Stand not amaz'd
I awake in a bundle; the pain of last night's fajitas acutely present in my distended belly. I drink my coffee, dull and acidic. On the drive to work everything looks yellow and swirling; I sip some water. I make it to work and muster enough consciencesness to open my car door and emerge - I've got zombie eyes and I can't recall if I brushed my hair this morning.
I put my things in my office and walk out. I stand looking across the hall at the public restroom. It's as if I'm looking through binoculars backwards - the door to the restroom telescopes out like in the movies. I dread what's inside - a three-stalled multi-urinal petre dish of hideousness. But to me, at this moment, it's goddamned Shangri La.
I open the door and the record of some horrific event undulates on the stale air. I take inventory to evaluate cleanliness before I make my selection and in the third stall, the oversized for special needs penthouse of a WC, that I witness man's inhumanity to man left there for me to find like some unholy Easter egg found by chance three months into summer. I flush, but time had cemented what this bastard had lamented. Didn't really matter since there was no postage stamp-sized area left unmolested by this damnation.
I want to leave. Take my business elsewhere, but those are the choices a blessed man gets to make, and I am cursed.
I choose the stall farthest from the filthy holocaust. I lay a foundation of paper over the seat until I am satisfied that I won't come into physical contact with the plastic urine absorber - seriously, nobody ever lifts these things. I settle in and count the soft shades of white on the fake gray marble door as I pull up the collar of my shirt to mask the monstrous environment like the unsuspecting soul who opens a door and uncovers a mass suicide a fortnight past.
While I was contemplating what would be a fair jail sentence for whoever violated the handicapped stall and thinking what a good idea it would be to have a shelf with a jar of that white stuff Jodi Foster used before examining the corpse in Silence of the Lambs at the bathroom door, I heard footsteps.
I can only imagine the poor guy's reaction at the killing fields in stall #3. Of course, the man chose the stall next to mine and I found myself in the uncomfortable position of being one of two human beings separated by a half-inch particle board divider at our most shameful. He had brown loafers on.
I tidied up and washed vigorously, dried my hands and left. I checked my mailbox and stopped at the drinking fountain. When I was walking back to my office I noticed a familiar face. A custodian and her yellow rolling menagerie of cleaning tools knocking on the bathroom door. She gave me a good morning smile and I returned, knowing full well the Hell that awaited her. I mumbled something in Latin and unlocked my office door. A simple prayer, may God protect you in the dark places you must go for I cannot.
Adieu.
I put my things in my office and walk out. I stand looking across the hall at the public restroom. It's as if I'm looking through binoculars backwards - the door to the restroom telescopes out like in the movies. I dread what's inside - a three-stalled multi-urinal petre dish of hideousness. But to me, at this moment, it's goddamned Shangri La.
I open the door and the record of some horrific event undulates on the stale air. I take inventory to evaluate cleanliness before I make my selection and in the third stall, the oversized for special needs penthouse of a WC, that I witness man's inhumanity to man left there for me to find like some unholy Easter egg found by chance three months into summer. I flush, but time had cemented what this bastard had lamented. Didn't really matter since there was no postage stamp-sized area left unmolested by this damnation.
I want to leave. Take my business elsewhere, but those are the choices a blessed man gets to make, and I am cursed.
I choose the stall farthest from the filthy holocaust. I lay a foundation of paper over the seat until I am satisfied that I won't come into physical contact with the plastic urine absorber - seriously, nobody ever lifts these things. I settle in and count the soft shades of white on the fake gray marble door as I pull up the collar of my shirt to mask the monstrous environment like the unsuspecting soul who opens a door and uncovers a mass suicide a fortnight past.
While I was contemplating what would be a fair jail sentence for whoever violated the handicapped stall and thinking what a good idea it would be to have a shelf with a jar of that white stuff Jodi Foster used before examining the corpse in Silence of the Lambs at the bathroom door, I heard footsteps.
I can only imagine the poor guy's reaction at the killing fields in stall #3. Of course, the man chose the stall next to mine and I found myself in the uncomfortable position of being one of two human beings separated by a half-inch particle board divider at our most shameful. He had brown loafers on.
I tidied up and washed vigorously, dried my hands and left. I checked my mailbox and stopped at the drinking fountain. When I was walking back to my office I noticed a familiar face. A custodian and her yellow rolling menagerie of cleaning tools knocking on the bathroom door. She gave me a good morning smile and I returned, knowing full well the Hell that awaited her. I mumbled something in Latin and unlocked my office door. A simple prayer, may God protect you in the dark places you must go for I cannot.
Adieu.
12 Comments:
The only way this could have been grosser would have been if that Elvis guy was in the next stall.
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Way to be topical! Today is the anniversary of Elivis' death; which coincidentally occured on the crapper.
I hear the roadie who found him remains upset about the "hey king, what happened in there, did something die?" greeting.
LOL! That is so wrong.
BTW, where the hell do you work anyhow??
An Ex-Lax factory, apparently.
I work at LSU. College of Engineering.
I swear, that stall made the one in Trainspotting look apealing.
Damn. That is the big daddy of all spams!
Goddamned hobo spammers.
There should be a time limit.
But then who would volunteer to regulate that one?
Not I -
Ben O.
Hey, stellar, you still alive?
Well... if it isn't Katrina. The scourge of the Gulf Coast.
I'm formulating a suitably scathing blog dedicated to your namesake.
Seriously, can you even introduce yourself anymore without hearing "ooh".
No. No I can't. And it didn't help last weekend when my boss kept telling my tables a hurricane was headed their way. On the up side, people now know they'd better not piss me off.
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