When I was about 6 or 7 years old we lived in a 3 bedroom trailer behind Lake Gas Company in Belle Glade. Daddy was working at Lake Gas that day. I'm not sure where Mom was on this particular afternoon, but Donna and I were alone in the trailer and we decided we were going to "help" Mom by mopping the floor for her. It was going to be a wonderful surprise when she got home and found what a great job we'd done without even being asked!
We filled a great big bucket with water and probably way more soap than was necessary, then we dunked that great big industrial strength mop into the bucket and swished it around a bit to get it good and wet. When we tried to lift that heavy sucker out of the bucket it was more than our puny little arms could handle and (oops!) we knocked the entire bucket over on it's side!
Soapy water went everywhere! All over the kitchen and onto the carpet in the living room! It was a disaster!! We frantically tried drying the floor with towels, creating an even bigger mess for Mom to deal with when she got home. Needless to say, we panicked!
We decided our best option would be to hide. But where? We'd be easily found inside. There was no place to hide in there! So, out the door we went, around back and up the ladder that Daddy had left leaning against the side of the trailer. The roof! Excellent hiding place plus it gave us a perfect view so we'd know when Mom got home.
About that time, Granny, who lived up front, arrived to escort us to Bible Study. We were very, very quiet. Not a peep even when she called for us! Granny, after viewing the carnage inside and not seeing us anywhere, immediately called Daddy for assistance.
He arrived much too quickly! When he found us on the roof? Well, it was ugly. This was the only time my father ever paddled my butt! I daresay, I deserved it, but we were only trying to help!
I blame this entire experience for my dislike of housekeeping! It warped me for life!
Cathy
Saturday, June 4, 2016
Thursday, March 24, 2016
The Three Fires
The Three Fires
I was twenty-two or so when I had my first fire
incident. I lived in West Palm Beach in Fruity Acres. By the end of my story, you will think I
lived in the right place ;) Robert and I were renting a home from a former
Glades Central High school
teacher named Robert Bennett. He was one
of the nicest people I have ever met, and was very understanding…I know from
experience!
One night I decided to fry chicken for dinner, which was back
in the day when I used Crisco in the can...and fried chicken with skin! Well the can of grease was almost gone, so I
turned on the stove and sat the Crisco can on it so it would melt and I could pour
it in the skillet. About that time Mr.
Bennett knocked on the door. I answered
it and we stood there talking for a few minutes when James, who was about six years
old, turned around and announced quite calmly that the kitchen was on fire.
He had been sitting in the living room floor watching
cartoons, and we had a big aquarium sitting where James could see the
reflection of the kitchen in the glass.
Note that when he made this announcement, he did not get up or stop
watching his cartoon. Mr. Bennett &
I ran to the kitchen, and sure enough, the Crisco can was engulfed in
flames. Mr. Bennett grabbed a rug off of
the kitchen floor and attempted to grab the can with the obvious intention of
running back outside with it.
Good plan….poor implementation. After he picked up the burning can, he lost
his grip on it and it fell in the kitchen floor. The flaming grease splashed out of the can
and onto his cowboy boot. The can went
out pretty quickly after being removed from the heat and falling onto a flame
retardant rug, but Mr. Bennett’s boot was burning quite nicely.
He began to stomp around the kitchen in an attempt to put
the fire out, which I must say to this day is one of the funniest things I have
ever witnessed. I thought about Dick
Vandyke…you know….Stop, Drop & Roll.
Anyway after a lot of stomping and slapping at the boot, he finally
extinguished it. Needless to say, the
boot was ruined. He said he was glad
that he was there and the only thing damaged was his boot…and the rug. I apologized as straight faced as possible
and offered to pay for the boots. He
took his rent money, but refused to let me pay for his boots. I never melted grease like that again, but
have laughed about this story for years ;)
The second fire happened right after I had Bobby. I was about 24….living in the same house with
the same landlord. I had bought a high
chair from a consignment shop that was real wood. I was stripping the old stain off of it so I
could refinish it for Bobby. The project
was working out nicely and it was beautiful wood. I had just finished putting polyurethane on
it…..and I DID NOT know that Mineral Spirits could eat through plastic. Therefore, after I had stained the highchair
and put my first coat of polyurethane on it, I poured Mineral Spirits into a
plastic glass and put my paint brushes in it to clean them. I then placed the plastic glass on the range
top until I needed it again. I wanted to
make sure it was up high so kids couldn’t get into it.
The next morning I got up and fed the kids, cleaned the
kitchen and started to sterilize Bobby’s bottles on the stove. I turned the burner on high and was fiddling
around making his formula when the entire stove whooshed into flames! Flames were shooting up into the range top,
which was also on fire since it was coated with flammable Mineral Spirits.
I freaked out and called 911 telling them my kitchen was on
fire. They asked who was in the house,
and I told them myself and my two sons.
I was told to get both children and get out of the house; they were
sending the fire department. I hung
up…then thought; if I leave that fire burning it is going to catch the kitchen
cabinets on fire and burn up all of our stuff.
So instead of listening to the dispatcher, and evacuating
with the children, I grabbed a pitcher and filled it with water. I proceeded to whoosh the stove with the
water and the fire immediately went out.
I was shaking I was so scared, but I knew the danger was over. I decided to call 911 back to cancel my
order for a fire truck. Apparently you
can’t retract a request once it’s given to 911…help will show up in full force!
I heard the fire trucks long before they arrived; they were
using sirens and blowing their air horns.
I was quite embarrassed knowing they were going to show up and NOT have
a fire to fight….although there were plenty of signs left proving I DID have
one. The soot was all over the stove,
range top & cabinets. Water was
everywhere too….which the Fire Chief got very upset about. Apparently you are NOT supposed to throw
water on an electrical fire. I assumed
you threw water on fire regardless of the cause. The Chief ranted about how you could get
electrocuted yada yada yada.
He then proceeded to find the source of the fire. He found my plastic glass full of brushes
sitting on the soot covered range top.
The mineral spirits had eaten the bottom out of the glass…I was amazed
because I didn’t have a clue that it could eat plastic! I blamed it on Robert since he wasn’t there
to deny it, and you could tell this guy had still not gotten over me putting
the fire out before his arrival! I think
he would have been pissed even if I beat it out with that flame retardant rug
from the first fire.
Then he said they had to do a report, which I was cool with
until they wanted the owner of the home’s name.
They had to copy Mr. Bennett on the report! I wasn’t sure how he would take it after
the boot and all….but he still didn’t evict me.
He actually laughed about it. I
cleaned up the mess and painted the kitchen.
Mr. Bennett begged us to buy that house with owner financing when we
decided to move to North Carolina. Which leads into the third fire incident…they
say things happen in threes.
After we moved to North Carolina
I had promised James that I would get him another dog, because he was very mad
at me for getting rid of his dog from Florida
named Cody. In my defense, the dog ATE
cats…we were moving next door to a cow pasture. I didn’t know what a cow would cost if Cody
ate it, but I was not willing to find out.
Anyway Donna and I took the kids to the Macon County Animal
Shelter and adopted two puppies that ended up having Parvo and died within a
couple of days. Well, since we had paid
for shots and spaying when we adopted the puppies the shelter let us pick out
more animals. So I got Boomer, who James
would not accept as a Cody replacement, and Donna got a big gray Persian
cat. I named the dog as soon as I saw
him, but Donna had not picked out a name for the cat when the third fire
incident occurred.
We had been waiting to get our income tax refunds back
because we really wanted to buy a new television. I had started cooking some hotdogs for lunch,
when someone brought the mail in and our refund checks were there. In a rush we took off to go to town to cash
the checks and to buy a TV. We had just
about made it to town when I remembered the hotdogs. Donna turned around and we hurried back home
to see if the house had burned down yet.
You could hear the smoke detector screaming as soon as we
got out of the car. We ran inside and
turned off the stove and ran outside with the hotdog ashes. We opened up the windows and doors to let the
smoke out when the poor cat made an appearance.
He was going HEEE HEEE HEEE.
Weirdest noise I ever heard a cat make, but I had never seen one dying
from smoke inhalation. Everyone started
freaking out about the cat, but I started laughing. I don’t mean giggling….I mean laughing with
tears running down my face.
Donna actually started to get mad at me. But when I told her I could just see us going
back to the shelter with this smoking cat to ask them to give us ANOTHER
animal, she cracked up too. She ended up
naming the cat Smoky. It was so
appropriate; I mean besides the smoke he was gray. Smoky and Boomer both lived very long
lives….and that was almost the end of my kitchen adventures.
I did mess up my brand new stove in the house we built in
Otto when I cooked tea bags until they ignited.
We won’t go there after the three adventures mentioned above, but I have
used a real Tea Maker ever since.
Karen White Williams
The Discovery of Eyebrows
The Discovery of Eyebrows
I have to start from the beginning for you to get the full
effect of this story. The Williams men
have never had an abundance of facial hair, but when Robert and I were young,
he kind of lost more than the average Williams.
He had this old Dodge Charger that was kind of rust colored. Almost looked like “The General Lee” from the
Dukes of Hazard, but without the stickers and the horn. Anyway, he was constantly adjusting on the
carburetor thinking he could make the car run better and faster, you know the
typical young male “fast car obsession”
Well, he made me sit in the driver’s seat and was working on
it, and yelled for me to “crank” the car.
When I turned the key, the carburetor back fired, and a ball of fire
whooshed past his head.
It singed his hair, which was kind of long at the time, but
burned his eyebrows completely off! The
mustache was a site too. I know what
you’re thinking….Karen and Fire! But
this was totally NOT my fault. I turned
the key just like I was asked! I
naturally laughed my butt off when he came out from under the hood looking like
the coyote after he had blown himself up with an ACME product. Let’s leave it
with the fact that his hair was fixable, but the eyebrows never grew back! He still blames me??
Now I can begin the story of the discovery of eyebrows! When Bobby was between two and three years
old; he spent a great deal of time with Donna and I….and Dad’s pigs. You see we would have to go sit behind Winn
Dixie in the evening to get produce and the leftover stuff from the deli. Dad had worked it out to get all of this pig
food by giving the managers a hog each when they were big enough. He had a LOT
of pigs!
One evening we were sitting in the truck behind the store
listening to the radio…waiting on the slop and playing with Bobby. He would go between my lap and Donna’s lap
asking every question that he could think to ask….then want to know WHY for
whatever answer he was given. He was an
inquisitive child, but was also apparently very observant as well. He must have noticed that his Dad did not
have eyebrows. He realized that evening
that Donna did.
He was standing in the front seat and was facing Donna
talking to her, when he gasped and traced her eyebrows with his finger. He said “Poor Donna”….she was like what? He just kept checking out her eyebrows and
repeating poor Donna when she realized he had never noticed eyebrows. She laughed at him and told him; look your
Mom has them too.
He flew from her side of the truck to mine so he could
inspect my face. He did the same thing
to me. “Poor Mama” I laughed at him too, but told him he had
eyebrows. He shook his head and
disagreed with me. He then went straight
to the review mirror so he could check out his.
Unfortunately, Bobby’s eyebrows were so blond you couldn’t see
them. That is when it really got
funny. He argued with us that he did NOT
have eyebrows. It was us who were
“Poor”.
Needless to say when he got home he wanted to check out
everyone’s eyebrows. He honestly thought
he and his father were the normal ones and everyone else had a deformity. He was a hoot to raise…he is still a
hoot…just a really big one. When he was around that age and didn’t get his
way, he would tell me “wait until I get big and you get little” and he would do
whatever. I told him it didn’t work that
way…turns out he is big and next to him I am little.
Karen White Williams
On The Foot
‘On The Foot’
During our ‘wonder years’ we lived on 3rd Avenue
in South Bay, Florida and our world was filled with family and friends and some
of the best times of my life. One of
mama’s oldest and best friends, Willie Sue Manning, lived at the far end of 3rd Avenue
and right next to her house was an old, broken down, abandoned house. Willie Sue lived right across the street from
one of the neighborhood's most interesting people, a little person named
Vernelle Simpson, who has absolutely nothing to do with this story, but I
always found her so interesting so she is worthy of an honorable mention
here.
My two best friends at that time were Cathy Mayo and Doris
Ann Peters. I hung out with Karen a lot
too and on this day, all four of us were looking for mischief. It was summertime, it was hot and we were
bored. I was about 12 or 13 years old, I
believe, and for some reason, we all decided to go explore the old, abandoned
house next door to Willie Sue. We walked
all over the neighborhood all the time so we may have just walked by it on the
way to our favorite shortcut to and from Cathy Mayo’s house and decided to go
check it out. We knew we weren’t
supposed to be there but it was far too interesting a place to ignore so we
sneaked our way into the old broken down house.
At some point, a window had been broken, probably by some kid that was
as bored as we were, and most of us ran around in flip flops or barefoot all
the time. Doris
stepped on a piece of broken glass and cut her foot, and much to our dismay,
she was a huge cry baby about it!
She screamed and cried as if she were dying and of course,
we all ran out of the house because we could hear Willie Sue coming, yelling
and cussing at the top of her lungs.
That woman could cuss a blue streak and she never held back! Doris was
bleeding and when Willie Sue reached us she started yelling at us for being
around that broken down old shack to begin with, insisting that we all knew
better. Then she asked the fateful
question: Where did she get cut?
Karen and I both insisted that Doris had gotten cut on the
foot, I mean, it was obvious, wasn’t it since that was where the blood appeared
to be coming from, but every time we gave that answer, and we gave it several
times, Willie Sue would get madder and louder.
She asked the question over and over: Where did she get cut? On the foot!
Oh, we knew that what she really meant was ‘where was she when she got
cut,’ but we weren’t stupid! We knew
we’d be in trouble for being there to begin with, so we weren’t about to fess
up to being somewhere we knew we weren’t supposed to be. Our answer remained firm: On the foot! The louder Doris Ann wailed, the madder
Willie Sue got and the louder she yelled and cussed!
Willie Sue wrapped Doris’
foot up then marched me and Karen home.
I think Mom was at work, but Daddy was home so Willie Sue proceeded to
tell him that we had been disrespectful and smart allecky to her and we needed
to have the…well, you can imagine what she said after that.
Daddy sent us to our room to await punishment. He made us stay there for the longest time and
we were having sloppy joes for dinner.
We really wanted a sloppy joe! We
had been out playing and exploring all day, after all, and probably didn’t
think to stop and eat unless it was a hot pickled sausage from the old convenience
store on the corner that we gobbled down on a regular basis.
One at a time, Daddy made us come out of the room, go outside
and cut a piss ellen club that grew next to the big trees in the front yard. Then it was back to our room to wait for him
to come spank us. Daddy rarely spanked
any of us…mom was the disciplinarian and the one to beware of, but that
evening, Daddy spanked us with our own little switches which he made a big
production of skinning in front of us.
He didn’t really spank us all that hard, though piss ellen clubs always
hurt. He lectured us about respecting
our elders. To top all of that off, mom
got in on the lecture too and that was never a pleasant experience. I was mad at Willie Sue Manning for years
after that but now I know how silly that was.
What she did helped to shape me and provided me with a lesson and a
memory that will never be forgotten. I
would much rather have gotten in trouble for being where I knew I wasn’t
supposed to be than for being disrespectful to Willie Sue so honesty really is
the best policy.
Donna White Johnson
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