Theyâre on a roll, doubly ply
Some kids TPd the house the other night, a dopey yet time-honored American tradition that Iâd feared was beginning to die out. At least I assume it was kids.
All I know is that when I took the 300-pound beagle out at about 9:30 -- he likes to eat a nice shrub right before bed -- the toilet paper wasnât there. When we woke up the next day, the trees were streaming with white double-ply -- ultra-strong, ultra-soft.
The yard was strangely beautiful in the morning light, nicer than Iâve ever seen it, a hint of Aspen in December. The reams of toilet paper blowing softly from the trees looked a little like Warren Beattyâs version of heaven.
âYou could hold a wedding here,â my wife said.
I immediately got a rash and threw up. Morning sickness.
Ironically, the toilet papering came on the week of our 27th wedding anniversary, an occasion my wife and I marked by not looking crossly at each other when one of the kids did something we didnât like. That was our little anniversary gift, not blaming the other person for lifeâs disappointments. It is one of the founding principles of a long and healthy relationship.
Twenty-seven years of marriage -- thatâs nearly a record for Los Angeles. It is all the more remarkable for the fact that 26 of those years featured children. Even worse, they were our children. Thatâs almost three decades of:
* Wiping noses.
* Wiping butts.
* Rushing out to buy birthday presents for kids they met yesterday.
* Yelling, âDONâT KICK YOUR SISTER!â
* Screaming, âDONâT FRENCH KISS THE DOG!â
* Burying deceased pet frogs out near the tomatoes.
* Digging marbles out of noses.
* Finding head lice in your soup.
* Staying up past midnight carving race cars for Cub Scouts.
* Finishing a million half-eaten McNuggets.
* Wiping gravel out of scraped knees.
* Finding nail polish in the fridge.
Our youngest is now 6, a great age, âthe age of reason.â He weighs 42 pounds, half of which consists of bug bites and Band-Aids. He is total mayhem. He is total joy. For Motherâs Day, he gave his mom a little clay flower pot decorated with exploding bombs.
âYour little friends,â I tell him, âseem to have toilet papered the house.â
âCool!â
âNot cool,â I say.
âDad,â says the boy.
âWhat?â
âMy friends donât even drive,â he says.
Indeed, my bride, Posh, seems to think it wasnât kindergartners who TPâd the house and trees. She seems to think it was the little girlâs high school buddies, for toilet papering isnât really vandalism. Itâs more like sending flowers, or a crate of holiday fruit.
âTeenagers would never do that,â I say.
âSorry,â she says, âbut thatâs what I think.â
I have met several teenagers, and they all seem to be above such behavior. Their fascination with themselves -- and their cellphones -- is almost a disabling condition. In that sense, I envy them.
âTPing?â a teenager would ask. âIs there an app for that?â
So we are still trying to figure out who mightâve toilet papered the house, you know, so we can send them thank-you notes. Thatâs the way we were raised.
I know they are generous people, because the next night they came back with shaving cream -- the boy chasing them off before they could actually shave the house.
If they come back, which I pray they do, I am hoping they bring towels and soap. Weâre always running low on those two things. And we seem to go through a lot of air freshener, if youâre keeping a list. Posh seems to prefer the stuff that smells of honeysuckle. I like the stuff scented of beer nuts and pea gravel, which is harder to find.
It is a measure of where we are in our lives -- counting every penny, saving every dime -- that I kept the leftover rolls of toilet paper, some of which were unused and completely intact. It is a good brand, better than the stuff we usually buy (unless Grandma is coming).
Too proud for handouts? Not me. These days, I am like that taxi driver in the song by the great Harry Chapin:
Another man mightâve been angry,
Another man mightâve been hurt,
But another man never wouldâve let them go . . .
I stashed the Charmin in my shirt.
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