Unless I wanted to spend the rest of my natural life chained in a windowless shed to avoid traumatizing the other citizens, I was going to need surgery to remove the tooth.
I was accepting of the idea until I found out that my surgery was scheduled on the same day as my friend's birthday party. My surgery was in the morning and the birthday party wasn't until the late afternoon, but my mom told me that I still probably wouldn't be able to go because I'd need time to recover from my surgery. I asked her if I could go to the party if I was feeling okay. She said yes, but told me that I probably wouldn't be feeling well and to try not to get my hopes up.
But it was too late. I knew that if I could trick my mom into believing that I was feeling okay after my surgery, she'd let me go to my friend's birthday party. All I had to do was find a way to prove that I was completely recovered and ready to party. I began to gather very specific information about the kinds of things that would convince my mom that the surgery had absolutely no effect on me.
I'm pretty sure my mom was just placating me so that I'd leave her alone, but somehow it was determined that the act of running across a park would indeed prove that I was recovered enough to attend the party. And I became completely fixated on that little ray of hope.
I remember sitting in the operating room right before going under, coaching myself for the ten-thousandth time on my post-surgery plan: immediately after regaining even the slightest bit of consciousness, I was going to make my mom drive me to a park and I was going to run across it like a gazelle on steroids.
And then she would let me go to the party.
I must have done a really good job pretending to be okay even while I was still unconscious, because I was released well before the anesthesia wore off. My mom had to hold on to the back of my shirt to prevent me from falling over while we walked out of the hospital.
I first started to regain consciousness while we were driving on the freeway. I didn't know what was going on, but somewhere in the back of my mind, I remembered that I needed to do something important.
THE PARK!! I didn't recall exactly why I needed to go to the park, but I had spent so much time drilling the concept into my head that even in my haze of near-unconsciousness, I knew that getting myself to a park was of utmost importance. I tried to communicate this to my mom, but the combination of facial numbness and extreme sedation caused me to be unable to form words properly.
I yelled louder and more urgently, but my mom still couldn't grasp what it was I wanted.
It was at this point that I decided to open the car door and walk to the park by my damn self. The only problem was that instead of being stopped safely near a park, we were hurtling down I-90 at 70 miles per hour.
Luckily I hadn't had the presence of mind to unbuckle my seatbelt, so instead of toppling to a bloody death, I merely hung out the side of the car and flailed around ineffectively.
A little shaken up by the incident, my mom decided that it would probably be a good idea to pull off at the next exit and get some food in me. We found a Jack in the Box and she led me inside.
It was pretty crowded, but my mom didn't want to get back in the car, so we found a table and she told me to wait while she stood in line to order our food.
I sat contentedly at our table for a few minutes.
But then I forgot what was happening and panicked.
I had to find my mom. I had to tell her about the park. I tried to call for her, but I still couldn't quite remember how to say words.
I began stumbling around the restaurant, shouting the closest approximation to the word "mom" that I could come up with.
My mom hadn't yet figured out what I was trying to tell her, but she knew that I was yelling and stumbling into the other patrons and generally causing a scene, so she firmly told me to go back to my seat.
I had remembered why I wanted to go to the park, so I obeyed my mom, thinking it would increase my chances of going to the park, thus increasing my chances of going to the party.
When my mom returned to our table with our food, some version of the following conversation ensued:
Me: Carn we go to the parp now?
My mom: The park? Is that what you want?
Me: Yes! The parp!
My mom: No. Eat your food.
Me: But moun - I can roun arcoss the porp. I can do it! I can go to the partney!
My mom: No you can't.
Me: I can! I can! I CAN!!!
My mom: Look at you. You can't even walk. You can't form a coherent sentence.
Me: I CAN ROUN ARCOSS THE PARP!!! I CAN GO TO THE PARPY!!!
My mom: You are not going to that party.
Me: NO!! NO! NO MOUM! I CAN DO IT! I CAN GO!
My mom: I said you can't go to the party. Now eat your food.
Me: MOOOOOOOUUUUUMM! WHY? WHY ARE YOU SO MEEEAAAAAAANNN?? WHY ARE YOU SO MEEEEEEEAAAAAAN TOOO MEEEEEE???
My mom: Stop it.
And then I started to cry big blubbery tears into my milkshake. It was at that point that my mom noticed all the people glaring at her and realized that, from an outside perspective, it appeared as though she was not only refusing to let her poor, mentally disabled daughter go to a park and/or a birthday party, but was also taunting her child about her disability.
And that's how I got to go to a birthday party while very heavily sedated.
I just now found this site. Thanx Allie...you have condemned me to several days/weeks of nonproductivityishness
ReplyDeleteHilarious. But I read it a week ago.Where did you go? I discovered your blog on Sept 13, was completely caught up by Sept 15, and you haven't written since. I need MORE MORE MORE!
ReplyDeleteJust wanted to say that reading this blog is the only time I actually laugh out loud on the computer. I would feel comfortable using lol to describe this blog, whereas with life in general I do not. Please keep writing, please keep making me smile.
ReplyDeleteOkay, so I've been reading your blog in reverse chronological order since finding it a week ago, and you're like crack. The awesome kind that makes you super happy and laughy and all the good stuff, not like...jittery and paranoid. Does crack even work that way? Meh, regardless, you rule. Please forgive my awkward weirdness, I'm a bit socially dumb so I'm sure I sound like a complete jackass. But an appreciative one, at least! Even if I'm not making sense. Okay, I should really stop now, or at least change topic.There! This entry about killed me. Especially the expressions on you and your mom's faces in the pictures. Thank you SO much for cheering me up after losing my crappy temp job last week. It sucked, but allowed me to buy food, so I kinda miss it. But being unemployed has given me time to read your blog extensively, so I guess things do balance out like my hippie professors liked to tell me constantly.On a lightly unrelated but still (I think) applicable note, I had four teeth removed simultaneously as a kid. When this was completed, I was far less coherent than usual, which means it's surprising I was able to make it to the waiting room to find my parents, let alone live to be 28. Anyway, my dad had the brilliant idea to go out for Mexican good as a reward for me being so good about the surgery. Not too bright a man, my pa, but his heart was in the right place. My food, however, was not. My only clear memory of that heavily sedated excursion is trying to sip Pepsi through a straw whilst being completely unable to feel my mouth or most of the rest of my face. Lovely, that.I've babbled your life away, and I apologize. You're made of win and all things awesome.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I type about as well as my 80 year old grandfather. *slightly unrelated* and obviously *Mexican food* are what those typos are meant to be.
ReplyDeleteI know I'm late in commenting, but Allie, I wanted you to know:My life since you posted this entry has been a seemingly endless string of Very Bad Things (including a niece with a ruptured appendix, a brother with an actual brain injury that made him bleed out of his ears, and a dear cousin who just plain died). Through it all, whenever I looked ready to implode with sadness, my husband would lean in close to me and whisper "Parp." That one word might not be able to bring people back from the dead, but it made me feel better every time. Thank you!Oh, and if your pain scale were on a get-well card, I would buy one for each of my hospitalized relatives, which is apparently going to be lots of people.
ReplyDeleteMy favourite part may very well be the part where your mom *facetables* and spills your milkshake. :p
ReplyDeleteI am so pleased I discovered this blog! The picture of the teeth on the eyes kills me (in a humorous way) Very very very very very very very good. A bajillion thumbs up
ReplyDeleteThis comic made me have two pregnants.
ReplyDeleteHilarious. HILRIOUS!! I'm laughing so hard I have tears in my eyes. This is probably the funniest thing I've read online. Totally sharing it with my friends. You're a brilliant blogger!
ReplyDeleteSo I was introduced to your blog for the first time yesterday....and I LOVE IT. I have already related in oh so many ways to your characters and am cracking up with my mom over some very familiar feeling stories. Looking forward to upcoming posts!alexa
ReplyDeletei hope the copyright monster doesn't kill me for getting a "SchmoHio" license plate, this year.
ReplyDeleteI spit out my gin and soda last night reading this. Then I snorted a few times and I'm fairly certain the dog thinks I've lost a few brain cells.Thanks.
ReplyDeletejeeez, you are so friggin awesome. your creativity is beyond incredible. you inspire me!
ReplyDeleteThis is soo deeply awesomeness! I like!
ReplyDeleteI cried I laughed so hard at this. And then I went back to the beginning of the blog AND READ EVERY SINGLE POST.It's like we're the same person, and it's a little eerie.
ReplyDeleteI literally laughed out loud while at work. Luckily my boss wasn't around. This post is epic.
ReplyDeleteMy sister had a rogue tooth in sixth grade! It was growing backwards into her nose. My mom would shove carrots up her nose and say "eat!".
ReplyDeleteAre you dead? I've been checking for a new update for what seems like forever!
ReplyDeleteAllie,I found your blog because this post got linked somewhere (Digg maybe? I forget...this was all the way last week) and I haven't been able to stop reading your blog, save to eat, sleep, work, watch TV, drive, daydream, and drool. (Sorry, I know you abhor alliteration). I've just finished reading the entire thing as I sit here in class, so I just wanted to leave you a message that says: I just read your whole blog.Thanks for these incredibly entertaining posts. I'm hoping you post something else soon.As incentive, I present you with a coupon good for One Internet, redeemable at any participating Applebee's.
ReplyDeletewhen you draw your mom, she looks like a cigarette butt.
ReplyDeleteA thousand+ comments! The epicness is mindbottling! If you aren't champion of the internet I don't know who is! I'm done with exclamation points now.
ReplyDeleteyou: "I'm going to blog every day!"me: thinking (It's been almost a month! what happened to every day?)
ReplyDelete