The washing machine launders me on a weekly rotation. This
only costs a dollar-fifty. To be clean only requires six quarters. No more, no
less. This is chump change.
Sometimes as I spin, I look out through the frosty,
bubble-obscured glass. Sometimes, I see your face. Usually, it is just my own
reflection.
I keep my phone in a waterproof case. It works most of the
time, but I do need to upgrade more than most people, usually before my
contracts expire. That is not chump change.
Sometimes people ask why I do this. I shrug my shoulders and
check the settings on my oxygen tank. I take my mouth off of the mouthpiece as
if I might speak, but I only spit into my facemask and rub my saliva around to
prevent it from fogging up. I like to be able to see as I spin.
Once the manager came out and stopped the machine. He asked
me what the hell I was doing. I told him. He asked why. I told him. The manager
nodded sadly, told me it didn’t matter much to him as long as I was a paying
customer, and asked that, from now on, I use a large quilt or something and
wrap it around my oxygen tank to keep from banging up his machines. That
didn’t seem like too much to ask. I agreed. I always wrap my tank in the same
blanket. It has a Holly Hobbie pattern on it. It used to belong to my sister.
This is fitting.
So I spin and I spin. I go nowhere, but at least I get to
travel. And compared to airline tickets, compared to drugs, even compared to
beer or malt liquor, this is chump change.
And as I spin, I think.
And the world spins on with or without me.
And with or without you, I spin on.
And that makes it worth every damn penny.
Showing posts with label flash fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label flash fiction. Show all posts
Thursday, August 2, 2012
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