Local man has cold, suffers horribly
- Share via
SHERWOOD KIRALY
So I have the cold that’s been going around. As you may know, the
cold that’s going around is more than a case of sniffles. This is the
kind of cold that flattens you and destroys your will. I feel bad now
about calling our daughter a sissy when she got it last week.
I’m too sick to read and haven’t the strength to change channels.
In the last few days I’ve seen ads for the Balance Bracelet, which
apparently keeps you correctly ionized; a little brush that cleans
your eyeglasses if you scrape them with steel wool; the Clean Between
Machine, which does all that dental floss can do and more; and a
clipper that cuts all the hair in those tricky places.
These are ads I would never hear if I were healthy, because I’m so
fast with the remote. But I’ve lost my reflexes along with my
resistance. I just lie there and think, “Hunh.”
The funny thing is, I was about to beat this cold. On Christmas
Day I was well enough for the family meal, putting up a good fight
against the symptoms. My mood was fine. It had been an OK year, with
prospects for 2004. And then somebody read a Christmas newsletter
from Patti Jo’s childhood baby-sitter, Linda. I made a little
excerpt:
Linda works at Pasadena’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory as deputy
project scientist for the Casini mission to Saturn (arrival in July
2004). She’s been busy planning infrared ring observations as a
member of the Composite Infrared Spectrometer team while continuing
her research on the thermal properties of Saturn’s rings.
Her husband, whose duties at JPL include mission concept
generation, is on the National Research Council’s Committee on
Planetary and Lunar Exploration. This year was his first as vice
president of the Kansas State University Geology Advisory Council.
Next year it looks like he’ll be back in the planetary laboratory for
more measurements of how Jupiter’s atmosphere affects radio waves.
Their daughters . . . oh, never mind.
The effect of such a newsletter on a lazy man with embryonic cold
symptoms can be decisive. For days I’ve drifted in and out of
consciousness, dimly aware that Linda does more by 9 a.m. than I’ve
done in my whole life. My thoughts have been disjointed, feverish,
influenced by TV. I remember thinking that I’ve heard the name “Oscar
Mayer” since I was 4 years old and yet I know nothing about the man.
Today my thoughts have been more recovery-oriented. It may not be
too late for me. Maybe, with the Clean Between Machine, the Balance
Bracelet and the hair clipper, I can make a new start. I can regain
my health and my self-esteem.
Accomplish something.
I just have to be careful about dampness, and germs and comparing
myself with Linda.
* SHERWOOD KIRALY is a Laguna Beach resident. He has written four
novels, three of which were critically acclaimed.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.