bought five. (They’re fully in
the rotation in laundry baskets “Bravo” and “Charlie” – I saw them this
morning.)
My unwillingness to put away my laundry is not hostile. I simply believe my time is better spent on
other pursuits. Pursuits that are more
fun, easier, or offer an immediate reward.
And no, a laundry basket-free room is not particularly rewarding. At least not to me.
It’s why this essay languished in my mind for weeks, then in
fragments in my notebook, and finally as bits and pieces on my computer. I thought it would be fun to write about
laziness, but when I started looking for a theme it turned to hard work. Like finding a place for my cherished teal
“Cape Cod” shirt I bought in the summer of 2001. I wanted to finish the essay, but other
essays were more fun or easier to write.
Likewise, I wanted to find a spot for the t-shirt, but I might wear it
tomorrow, so I’ll just leave it on top of the laundry basket.
So, like everyone, I am constantly navigating this delicate
balancing act between that which I must do and that which I would like to do.
Must do? Reclaim the
basement from the clutter caused by recent reorganization. Like to do?
Reclaim the high score in Temple Run that was recently snatched from me
by one of the children. Must do? Take my car in for service. Like to do?
Take my car to the mall and go to the movies. Like I said, a balancing act.
The balance works in our house because as hard as I’m
tugging on the “fun, instant gratification” side, my wife is there pulling on
the “responsible” side. But recently it
all got turned on its head.
Our cat, I’ll call her “Mao,” has a tendency to work herself
into a frenzy when she’s hungry. She
attacks her food, wolfing it down like a New York City straphanger devouring a
Papaya King hot dog as the 2 train approaches.
The result, in both cases, can be a little indigestion. In the case of the cat, this can lead to her
throwing up a little dry food from time to time.
It’s dry food, so it’s not a big deal – one can scoop it up
with a dry paper towel. We’ve all taken
turns doing this – even the kids. But
recently the cat threw up a little dry food exactly in the middle of the top
step leading to our basement.
Since it was in the dead center, there was little risk of
stepping in it, thereby negating the house rule, “you step it in, you clean it
up.” Also, the step is carpeted with
what, now that we think about it, we would call “Cat Vomit” colored carpeting.
Nobody saw it for quite awhile. I finally did, but didn’t have a paper towel
in my hand. Since it was so well
camouflaged I decided to un-notice it, quite confident that “Jen” would soon see
it. She didn’t.
I side-stepped the puke for the better part of a week. Then it became two. I decided she wasn’t going to see it, the cat
wasn’t going to eat it, and the kids weren’t going to step in it, so I’d just
clean it up. But at the moment I reached
this magnanimous decision, there were no paper towels on the roll. And the responsible moment passed. I had new “like to dos,” and The Steps Puke
was pushed down the list.
Look, I’m not particularly proud, but a third week went by and
it dried out even more. I was sure “Jen”
would see it any day now.
Ironically, we had all cleaned up other bits of puke in
other locations in this time, but The Steps Puke remained unmolested. One full month after I first noticed it, I
decided I had had enough. There were
paper towels in the dispenser, I was full of coffee, and ready to take on the
world. It was a perfect storm. I stepped into the living room and said,
“Fine, you win. I’ll clean up the vomit
on the stairs.”
“Jen” looked up at me – she had been sitting there folding
laundry – and said, “Oh, yeah, thanks. I
figured it was disintegrating and would eventually just disappear.”
I was speechless. As
laundry baskets stacking up wouldn’t get to me, apparently out-of-the way cat
vomit wouldn’t get to her.
She’s gone native.
And I don’t care for it. Now if
you’ll excuse me, I have some clothes to sort through, the donation truck is
coming on Tuesday.
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