Hugs, Hope, and Peanut Butter 
Finding Light Behind the Clouds   

EXCERPTS FROM THE BOOK:

Hunky Magoo 

Hunky Magoo is a fitting nickname for the husband. It’s unusual and so is he. I call him "H.M." which he likes to think stands for "His Majesty." H.M. sometimes gives the impression of being unfriendly, but deep down in his heart, he’s really anti-social.

Like all men, he has his little idiosyncrasies. For one thing, he’s a pack rat. I haven’t been able to park my van in our three car garage for ten years because it’s overflowing with all the junk he’s collected. He hangs onto everything he’s ever owned, including the wing tip shoes he bought for our wedding thirty years ago. I can’t sneak them out of the house, because he routinely checks the garbage to see if I’ve thrown away any of his stuff. He thinks the groovy polyester pants he wore in the seventies still have a few good years in them. I’ve even caught him wearing my cleaning rags.

Hunky’s the most handsome, thoughtful, charming husband in the universe -- in his opinion. He brags that he can do the work of three men; and that’s true, if the three men are Larry, Moe, and Curly. He also brags about having a mind like a steel trap. I tell him he’s right about that, because nothing can penetrate it. I also tell him the trap must be stuck, because he keeps forgetting who’s the boss around here.

H.M.’s perspective is very different from mine. For instance, he doesn’t feel as strongly as I do about things like empty toilet paper rolls. Then there’s the issue of dirty underwear. He seems to believe they belong on the bathroom floor. Every morning, I pick them up, along with enough back hair to fill a trash bag. (I’m saving it to weave a rug).

He also has some odd ideas about home decorating. Once, we were to show our house to prospective buyers on a day I had to work. That left H.M. in charge of giving the tour. That morning, I ran through the house giving it a quick inspection. Everything looked good. I grabbed the dirty laundry from the bedroom, ran downstairs, and dropped it into the washer before going out the door.

When I came home that night, the couple was just leaving. I met them on the front porch, thanked them for coming, and went inside to ask the husband how the showing went.

As I stepped through the door, I saw THEM! There, on the stairs leading up to our bedroom -- on the third step to be exact -- was a pair of my holey, white, cotton, "grandma" underwear.

At that moment, I can’t be sure, but I think I had a stroke. I could almost hear those ragged old bloomers screaming, "Look at us! Look at us!" They mocked me. " Nya, Nya! We'’ve been here all day, right out in the open for all the world to see, and there wasn’t a darn thing you could do about it!"

I was mortified. I'm not sure, but I think I had a stroke.  It was the second most embarrassing event of my life. The first most embarrassing was in second grade when my mother gave me a haircut and a poodle perm the day before class pictures were taken. That horrific memory .  .  .

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