lost and found

October 30, 2003


OK, so my life is definitely unmanageable, weird, out of control, and downright silly. Last night I was icing after doing my shoulder exercises. I was stretched out on the bed with the ice pack draped over my shoulder and after about 20 minutes I started to fall asleep. Since I never fall asleep so easily, I didn't want to get out of bed to put away the ice pack so I flipped it up onto the top of the dresser. Where my glasses were. Amidst the sound of loose change hitting the baseboard radiator behind the dresser I heard a sound exactly like my glasses hitting the wall. That got me back on my feet pretty darn quickly.

Behind the dresser, I could see the blue ice pack, the velcro thing I use to move my arm around for the passive exercises, a whole lot of dust (who vacuums behind the dresser? don't answer that), and my glasses. Grrr. The dresser is heavy and I can't move it using just my good arm unless I unload it. Fortunately, I'm far enough along in the shoulder rehab that I can take the drawers out and lower them down to the floor (though I can't lift them back up). Emptying the shelves is pretty easy. With stacks of t-shirts, the sock drawer, the underwear drawer, and random stuff from the top of the dresser piled up all around me I manged to shove the dresser far enough away from the wall that I can get my leg behind it and push from the hip. Man there's a lot of dust.

Sneezing copiously, I grabbed the ice pack with my reacher and found the glasses underneath it leaning up against the radiator. The reacher grabbed those handily too. The right lens is missing. That's not surprising because it often falls out. The lens doesn't really fit the frame in the first place and the frame is held together with picture wire. I've been meaning to get new glasses but with everything else going on in my life and the fact that my prescription hasn't changed in 7 or 8 years it's been low on the priority list. The lens is nowhere to be seen by flashlight and I can't move the dresser any further without help. The lens has to be back there somewhere. It can't have vanished without a trace unless the laws of physics have been temporarily suspended in my bedroom. If that's so then why couldn't the law of gravity have been suspended on my birthday to keep my from tearing my rotator cuff in the first place?

Figuring I could search more effectively after a good night's sleep, I proceeded to attempt to sleep. I may have slept a few hours. I'm not sure. When morning comes around again, I open the curtains (actually door cloths from Tibet) and the shade so I can search with daylight. This is before breakfast, before showering, before getting dressed, before making coffee, basically before everything. There is no sign of the lens.

Once I'd searched fruitlessly past noon, I called Ned. He was on another call and promised to call back. I started looking for the closest optical shop on the Internet (getting a crick in my neck reading the laptop screen without glasses). When Ned called back, I still wasn't dressed, medicated, caffeinated, or fed. He said he'd be right over so I threw on some clothes. I'm sure getting dressed will help find it.

Ned moved the dresser further from the wall, stretched out behind it on the floor, and ran his hand under the radiator the whole length of the wall. Besides skinned knuckles we got a small metal Buddha statue, a carved wooden tortoise I brought back from the Galapagos, a tiny wooden elephant that Joan-west brought me from India, my lucky plastic Figment that my mother gave me from Epcot (I brought it to a Red Sox game in 1986 and Ellis Burks hit a grand slam. For the rest of that season I brought it to every game I went to. I wonder how long it's been behind the dresser and if this has anything at all to do with the ALCS.), a stick of Spray n' Wash, about $2.00 in change, and a picture of Nancy that I took about 7 years ago. Oh, and also a lot of dust and some Chinese fortunes that I must have thought were lucky. But there was no sign of the lens.

I took the front panel off the radiator, uncovering more dust, but no lens. Ned ran a fork under the heating element. I speculated that it must have gone down in back of the radiator between the heating element and the wall. I couldn't figure out how to take the rest of the radiator apart and Ned is not real mechanical (audioanimatronic, yes but not mechanically inclined). He refuses to look any more, believing that the laws of physics have indeed been suspended or some higher being has intervened and the lens has vanished forever. He starts calling optical shops and telling them my story. They all have the same answer: they need the prescription,which I don't have, and then maybe they can make the glasses in a week. Even that "beep beep glasses in an hour place" says they can't get me in for a new eye exam to get a new prescription for some time. Ned wanders back to the bedroom and gets down on the floor by the radiator with the fork and a knife. I start to dial my opthamologist to schedule an appointment as soon as possible. I've dialed all but one digit when Ned yells "Get in here!"

Ned tells me to lift up the heating element. I try and skin my knuckles. I have visions of having to call a plumber to take the pipe apart. It's in there, wedged up against the wall in the tiny space behind the heating element. It's wedged good. "Fork!" "Flashlight!" "Knife!" "Lift up the pipe!" This is like ER except there's way more dust and we're on the floor behind my dresser using kitchen utensils. "I've got it! I've got it!" Ned exclaims as he pops the lens out of the radiator with the fork. I start laughing hysterically and can't stop. I pop the lens back in the frame, tighten the picture wire kludge, and laugh all the while. We are high the adrenalin rush and the feeling of having prevailed over powerful forces. Though exactly how the lens managed to wedge itself in that small a space on one bounce is beyond me. We have done it!

Grocery shopping is an anticlimax after the high of finding the lens. The weekly circular advertised organic scallions for 50 cents a bunch only there are no scallions in the produce department. A store employee tells me "That's the trouble with organics, sometimes they have it and sometimes they don't. Come back on Saturday and if we have them then we'll give you the same price." No place has scallions, organic or otherwise, and we've forgotten the laundry. I've been wanting my black jeans back for over a week so we leave the groceries on the kitchen counter and go back for the laundry. Reunited with my black jeans and seeing quite well out of both lens of my glasses with not even a scratch from either the heating element or the fork, I'm almost OK with the lack of scallions.

Later on Ned calls back to tell me he's still on a high from getting the lens out from behind the radiator. Me too. Manic episode anyone?

Today's Reading
Notes and Sketches from the Wild Coasts of Nipon by Henry Craven St. John

This Year's Reading
2003 Book List


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Copyright © 2003, Janet I. Egan