This is one of my old columns from the Rowlett Lakeshore Times a couple years ago. I thought I'd resurrect it for a little levity:
Somewhere in the back of my tired brain, I remember something I learned in college. I remember learning about entropy. I remember the professor telling us that entropy was about a system or a universe moving from a state of order to disorder. I don’t know why, but the definition stuck, filed neatly behind “don’t mix ammonia and bleach” in my brain’s useful-information-if-I-am-ever-on-Jeopardy drawer.
I remembered entropy this last week as I recovered from surgery. I left my home in a state of order, and I was lucid. I came home blurry, and over the next week my home moved to a ramshackle state of disorder.
I didn’t realize that I was the entropy killer in my house. I guess I hold things together. But when I convalesce, entropy rears its disorderly head and tackles each room with a sinister vengeance.
He (Entropy) puts my four-year-old’s underwear in my laundry basket. He dirties dishes and lets them sit and sit and sit until they are steel-encrusted. He takes every toy out of every toy box and spews each one to the four corners of the house, and he laughs. He adds more rings to the toilet bowls, puts more bills in the mail box, and loses invoices. He stays up late at night and puts rats nests in my sleeping daughter’s hair. He loves Legos. He puts them anywhere...in the fridge, in the pathway of my tender feet, in the mailbox, and apparently in Julia’s stomach. He writes on the piano keys with indellible markers. He steals the two of clubs from our deck of cards.
When left unchecked, Mr. Entropy multiplies. He lurks. He especially loves his apprentices, my unsuspecting children.
I finally kicked him out of the house once I was feeling better. I polled the kids to see if they even knew who or what entropy was. Here are their responses:
Sophie: “Someone that’s a genius.” Ah yes, that’s true. It takes a genius to take a perfectly normal fridge and add moldy microorganisms. One would have to know microbiology!
Aidan: “A trip from outer space.” Aidan must intrinsically know about the nature of the universe, that even in outer space entropy exists. I wonder if Luke Skywalker ever had to clean his room?
Julia: “It means you win a trophy.” Well, no. Entropy wins no trophies in my home. I do try to kick entropy out by making elaborate chore charts for the kids. They win “allowance” for their part in entropy kicking. But even this is short-lived.
The truth is, we all live with entropy. Our homes need repairs that our skyrocketing insurance won’t pay for. (Did you know entropy is behind that black mold thing?)
Our cars don’t fix themselves when their transmissions clunk. Our hip wardrobes wane in popularity in months. Our lawnmowers get mysteriously run over—okay, that was me. Sorry, honey. And our bodies, well, let’s just say that I don’t look like I did in high school.
What to do? One boring way is to jump on the treadmill of life, constantly, joylessly combating this relentless foe. Another way is to give up and let entropy take over your life. Let the laundry pile up so you can’t see out your windows. Let the minivan’s floor gather that fine 12-inch dusting of McDonald’s wrappers. Call the spindly weeds in your yard flowers.
Or, we can become an entropy busting army. Recruit your family to eradicate this messy foe, but do it with laughter. Realize that entropy is the law of life. When disorder comes (and it will), cast a knowing glance at entropy hiding in the dusty corner and laugh like a hyena. Your home and sanity depend on it.
Somewhere in the back of my tired brain, I remember something I learned in college. I remember learning about entropy. I remember the professor telling us that entropy was about a system or a universe moving from a state of order to disorder. I don’t know why, but the definition stuck, filed neatly behind “don’t mix ammonia and bleach” in my brain’s useful-information-if-I-am-ever-on-Jeopardy drawer.
I remembered entropy this last week as I recovered from surgery. I left my home in a state of order, and I was lucid. I came home blurry, and over the next week my home moved to a ramshackle state of disorder.
I didn’t realize that I was the entropy killer in my house. I guess I hold things together. But when I convalesce, entropy rears its disorderly head and tackles each room with a sinister vengeance.
He (Entropy) puts my four-year-old’s underwear in my laundry basket. He dirties dishes and lets them sit and sit and sit until they are steel-encrusted. He takes every toy out of every toy box and spews each one to the four corners of the house, and he laughs. He adds more rings to the toilet bowls, puts more bills in the mail box, and loses invoices. He stays up late at night and puts rats nests in my sleeping daughter’s hair. He loves Legos. He puts them anywhere...in the fridge, in the pathway of my tender feet, in the mailbox, and apparently in Julia’s stomach. He writes on the piano keys with indellible markers. He steals the two of clubs from our deck of cards.
When left unchecked, Mr. Entropy multiplies. He lurks. He especially loves his apprentices, my unsuspecting children.
I finally kicked him out of the house once I was feeling better. I polled the kids to see if they even knew who or what entropy was. Here are their responses:
Sophie: “Someone that’s a genius.” Ah yes, that’s true. It takes a genius to take a perfectly normal fridge and add moldy microorganisms. One would have to know microbiology!
Aidan: “A trip from outer space.” Aidan must intrinsically know about the nature of the universe, that even in outer space entropy exists. I wonder if Luke Skywalker ever had to clean his room?
Julia: “It means you win a trophy.” Well, no. Entropy wins no trophies in my home. I do try to kick entropy out by making elaborate chore charts for the kids. They win “allowance” for their part in entropy kicking. But even this is short-lived.
The truth is, we all live with entropy. Our homes need repairs that our skyrocketing insurance won’t pay for. (Did you know entropy is behind that black mold thing?)
Our cars don’t fix themselves when their transmissions clunk. Our hip wardrobes wane in popularity in months. Our lawnmowers get mysteriously run over—okay, that was me. Sorry, honey. And our bodies, well, let’s just say that I don’t look like I did in high school.
What to do? One boring way is to jump on the treadmill of life, constantly, joylessly combating this relentless foe. Another way is to give up and let entropy take over your life. Let the laundry pile up so you can’t see out your windows. Let the minivan’s floor gather that fine 12-inch dusting of McDonald’s wrappers. Call the spindly weeds in your yard flowers.
Or, we can become an entropy busting army. Recruit your family to eradicate this messy foe, but do it with laughter. Realize that entropy is the law of life. When disorder comes (and it will), cast a knowing glance at entropy hiding in the dusty corner and laugh like a hyena. Your home and sanity depend on it.








8 Comments:
Ahh! Now I feel better about brandishing mops like rapiers! I really AM taming the stubborn tangibles in a life-and-death struggle against one of the titanic forces of (fallen) nature: Entropy!
Banish that old picture of the housecleaning wife armored only in an apron and some silly hanky on her head.
It's a pleasure to meet you - via the Carnival of Beauty.
Kim,
I noticed on your blog you have a link to soulpersuit! Very cool. I am friends with the gals who started that.
I'm all too familiar with that untidy enemy of mine: entropy. Although I'd never seen him personified before! Perhaps we'll become friends, he and I, as I step off "the treadmill" and share a cozy laugh about how his daily whirlwind threatens to destroy my home. :)
What a great post! I remember reading The Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon back in University. It was a humorous look at how entropy was taking over a womans life. I can relate to this:
When disorder comes (and it will), cast a knowing glance at entropy hiding in the dusty corner and laugh like a hyena. Your home and sanity depend on it.
A sense of humour does wonders. Tanks for this.
That's "thanks".
Tanks, Catez!
Waving to you, Heather!
Tanks for the wave. Cracking me up, you ladies. :)
What a wonderful post! Here in NC, the beautiful Bradford Pear Trees are blooming and sadly, I am allergic to their pollen. After almost two weeks of migraines, a six year old valiantly trying to take care of himself and a husband deployed to Baghdad, Entropy had moved in and set up shop! I'm still battling a bit at a time to take my house back. Armed with a swiffer, I banish him from the kitchen floor only to have him sneak back in riding on the cat fur. I run and tackle him as he spreads little army men all over my dark rug and I think I have him hog-tied until I head to bed and crossing the room, the lights out, I find I have been attacked by those very army men I was attempting to banish when I tackled entropy. I praise the Lord for on-line bill paying, but it doesn't keep entropy from loading the mailbox with paper bills that form small mountain ranges on my makeshift desk... I shall join you in your efforts to keep entropy from taking over the world. Together, perhaps we can hold our own....
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