feel free to take bets on whether or not it will make it home safely
kelly | 28 July 2005 - 10:05am
There are some sins in a marriage that just cannot be forgotten. Forgiven, yes, but never really forgotten. You put a lot of trust in the person you share your life with. A LOT of trust. And even a tiny fracture of that trust is hard to forget. The memory of a mistake your spouse has made looms in the back of your mind, waiting to be remembered, waiting to be flung across the room as part of an accusatory statement.
I'm not talking about cheating here. I'm talking about Corningware.
In November, the company Rob works for had a carry-in Thanksgiving meal. Rob took cranberry sauce in one of our glass containers. No, my favorite glass container. It was a small cranberry-colored Visions container. It was perfect for leftovers. We used that container all the time.
And Rob, he lost it. HE LOST THE CONTAINER!!
I specifically remember saying to him that morning when he left with his cranberry sauce in tow, "Make sure you don't lose the container." Really, I'm typically not that possessive of my stuff, but it was my favorite container! We used it all the time! That night I didn't notice that Rob hadn't brought it back, but the next evening I asked him, "Where's that container you took to work? You brought it back, right?" And he looked at me sheepishly and I knew. His slip-up was written all over his face. I looked at him, disappointed and in disbelief, and said, "You lost my container?"
No, he hadn't lost it, technically. He knew right where he'd left it. But when he went back to get it at the end of the day, it was gone. "So you're saying someone stole my bowl?" Well no, not quite. Apparently the secretaries had taken the leftover food from the meal to a food shelter and he thinks the container just never made it back. "Well you're going to ask them, right? Because probably the secretaries know exactly where the container is and just don't know to whom it belongs." Yes, he would ask them. In fact, he had tried to ask them that day, hoping to retrieve it and bring it back without me ever knowing it had been temporarily lost, but he hadn't been able to track them down. Yeah, okay. Whatever.
So the next day I sent him off to work with a strict directive to ask the secretaries about our container. He came home saying he had asked them but they didn't remember seeing it.
I began to grow a bit suspicious at this point. Perhaps I was just in denial, but the whole story seemed a little strange to me. Christmas was fast-approaching and I began to wonder if perhaps Rob had the container after all and was just messing with me.
You see, I have been known to steal people's stuff so that I can give it back to them for Christmas. Well, just once did I do this. My brother and I were kids and we didn't have any good ideas (or money) for presents for my parents, so I suggested we steal something that each of them used every day, something they would really miss, and then give it back to them for Christmas. I mean, think how happy they would be! Best presents ever, right? So we stole my dad's winter coat and my mom's eyelash curler. Mom had a back-up and didn't even notice the other one was missing. But my poor dad looked everywhere for that coat. He went back to every place he might possibly have left it, and resorted to wearing a much thinner coat out in the cold instead. All the while, his coat was in my closet, wrapped and waiting for Christmas.
Rob has always been appalled by that story. Thinks I'm some sort of sociopath freak or something. And so I started to wonder if maybe he had stolen my container so that he could give it to me for Christmas as a cruel joke.
So I called him on it one day. I said, "You really do have that container, don't you? Of course you didn't lose it. You're just keeping it to give to me for Christmas. Aren't you?!" He shrugged his shoulders and maintained a blank expression. "Fine then. But know this - there had better be a container just like that one under the tree. So if you really don't have it, you'd best be going out and buying one."
Turns out he really had lost it. And under the tree were not one but three containers to replace it. But they were blue - I think he didn't buy cranberry-colored ones in the hope that I would forget the entire cranberry sauce/lost container fiasco.
Which brings me to the point of this post: I did not forget. In fact, every time I use one of those imposter blue containers, I think sadly of my cranberry-colored one and how Rob lost it.
Rob hasn't taken any food for sharing to work since. But last evening I made cupcakes to take to dinner with my parents, and I thought it would be nice to send the extra ones to work with Rob today. But as I thought about which container to send them in, the betrayal came flooding back and I almost didn't send them at all. I just wasn't sure I could trust Rob to take care of the container. But then I told myself that I have to try to trust him again, that he deserves the chance to prove to me that he's changed.
So this morning I placed the cupcakes gently into the only container that would hold them - my largest Corningware container. And I pleaded with Rob for it to be different this time. "Okay, I am sending the cupcakes in this Corningware container. My favorite Corningware container, the one that I got in Corning, NY. The one with the pattern that I've never been able to find anywhere else, ever. Please...please, just don't lose it. In fact, rather than leaving this container in the eating area, perhaps you should keep it in your cube and just offer the cupcakes to people who stop by. Just...just don't lose it, okay?"
He rolled his eyes (I don't think he's taking this as seriously as he should) and promised he'd take care of the container. And then I wrote our last name on tape and stuck it to the bottom, just in case.
______________
UPDATE (2:00pm): Rob just forwarded me an email from one of his co-workers that said, "That was the best cupcake I've ever had. Thanks." How sweet, right? And yet the first thing I thought was, "Did Rob forward this to me as a way to suck up because he LOST MY CONTAINER?"
______________
UPDATE (7:00pm): Rob has successfully returned home with the Corningware (and lid!), although he loses points for cruelty: he walked through the door empty-handed and was all, "Container? What container?" Still, the potential marriage-threatening crisis has been averted and trust has in large part been re-established. (However, I think I will buy some Gladware immediately.)
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Two things:
1. Men cannot be trusted with Corningware. Or Tupperware. Or the Tupperware knock-off cheap plastic shit I buy at Wal-Mart. They do NOT take seriously the directives we issue to PLEASE DO NOT LOSE MY BOWL. They ALL do the eye-roll, and then they lose the damn bowl.
2. Gladware. Gladware has saved many marriages, Kelly. Get some, and you'll never again have to let Rob out of your site with your favorite dishes.
I am laughing, but also saddened at the truth to this betrayal. I have lost many a container. I now use old butter tubs and wonton soup containers for when I bring lunch to work. I am also know for losing coffee mugs. I feel for Rob.
Dude...I would have written your name on about 10 pieces of tape and taped the hell out of that dish. I'm praying for you, Rob.
"Let us bow our heads..."
Oh, he'll make sure it gets home. Yeah, you remember. But we remember that you remember.
GREAT...I had almost let it go until I read this.
Shaun broke the lid to my crock pot. The glass one. The one that came with my expensive crockpot. THE ONE YOU CAN'T JUST BUY A LID TO!
I have to rebuy the whole damn thing.
*sigh* breeeeath...let it go. (I'm talking to myself...not you.)
Keep us updated on the Lid...er Corningware.
Rob - There's a Corningwear outlet store on 50/301 on the other side of the Bay Bridge.
Kalki - I know this pain. K's done the same, although with my favorite (and cheap) serving platter. He never did replace it.
"Gladware has saved many marriages, Kelly." - Crack me up, LB! But truly, you are very wise. Gladware! That's brilliant!
william, you feel for Rob and I feel for Lauren. All those lost containers. And coffee mugs! Poor girl....
Yeah, I should've, Doreen. And I also regret not including my address.
For his sake, he'd better remember that I remember, Nilbo.
Oh kristine. He broke your crockpot lid?! That shit ain't right.
mrtl, HE NEVER DID REPLACE IT?! That shit ain't right either!
Kristine:
Crock Pot lids available here.
LadyBug #2: You read my mind. They even make cute little festive numbers now.
Your Christmas gift joke on your dad was funny, but only because he didn't freeze to death.
Yes, I think the UPDATE was Rob-speak for "don't kill me, but I've done it again!"
Dude, haven't you people ever heard of paper plates and gladware? I think gladware has probably saved many a marriage. Cheap. Replaceable. Think about it.
Ok, I swear I didn't read Ladybug's comment before I made mine. (But that'll teach me to comment without reading the other comments, won't it?)
Oh I did like that image of the coat wrapped up in the closet. Awesome.
But that corningware tale. It's time for some boundaries to be established. The margarine containers gotta come out, I think.
Around here, a little while ago, I kept losing forks. And I replaced them. And then lost more. And then I was at hubby's work and I opened a drawer in the lunch room and AHA! There they were. Now we have a lot of forks.
You crack me up. :D
OH MY GAWSH, Kell, I am ROLLING! WE are soooo BFF material, cuz poor TGIM has to live with my Corningware issues too! Trust, my friends, trust, it is bitch to build back once you have LOST THE CORNINGWARE...
I LIKE ROB
HE CAN LIVE WITH ME
This whole post cracked me up! I could never send Andy to work with a good container, it wouldn't stand a chance. And the Christmas present story? So funny! How did your Dad react? I've never done that, but once my brother and I thought it would be funny to hide our parents bottle of rum and replace it with one full of water. We planned on telling them as soon as they poured a drink, but both went out and forgot. They ended up drinking half a pint of water and coke before I remembered to call and tell them. Only thing was that my brother had done the hiding and I filled the other with water so I didn't know where he put it. They did not find this too funny as they both like to have a couple drinks of actual rum on the weekend. I, however, am finding it hard to type this right now from all the laughing because I still find it so funny.
I had to buy gladware as well because my Bobblehead is guilty of taking the containers with food in them, bringing them home, but then forgetting them out in his huge monster truck of doom until they have a science project growing in them and must be thrown away.
Boys,sigh.
We received a nice four-piece set of Corningware (plus lids), basic white, different shapes and sizes, for a wedding gift. Two ovals, large and small, and two rounds, large and small. Since then, Leo has managed to lose not one, but two of these great dishes (the small one of each shape). Once he thought he had found ours at church, sitting on a shelf above the coat rack, but when he brought it home, it turned out HE'D BROUGHT HOME ANOTHER LARGE OVAL. He decided we should keep it, assuming the person who had left the large had our small. Whatever. I'm still peeved because 1)the small round is still lost and 2) TWO LARGES DON'T STACK INTO EACH OTHER.
Men: Don't mess with the Corningware.
I own a cranberry red "visions" bowl & lid. Used them once in the last five years. Didn't know that they should be my favorite.
ieatcrayonz, the worst part of the Christmas coat thing was that Mom was sorta mad at Dad for losing it. Can't say I really felt badly about that, though. Huh, maybe I was a sociopath freak.
Man, look at Ern with the attitude! "You people" and "Think about it" - you crack me up! And I love that you said almost word for word what LB said. :)
Rob loved your fork story, Amy.
:D to Amanda B.
Blove you, cat!
Wait, there's an I HEART ROB FAN CLUB and I don't even know about it? Um, shouldn't I be president or something? I'm just sayin'...
Bente, my dad was so glad to have his coat back that the whole thing went over pretty well. Fortunately he's got a good sense of humor. And your rum story is HYSTERICAL!!
Eeew, yuck, JR. "Boys, sigh" indeed!
Hee hee Andrea, I'm laughing over the TWO LARGES DON'T STACK INTO EACH OTHER. That would drive me nuts too.
Once in the last five years, CM?!! Oh, I think I'm having heart palpitations.
HA! this is great...and while I was reading I kept thinking--why doesn't she just use a box lined with foil or something disposable? Buy some of those cheap disposable cake carriers or something?--Too easy right? So nice of Rob to REPLACE the dishes but I would be totally like you with the color and remembering each time I used them ...blah...I probably would go out and buy a new one MYSELF and some of those disposable containers at the same time. ;)
They were just so cup-cakey. They made me realize, for the first time, why Wal-mart might be an inspirational business but is, in reality, a transformational let-down.
A box lined with foil? Weetzie, that is brilliant! Why don't I think of things like that?
Um, I'm going to take that as a compliment, Mr. Mojonator.