Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Service With a Smile


This week we had some dear friends relocate to California and I got the chance to help with the move a bit. When you really love people, it is so easy to serve them. You can stay up til midnite wrapping framed paintings in blankets or watch their kids or bring in a meal, all with a smile and a happy heart. There's nothing I wouldn't do for a friend. But the true test of my Christianity comes when I am asked to serve people I don’t love, people, who, if I am really honest with myself, actually make me crazy. That's a different story.


Every ward has their wackos, their needies, their hoarders, their chronic movers, their easily offendeds, and our ward is no exception. Many years and 3 children ago, there was a woman who was all of the above. I have come to put her in that unique category of "F-BOHN," or Freakin' Black Hole Of Needs. Some people just suck the life out of everyone around them. This sister, let's call her Bhonnie Leech, preyed on new ward members who didn't know to run from her. One set of friends mistakenly let her stay in their apartment for a week until their sister who was to sub-let it arrived. In that short week Bhonnie had filled the entire apartment with her thousands of boxes and would not leave. These same kind souls let her use their car while they were away. When D got in the car he started to gag and choke. There were vapors and toxic smells of the rat juice variety emanating from the trunk. When D opened it up, there were dark red stain all over, like she'd been carting body parts around. When questioned, Bhonnie said, "Oh that smell. Well, it MIGHT be from the time this summer when I bought 10 lbs of ground beef--it was 60% lean and such a bargain!-and forgot about it in the trunk for a week." 90% of the ward had similar stories. Some even worse. She's bounced around the area for years and when she lands in your ward, the Relief Society president feels like the doomed character in Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" who is "chosen" to get stoned to death.


I had miraculously eluded her until the following summer. She calls on Dave's birthday as I am preparing for about 25 guests to arrive any minute. After 10 minutes of chit chat and hemming and hawing she confesses that she has "a tiny favor." She has signed up with a program to host foreign exchange students. She has to house and feed them dinner, but she is in California and forget to arrange food for them and could I just whip a little something up and take it to her house and feed the foreigners? I said I was in the middle of throwing a party and unfortunately could not help her. I got off the phone, so relieved to have dodged a bullet but also feeling a tiny uneasy. I knew she'd go down the list of ward members until she found a sucker to help her, someone much nicer than me. I felt guilty, like the survivor of a car accident where every passenger dies but one guy walks away without a scratch.


So when Bhonnie calls a week later, obviously needing "a small favor," I knew my number was up. "Hi, Heather, how was the party? California is beautiful. I'm having such a nice time." She gasps a little, like she's out of breath; I'm holding mine. "Well things were nice but you see I got a call today from the foreign exchange people and I guess my tenants aren't happy. Well, the FRENCH ones aren't." Two Parisian students were staying in her room and said it was not fit to live in. If the situation wasn't fixed at once, they'd leave and Bhonnie would not get paid. This takes her 20 minutes to explain. I finally say, "Bhonnie, do you need me to go over to your house and clean?" "Um, yes. That would be lovely." At this point I think cleaning can't be worse than her rambling conversation.


Getting the logistics taken care of made me want to pull out my hair.

Me: "So how do I get in?"

Bhonnie: "Oh, Masuko is always home. But she's deaf. So knock loud."

Me: "Where are the cleaning supplies?"

Bhonnie: "Cleaning supplies...cleaning supplies...hmmm..." I'm already siding with Pierre.

Me: "I'll bring my own. "

Bhonnie: "Now you may need to find a lamp for the bathroom, the light wasn't working."

Me: "Where would I find a lamp?"

Bhonnie: "Um, well there's this one part of this one room with this closet..."

Me: "I'll leave right now and go to your house and you call me in a half hour and can walk me thru anything I need then."

Bhonnie: "Okay," and then she blabs about how picky "those Frenchies" are and how lovely California is in August and how she'll just die if they take her money away and on and on. For 15 minutes she holds my ear hostage as I scramble for cleaning supplies.


By the time I pawn my kid off on my upstairs neighbor, fearing Jonah might get scabies if he so much as touches the floor of her obviously dilapidated house, and head to Chez Leech where I bang on the door until a shadowy figure unlatches the bolt and disappears before I enter.


I find Bhonnie's room and am sicked out by the mustiness and thick layers of dust on everything and the piles and piles and piles of boxes and junk. I am paralyzed in there and so I move on to the bathroom. There are 3 non-working lamps in the bathroom. I hunt around the house for one that isn't broken and though there are several in the living room, only one works. I steal it and put it in the bathroom so I can see what I need to do.


I turn it on and immediately wish I hadn't. The bathroom belongs at a truck stop, or a really bad Taco Bell. The sink had a grime ring and a hair clog. After trying to clean the soap holder with a sponge, I resorted to my key ring attached Swiss Army knife and proceeded to scrape soap scum an inch and a half deep that must have started collecting in the Carter Administration. I won't talk about the shower. Some things are better left unsaid.


It's at this point that I start to get really resentful of Sister Leech. This is not a friend in need, this is a nut job slob using me just like she uses everybody in her path. "Why on earth am I doing this?" I asked myself. Honestly, I know that if I hadn't volunteered, some other, most likely kinder person would have been roped in. I imagined her visiting teacher who is so good to her, having to leave her 4 kids to come over and do this. I thought of all the woman in all the wards who had served this woman and thought, "I'm taking one for the Relief Society." Okay. I can live with that.


The toilet was my undoing though. I was so frustrated and the phone is ringing again. Bhonnie keeps calling asking how things are going and to tell me how much she appreciates me doing it and that she will make me dinner when she gets back, but not that first week because she has a lot of stuff to do and did she mention how much she appreciates it? Ring. Ring. I am racing to finish, to be done, to run back to my little apartment that didn't make my skin crawl. I pre-flush and start scrubbing the bowl with Bon Ami, my cleanser of choice. The Frenchmen have terrible aim and there is dried urine all over the rim that requires me to really use force to loosen the stains and before you can say "sacre bleu," I lose my leverage and the brush bristles ricochet off the rim and yellow toilet water sprays me full in the face.


I am dripping in eau de toilette. I try to come up with a single good reason to stay and finish cleaning. Let them banish Bhonnie as a host family. No one deserved to pay for her inhospitality. I want to be a good person. I do. But I need a way to justify this. And then it hits me. I'm cleaning for Jesus. "I'm...cleaning for...Jesus," I say it out loud, trying on this bizarre worldview that allows me to be covered in a stranger's piss, cleaning for a woman I don't like, and somehow still be okay with it. I'm feeling rather pentecostal but oddly at peace as I pick up the toilet brush and say again, "I'm cleaning for Jesus" and get the last of the ring off the bowl. I spray the mirror with Windex and chant, "I'm cleaning for Jesus" with each wipe. "I'M CLEANIN' FOR JESUS!" I shout this mantra as I dust and and tidy, thankful that the only person within earshot is deaf. My voice is hoarse by the time I leave.


This epiphany has stuck with me over the years and made me a better sport when called to serve people I'm not lovin'. When I send Dave off to help move families whose income is triple ours, I think, "Well, he's movin' for Jesus." Or when I want to kill a visiting kid who hollers at me from the bathroom that they need "help" even though they are 5 years old, I remind myself that I am wiping for Jesus. Over the years I've cooked for Jesus, cleaned up cat poo for Jesus, babysat for Jesus. Once I even waxed arms for Jesus.


I ran into Bhonnie about a month after that incident. She was tan, the Frenchmen were satisfied, but she might have to move out of that house soon so it would be a while before she could cook me that dinner. I tell her it's all good, no repayment necessary. Honestly, I'm happy to clean for a Friend.

18 comments:

ellen said...

Publishable. Maybe not in the Ensign. But definitely publishable!

Rachel said...

I had to explain for Boo as he was so uneasy with the details of the story. In his words, "funny, but gross." I still giggle just a little when I think about the first time I heard this story. Good reminder though.

EmilyCC said...

I love this story! "Cleaning toilets for Jesus," is a succinct and apt reminder as to why we sign on for service projects (in or out of Church) again and again.

Anonymous said...

holy, I can't stand that! There's nothing I hate more than getting sprayed with a strangers pee pee water....maybe sucking rat juice from the gutter might be worse, what do you think Heather?

You are a better person than I. Yet another reason why I've never been in Sis. L's house! No thanks

Camille Bassett said...

You said it every ward has one. I just love how you said it. You should publish this stuff. I love that your not crazy and will say what we all want to say so bad.

aunt sue said...

I love that you are finally bloggin' that one out. Now, make Linda read it.

Julie said...

Best thing I've read in at least a month. Sorry you had to go through it, but thanks for sharing. Really.

Jessica Steed said...

Such a great story.
I love F-BOHN.
I'm going to use that one.

Caroline said...

Fantastic post! Thanks for the laughs.

Anonymous said...

Heather! Soooo glad this showed up in Virtual Oases--it's great to "hear" your "voice" again after all these years. You're a frickin' genius.

Mwah.

Mary Ellen said...

I second JaneAnne! Been wondering what you've been up to since the mid-1990s.

I've always wondered if grudgingly- rendered service counts. I guess if you remember who you're really serving, it does.

I could see Sunstone publishing something like this...

Mary Ellen

Withawhy said...

I love this! You're such a great writer. I've often felt blessed by Jesus because of you!

JoanneV59 said...

What a fabulous talent you are! I'm a Shirley Jackson fan, so I loved your usage of "The Lottery."
Your blog entry was linked from the Exponent for RS lesson 38 on service. Thanks for giving the subject a dose of reality mixed liberally with laughs!

Jambo said...

One of the gals in my chat group (LDS Moms at Cafemom) alerted us to this post.
What a great read! Believe me, there are so many of us that could relate to EVERY word you said. (and you did it in such an entertaining way ;)

Erin McPhie said...

Found this via Deborah's lesson plans at the-exponent.com for tomorrow's RS lesson on service. Love it! Love your perspective here. Thanks so much for sharing!

Kim said...

I just discovered your blog...and I think I've found my soul sister. Only you're MUCH funnier than I could ever hope to be.

Our RS teacher read your "Sister Leech" post last month, and I finally found it here. It gave us all a good laugh, except for our own "Sister Leech," who promptly charged to the bishop's office red with anger after class. My husband says her name hasn't come up in correlation meeting since then.

Keep pushin' the envelope!

Angela Brown said...

A friend recommended this post after I was complaining about some difficlt service I volunteered to do! Thanks for the slap in the head. (0=

Danielle said...

I think Sister Leech moved to my ward. :)