DEBORAH M. PRUM

DEBORAH PRUM

Stories, Essays and Reviews

RADIO–WORDS YOU NEVER WANT TO HEAR

WORDS YOU NEVER WANT TO HEAR

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Words You Never Want to Hear

A couple of weeks ago, at the end of a cut, my stylist said, “Hmm…your hair looks strange.”   A week of high humidity had made me resemble a poodle.  Perhaps that’s what she meant. As you might imagine, her statement jarred me.

What she said made me think of other times in my life when I heard words no one would ever want to hear.

For example: My lab instructor at the University of Connecticut tells me: “You have the highest chemistry lab breakage bill I’ve ever seen.”

When I point out a dead fly in my salad to a waiter at a restaurant in Windsor, Vermont, he replies, “I’ll take the salad back to the chef so that he can remove the fly.”

My city slicker friends and I hike up Cardigan Mountain in bright sunlight and then trek back down in thick fog.  At the end of the trail, a man tells us, “You climbed down the wrong side of the mountain. You are forty miles from the lot where you left your car.”

While a surgeon is performing my Caesarian-section during the birth of my second child, I hear her say, “Oops.”

When we live in North Carolina, my three-year-old son’s preschool teacher predicts, “Oh yeah, fifteen years from now, I see him as a kid who will be partying hard at a frat house on a Saturday night.”

From a pharmacist in a rural village in Wales, “Your child has pinworms.” Then, after a pregnant pause, with nostrils flared, the man continues, “Most likely, it is a result of poor hygiene in your home.”

A letter from the elementary school, “Seven students in your child’s class have been sent home with lice.”

A phone call from the high school administrator, “Last night, your son and his buddies stuck about one thousand plastic forks into my front lawn.”

When we are pet sitting for a neighbor and our son announces, “Elizabeth’s corn snake is loose somewhere in the house.” (At the time, our family pet is a detestable Russian dwarf hamster that routinely bites us. For a second, I consider setting the hamster free in order to let nature take its course.)

When we are off on vacation and we get a call from our college student son, “They are fumigating our dorm because of bedbugs, so I spent last night at home.”

From a flight attendant at the Charlotte airport shouting at me and my fellow passengers in waiting area at 2:00 in the morning, “Hurry up. Get on the plane. We’re going to try to fly out before the next lightning strike!”

When I walk into my backyard, words from a mother whose toddlers are swimming at our house: “I’m not completely sure, but I don’t think any poop got in your pool.”

From a fellow participant in a Nia dance class, “You dance like you really don’t care what people think.”  (Hmmm…thank you?)

On the other hand, here are some words we might like to hear:

From your doctor, “Chocolate is definitely not fattening, especially not Snickers Bars.”

From your dentist, “I was looking at the wrong X-ray. You don’t have to have a root canal.”

And last but not least, from your tax preparer, “The IRS is sending you a HUGE refund this year.”

(Photo by Jen Fariello)
Deborah Prum’s fiction has appeared in The Virginia Quarterly ReviewAcross the MarginStreetlight and other outlets. Her essays air on NPR member stations and have appeared in The Washington PostLadies Home Journal and Southern Living, as well as many other places. Check out her WEBSITE. Check out her DEVELOPMENTAL EDITING SERVICES. Check out her PAINTINGS

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