I took Emily and Laura to work with me this morning because
no one would be home. Laura slipped into the front seat. As we were backing out
of the garage, I sniffed a couple of times and finally said, “You smell nice.”
This is not like “You look nice,” which would have elicited a smile. It
embarrassed her and she looked away.
As I turned the car around and the nice smell wafted on the
breezes from the open windows, it struck me. “You smell like Sweetheart soap.”
I stopped the car to for a minute for a couple more inhales. Laura was so
embarrassed, she looked away. All the way up our street I rhapsodized about
Sweetheart soap at my great grandma’s house. She did not look at me all the way
to work.
Look at that bar of soap. That’s exactly how my great
grandma’s bathroom looked. The bathroom was huge, converted from a bedroom when
indoor plumbing came along at the turn of the previous century. Big claw foot
tub with a wire soap hanger over the edge. A porcelain sink big enough to bathe
a baby. Nickle plated fixtures, the hot and cold handles with little ceramic labels
inside captain wheel taps. The rubber sink stopper on a chain. And, the
Sweetheart soap, there on the right, in another wire holder.
Grandma's Cox's sink was a huge oval. I couldn't find one, so think big on this.
From the time I could step on the stool and wash my own
hands, I knew that soap was the smell of goodness. It smelled like Grandma Cox,
and I could take it away on my hands. Not like that brown stuff, Camay, my mom
had at home. I boarded with Grandma Cox the first year I was in college, so I
have a long history with that soap. I have no idea what Laura uses in the
shower, but I may track down a bar of Sweetheart soap for her for Christmas.
In other nice things, Laura, Emily and I are all leaving
town next week. Emily is going to band camp, Laura is going to horse camp with
Cousin Caroline, who is an old hand at horse camp and champing to show Laura
what it’s all about. And, I’m taking my camera and going to Wisconsin. After an
extremely intense and unhappy executive session at the township this week, the
trustees wished me a good trip, and one trustee wistfully said, “I’ve always
wanted one of those cheese head hats.” We all looked and he mumbled, “I just
think they’re cool.”
He is the director of our library and runs a great children's program. He came to another very important board meeting this week in his best
batman tee shirt. It was the children’s talent program day at the library. We
just let all the VIP’s in the meeting conclude for themselves this trustee
knows his township business, too. I’ll bring him the hat, and he will say, “Holy
cheese head hat, Robin.”