Written for "Take my Phrase, Please." Uses phrase, "Plaid is my friend." |
Plaid is my friend like my therapist was. Who, like my now-estranged husband, was what he called “perceptive.” And who, like my estranged husband, noticed that the grid on my pink and white plaid that I bought for five dollars at Freddie’s end of spring sale bowed like the lines in the optical-illusions newspaper editors use for space-fillers. She would ask me: “Do you feel overweight today? You act uncomfortable.” And he would ask me: “Why don’t you take off that (insert curse word here)? “You look like you’re having triplets tomorrow.” And I would ask him if he wanted Tabasco for his scrambled eggs. . I would sit a foot and a half from her office door, (directly opposite a globe-shaped lamp) watching her roll a blue pen between her thumbs. And she would say: “As your friend, I wonder if you’d feel more confident if you wore clothing that flattered you more.” And I would mumble something that sounded indecent, –hoping to jolt her, but meeting each time empty, dead eyes. Then I –ever adept at air traffic control – would direct her curiosity to my anger issues or my childhood. Because anything seemed pleasant compared to discussing the relationship tension between my shirt and I. Line count: 34 |