Monday, October 16, 2006

The life of an ironing board

It is a grey Monday afternoon here. So grey I am going to have to put the light on and it's only 3.15.

gray - see grey

grey or (esp N Am) gray, adj

It sounds as though it should be gray, but grey is more the norm (except N Am).

Anyway, I've just finished my ironing. On my new ironing board.

Husband was going to the shop the other day to buy a new toaster and I said, 'Get me a new ironing board at the same time.'
'Why?'
'Cos mine's broken.'
'I'll fix it.'
'No, just buy me a new one.'
'Another new one?'
'What the second new one I've had in 28 years of marriage?'
'Yes.'
'We've had twelve toasters!'
'Toasters are electrical; you expect them to go wrong. Ironing boards can be fixed.'
'Get me a new ironing board.' (This said through gritted teeth, with an or else hanging unspoken in the air.)

He got me one. Then grumbled that it cost all of £20. 'Could have fixed the other one.'

He's not really mean; he just doesn't understand how ironing boards can have a limited life span.

Of course what I really need is not a new ironing board but an ironer.

When we were first married, my granny came to have Sunday lunch with us every week, before spending the afternoon doing the ironing. She enjoyed ironing, and liked to be useful, and it's not as if she had to do it before she got her dinner. I'm not that horrid.

* * * * * * * * * * * * *

Last night we went to see The Shout. They were on at the theatre in the university - you know the one that hosts the avant garde and unusual, poorly-attended arty productions.

I think we managed to pass ourselves off as intellectual left-wing academic and spouse. At least until I tried to force the ice cube from my glass into my plastic coke bottle.

But The Shout were very good. They're described as ' ... a choir armed with attitude, sixteen megaphones and astounding voices,' and they performed at the Proms this year apparently. Using their voices and home-made percussion instruments they created an amazing range of sounds all around the theme of protest. They began with a Hebrew slave lament and went via the Jarrow marchers to the lost of New York who live in the unused metro tunnels, to a rant about the disappearing English apple. (Many apples were destroyed in this production.)

Even if we didn't understand some of it the sounds made were brilliant. You can tell you're in with the intellectua when the leader introduces one of the singers as, 'to the Shout what Naomi Klein is to the anti-globalisation movement'. Yes, right - that's good is it?

* * * * * * * * * * * * * *

Over the last months I have been helping a friend through a difficult time. All I want to say on the subject is that I earnestly pray that justice will be done. At the moment I feel like slapping a devious little sonofabitch. (I never use language like that normally but this is not a normal situation; please excuse me.)

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

well don't be coy - follow your heart and slap away!

as i was telling you about the choirs who make funny noises...
the honda advert that you must have seen: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2bspbPAeFqw

and the nintendo/mario performance: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXa_3cnp-NU

Anonymous said...

Wait! Wait! I used to know the difference between "grey" and "gray." Here it is: "Gray" is a color. "Grey" is a colour.

For what it's worth - even as an American - I use "grey." I don't know. It looks "greyer" somehow.

Congrats on the new ironing board, BTW.

Anonymous said...

My husband objected to me buying a new ironing board...because even with a swish new board he was still going to be doing all the ironing!!! Mwhahahahahaha I'm an evil wifey!

Elsie said...

"Grey = gray." That's all it said when I looked it up in my American dictionary. "Gray" (preferred) has a definition that's a quarter of a page long. What I don't understand is the theater/theatre thing. Same with the local shopping centre/center. My aversion to non-American spelling must be from having a British ex-husband. So I just get into my American ex-wife snit and stick with the U.S. versions of everything. Now that I have some new friends in the U.K., I'll try to change my wicked ways.

And here's one for your husband, we have an electric ironing board. Yes, it's true. The board itself is plugged into the socket, then the iron is plugged into the board. It makes it easier to put the board in the center of the room or wherever else you want it. I'd like to throw mine into the bay, but since I have a thing about wrinkles and use it daily, I guess I'm stuck with it.

All the best to your friend. It's nice of you to keep it to a slap, I'd probably want to "kick the crap outta him" (there's a good American expression for you).

Anonymous said...

Elsie - re: theatre/theater. I've posted before about having the word on a 6th grade spelling test. Of course the speller had "theater," but I knew there was another way to spell it so I put "theatre." My teacher (now a very close friend, believe it or not) marked the word wrong. Even though I proved it was an acceptable spelling, she still counted it wrong because I didn't use the speller version. Now she tells me she just marked it wrong 'cuz I was being a smart-ass. (But I still spell it "theatre.")

Anonymous said...

Us husbands try to understand our wives. I've replaced the ironing board cover a half dozen times. They seem to wear out, but the board works fine.

Elsie said...

Mary, I was a smartass, too! Aren't sixth grade teachers the best?! I think your spelling is lovely, and I wouldn't change a thing (except for the chip on my shoulder I have against British men -- I'm working on it!).