Holy crap, I am such a klutz. I was at work washing the dishes, and at the exact same moment I thought to myself, Geeze, it would really suck to break this coffee pot, I smacked it against the spigot and broke it. Unbelievable.
This doesn't sound like such a big deal, I know, but you have to understand that at work I have this reputation as the person who breaks things. I've tipped over the same filing cabinet twice, I spilled water on the desk and thought I shorted out the phone, and most recently I did something to the stapler--the regular old, hand-held stapler--that took the owner's husband more than 10 minutes to fix.
It's a gift, I guess. My special talent. Thank god I only work part-time!
Andrew Bird--"A Breaks B (Daytrotter Session)" mp3
The Earlies--"Breaking Point" mp3 off The Enemy Chorus (buy)
p.s. These are pretty mellow songs for your Sunday listening.
p.p.s. I think this falls into the "everything is copy" category.
p.p.p.s. I am still looking for a replacement carafe and/or coffee-maker, but I can't find what I need. Very frustrating.
Oh, I can empathise with what you've said. I'm normally not bad, but
everytime I go on holiday, I develop what my other half describes as
'dropsy' and I break all sorts of things.
i was in a store around christmas and while putting something back on a
shelf, it fell and broke an item on the shelf below, where there was a very
clear sign that said, if you break it, you buy it. i very quietly slipped
out of the shop and didn't say a word--now i can never go back in there
again!
Tipping over a filing cabinet? Wow, that's impressive!!
why, thank you sir. it actually fell on me, and the second time it happened
i had a very hard time getting it upright. my boss was in with a patient
and besides that i wasn't going to call her for help since i'd just done
the same thing a week before. thankfully she's very understanding about
such things. re: the coffee pot--if it were mine, i would consider going
that route, but alas, i had to replicate, not upgrade. :)
OK, OK - clearly if a filing cabinet tips over twice, it must be unsafe.
Those things are easy to load so that they're top heavy. And, I personally
can't tell you how many times I've smacked our coffee pot against the sink.
Each time I do it, I marvel at its not breaking; I should probably be
careful what I think.
well, see, it only became unsafe after i opened both drawers at once and
this thing on the bottom broke off that generally kept it from tipping. it
is a piece of crap sauder-type filing cabinet, though, not a sturdy metal
one, but it sure was heavy with all the files that are in it.
WHAT?!? I have been grinding my beans since 1994. I am shocked, I tell
you, shocked! You might be legally banned from traveling to Seattle, you
know, not that it matters a whole lot.
You don't grind?? I can understand not bumping, but no grinding?? Sigh...
Oops... Does blog city not do html refs in comments?
wre--i have been informed by the coffee grinders assoc. of america that
yes, indeed, i am banned from all travel to seattle unless and until i
start grinding my beans!
After many such coffee pot and other glass-breakage incidents in our house,
I came to a sudden, startling philosophical realization:
wow, you're a bigger klutz than i am! j/k!! :) i found that out about
replacement pots without a doubt. i ended up buying a new machine. but when
my boss found out about it they all started teasing me and she told me to
bring in the receipt and that she would reimburse me. turns out they've all
broken things at work--this was actually pretty minor! so i feel much
better now. :) the only glass thing i've ever broken that i still regret
was a one of a kind antique lead crystal candleholder--i did that when i
was cleaning it, too. i think the real lesson to be learned here is never
clean glass items!
I haven't yet broken anything irreplaceable, but I live in fear of doing
so. As you know, I'm big into Batman collectibles. I have a complete set of
Burger King Batman Forever glass coffee mugs that are beautiful,
artistically crafted objects, made in France no less. I use them because I
think it would be a travesty to keep them in a box but, every time I use
them, I think "dear lord, what would I ever do if one of these broke?"
Our aluminum mocha pot espresso maker could stop a bullet, I think - the
espresso could surely stop your heart.
you're both right. i think we could get all buddhist here and talk about
attachment and all that, but maybe lyle should write a post about it
instead. :)
Is that like "Don't make me get all Buddhist on your ass"? Probably
involves incense, not coffee. ;)
Quiet, please. I'm meditating on the nature of coffee pots so as to develop
compassion for their fragile frangibility...