Wednesday, February 6, 2019

Moments

I used to have the stereotypical blonde moment every now and then. Called senior moments now that my hair is grey, they are the times you forget something vital and don't remember it until your daughter, who lives 60 miles away and whose house you left an hour ago, answers the phone with, "We have your pocketbook, Nini!"

Of course, you knew she had since it wasn't in the grocery shopping cart when you went to pay and it wasn't in the car when you ran out of the store, waving hastily at the clerk to hold everything, you'd be back in two ticks. And then you weren't because you were tearing the car apart looking for the blessed bag that was an hour away at your daughter's house right where you'd left it.

And of course, everything you needed - credit cards, medical cards, driver's license, cell phone - were in that one bag you could be relied on to leave behind despite a taped note on your car's dashboard exhorting you to remember your pocketbook and the annoying little chimes on your iphone reminding you to grab your pocketbook on the way out the door. For the past six years you've been reminding myself with such reminders, and in those six years you've left your purse behind an embarrassing number of times.

Daughter obligingly took said pocketbook to the Post Office, wrapped it securely, and put it in the mail after being assured it would reach me the very next day. It did, intact and with a text message on the phone from daughter the day before saying it had just been mailed. Of course, she added sheepishly, she'd had a blonde moment of her own when, from the depths of the box in the Post Office clerk's hands, she heard my phone whistle to alert me that a message was on its way.

I relayed all this to my friend and cohort in aging, J, who has her own pocketbook issues. She laughed sympathetically, offered to take me with her on her trip to town, and reminded me to be sure to grab my bag before meeting her. I obligingly flung the strap over my shoulder, closed the door behind me, and met her at the end of my driveway. She grinned at me when she saw my purse and off we drove.

Ten minutes later the grin turned to grimace when she reached into the back seat for her pocketbook. "Why," she began, "where's my purse?" We both looked at the empty seat. She fumbled under the driver's seat. I searched the space between the driver and passenger seats. She got out of the car and looked in the empty trunk. Then she looked at me. I snorted. She giggled. We guffawed. "Who's going to take care of us?" we asked each other, only half in jest. Then we drove back to her house to fetch her pocketbook.






6 comments:

Tabor said...

Oh my, Pauline. This is delightfully miserable. I left a burner on the other day. Cannot remember ever doing that!!

molly said...


Aha! Now I'm convinced Pauline - you and I were separated at birth! I guffawed my way through this as I am often the bagless lady, and not by choice. My husband just rolls his eyes and holds his tongue. He is very logical and organized himself and he used to comment, until one day he was leaving on a business trip. We were almost to the airport when something made him wonder where he'd put his ticket and his wallet. Long story short - they were sitting on the kitchen table, forty five minutes back in the wrong direction. Of course he missed his flight, left the next day, no permanent damage except perhaps to his ego. That kind of thing was supposed to be my department! And I will admit it was a rare thing for him and a weekly occurrence for me. Thanks for the laugh. Making every effort to hold onto our marbles as long as we can!

Pauline said...

Tabor - I'm not yet at that point, though I did leave the oven on once and wondered why the stove felt so warm when I went to wash the pots after dinner.

Molly - sounds like we're twins all right! If you come up with a foolproof way to remember let me know. So far my younger sister's suggestion of attaching my keys to my purse has helped. I can't go too far in the car without the keys ;)

molly said...


My current purse has a 'leash' attached so I can call my keys to heel!

Friko said...

Botheration and Hallelujah, I am not the only one. I am about to tell a story along the lines of ‘all-round embarrassing’ too. Difference is that I was in full view of the public.

Pauline said...

Friko - I shall be over to read!