Some very odd things have been happening around here lately.
We have had a spate of doormat swapping. No one knows how it started. Most houses have a doormat
or rug by their front doors for visitors to wipe their feet on before
entering the house. Some have personalised doormats with the words
"Smith Residence" or such like. Others have plain rubber doormats, or
multi-coloured ones or whatever. Every one, or almost every one, has a
doormat by their front door.
In the last few days these doormats have swapped places. We get up in the
morning and find that instead of our doormat we have the one from a few
houses up the road, and they have another doormat which does not belong
to them either; and every house has a doormat which belongs to their
neighbours from further up the road, rather than the one living just
next door.
The first morning this happened it was pandemonium out there. Everyone
was out in the street, in various stages of undress,
doormat in hand trying to find who has their doormat and giving away the
doormat left on their doorstep.
It baffled me why people should get out in the street with their night
clothes on, just to get back their own doormat. You'd be surprised what
some people wear in bed these days. It was quite a revelation I tell
you.
And I wondered why Mr Harrison from Number 14 came out of house Number 17 in his pyjamas with the young lady from Number 17 following him
in her nightdress.
Yesterday it all happened again. Someone at night swapped all
the doormats once more. And it happened this morning too.
Now we keep our doormat indoors. Whenever people visit we let them right
in and ask them to wipe their feet as they leave so as not to dirty the
outdoors.
Our neighbour on the left of us is an old man who lives alone. I saw him with a dog
lately. He must have named him "Help" because all day yesterday he kept
shouting from his back garden, "Help ... Help ... Help ..." He eventually must have found his dog
because he stopped calling it.
A few houses up the road a new couple have moved in about a month or so
ago. They are elderly too. I have not seen the old man but his wife is
frequently seen coming up the hill from town carrying a large shopping
bag. Her head stooped down by the many years on her shoulders, she walks
slowly past our house and on to hers a few yards further on. I noticed
once that she was followed by a cat.
A few days later I saw her again walking towards her home with her
shopping bag. This time she was followed by two cats, neither of which
was the cat I saw her with before.
Yesterday I saw her again. This time she was followed by at least six
cats. They were all
following her and miawooing like cats do.
I stopped her to have a word. I noticed that she
smelled of fish. So I ventured to ask whether she kept cats as pets. She
looked around her and said, "Oh no ... they follow me everyday from the
fishmonger all the way home!"
"You like fish?" I asked rather stupidly.
"No ... I hate fish, and the smell of fish," she replied, "this is for Hector!"
"Your husband?" I asked.
"No ..." she said, "the man who lives with me is not my husband. We are
not married. He is my lover and we live in sin, so to speak!"
I was embarrassed and mumbled something incoherent which even I could not understand.
"Anyway, his name is not Hector. It is Ivor ... Ivor Heavybottom!"
"Oh ..." I said wishing to end this conversation.
"Hector is our penguin. We keep him in the bath. He is staying with us for a while," she informed me.
"Is he on holiday?" I asked stupidly.
"Oh no ..." she said, "he is from the zoo. His mother rejected him
and the zoo keepers tried to get him adopted; but apparently penguins do
not like to adopt other birds' chicks. So the people at the zoo tried a
walrus. But the walrus rejected him too. So they asked us to look after
him until they find another animal who might adopt him until he grows
up. A crocodile perhaps!"
"I see ..." I said unconvincingly.
She continued, "The people at the zoo are
trying to find out whether fish are depressed. You can't tell
if a fish is depressed because they don't smile. It is easy
with a dog, when he is happy he wags his tail. But with a fish it's
different. He wags his tail to keep afloat in the water. The
animal psychiatrist says one way of finding out if fish are
depressed is to check their mortality rate. But when you have a tankful
of dead fish it is too late to cheer them up if they're dead."
A few days later I learnt from another neighbour that this old lady's
first and only husband wanted to be a lion whisperer. He achieved his
ambition just before he died trying to tame a deaf lion.
...can you nail them down?
ReplyDeleteWe now have the doormat indoors; so there's no need to nail it down. You did mean the doormat. didn't you?
DeleteGod bless, Tom.
😊
ReplyDeleteGod bless, CM.
DeleteYou could super glue the mats down and then people wouldn't take them. :)
ReplyDeleteWe've now decided to keep a doormat indoors. It is not ours. No neighbour would claim it. Maybe its from another street, or town, or country, or continent.
DeleteGod bless, Bill.
Thanks, Victor, for entertaining us with all the antics going on in your neighborhood. LOL! God bless!
ReplyDeleteIt's a mad world over here, Martha.
DeleteGod bless you.
Your imagination and ability to entertain know no limits!!
ReplyDeleteI make up/imagine these stories in my sleep, Barbara. Last night I dreamt I was in a marshmallow factory. When I woke up I'd half-eaten the pillow.
DeleteGod bless always.
You are funny! Bring the doormat inside!
ReplyDeleteYes, it is inside now. I hid it in the bathroom but it did not look in the right place there. It is now in the garage.
DeleteGod bless, Sandie.
You live in a strange but fun neighborhood. :)
ReplyDeleteI'll have to check and see if the doormat by my door is mine! :)
Better bring your doormat indoors, K.
DeleteGod bless always.
There certainly is a lot going on in your neighbourhood! LOL.
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
This doormat swapping thing is spreading to other towns, I hear.
DeleteGod bless, Jan.
Stand aside Mr. Rogers ... there's a newer and funnier neighborhood in town!
ReplyDeleteIndeed there is, Mevely. God bless you.
DeleteGet rid of the doormats, put slippers inside the door and have people take off their shoes when they come in and wear the slippers instead. You'd be amazed how much better it works.
ReplyDeleteWhy did I not think of this? Thanx Mimi.
DeleteGod bless.