UnderHisSpellA friend of my daughter’s is a rather handsome, very articulate young man. Of any of her friends, he is the one I expect will go far in life. At present, he’s in college and working part time at a major corporation. All very nice, but what follows shows more than anything why he’s an exceptional young man. Honestly, I could not have done what he did. And at the end, tell me a story of your latest adrenaline rush. One lucky commenter will win a copy of Kathy Lyon’s UNDER HIS SPELL.

HERE’S HIS STORY:

I would have preferred to tell this story in person, but it is simply too ridiculous not to share as quickly as possible…

doorknobSo I’m taking a shower, which is normal for a Saturday morning. And my parents and brothers go to karate practice, which is also normal for a Saturday morning. I get out of the shower — still normal — and try to open the door — still normal — at which point the doorknob in my 90-year-old house falls off — not normal.

I am now alone in the house, trapped in the bathroom.

My family will not return for two hours. I am straight-up, R Kelly-style trapped in the bathroom. I have no phone. I also, for the record, have no Beretta. And there was no singing, although in retrospect there should have been.

The first option is to wait it out. I could take an extra-long shower, Clorox-wipe the entire bathroom, or do the Unspeakable (which honestly couldn’t occupy me for two hours). The second option is to exit through the window. But I wouldn’t be able to get back into the house. So I would be marooned in my hot backyard, wearing my dirty boxers and a towel, waiting for my family to come home. The third option is to escape. I go from R Kelly to MacGyver, amass a collection of potentially useful bathroom items — electric razor, seven toothbrushes, plunger (not sure how exactly that would have helped), hand soap, Q-tips, depleted toothpaste tube — and get to work.

My first plan of attack is to reattach the doorknob, which of course fails. Then, after about fifteen minutes of poking, hitting, jiggling, and otherwise harassing the door with various implements, I discover the fatal flaw of my prison: The door opens inward, but when I push it out, the Little Thing that the doorknob operates that goes into the Little Notch in the door (I don’t know much about door anatomy.) gets pushed back into the door. So all I need to do is block the Little Thing from going into the Little Notch while I yank the door back towards me.

I survey my toothbrush army, and ultimately select two soldiers for the mission: The smallest (one of my brothers’) and the largest (a surprisingly robust free handout from our swanky downtown dentist). I lodge the small toothbrush in the Little Notch, hoping that the Little Thing will slide over it when I pull the door. But without a doorknob, it is very difficult to exert inward force on a door, so I use the large toothbrush to pry into the stump where the doorknob once was and start yanking.

With each toothbrush dangerously close to its breaking point, the door lurches open. A refreshing burst of not hot-sticky-just-took-a-shower air comes over me. Free at last! And it was so freaking fun.

If you really want an adrenaline rush, I encourage you to succeed in escaping from an inconvenient but not dangerous situation using only immediately available household items.

Hoping there will be no Volume 2.

8 Responses to “In Praise of Small (but Significant) Escapes.”
  1. katie says:

    I wish I had had such an experience. I don’t usually have any adrenaline rushes….usually, they are minor soon to be hot flashes. LOL.

  2. Wow. 2 Toothbrushes. Who’d have thunk it? That’s GOT to be used in a book someday!
    Cool story! The only thing I have that comes close is not so cool.
    It was summer in Texas. VERY HOT. I don’t remember now, how I managed to come home from the store without my house key and yet WITH my car keys, but that’s not an unusual situation for me since I usually use the garage door opener to get into my house. Unfortunately my husband is a security freak and locks all doors at all times-always. Anyway, I couldn’t get into my house, it was freakin hot and I had a car load of groceries, including milk and ice cream. So I rammed the wooden gate until it broke and then used a patio chair to break a kitchen window and climbed in. More Die Hard than MacGyver, and my hubby wasn’t very happy with me, but when I am determined to do something, not much will stop me.

  3. Colleen says:

    Wow what an adventure… my recent adrenaline rush came from rollercoasters… it had been over 10 years since I was at an amusement park and I had a blast… the fast pace, the turns and dips… WOW!

  4. Jane says:

    It probably would have taken me twice as long to get myself out of there even if I utilized the same household items.

  5. Alina Duffer says:

    Hi Jade. This is a hilarious story. That kid is pretty inventive. I probably would have settled on for a long wait. Maybe do a manicure and pedicure. A face mask. Something to keep busy, lol! Of course I never go any where with out my cell phone. My husband jokes that I have the thing glued to my hip 24/7. I tell him all the time that the few times I have left it sitting somewhere my kids call people and take pictures with it. Although there was that one time they took pictures of me in the shower with it. LOL!

    I havent had any real adrenaline rush moments latley. Unless kids tieing each other or the dog up count. The last real moment like that I can think of, and mind you I have no clue why Im admitting to this, was when I was 8 months pregnant with my daughter. At the time we had a ford ranger truck. I had done some shopping and had put the stuff in the little extended cab area. Well I put the seat as far forward as it would go and tried to reach in and grab the stuff. I couldnt reach so I wiggled farther in to get them. Well lets just say I gave Winnie The Pooh a run for his money. I was stuck! Screaming at the top of my lungs for help. My mom and my husband came out of the house to find me wedged in the truck standing on my tip toes. I think they laughed so hard they almost wet themselves. Needless to say he managed to get me out. That was almost 6 years ago now and every once in a while he will bring it up and we have a good laugh about it. For a while there they kept calling me pooh bear and I hated it!

    Have a great day! (*)

  6. Tammy Yenalavitch says:

    Kathy,

    What a great story. Toothbrushes are so useful! Thanks for sharing. And your pooh bear story was so funny. The only story I could think of was when I was maybe 19 or 20 and my cat got stuck on the neighbor’s roof and is meowing her little head off. It’s 1:00 AM. I am home alone. I am afraid of heights and in my pajamas, silently cursing this cat, I head next door with our big ladder. Shaking, I climb it, thinking she will jump in my arms. She does not. After 15 minutes of coaxing her, I am in tears. Now I tell her “You jumped up, so jump down” I am also thinking the police are on their way to arrest me. As I climb back down the ladder, the cat jumps down and she follows me back in the house. Why she couldn’t do that at the start, I will never understand.

  7. Ilona says:

    Great story – loved the Macguyver reference :D
    I haven’t had anything nearly s interesting happen to me. The earest I got was when my dog Alfie got in a small scrap whilst out walking him yestrerday.

    Another dog approached which wasn’t on a lead (Alfie was as usual) and this dog went for Alfie. A lot of growling and snarling ensued. Next thing I know my Alfie had niftily tangled the other dog in his lead and very adroitly had one turn of the lead around the dog’s neck. Only my quick action stopped Alfie from strangling the other dog. Guess he knows how to sort out rival dogs :D

  8. Kim Lyn says:

    What a great story!! You never know when you’ll have to Macgyverize something!! My hubby’s deployed and I recently sent him a joke box, complete with a Macgyver kit, just in case. I added gum, shoe laces, paperclips, duct tape, and a few other household things. Of course he loved it, and everyone he was with had a good laugh. :-D

    I have a 4 year old and a 5 year old, so unfortunately all my recent adrenalin rushes come from things they do to them selves. Scooter accidents, near choking (classic case of hungry kid shoves too much food in their mouth), and so on.

    The funniest thing I think I’ve done to myself was a decade or so ago. I was locked out of my house and had 3 choices: 1. wait HOURS for someone to come home, 2. break the window on the front door to let myself in, or 3. climb thru the open, but ridiculously small bathroom window. (You know the ones? Tiny little windows at the top of the shower?) I was too impatient to wait, and not rebellious enough to break the window … so I stacked up a pile of whatever I could find, including a hose and fairly large tree branch, and wiggled myself thru the window.

    Looking back, I’m probably lucky I didn’t break my neck as I not so gracefully slid thru the window into our bathtub … BUT, I got inside the house. :-D

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