Anyway, I can still work from home, but it's all heavy-duty-academic-thinking work, so I'm going to take a break and blog about something far more inconsequential. If it's long and rambly, I use the excuse that the pain and stir-craziness of being confined to my apartment all day is making me a little loopy.

I have not been so successful at transferring my love from one inanimate object to another in all areas of my life. This week, the most notable failure was my alarm clock.

Also, the tape deck was broken, a quality that especially shows my alarm clock's age because a) it was old enough to have a tape deck, and b) it was old enough that by the time the tape deck broke I was still at a point in my life when I still had cassette tapes to put in the tape deck.
For several years, I would occasionally browse the alarm clock section of Target or Meijer, but two things stopped me. First, I rarely use an alarm clock. I sleep so restlessly in the morning that I can be awake when I need to without any help. So a new alarm clock always felt like a want, not a need, and it's kind of a boring want to spend money on. Second, I was attached. None of the other alarm clocks on the shelves ever felt right. They had the wrong combination of functions, or the numbers were too big, too small, too bright, too red.
I used my move from Michigan to Utah as an excuse to de-clutter, and as I filled up my last box of stuff for the Salvation Army back in August, I decided to get rid of my old clock radio once and for all. I figured I could use my cell phone for awhile until I managed to find just the right replacement, and at first it felt good to have unloaded a piece of almost-junk that had been plaguing me.
But it turns out that the reason I liked my alarm clock was not for the alarm, but for the clock. After a couple weeks of not being able to tell the time when I woke up in the middle of the night without fumbling around on my bedside table and squinting to make out the tiny cell phone numbers, I finally made the trek to Target and bought myself a brand new digital alarm clock.
And I hate it. Or at least dislike it intensely. The numbers are too bright and they are the wrong color, so I tilt the alarm clock away from my bed, which solves the brightness problem but makes it hard to read in the middle of the night. The alarm is too loud (because I use my alarm so infrequently that when I was shopping for alarm clocks that I forgot that I only ever set the radio alarm on my old clock, and accidentally bought a new clock without a radio alarm), which means that if I need an alarm I just use my cell phone.
And if the alarm and clock functions are worthless, what's the point?

And then I spent a frantic half hour getting ready for church, which hadn't been supposed to happen so soon, all the while resenting my loss of the hour I had so looked forward to. Or my gain of an hour without realizing I'd gained it, which amounts to the same thing.
That kind of blows my mind if I think about it too hard.
But on the plus side, this is only one failure among many more successful transfers of affection that have taken place in the course of my move: personal computer to spiffy new school computer, blue dog-hair-covered couch to brown dog-hair-covered couch, old apartment to new apartment, academic work that I have to pay to do to academic work that I get paid to do. All in all it hasn't been such a bad transition.
And if this post weren't already long enough, I have two new book blog posts. Both of them were books I read for (different) book clubs: Fahrenheit 451 and The Help.
3 comments:
Your problem was trying to make a distinction between "wants" and "needs"...is anything truly a need? You only need something if you want something else...for instance, you only need food if you want to live...hope your back gets better soon, let me know if the "dog slayer" needs walking.
Poor alarm clock--don't be too hard on "him." He's trying...
I love this story. This seems like something I would do. I hope that you can like a new alarm clock. It's a tough relationship to begin with.
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