When we got the news that we would have to undergo
Intra-Cytoplasmic Sperm Injection in order to have children, my first reaction
(after googling that $hit) was to lament that I was never, ever, absolutely
never going to be a mother. Bryan
said that it would work out. We have two daughters. Point Bryan.
When our oldest daughter, Riley, two years old at the time,
choked on a miniature white plastic "Barbie and the Rockers"
microphone, I bolted for the telephone to call 911; Bryan
gave her the Heimlich. Point Bryan .
When our youngest daughter, Jordyn, five years old then,
leaped off a chair whilst holding a bowling ball, Bryan
said that she'd be fine and put a band-aid on her bloody chin. I took a
hesitant peek, saw that Jordyn's chin was now enhanced by a teensy tiny gaping
mouth and knew that she actually needed stitches. Point Jessica.
When Riley, at six years old, fell off the monkey bars, I
rubbed the woodchips off her, told her she'd be fine and commanded her to stop
crying and then I continued talking to my friend. Bryan
put Riley's arm through a series of calisthenics and correctly proclaimed it
broken. Point Bryan.
With Bryan
winning the past crises of our lives 3-1, our first family RV trip was an
opportunity for me to even the score.
Bryan, in his brilliance, decided that we should "try
out" the RV at a nearby location before embarking on our month long RV
trip this summer, to determine if we actually were crazy in thinking that we
could circumnavigate the United States of America in one month's time with our
two children, two dogs, and four cats, our biggest concern being how to handle
six animals, chiefly Scout, a geriatric cat, aged 16 years, afflicted with
diabetes and requiring 2.5 ml of insulin injected between her shoulder blades
twice a day. She also occasionally either actually forgets or chooses to forget
where her litter box is.
I selected Melbourne , FL
as our "fairly close to home" location because it is the first point,
as one travels south in Florida ,
where the ocean is actually that gorgeous South Florida blue.
I booked us a campsite at Wickham Park and wrote up a loose list of things for
us to check out including a cute bakery called Love Bugs, the Eau Gallie arts
district, the go-carts at the Andretti Thrill Park, the Kennedy Space Center,
and the Palm Bay Aquatics Center. Besides the fact that Wickham
Park was quite lovely and peaceful,
the only thing I can tell you about Melbourne , FL
after being there for three days is where the Wal-Mart and Home Depot are
located.
The trip began on Saturday with what we thought would be the
"crisis we'd remember." We placed all four cats into a fabric dog
crate with no litter box wrongly assuming that being thrown together in a tight
space that smelled like dog and then placed into a moving vehicle wouldn't be
traumatizing for them at all. Not so, my friends. They literally lost their
$hit two minutes into the trip. When the stench wafted into the front seat
region of our vehicle, Bryan asked,
"Should we just go to Target?" I replied, "We need to go back
home, NOW." Point Jessica.
In ten minutes, I cleaned the befouled cats, each of them
giving me a nice long thank you scratch from their back claws, and returned
them to a hose-able crate now equipped with a litter box. We had learned that
there were worse things than having cat litter spilled all over the car and
didn't we just feel blessed as hell to have learned that lesson only two
minutes into the trip? You're damn straight we did and off we went with a ha ha
tee hee about the poo incident.
We arrived at Wickham Park around 5pm, much later than
anticipated because we had never stocked an RV before (it's like outfitting a
college apartment for you, your roommate, and your roommate's eight drunk friends)
or traversed 2.5 hours in a vehicle containing ten bladders. We got the RV
hooked up before dark and went to bed at 9pm
just exhausted from our "tough" day.
When we woke up early Sunday morning, Bryan 's
foot literally squelched in the carpet and Scout, the geriatric diabetic with a
litter box problem, was cowering near there in a hidey hole, her legs and
backside wet. What we most feared would happen, had happened.
I soaked up what I could with half a roll of paper towels
thinking that it was a strangely large and rather saturated area that she
managed to destroy, even seeping into an under-bed storage area, and I told
Bryan that we needed to get a steam cleaner stat, all the while just dreading
the fact that my cat had destroyed his new RV because no matter what my lips
said, my brain coils knew that there is no getting the smell of cat urine out
of a vehicle that spends the majority of its life baking in the sun with sealed
doors and windows. I also knew that I would have to have Scout euthanized
before our summer RV trip because she just wasn't going to make the cut, not
after this.
At 7:30am , we
toured the Melbourne Wal-Mart, a nicely organized affair, with handheld steam
cleaners available for the low everyday price of $99.99. There went our entry tickets to the Kennedy
Space Center but, no matter, my mind was on the absolute ruination of Bryan's
spanking new toy which he had only been dreaming about for, um, perhaps just
his whole life or so, not to mention the impending death of a cat who has been
purring right alongside me through college, my wedding, several apartments,
three houses, and two children.
Back at the RV, I steam cleaned for my life a nook and
cranny area of our bedroom not intended for a stocky she-hulk type contorting
into the most unattractive positions possible while Bryan investigated a
problem that he had just noticed with our water hook-ups. For some reason, the
city water hook up, which normally supplies the RV with running water in the kitchen
and bathrooms, was filling up the "fill tank," which is just a small
accessory tank that one would use for a quickie situation on the side of the
road for hand washing or bathroom using while traveling. The fill tank was
overflowing to the point that water was streaming out of its hose input hole on
the side of the RV, the very side where the soaked carpet was located in our
bedroom. Eureka ! It was not cat
urine I was steam cleaning, it was merely water! Scout could live! I was knee
deep in water not, um, wait a minute, we have water leaking into our new RV,
egads!
Because we are RV rookies, Bryan spent hours checking all of
the valves and connectors, trying to determine if we had gone wrong somewhere,
finally landing exasperated on the couch not knowing what to do next and
needing a nap so that he could think straight. I'd never seen Bryan
not know how to fix a problem before, so I knew that we were in deep...water,
so I did the only thing a level-headed person could do, I asked Google. Point
Jessica.
Doing the best it could with the spotty campground internet,
Google found me a forum of experienced RV campers who had also encountered this
same problem with our model camper and, according to them, it was the result of
a tank or line leak, and not something that we had done wrong. This normally
would have lifted the weight off Bryan's shoulders except that his shoulders
were still weighed down by the nearly three gallons of un-dry-out-able water in
our bedroom, not to mention the fact that we had an ongoing water leakage issue
with another day and night of camping remaining, and also the fact that we were
not exactly all that close to home or our RV service department who had the
audacity to be off enjoying Memorial Day weekend in their own perfectly functioning
RVs. At this low, low moment Bryan
needed to tag out, so I offered to go to Home Depot to purchase a wet/dry vac.
The fact that he trusted me, alone in Home Depot, to pick out a tool shows how
very dark his day had gotten. Points nullified.
After touring the Melbourne Home Depot, notable for its
friendly greeter man, I returned to the RV in the role of rescuer and spent the
next two hours sucking water, not urine!, from the carpet. I also suggested to
Bryan that we just shut off the city water and use the water in the fill tank
until it was empty and then refill it again when needed and he agreed that that
was a good plan. In the interim, he had made an appointment to drop the RV off
before 5pm the next day, Monday, to
have the service department look at it upon their return on Tuesday. This meant
that we would have to wake up, pack up, and leave the next morning giving us no
time for our planned activities. The girls spent the entire, entire!, day
curled up with the cats and dogs in their RV bunkhouse room watching a kids
channel called kudo or judo or moodo or whodo knows because Bryan and I were
busy drowning!
We managed to squeeze in a home cooked spaghetti dinner plus
a bike ride around Wickham Park and a visit to both the playground and the dog
park there which were great. Right before he went to bed, I told Bryan
that tomorrow would be a better day. Points nullified.
Monday morning we awoke to dry floors, hooray!, and a
mission: get out of here as soon as possible so that we can drop off the RV to
the service department, 2.5 hours away, before 5pm. We used every ounce of partnership
to get those kids, those animals, and that RV rolling by 10:30am . Points nullified.
We had hungry kids by 11:30am ,
so we found a rest area and opened up the RV to have lunch right there in the
parking lot which was quite lovely. We drove along uneventfully for awhile after
that, so I decided that since home was close and the weekend of crisis was
nearly over, I could safely take a little nap. I went to sleep with the sun
shining and everything humming along fine and I awoke to dark skies and Bryan
saying that it was starting to rain. Just as we passed a rest area, something
black twisted up on Bryan 's side of
the windshield--it was the windshield wiper. The damn thing broke, right then,
while we were towing a 35 foot long house for only the third time, in a
downpour, with our children and all the life of our household snoozing cozily
oblivious and with a looming 5pm
deadline.
For as long as I have known him, Bryan
reacts to occurrences on the highway by pulling over to the side of the highway.
Once, he stopped on the side of a highway in Missouri to get what he thought
was a rare piece of Ozark glass, which turned out to be a blue Wal-Mart bag. He
has, thankfully, not lived that story down in nearly fifteen years. Point
Jessica. Speaking of Jessica, I am a person who would drive her hubcaps to
stubs before pulling over to the side of a highway because I am a worst case
scenario envision-er. Every time Bryan
has ever pulled our vehicle over to the side of a major highway, I have berated
him with my fear that we are about to be crashed into and killed just because
we pulled over on a highway. I don't mind dying, but I don't want to die for a
stupid reason, so if I ever do die because of stupidity, please don't tell me
and please just tell everybody else that I died in a more heroic manner.
So, while my usual response to finding myself in a vehicle
on the side of a highway is utter terror, for some reason on this occasion,
when I had a 35 foot long brand new house behind me as well as a vehicle
containing everything I most treasure, in a downpour, with a broken windshield
wiper and a 5pm deadline, I responded with laughter, sheer unadulterated hysterics
that I just could not stop. Oh, there's my husband climbing out my side of the
car and then getting onto the hood of our SUV to fix our broken windshield
wiper. Ha! Ha! We're all about to be killed, any moment now, by some idiot
ramming into the back of our house on wheels in this weather. Oh, ha, ha, hidy,
ho! I was a nut! A complete crack-up! I could not hold it together for the life
of me. Point Bryan.
Bryan got back into the car, climbing over the center
console again with a speed I have never seen before and there we went bumbling
down the breakdown lane with our hazards on, crossing over ripped up tire
pieces from semis and bumbling along the rumble strip they embed into the road
to wake up sleeping drivers, the SUV bumpity bumping and then the RV just
droning grumble, grumble and Bryan is trying to get our almost 45 feet of
combined snail vehicles back into traffic that is roaring past constantly, in
the rain, and then broomp, there goes the windshield wiper, broken again, and I
am just laughing my a$$ off with tears running out of my eye corners, so loudly
that I wake Riley up and she is, whether from sleep or my noises, confused as
to whether I am crying or laughing, whether we are about to die or having the
greatest time of our lives and I cannot respond with anything at all because I
have no idea myself.
Through my hysteria, I manage to tell Bryan that if we keep
driving in the breakdown lane, we will soon reach the exit for Old St.
Augustine Road and that there is a hospital there with a big parking lot where
he can park this rig of crazy and figure out what to do with the windshield
wiper, so he starts inching along again because it's a plan of some sort and
even though he can see nothing but sheets of rain on the windshield, he trusts
this insane person who used to be his wife telling him that he's doing great
and that he's almost there. Point Jessica.
I get out of the SUV to help him and he is just slapping all
over the place, screaming at someone, God? Mother Nature? The Devil?, "Is
it enough yet? Is this enough yet?" and I start smacking those horseflies
as hard as I can and it is unfortunate because they are on the back of his head
and his shoulders and I feel like I am just beating the crap out of him on the
worst day of his life, so I finally tell him to get into the car and move us
because we are obviously near their nest or something and they are having none
of it, so he gets us moving along to a safer spot, fixes the windshield wiper,
with a paper clip!!, and gets us back on the highway to the RV service center,
all in one piece, all alive, all before 5pm, and my God it is just the greatest
thing when he finally smiles and starts laughing with me at what we just went
through. The crises of all crises and he came out on top and un-toppable!