I don’t know if it’s because I’ve had a cold or because of
our weird, windy weather but petty stuff has been getting on my nerves this
week. Actually, it could just be
because I’m kind of a petty bitch. Once
again I’ve proved that the Catholics won’t be breaking any rules to make this
Methodist a saint any time soon.
Yesterday I called in sick, which I have rarely done. I just had a bad cold, hadn’t slept well and
wanted to nap and blow my nose in privacy.
That wasn’t to be. About an hour
after school started, my boss’ boss called me.
I thought it was nice that she was checking to see how I was. Actually, she wasn’t. She was calling to say she needed some typing
done. I told her to send it over with
some kids and I’d type it then print it the next morning when I came to
school. Two kids arrived with a letter
to be typed.
An hour later, the same kids arrived with several documents
and the message from my boss that he needed them typed and printed in 20
minutes. I called him and explained that
it would take at least two hours and that I was sick and in bed. He said he had to have them and told me to
come to school. I did, although in
hindsight I shouldn’t have. He got his
documents but they were served with a side order of pissy palagi. While I typed (and helped two teachers with
copy machine issues), the teachers moved off to have tea, leaving me at the
computer. When they finished, they came
back to say that I was not working fast enough.
I finished the documents, turned off the computer and my boss said I was
allowed to go home, since I was sick. He
did not say thank you. He had known for
months, by the way, that the documents I typed for the Ministry were due today.
This morning my day started with laundry, which had been soaking
for a few days since I just hadn’t felt up to doing it. I did change the water, though, since leaving
things to soak in the tropics can result in seeing and smelling things that
should only be seen in scary movies.
When I dragged the bucket of clothes and myself out to hang them up I
realized there were no clothespins. My
wooden clothespins have been hanging on the line for months. I have no idea who took them, or why. I’m assuming that the family used my line
(and pins) while I was in Apia and just collected them when they took in their
laundry.
Missing clothespins is petty. It truly is no big deal. But in that moment, feeling unwell and
unappreciated, it was huge. The
proverbial straw. I considered
firebombing the family compound and the adjacent school. I considered obscene graffiti. I considered long, passionate speeches about
appreciation and respect. But I was too
pooped. Instead, I went inside, had a
sip of tepid tea and sat down next to the fan for a few minutes. Then I scrounged some pins from my indoor
clothesline and did a truly inelegant job of hanging multiple panties and other
items from a very few pins. At least no
one seems interested in stealing granny panties. And
then I walked to school.
Where there were no teachers. There were kids. Lots of kids.
They carried my bags. They
rallied around me, touching, hugging and yelling in delight that I’d returned
after (almost) a day off. I’d
deliberately dawdled, since I’m usually the first to arrive and since I didn’t
have the keys there was no since in me getting there early. Others were better dawdlers. After 45 minutes, just after the bell rang
for assembly, the teacher with the keys arrived. She greeted me from behind during the first
hymn, kissing one cheek and squeezing one boob.
Today one teacher was on maternity leave, the principal was
absent, and three other teachers were AWOL.
I was asked to take three classes.
I politely refused. Instead I
sniffled and sneezed my way through the day with over 50 kids from two classes.
During interval, the teachers gathered to eat and
gossip. Mostly the gossip is about who’s sleeping
with whom or about money. Happily, the
speculations on my love life have dropped significantly, since it’s pretty
obvious that I have no plans to get busy in Samoa. They don’t even often suggest I sleep with
every man who visits the school anymore.
Today one of the teachers was talking about me. She was sitting two feet away and knows that
I can understand her. She was commenting
on how I hate Samoan food. That was
evidenced by the fact that I turned down a package of ramen noodles and pankeke
(donut holes) to just eat an orange. I’d
explained before she arrived that I wasn’t hungry because I still have a bad
cold. Just an orange was perfect.
I found her comments annoying for a couple of reasons. Mostly, because she didn’t refer to me by
name but as “the palagi”. Palagi is not
usually used as a pejorative term. It is
used for outsiders. And at school, we
call ourselves a family so I find it somewhere between annoying and offensive
to be referred to that way. I also found
it annoying, although humorous, that she was mad because I wasn’t eating Samoan
food. I think a few Asians would beg to
differ when a Samoan claims ramen noodles as their own. And donut holes? What she didn’t realize is that before she
arrived in the room there had been a fast and furious discussion about the
amount of food available. Had I not
turned it down, she wouldn’t have been eating.
Petty, trivial crap. Visions of sainthood for my patience and
virtue down the crapper. Tomorrow is
another day. Another opportunity to be a
better, less petty, person.