Tags
American, Black Friday, British, humor, laundry, washing machine
A few years ago, I made a big mistake: I let my husband move to England before me. By the time I got here, he had already acquired the household basics. “But don’t worry,” he assured me. “I did just what you would do and got them on sale.” Oh, yeah, I was scared too. Luckily, he equated little and cheap with “on sale” so most of the POS dollhouse-sized crap items barely outlasted their six-month warranties, with only a few exceptions. That adorable little fridge can still chill almost a whole six-pack.
Then there was the washing machine he bought. Actually, it was a combo washer/dryer, and it made its home in the kitchen, a convenient location because its optimal load was about one pair of jeans. Or—if you wanted them to come out dry—one leg of a pair of jeans. This amazing mechanical feat took about five hours per load. So basically, I ran the thing 24/7, taking the (still-soggy) clothes out and draping them over every available surface. Then each and every board-stiff, crunchy item had to be ironed. No really. Everything. (Use your imagination. Yup. Those too.)
I tried to explain to the Village Brain Trust (ie Village Coffee Morning regulars) that very few Americans ironed their dishtowels. Or their knickers. A few admitted that they had heard such crazy talk before, but dismissed it as blatant anti-American propaganda. “I saw them ironing on Frasier,” I was told. More than once. Actually, once they learned that I was from Seattle, they asked if I’d ever met any of the Frasier cast. The show apparently attained cult status here, perhaps because of its ironing expertise. When I confessed that I’d never seen Frasier, I think several of them wondered whether I was actually some kind of foreign spy. Maybe from Wales.
How Americans Iron–
Like my dog, the washer was prone to fits. Every few months, my clothes washer wrinkler nemesis would regurgitate all the water in its tank, and have to be emptied by hand, usually when something urgent was occurring in the kitchen (like this).
Digression: I had a philosophy professor back in the day who said two things I remember. One was that cogito ergo sum actually means “I am thinking, therefore I exist”. The other was that it is impossible to hate inanimate objects. I disproved the first statement the first time I went to a professional football game , where I discovered that it is completely possible for large numbers of people to exist quite convincingly without doing any thinking at all. The second one went when I realized that what I felt for that washing machine was no less than pure, unadulterated loathing.
But I must have been banking some serious karma, because last month a miracle happened. The washer broke. The repairman who gave me the terminal diagnosis said that most people don’t dance at such news, and he usually sees very little singing. Then he told me that I was in luck because it was Black Friday and there were sales going.
Okay, another digression. Sue me. Here in England, they are a bit Black-Friday-challenged because a Thanksgiving holiday celebrating the Pilgrims’ successful escape from religious persecution in England has never really caught on here. So they can’t really have Black Friday shoppers trampling each other the day after Thanksgiving to get into Marks & Spencer for the doorbuster deals. Not to mention the fact that it’s England: they’d just queue up in an orderly fashion and if anyone attempted to jump queue, they would look at him very severely. There might even be throat-clearing.
As far as I can tell, they choose a random Friday in the lead-up to Christmas, and put washing machines on special. But here’s the good part. They have washers AND dryers. Cogito, ergo volo siccis vestibus! (I am thinking, therefore I want dry clothes.)
As a writer, I’m all about the HEA. (Happily Ever After) I’m not saying I’m obsessed with my new washer and dryer. It’s just that I’m so enchanted by the concept of doing an entire load of laundry in less than an hour that I roam the house looking for anything which might have touched the ground or human skin and thus needs immediate laundering. When the kids visited over the holidays, they told me I had a problem, and wondered if there was a 12-step program for compulsive launderers. Just because I tried to get them to give me the clothes they were wearing “for a quick wash”.
Cogito ergo quidam iudicent. (I’m thinking some people are so judgey…)
Thank you for the laugh and the insight on the combo unit…we are moving to a small home soonish and gave some thought to the space saving…but wondered about the time-saving, as it seemed in the stats to take a long time to do a load. Guess it does. And though I iron the occasional skirt or dress shirt, I’m not up for much else that would need pressing. So, so pleased to meet you on this glorious blitz day!
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I think if your buying strategy isn’t “Go for the one with a clearance sign that is closest to the door so you won’t have to talk to an actual human”, you’ll find that there is a spectrum of the combo models out there that range from “it would save time and energy to rinse clothes out in the sink and dry them with your hair drier” to “will actually wash/dry clothes in less time than it takes to watch the all LOTR movies.”
Good luck with the move. And stand your ground tall and proud on the (non)ironing! The world’s wrinkled masses are behind you (where, hopefully, their moms won’t notice the state of their shirts…)
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Too funny! Congratulations on the new washer/dryer, Barb. You definitely paid your dues. I’m not a big ironer (is that a word?). While I wear a lot of cotton shirts during the summer months that require ironing before I face the public, I handle this challenge by changing clothes before I go out. 🙂
Happy Blitz Day!
VR Barkowski
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Ah, yes the old shirt-switcheroo. The only other option is to live in New York, where your most sacred personal relationship will be with the laundry lady around the corner. (The other advantage to New York, of course, is that you can get great food brought to your door 24/7, so you can use the oven to store the clean and ironed clothing.)
Thanks for the Blitz!
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What a fabulous story! I have a friend who is in London at the moment and the complains about the lack of space, and the laundry. I got lost in that Frasier snippet. I loved that show. LOL Really enjoyed reading. 🙂
http://www.CorinneOFlynn.com
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Thanks, Corinne! I still don’t get Frasier or ironing, but I hope your friend is enjoying London. You should go visit her. Bring your laundry, mwahahaha. My daughter and I bolt for London a couple times a year to eat at Chipotles. (Don’t judge. Along with space/laundry issues, England just does NOT get Tex-Mex)
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I had Chipotle yesterday. No judging here! Thankfully, we live where they started, so they are all over the place. In Colorado, you can get some amazing tex/mex… but I love me a chipotle salad!
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I’ve never laughed more on a Blitz Day, though I’m thrilled karma buzzed me through yours.
You had me at one dry leg.
I love you, forever.
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Wow! Thanks so much Kelley. For you–TWO dry legs!
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(Happy Blitz Day!)
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“…if anyone attempted to jump queue, they would look at him very severely. There might even be throat-clearing.” This was hilarious!
I love the Frasier references. That show is practically an anthropological series on the American Human species Elitus Americanus.
Great Post. Happy Blitzzzzz!
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Thanks for the Blitz, Tanya! Queue-jumping reactions are very country-specific. I was standing in the (eternal) passport control line at Heathrow and and a well-dressed man cut in front of me. There followed much indignant glaring, throat clearing, and finally an indignant, “Really!”. But it took a pair of angry American backpackers complaining to a security guard to evict him. Contrast that with my trip to Venice a few months ago. We were on the vaporetto (water bus) and a beautiful, expensively dressed girl cut in front of a pair of little old ladies to snag two of the handicap-logo seats (she had shopping bags). Immediately the two black-clad women approached. They harangued the girl, who simply smiled and said something in Russian. Infuriated, the women appealed to all around them, with much hand gesturing. Voices escalated, and soon most of the boat was involved. About the time I thought there would be violence, the girl shrugged again and stood up. Triumphantly, the two elderly women took her place, but continued scolding until she was driven, defeated, from the vaporetto. I wanted to move to Italy and start wearing all black.
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You made my day! Thanks for the laughs and have fun with the laundry. I have a vacuum addiction myself. I go through those things like chocolate.
Happy Blitz Day!
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Luckily, it would never have occurred to my husband to buy a vacuum, so I was able to do a little research and get one with enough suction to practically hang from the ceiling. More important, it can handle the output of a long-haired dog. Thanks for the Blitz!
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Never…seen…Frasier…
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You’re…my…hero…(!)
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This post absolutely cracked me up! I spent a summer in (South) Korea and we didn’t have dryers at all! Everything got hung to dry, or carted wet to the one laundromat 1/2 mile away, to get dried.
Happy Blitz Day!
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Well, I can kind of get the whole line-drying concept (except for the ironing, of course). But the problem I have is that I now live in Scotland. MONTHS can go by without a glimpse of the sun. So your house acquires a kind permanent eau-d’wet-garment aroma.
Thanks for the Blitz!
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aaaw the dog is soo cute! haha loved this post, too funny. happy blitz!
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Now that we’ve moved to Scotland, the dog is no longer cute. She’s officially a “fine wee doggie”! Thanks for the blitz.
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What a cute post! And I get it. I really do! Make mine cup tea and have a very Happy Blitz Day!
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You’re right! If you’re ever in Scotland, we’ll have a cuppa and ignore anything that needs to be ironed. Thanks for the Blitz!
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LOL!! Barb, happy blitz day.
I totally get what you’re saying. Yes, I’ve had a stackable washer/drying…while I had 3 little kids, one being an infant and another one year old. Feel free to hate. I also had a pitcher–yes, you read right, pitcher–that took my rage to new heights. As in, it was impossible to clean. It was a “quick stir” pitcher and a wedding gift. About two years into our marriage when I confessed to my husband how much I HATED the thing, he said simply, “Well then, why don’t you throw it away?” And I did. That very moment. I had never felt so free… =)
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Wedding gifts from hell! For us it was the folding 3-tier silver cake server that would tarnish just from…actually, it was ALWAYS tarnished. I just knew that the second I pitched that sucker, Great-Aunt Mehitabel would visit expecting to be served cake on the (untarnished) damn thing. This actually happened twice before I wised up and told her it had been lost—along with the velvet painting from Aunt Josie—on the last move. This was only moderately successful. I was allowed to present cake on a regular plate, but Aunt Josie sent an even bigger velvet painting.
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During the 3 years I was at university I never ironed anything.
And now I steer clear of ironing bedding, towels, underwear, pyjamas and sometimes even jeans
Happy Blitz Day!!! 🙂
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No, no, no! Repeat after me: it is our birthright as Americans to never, ever iron jeans. It’s a slippery slope from an ironed in crease up the middle of your jeans leg to polyester pants with elastic waists. You must always be on your guard.
Feel better?
Thanks for the Blitz.
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Happy Blitz Day
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“if anyone attempted to jump queue, they would look at him very severely. There might even be throat-clearing.” <–I'm imagining this as Professor McGonagall 🙂 And since I'm going to be living in London for a few months in a little bit, it's good to know that I should brush up on my Frasier knowledge (haven't seen either).
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Personally, I’d skip the Frasier. But if you want a crash course in Brit-speak, you might take a look at https://barbtaub.com/2012/11/09/hello-world/
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You just don’t know how much you love a washing machine until it breaks. In your case, I’m surprised you didn’t put a hit out on yours. Glad you’re enjoying the new one. I’ll just be happy to get my old one working again (especially since tomorrow is laundry day). Happy Blitz Day!!!! 🙂
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Thanks for the Blitz! And here’s hoping your washer is feeling better soon.
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I imagine you could find a washer/dryer with a 12 step programme. Many cheers for my favourite Frasier clip – I hope you realise I waited patiently for a long line of comments before adding mine!
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Ah, but it was your comment I was waiting for! Thanks so much.
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Very funny! I’ve always wondered how anyone thought the kitchen was a good place for laundry. Happy Blitz Day!
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I know! But luckily, we’ve now moved to the Hobbit House where (since Harry Potter is not in residence) we’re using the cupboard under the stairs for a laundry room. My life is complete.
Thanks for the Blitz.
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Saying hello from Blitz Day! I visited London years ago and LOVED the area.
I just followed you on Twitter. Hope to read more from you.
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Thanks for the follow and the Blitz!
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Having lived in the UK in a student house with the absolute cheapest washer imaginable and water so hard my towels never actually became “fluffy” again no matter how much softener I throw at them (who needs fluff when you can have sandpaper?) I sympathise entirely! Glad you finally managed to get the new combo!
Oh, and Happy Blitz Day!!
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Thanks for the Blitz. And maybe it’s time to retire the towels?
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Thanks Barb, a great article and totally accurate with regard to Brits (being one myself and an avid fan of Frasier – not so the ironing thingy, not doing that, no way) Congratulations on your new acquisitions, sounds like you deserve them.
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Hi, Diane: I stand shoulder-to-wrinkled-shoulder with you on the ironing. (Frasier not so much…). Good luck with your new release, Short Circuit Time. Let me know if I can help with reviews, etc.
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OK. I love the name of your blog. I could go for some coffee now.
Great post and happy Blitz Day!
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Someone who gets the pivotal importance of the caffeinated life. Thanks for the Blitz.
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Love your post! We’ve had one of those combo washer/dryers when we lived in a small apartment in Philadelphia. It was a pain, but in the winter it helped keep the apartment warm.
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When we lived in the Castle, we kept warm via a demanding woodstove. Now that we live in the Hobbit House, we have a boiler, radiators, and (the new love of my husband’s life) a thermostat named Mildred. I hope you’ve graduated to better heat and laundry facilities.
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OMG! So funny! I had an itty-bitty washer many moons ago. I could roll it to the kitchen sink and attach a hose to fill it up. If I was lucky I could do one twin sheet at a time! No dryer… everything was hung out on the line.
Happy Blitz Day!
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That’s so funny! Our first dishwasher worked that way too. And about that well… We finally ended up using it like a giant, rolling dish drying rack. I hope you’ve graduated to better laundry facilities.
Thanks for the Blitz!
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HAPPY BLITZ DAY!!!!
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Hmmm, I popped in to help surprise YOU with the rest of the blitz gang, and instead, you ended up surprising ME. By your post, I mean. It was one of the most enjoyable posts I’ve read in a long time. Gee, maybe you should be a writer…. um, never mind… HA! (I guess ya know I’m gonna have to check out your books, now…)
Anyhow, nice to meet you, and Happy Blitz Day!
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Your comment just made my day! (Not to mention your blog tagline–cogito ergo spud!) I tried to comment on your blog, but kept getting error message. But I loved the kitty 3D TV.
Thanks so much for the Blitz.
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Barb, you are a rig! I love your humor and I share this same laundry wisdom-as you. My spouse bought a washing machine that can wash every blanket on our bed, but we still had the same tiny dryer?!
I love my new dryer ;D
Happy Blitz Day to you!
Your dog looks happy, too~
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Hooray! I’m a rig. (What’s a rig?) What is it about men and dryers? My theory is that men will happily get into jobs that don’t involve their hands getting wet. So wash dishes/clothes/bathrooms? No, there must be a technology solution for that. Cue the dishwasher, washing machine, and that weird spray thingie that zaps the shower every time you finish up in there. But a dryer? WTF?
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I truly feel for you, especially the part about the washer/dryer combo.
Enjoy your Blitz Day1
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Thanks for the Blitz and sympathy!
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Sounds like your husband had good intentions in getting things up and running. That counts for something! There’s nothing like a good washer and dryer. Doing laundry is usually not my idea of a good time so, like you, I aim to get that stuff done in an hour or less if I can help it.
Have a Happy BLITZ and Here’s to your new washer and dryer! May they work well to complete lots of loads for you in a timely fashion 🙂
~Nicole
#atozchallenge Co-Host
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Thanks for the Blitz, Nicole! I’m all about good intentions—until I don’t have clean clothes or dishes. Then it’s time for good technology.
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This has got to be one of the funniest posts I’ve read in a very long time! Thanks for making my evening! I especially loved “if anyone attempted to jump queue, they would look at him very severely. There might even be throat-clearing.” Now, I’ve never been to England, but I can only imagine that scenario. Priceless!
I love your doggie. My Sophie looks at me the same way when I take her toys to wash as well. Can’t have them smelling like her ‘ba-ba’ all the time. 🙂
You’ve just gained a new follower. Thanks for sharing and for the record, you’ve just been BLITZED!! Enjoy it! Have a great day. Eva
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Thanks for the Blitz, the follow, and especially the kind words. My love to Sophie!
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I’m feeling the washer and dryer love/hate thing. Funny about Black Friday. My daughter was studying in Morocco over Thanksgiving and suffered serious turkey deprivation. The two of us decided it should be world-wide Thanksgiving next year. Happy Blitz!!!!
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I like your idea, but somehow they just don’t see Thanksgiving the same way here. Turkey and stuffing and cranberries are THE Christmas menu of choice, so it’s hard to even get a whole turkey if you’re having your “Christmas meal” a month early. I had to get up at dawn and drive north to an organic turkey farm. On the way back to the car with my (OMG! Did I really just pay £100 for this?) turkey in my arms, I was surrounded by his squawking free-range girlfriends. I had a feeling they were all screaming, “She’s got Tom! Get her!” So…that was fun.
Thanks for the Blitz!
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Hysterically funny video of Niles. I remember that episode too. I know, I know…No, lilicasplace is not my twin, it’s my other blog. 🙂 Both of them are involved in the Blitz…because we love Blitzing people! And you, my dear, have just been Blitzed by me AGAIN! Soooo, Happy Blog Blitz Day. I love that I get to do it twice. 😀
Have a great night. Eva
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Wow! My first double-Blitz! (Okay, my first Blitz…) I’m so flattered that you liked the post, although I’m still mystified about why Frasier is the go-to TV show over here. Must be the ironing.
Thanks again for the Blitz(es).
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I’m late to the blitz, but was glad I came. Your story is quite amusing. Happy you got something that works a lot better this time around
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Thanks so much for stopping by, and for the Blitz!
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Love this post! I’m smiling from ear to ear. I have a washer and dryer thing too. (I now own an HE washer that gives me great delight.) As for the washer/dryer combo, my husband and I rented an apartment in Paris that housed one of those atrocities. And printed on a sheet of paper mounted above the “thing” was the admonition, “Do not run the machine in the evening as the noise irritates the neighbors.” So, you know, we could wash one leg of one pair of jeans per day. I learned to wash undies in the sink and let them air dry.
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Back in the States, we had an HE washer that came with its own DVD. I’d find my husband and the cat down in the laundry room, studying the video manual with the mega-gazillion wash cycle combinations, or just watching the clothes through the little round window. Sigh. Good times.
Thanks for the smiles and for the Blitz! May your HE continue to enrich your life!
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How did you put up with that teeny washer for so long? Never fear, your compulsion to wash will fade as the newness wears off. You slayed me with your descriptions of the Brits smiling severely at line jumpers. I lived in Naples, Italy, for a few years and traveled to London a few times during that period. The Brits were so incredibly orderly but the Neapolitans won’t stand in a line for anything. (They won’t drive in marked lanes either, but that’s another story.)
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Queue-jumping reactions are very country-specific. I was standing in the (eternal) passport control line at Heathrow and and a well-dressed man cut in front of me. There followed much indignant glaring, throat clearing, and the occasional sotto voce, “Really!”. But it took a pair of angry American backpackers complaining to a security guard to evict him. Contrast that with my trip to Venice a few months ago. We were on the vaporetto (water bus) and a beautiful, expensively dressed girl cut in front of a pair of little old ladies to snag two of the handicap-logo seats (she had shopping bags). Immediately the two black-clad women approached. They harangued the girl, who simply smiled and said something in Russian. Infuriated, the women appealed to all around them, with much hand gesturing. Voices escalated, and soon most of the boat was involved. About the time I thought there would be violence, the girl shrugged again and stood up. Triumphantly, the two elderly women took her place, but continued scolding until she was driven, defeated, from the vaporetto. I wanted to move to Italy and start wearing all black.
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Thanks for the chuckles! I’ve had my own issues with washers and dryers, so I know your giddiness at getting new ones=)
Happy Blitz!
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Thanks for the Blitz Katie!
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My gosh – I don’t know how you put up with that nemesis washing machine all that time! I would have done a happy dance as well when it broke. ha.
Happy Blitz day! 🙂
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Well, actually it was a combo guilt-load of Catholic school upbringing and Jewish momhood. There was NO way I could pull the plug on a (relatively) functioning appliance. But you better believe I happy-danced on its grave! Thanks so much for the Blitz.
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I’m so happy you got a new set – with a dryer! I had a hate relationship with my last washer and had never hated an appliance so much in my life. When I got my new set I was totally in love – what a difference. 🙂
Happy Blitz Day!
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Ah! A kindred spirit. It takes someone who knows true washer-trauma to really appreciate the joy of a machine that actually (O the novelty!) washes the clothes.
Thanks for the Blitz!
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Happy Blitz Day!
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This is awesome. Sort of a blitz for the readers 🙂 Happy Blitz day
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What an incredibly nice thing for you to say! Thanks so much for stopping by, and for the Blitz.
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Happy Blitz Day! Sorry I’m late to the party. We had a crazy blizzard yesterday, and I was distracted by all the things that came along with that.
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I’m so glad you stopped by. Sorry to hear about the blizzard though. Here in Scotland we had high winds that knocked down our fence and blew over some (solid cedar!) garden furniture. My brother in California says it’s tough there too—he had to turn the heater on in the pool. Maybe you could hold him down while I pound him?
Thanks so much for the Blitz!
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I loved Frasier. I didn’t know it was big in Seattle.
Laundry…there’s always something aggravating about it for me.
Happy Blitz Day.
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Well, Frasier is set in Seattle…but I’ve never met anyone there who is particularly into it. And now that I have my beautiful new laundry set, I’m a born-again launderer. If you’re ever in Glasgow, stop by for a cuppa and I’ll throw in a load of wash for you!
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You take me back, Barb. Laundry in Europe is the single biggest pain in the ass. We had three different washers — two of which washed only on SClding hot? That temperature turns your young boy’s socks and underwear pink. I shudder to recall how many billions of loads I did.
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It’s a concept thing that we also didn’t really grasp. (Yes, my husband is proud owner of several delicately pink undergarments that he avoids like the plague on days he’s going to the gym. Am I a bad person for enjoying that he ignored my warnings to separate colors?) But I have to admit that the whole concept of doing wash at lobster-boil temps that fuse wrinkles into every square inch…well, I just don’t get it. And then there is the “condenser” dryer which works (I’m not making this up) by ADDING water, and superheating it so that the moisture on the clothes condenses. Yeah, right. Sure it does…
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I hadn’t heard of a condenser dryer before I am now seechless. My lios are flapping. I am glad to be home.
It is the lottle, day to day things about living abroad that make you nuts.
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Thanks for the chuckle about ironing and the Frasier video. It has been my experience that if one uses the timer on the smartphone, clothes can be removed from the dryer ASAP and avoid the whole “ironing hassle”.
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One of the (few) advantages to only replacing cars and appliances when they’ve attained double-digit ages is that when we finally do go to buy, the new-to-us bells and whistles that now come standard just astonish us. Take my new dryer, for example. It beeps to tell when the load is done, and then resumes spinning with another discrete beep every ten minutes or so until I can get to it. Voila! No wrinkles (or at least, none that have me reaching for an iron). Life is so good!
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I had no idea that Satan had a line of appliances! That is quite the helpful feature for a guy like me.
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Happy New Year and a Happy, but late Blitz Day to you too! I have just bought a new front loader with a vaporizer cycle, cuts down the ironing. Yah!
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Fellow laundry-sister, I salute you! (I don’t know what a vaporizer cycle is, but it sounds wonderful.) I’m still flying on the Blitz buzz, so thanks for stopping by.
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Hi Barb! I saw this on #SundayBlogShare and clicked on it, then was horrified at the fact that I was NOT following your blog. Say what?? I am so glad I clicked because this is a hilarious and fantastic post! It made my Sunday! Loved every single word you wrote. 🙂
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ROFL. I had the EXACT same experience moving to the UK!
Also found my way here from SundayBlogShare, but I’ve followed so I will be back!
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I made it! Happy Blitz day! Looking forward to read more from you!
With great respect! A.
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Happy belated blitz! Love your commentary on cogito ergo sum. And I miss Frasier. But we moved from Montreal to Geneva and got a washer and aren’t able to have a drier in the apartment and I still don’t have an iron…
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