Welcome to Day 5 of the 2020 RWISA "RISE-UP" Blog Tour! Each day, I will be featuring an amazing RWISA author and a piece he/she has written to focus on one of our two themes: A World Without Mom and/or How Living in This New World Has Change Me. Today's author is PTL Perrin.
WHEN THE WORLD WAS FORCED TO A STOP
by P. T. L. Perrin
…it
immediately created a toilet paper shortage. No restrictions had yet been put
into place the day I went shopping at Walmart. As always, the items I needed
were available. I loaded my cart and headed for the paper aisle. Wait! What the
heck happened? A single pack of toilet paper sat on the otherwise empty
shelves, left there, most likely, because of a tear in the packaging. I grabbed
it. The paper wouldn’t spoil because the package was ripped.
Two women,
one elderly and one a younger version of her, stopped in shock, just like I
did. I couldn’t help myself. Tears filled the older woman’s eyes, and I had to
do something. I handed her daughter the pack, fully expecting to find one
somewhere else. Besides, we were okay for a while. How could Walmart, of all
places, be out of TOILET PAPER? And why THAT item and no others?
In the
coming weeks, when nary a roll was to be found anywhere, I fantasized about the
hoarders having to eat it. Roasted TP. Grilled TP. TP Soup. TP pie. I hoped
they choked; until I realized that some of them might be families with kids,
and they’d be up the creek without a paddle if they hadn’t bought it all up
that first week. I began to wish them well and decided to order some online.
The next available delivery date was sometime in June, in two months, but it
wasn’t guaranteed. A friend suggested I search Amazon for a bidet.
Having lived
in Italy in the late ‘60s, early ‘70s, I was familiar with bidets, simple low
basins separate from the toilet with shower nozzles that sprayed upward. Back
then, they were a place to float toy boats, complete with a fountain in the
middle. I did not know their true purpose until I was much older and no longer
living there. We had plenty of toilet paper back then.
The bidets I
found online ranged from a hand-held sprayer, which can double as a cloth
diaper cleaner (for those with babies who still use cloth diapers), to a seat
attachment that requires no aiming. It appears that the sprayer might take some
practice in order to avoid a wet bathroom. But then, if you turn on the
no-aiming-required spray without your rear end covering the inside opening of
the toilet seat, you could give your ceiling a wash. At least you could with
the Italian ones. Amazingly, the guaranteed delivery date was in three days. I
clicked the button, quite satisfied with myself.
Neighbors
drive to a local farm, where a box of fresh veggies is placed in their trunk,
and they drop some off at our front porch. Other neighbors are busy sewing
face masks for a local nursing home. I gave them some colorful fabric and a
treasure trove of elastic left over from my long-ago sewing days. Kids ride
their bikes in the quiet streets, six feet apart from each other most of the
time. Couples walk holding hands (come on…they live together!) and greet other
walkers, keeping their distance and using their ‘outside’ voices. Everyone asks
everyone else, “How are you doing? Need anything?”
The air
smells fresher, the office is gradually getting cleaned out, and my tennis-pro
husband burns off energy doing yard work and cutting the hedge shorter and
shorter. By the time this is over, it’ll be six inches tall. We’re finally using
up the canned goods in the pantry, at least those whose expiration dates are
newer than July 2015.
The worst
part of this for most people is the loss of jobs and income, although we’re all
hoping it’s temporary. We hope to scrounge enough to pay the mortgage for the
next couple months, until the tennis courts open and people take lessons again.
Younger people with families at home are worried, including our children with
their families. Some can work from home, others cannot.
The systems
that should facilitate what the government has done to ease the burden are
broken and scrambling to find fixes. When this happens again, hopefully in the
far distant future, they should be prepared, and the process should run
smoother. The same goes for medical supplies and personal protection equipment.
There were no stockpiles when this virus shut us down. After this, there will
be.
We pray for
the sick, that they will recover, and for those who’ve lost loved ones. We pray
for those who are feeling the pain of lost income, especially those with young
children. We pray for the teachers who have poured themselves into making
lessons their students can do from home, and we pray for the parents of those
students. We pray for the homeless and the prisoners who have little choice in
anything. We pray for Bill’s mom in a nursing home, and for all those who live
and work there. We pray for doctors, nurses, hospital staff, first
responders…everyone helping others though this.
We were both
sick in January, and so were some of our kids and grandkids. Could it have been
this virus, this invisible scourge, that made us miserable for a while and then
left us to recover? Perhaps. Perhaps many people have had it unknowingly and
are now immune, with antibodies that can help someone who is seriously ill to
recover. In time, we may all be tested, and then we’ll know for sure.
For now, we
practice social distancing. We stay home and catch up on things we’d been
meaning to do for the last twenty years, and thank the good Lord we have a home
to shelter in. We follow the rules, not to protect ourselves, but to protect
the people around us, known and not known, just in case. We are witnessing the
spirit of the people who live here, who, when faced with calamity, reach out
and help their neighbors. We have never been prouder to be Americans than we
are right now.
The bidet
arrived right on time. It looks nice in its box, which will remain closed until
we run out of toilet paper, an unlikely issue with our kids and neighbors
watching out for us. Neighbors, if you run out, we have some to share. I want
to try that bidet.
Now about
those toilet paper hoarders…
Thank you for supporting today's RWISA author along the RWISA "RISE-UP" Blog Tour! To follow along with the rest of the tour, please visit the main RWISA "RISE-UP" Blog Tour page on the RWISA site. For a chance to win a bundle of 15 e-books along with a $5 Amazon gift card, please leave a comment on the main RWISA "RISE-UP"Blog Tour page! Thank you and good luck!
Thank you so much for sharing, Yvette! I appreciate you! Happy Mother's Day!
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome! I love your piece! :-)
DeleteThank you, Yvette, for posting Patty's story. I've enjoyed traveling from site to site to say hello.
ReplyDeleteAnd I appreciate you stopping by to say hello. :-)
DeleteI enjoyed Patty's piece and loved that she managed to add in a bit of humor. I also loved how she talked about neighbors helping neighbors. Thanks for sharing, Yvette!
ReplyDeleteYes, the humor was a nice touch. Thanks for stopping by, Jan. :-)
Delete