Our shower drain kept getting clogged. It was a big problem. We had to hire a plumber. He came out twice.
God love him, the plumber did not look happy the second time. Namely, because our house is 100 years old. Meaning, five generations of people have been bathing in this house. The drain pipes have been whisking away one century’s worth of funk water.
“No telling what’s in those pipes,” the plumber said in a quiet, ominous voice, gazing into the treacherous blackness of the drain hole.
The plumber and his young assistant, Charlie, spent an hour working on the problem. The plumber is not a tiny man. He did a lot of bending over while Charlie would laugh, pointing at his boss’s partially exposed gluteal cleft, and saying, “Crack kills, boss.”
They located the clog.
Charlie found me in my office. He was breathless and excited. “We found it!” Charlie said these words in the same weighty tones NASA engineers would use to say, “Houston, the Eagle has landed.”
Three of us stood in a tiny bathroom, looking
at the source of the clog, lying in the plumber’s hand.
“I’ve never seen a ball of funk that big before,” said Charlie.
The clot was a rat’s nest of human hair about the size of a golf ball. The hair was old, so it just looked black and green.
“Probably your wife’s hair,” said the plumber.
He’s probably right, I was thinking. My wife has the longest hair in our house. Moreover, I’ve seen the aftermath of her showers. Whenever she washes her hair, the shower stall looks like she’s just finished bathing a border collie.
So, I told my wife about the ball of funk. She became very defensive.
Her main defense was, “It wasn’t MY HAIR!”
I had to laugh. Her thick, brunette hair comes down to her mid-back. Who else’s hair could it be?
“What about…
