This post has nothing to do with my grandfather, but it is still funny. And it has pictures!
The Terrible Horrible No Good Very Bad Day(s)
After weeks of uncertainty and half-planning, I was finally on my way to Staunton, Virginia to help Justin, my boyfriend, move back to his parents’ house in New York City. I’ll spare you the details on the different variations of the plan surrounding my trip down there; the final plan involved me driving to Staunton on Wednesday, loading some of his stuff into my car, loading the rest of his stuff into the back of a truck that was passing through to Georgia and then back to New York sometime, and then driving with Justin to New York on Friday. A few days after we settled this plan, Justin sent me a text message.
“I have some good news and some bad news. The Shakespeare Theatre Company wants me to come to DC for a face to face interview, but it’s on Friday.”
I responded with glee, as I am overly supportive and dying for him to get the internship with STC. “That’s not bad news at all! We’ll make it work!” I said in response. Making it work involved changing our Friday plans from leaving whenever and driving straight to NYC to leaving by 11 am from Staunton to DC, and then leaving DC sometime in the evening to drive to New York. This is one of those plans that is good in theory.
So I arrived in Staunton on Wednesday late in the evening. I’d had a relatively rough day that involved an early rise, a sudden doctor visit, the inability to eat all day, and a four and a half hour drive, so I was extremely tired. We grabbed food at the only place that would still serve us after 10 pm, and then we met with a friend to say goodbye. According to Justin, I fell asleep so fast that night that when he turned over to go to sleep, I didn’t move a muscle or say good night, which is incredibly strange for me. I had weird dreams all night, and I’m certain I actually sat up in confusion several times throughout the night.
So then Thursday came. Thursday was a full day. We had plans to have a goodbye breakfast with our friend Erin at an incredibly early time, then work on finish packing and cleaning the house, take a load of stuff to the dump, take a mannequin to a local theatre, and have lunch with our friend Kitty. Then I was going to attend a rehearsal of Pericles at a local private school, visit quickly with Bob, and have snacks and drinks with Beth and Prewitt while Justin continued to pack and clean the house. We’d both have dinner with Victoria and Matt, and have waffles at Waffle House with Mike at 10:30pm. There was also a possibility the truck for Justin’s stuff would show up sometime in the evening.
That was the plan. Then life happened.
The goodbye breakfast went off without a hitch if you don’t count us being late as a hitch. Justin enjoyed his meal (I ate a piece of his bacon since I still had a stomach ache) even if it was early in the morning, and then there were sad hugs and promises of visits that I absolutely intend on keeping. We watched Erin leave and then headed back to Justin’s house….
…Where we took a nap. Yeah, well, when involuntary naptime/food coma happens, you can’t really fight it. Also, neither of us likes getting up before 10 am. So then we woke with a start around 11:30 am, suddenly very aware of how much we needed to get done. We decided to go to the dump, then come back to the house for the mannequin, then go to lunch. Then Justin would head back to the house while I watched rehearsal, met with Bob, then visited with Beth and Prewitt. I folded down the back row of seats in my VW Golf and then loaded in the old computer tower, the rat cages, the folding chair, and the gallon can of red paint that Justin’s roommate had left after moving out. Justin grabbed the mail he needed to send, and we left for the post office and then the dump.
While I was sitting in the parking lot at the post office, I was feeling good about life. I was feeling so good about life that I tweeted about it.

Justin came out of the post office and said that a friend of mine was inside and wanted to say hi. When she came out to the car, she looked in the backseat and said, “Did you know that your can of paint is open?” No, no I did not know that the gallon of red latex paint that I had set in a precarious and stupid place on the folded back seat was open and dripping all down the seat cushion in the back row and the back of the driver’s seat, and collecting on the floor behind the driver’s seat into what was currently a puddle of about a half an inch.
Justin and I both jumped out of the car with a few “oh shit” and other profane phrases. I swung open the door and stared at the damage.

“Ohmygood, what do I do?” I said.
“I don’t know,” Justin replied sadly. He looked very concerned, mostly because he was certain the red damage in my car was somehow his fault. Secretly, it wasn’t his fault even a little. Our friend looked at me with concern, and then she said, “Well, I have to go. I’m sorry about your car!” She gave me a hug and left us staring at the red travesty before us. Luckily, for her character and image, she really did have to get someone to the airport.
We stood there a little in shock as my brain raced. Justin wrapped his arm around my waist and said, “I guess I’m buying you a detailing for your car for your birthday.” A woman, who had just pulled up, jumped out of her car and ran to us with a few paper towels. “I am so sorry!” she said, which confused me because for a second I thought she was taking blame for the leaking can of paint that my boyfriend’s roommate never properly closed or disposed of himself and that I never checked before placing in a precarious position. I thanked her for the paper towels and then explained that the damage was beyond that. She saw the pool of paint on the floor of my car, apologized again and then also left us to stare.

I called my dad, but he didn’t answer, so I decided that all we could do was run to a detailer and see if they could rescue us. On our way there, I realized there was no way I would make the 2:30 rehearsal since it is already 12:30 and we hadn’t had lunch, so I called the teacher and apologized and asked him to explain to the students that I had an emergency that involved red paint and my beloved car. He assured me it would be fine and wished me luck. We pulled up to the detailers and headed inside. The young guy asked us if he could help us, and I uttered a phrase I never thought I’d say.
“We have a detailing emergency. Can you get latex paint out of a car?” The guy thought for a second, and then he said, “well, I don’t know if we are allowed. We can’t clean bodily fluid, so I’m not sure about paint. You’ll have to ask the manager.” We asked the manager, and he explained that even if they were allowed, they wouldn’t be able to because they didn’t have the equipment. Great.
My dad called as we were on out way out of the detailer's place. He told me to keep the paint wet and to find a wetvac. When I explained to him that I know no one in this town with a wetvac, he says “well, keep the paint wet and run to Walmart. Buy their cheapest wetvac. When you get back to Justin’s, use the garden hose to soak the paint and then suck it up.” So we did that. I ran through Walmart to find a cheap wetvac, ignoring the greeters who told me to stop running. I raced back to the car, and then we drove back to his house as I cursed at every slow driver we encountered.
As soon as we got back to the house, we tried to plug in the wetvac, but Justin only had a small extension cord and a power strip since he was moving and had already packed up his house and certainly didn’t anticipate such an emergency. We were only able to bring the wetvac to halfway across the lawn. I drove my car up onto the sidewalk and into the lawn and started cleaning. I poured gallons of water into my car and then tried to suck it up, but the wetvac almost immediately lost suction. In a panicked state, Justin and I dismantle the wetvac to figure out the problem. After discovering that there were instructions and loose parts still inside the wetvac, we took a second to put the wetvac together properly. Doing so nearly killed all the patience and ability to think clearly that we possessed in that moment.
Now, about that whole “keep the paint wet” part? It was something like 90 degrees on Thursday and my car is black. So, after about an hour and a half of cleaning, the best I was able to do was lift some of the excess, still-wet paint. Justin and I stared at the damage. “You can’t ever dump me,” I said.
“Why?” he asked.
“Because I’ll always think of you whenever I see the red in my car. So, really, if you dump me, you have to buy me a new car.”
“Oh. I think I’ll start playing the lottery.”
The car looks like a shooting crime scene, and I’m attempting to embrace it since there is little to nothing I can do about it. Also, I tend to only freak out about things that have possible solutions. The only possible solution here is to splatter the whole back seat with all sorts of colors and sell it to a trustfund hippie. And that’s not actually a solution.
So, at this point, it’s 2:45 and we still hadn’t eaten lunch and who knows if Kitty had actually waited for us. I told Justin the best we could do was load the mannequin in the car on top of the stuff going to the dump, meet Kitty for lunch, run our errands, and then try to meet Beth and Prewitt so that we were back on schedule.

He admitted that he had to run to the program office to print out some documents and that it might take a few minutes, so I ran to the theatre with the mannequin myself. While waiting for him, I ran to visit with Bob, which turned into me visiting with my friend Sarah instead, which is good because it is Sarah, but sad because it wasn’t a real visit with Bob. I hugged them goodbye, and then I ran to meet Justin and Kitty for lunch. Matt was there, and after we talk about how it is 4:15 and we still need to get to the dump and back before 5 so I can meet Beth and Prewitt, Matt suggests that if I’m okay with him loading his junk in my car as well, he’ll take the stuff to the dump. If you are curious about why I hadn’t thought to send Justin to the dump himself, it is because he doesn’t know how to drive. I thanked him profusely, and at 4:45 I kissed Justin goodbye and ran to the restaurant where I was meeting Beth and Prewitt.
Snacks went well with Beth and Prewitt, although having just eaten lunch and about to eat dinner around 7, I wasn’t very hungry. We ate some sweet potato fries while I told them the tragic story about my car, and Beth told me that the dump doesn’t even take cans of paint in the first place. Justin texted me to tell me that the dump closed at 4:15, which he knew because he was sitting in front of closed dump, so we would have to add “run to the dump” to our preposterous list of things to do Friday morning before we left by 10 am. I enjoyed the rest of my visit with Beth and Prewitt, and then I headed home just before 7, which then made me late for dinner with Matt and Victoria. During dinner, Justin had to go back to the house long enough to let friends in so they could take his dresser. The dresser didn’t fit into their car, and then the neighborhood cat, Adorable Orange Kitty, snuck into the house while the door was open.

This resulted in Justin and our two friends scouring the house for the stray cat, who had snuck back out at some point and was sitting on the concrete wall across the street from the house, laughing at the silly humans, I’m sure. Justin returned to Victoria’s to tell me that he found out that the truck for his stuff wasn’t arriving until sometime in the afternoon on Friday, so he’d have to pay a friend to sit at his house and wait for the truck. At this point, however, dinner with Matt and Victoria had been ruined by the fact that we still had to finish cleaning Justin’s house after a day that had been one crappy happenstance after another.
We left Victoria’s around 11:30 pm much against our wishes to relax and enjoy our last night in Staunton. When we arrived home, we stared at the mess and debated whether Justin was the one who should go to bed early because he was the one with the interview or if I should be the one to go to bed early since I was the one driving. Instead, we both went to bed at 2 am, hoping for the best.
Friday started at 7:45 am, as I reluctantly pulled myself out of bed. We ran to the dump, which was an adventure in itself, but not amusing enough to tell here, and unloaded all of the crap except the guilty red paint. We wrapped that in a kazillion plastic bags and dumped it in an undisclosed place. We rushed around to finish everything in the house, and at 11:15, when we were over an hour behind schedule, Justin finally gave in and left stuff for the third roommate (the one who didn’t leave behind a can of paint) to toss. Shannon, the third roommate, gets a million gold stars. We loaded our travel bags in the car, put the car in drive, and pulled away from the Hobbit House for the very last time.
We made it to DC so early we were able to grab a quick lunch with a friend. I met with another friend, Ashley, while Justin had his interview. It was a good visit, and Justin was able to join us after his interview. Things were almost starting to slow down and chill out. Justin’s interview went well, we think, but it is hard to tell. He’ll know in about a week if he got it. I think he did (knock on wood). Keep your fingers crossed if you have any you aren’t currently using.
After the interview and visiting, we had dinner with one of Justin’s friends. During dinner, I started to melt from exhaustion, but I was determined to head to New York. Even though we got back to my car around 10 pm, I was still determined. I was enticed by the thought of sleeping in all day on Saturday. I will always choose the option that lets me get more sleep and lets me sleep in over the option that involves me stopping and starting again. I was certain one more early morning might kill me.
Except somewhere around 12:30 am I thought all of the cars were trying to merge into me even though they weren’t and I suddenly was struggling to change lanes because there were imaginary cars everywhere and everything was confusing and I made some stupid comment complaining about a car I was attempting to pass speeding up to match my 80 miles an hour because clearly that’s what my speedometer said I was going when really I had unknowingly slowed down to 70 and had grossly misread the speedometer. I admitted defeat, and we pulled off at a stop in Christiana, Delaware. Unfortunately, all of the hotels were booked solid except for king beds, and those rooms were hiked up beyond reason. One of the hotel clerks explained that the University of Delaware was having graduation that weekend, so we got back on the highway and continued up to exit 3 on the New Jersey Turnpike. We got a room at The Red Roof Inn, and I crashed into the hotel bed sometime after one.
We arrived at Justin’s house in Queens sometime around 1:30 pm on Saturday, and after some greetings and settling-ins, I took a nice long nap.