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The Days of WhineBy 
LC Van Savage
 Through no fault of my own I have a very nice life, 
but even knowing that, I still reserve the right to 
whine occasionally, just to keep the balance, so that’s 
what I’ll do now.
 There are three things in my life that simply never work 
for me. I hate them. Even as I approach them my heart 
starts to hammer, my BP shoots up and I know the minute 
I touch them, I’m doomed to failure. Yes I do believe in 
the power of positive thinking; for others, not I. I can 
think positively about these 3 things for 85 straight 
hours, and they still won’t work.
 The first is restaurant teapots. You know, those 
little usually stainless steel ones containing hot water 
for tea, although any sort have the same problem for me; 
they do not work. They always, without fail, leak. I 
pour them with the lids on, the lids off, holding the 
lids down in a death grip with a napkin; no good. They 
leak. Do you suppose they’re made like that to drive 
restaurant patrons nutsy? I mean are there sadistic, 
laughing people somewhere in factories designing those 
teapots to leak? I think yes. I know yes.
 The second thing I hate? Toaster ovens. I own one 
because I have friends and family members who think 
toaster ovens are wondrous gifts from the appliance 
gods. But they’re not. I simply can never, ever make 
them work. I push all the buttons, twirl all the dials, 
even read the manual, but they won’t work. Bread slices 
waiting within, if I finally get that light to come on, 
I can count on the house smoke alarms to start blasting, 
because for me, toaster ovens have 2 speeds; burn and 
burn a lot. Furthermore, they’re uncleanable. When ours 
gets really gross, I vacuum the crumbs out, or shake the 
thing over the sink, but eventually just throw it out 
even if it still works (gleeful murder) which it never 
did anyway. And when I spend time in someone’s home for 
a few days as a guest and see a toaster oven on the 
counter, I clench. Those little white appliances dare me 
to try to cook my AM toast in them. They love to 
humiliate me. They squat there, glaring with their evil, 
square glass cyclops eyeball and I know they laugh. I 
passionately hate toaster ovens, but do have a 
conventional toaster in my home, for normal people.
 Third? Corkscrews. I’m a non-drinker, but it’s fallen 
to me over the years to occasionally open a bottle of 
wine, another chore I approach with fear. I just cannot 
do it, but when I have to, I carry a small strainer to 
the table to strain out the shoved-down cork pieces 
while convincing my guests it’s commonly known that cork 
shards are important for good duodenum health. 
 I always watch with unabashed envy while waitpeople 
screw corkscrews into bottle necks and ease those corks 
out in toto as if they’ve been greased. Never happens 
with me. 
 My brother, a wine aficionado (boring) once gave me a 
cork remover. It’s two different lengths of thin blades 
with a handle on top one forces down each side of the 
cork, then twists, pulls, and voila! Out comes the cork. 
 No. I twist and pull and my arm and brother’s gift go 
flying into a wall whilst the bottle crashes to the 
floor from between my knees with the cork exactly where 
the bottlers originally put it.
 I really think the most successful way to open a 
bottle of wine is the old cowboy method; bashing the 
neck against something until it’s broken off, then 
grabbing the strainer and pouring the wine, this time 
avoiding all talk about duodena, because shattered glass 
probably isn’t good for anything internal although I 
don’t know that for sure.
 There you have it. Whining done. 
 
  
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