Life of Pee: Going to the Movies with MS
From the title alone you know where this is going
and you think you know exactly what I am going to talk about. But you might not
predict my latest adventure to the movie theater when I, like young Pi, was
desperate for a lifeboat. And I mean this literally. Huh? Why the hell would
anyone need a lifeboat in a movie theater? A real, honest-to-god lifeboat (sans
tiger)? Allow me to explain.
Going to movies used to be so easy. Park a few
football fields away, jog to the ticket line to make sure you beat the
lollygaggers, pick up a soda so large you could swim laps in the carbonated
sugar water, and then make a beeline to the perfect seat—eight rows up, dead center.
Oh, life before multiple sclerosis.
So the other day, when seeing appropriately Life
of Pi, I decided to start tabulating just how trying it can be to watch a movie
these days at a large Cineplex, starting with the parking lot. I first calculated
that the handicapped parking spaces were nearly a quarter mile from our actual
movie theater, conveniently located on the far, far end of the 24-theater
complex. Automatically I was guaranteed to trudge a half mile with my forearm
crutches to see a flick.
Next, I skipped the soda—extra liquid and movies
without a pause button are a poor combination if you have MS. As for grabbing a
seat, these days I avoid too many stairs (trying to navigate lots of stairs in
the dark is a major MS violation) and if the theater is crowded, that seat is
usually on the edge since crawling over folks can be a challenge. But today I
went up a few stairs and staked out the middle. I mean, how busy could a movie
get that had been out for months? I am such the gambler. And a few minutes
later I followed the cardinal rule of having this disease: pee before the movie
starts.All was going swimmingly (pun intended) until I entered the men’s restroom. These days I’m a sit-down kind of guy and two of the three stalls were occupied, including the handicapped one. No biggie, except that the one unoccupied toilet hadn’t been flushed in the last century. It was a swirl of faded fall colors—yellows like the fallen leaves of aspens and browns like the muddy trail after a fresh, chilly rain. Uh, you get the picture. I took it upon myself to be the hero that day. To do what few clearly had had the courage to do before. I flushed that toilet. (Granted, from a good distance using a forearm crutch—I mean it was pretty nasty.)
For reasons unknown, there is exactly one men’s
bathroom on this wing. The nearest other bathroom is a quarter mile away
roundtrip, something I wanted to avoid since the movie was going to start in 10
minutes. But I realized pretty quickly that such a trip was going to be
unavoidable as the murky festival of fall lurking in the toilet bowl started
cascading over the rim. And kept cascading. Holy crap, literally. The bathroom was flooding!
The two poor souls in the neighboring stalls immediately propped up their legs,
struggling to keep their feet aloft. They were trapped without a lifeboat. I
apologized (“really sorry guys”) and ran, as fast as one can with forearm
crutches, for help—and the other bathroom (after all I did still have to pee).
When I finally made it back to the theater, the
previews had started. And the movie theater was packed, my wife bravely fending
off potential seat suitors for the last 20 minutes. Now my path was as murky as
that toilet water—up stairs and past the legs of a half dozen strangers who
were most definitely not prepared for a Dave lap dance. I figured they would probably
be poor tippers anyway, so I delicately gimped my way to my seat, sat down, and
thought, Oh no-no-no-no, do I have to pee again? Thank goodness it was a false
alarm. Ah, my Life of Pee, it’s a guaranteed Oscar contender every time I go to
the movies.
Comments
Larry
I
Mike
She had a stack of comic books in her lap, so I asked:
"If you had a superpower, what would it be?"
"I'd never have to pee," she said.
Somedays I would like to pick that super power too!