By Lisa Scottoline
Good news! Lisa is just putting the finishing touches on her new novel, and will be writing new columns ASAP!

I just read a story about a man who thought he had a lung tumor.
But it turned out to be a toy he’d inhaled as a child.
This is an absolutely true story.
Actually, all the stories in these columns are true, but most of them are bizarre things that happened to me.
This is a bizarre thing that happened to someone else.
It turns out that there was a postal worker in Britain who had been treated for a bad cough, and an X-ray revealed a mysterious mass in one of his lungs. The doctor thought it was a tumor, performed a bronchoscopy, and found a tiny toy cone from a Playmobil set. Which the man remembered getting for his seventh birthday, forty years before.
Wow.
The doctors took out the cone, and the man’s cough disappeared.
Plus he got his toy back.
Do endings get any happier than that?
Or harder to believe?
He couldn’t remember eating the toy cone, but obviously he must have.
I have that problem too.
I never remember the things I eat.
I could swear I’m not eating anything, but mysteriously, I just gained five pounds.
I must have eaten the entire Playmobil dollhouse.
And the dolls.
Plus the play and the mobil.
It was also incredible that the toy cone didn’t go into his stomach, but into his lungs.
That’s another problem I have.
Anything I eat goes into my hips.
But the story got me thinking about random toys I could’ve eaten at that age.
Barbie comes immediately to mind.
As in, Barbie shoes.
You remember Barbie shoes, don’t you?
They were plastic high heels that came in different colors and never stayed on her foot.
Maybe because she was permanently on tiptoe.
Or maybe because high heels aren’t worth the trouble.
I loved everything about Barbie, but I was fixated on her shoes, which I collected and sorted by color.
I took better care of Barbie’s shoes than I do of my own.
And weirder than that, I also had a habit as a child of walking on tiptoe.
Like, all the time.
I remember my mother and father being concerned about it and even taking me to a doctor.
Which was so not the Scottoline way.
We never went to doctors because Mother Mary believed in the healing powers of Vicks VapoRub.
I’m surprised she didn’t rub it into my feet and call it a day.
My entire childhood smelled like camphor and tomato sauce.
Anyway, the doctor said that there are a percentage of kids who are “toe-walkers,” that my parents shouldn’t worry about it, and I would grow out of it by age five.
He was partly right.
They shouldn’t have worried about it, and they didn’t, after that.
But I never grew out of it.
I still do it, even today.
Not all of the time, but sometimes.
Weirded out yet?
I never even realized I do it until I was speaking at a book signing and people started asking me why I was standing on tiptoe. And I realized that I speak on tiptoe at most of my signings, and I’m the most comfortable that way.
I looked it up online and it says that there are adults who toe-walk and that it doesn’t indicate an underlying neurological problem.
Obviously they don’t know me that well.
The articles say that it can mean your Achilles tendon is too short, but I don’t know how long my Achilles tendon is, and in any event, I’m short too, so my Achilles tendon probably matches me.
Otherwise how would it fit in wherever it is?
You see I’m no biologist.
Online it says that adult toe-walkers with an unknown cause are called idiopathic toe-walkers.
There’s no need for name-calling, Internet.
In any event, I don’t know why I do it.
Maybe to feel taller.
Or maybe in my mind, I’m wearing Barbie shoes.
At least I’m not eating them.
Copyright © Lisa Scottoline