Monday, May 16, 2011

Genocide In The Garden

Imagine you are a tomato plant at Home Depot, and you see Mark strolling towards you. If you had feet I'd tell you to run. Run like your life depended on it, because it does.

Here's how it works. Mark goes to Home Depot and buys the plants. Flowers, tomatoes, pepper plants, whatever bug he has up his ass at the moment. He then brings them home, and sets them out back by the swimming pool. About three days later he will ask me if I'd plant them in the garden. By that time they are already a bit withered, and begging for water, but I do my duty. I stick the little buggers in the ground out in the back yard, and that's the last time they will ever see Mark again.

Every day I go out there and water Mark's plants. I weed the garden, and harvest anything worth picking. After my knee surgery two Friday's ago, I was unable to do that for about four days. That was too bad for the tomato plants, because in the South Florida sun plants become shriveled, and stressed within hours. Weeds have the ability to grow inches a day, and battle the garden plants for what moisture is left in the ground. In other words, Mark's garden is nearly dead, and I have given up on trying to save it.

Now this might seem inconsequential to you. So what if Mark can't keep a garden going without me to do all the work. Let the garden die you say. It only becomes disturbing when you realize that Mark has bugged me for years with the suggestion that we adopt a child. It's an idea I have steadfastly refused to go along with because it would probably interfere with my afternoon naps, and evening cocktails. Besides, I understand that they require a bit more attention than spraying them with the hose once a day to keep them alive and thriving.

8 comments:

  1. Trust your instinct. Don't adopt a real child. There are plenty of cabbage patch or similar realistic dolls out there for Mark to practice on...er Should I say for you to practice on once the doll has been abandoned by Mark.

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  2. Like I want a doll laying around here cluttering up the place.


    http://judysdolls.com/shop/

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  3. Ohhh, I just saw that National Geographic special about the women that have the realistic dolls. Mark is a perfect candidate. Then you could rig up a stroller to Chandler let him run and watch the neighbors jaws drop in terror as you call, "Come back with precious!" Like Jackass but in a cul-de-sac.

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  4. You could pretty easily have a container garden. Minimum work, easy to care for and everything can be put up high. I always make one for my mother since her hip surgeries.

    I've got a 7 year old that would take that child-longing feeling away in a hurry. A big big hurry.

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  5. Yeah, you need to borrow a baby or young child to let Mark "play with" until he loses interest!!

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  6. Let's see how many minutes that will take...

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  7. The sewing machine from Christmas has a nice layer of dust on it.

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  8. Mark can learn to sew baby clothes then.

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