Big News: Lisa's new psychological thriller THE UNRAVELING OF JULIA is on sale now!

Column Classic: Sucking Up

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

Column Classic: Junk in The Trunk

By Lisa Scottoline

If Freud wanted to know what women want, he could have asked.

If he’d asked me, I would have answered:

Another kitchen cabinet.

And I just got one!

Here’s how it happened. 

It was about ten years ago that I remodeled my kitchen, adding white cabinets and a trash compactor.  To tell the truth, I don’t remember wanting a trash compactor and think it was Thing Two who wanted a trash compactor, but I’ve blamed enough on him, so let’s just say I wanted a trash compactor.

At the time, my kitchen contractor said, “I’ll install this trash compactor for you, but I bet you’ll never use it.”

“I’m sure I’ll use it,” said I.  And I probably added, “Plus it will give me something to blame on somebody, down the line.”

In any event, the trash compactor got installed, and it came with two free bags, which I promptly lost. 

Ten years and one divorce later, it turns out that the contractor was right. 

I should have married the contractor.

But to stay on point, I never used the trash compactor.  Not once.  I even forgot it was there until three months ago, when it began to emit a mysterious and foul odor.  I searched the thing and could find no reason for it to be smelly, but I washed it inside and out anyway.  Still the smell got worse and worse, until it was so bad I could barely eat in the kitchen.  Then one day, the electrician came over to fix a light and he said,  “Smells like something died in here.”

Bingo!

The electrician showed me that you could slide out the compactor, which I hadn’t realized, and when we did, we found behind it an aromatic gray mound that used to be a mouse.

Eeek!

The electrician threw the dead mouse away, and I cleaned the trash compactor all over again, but it still stunk worse than my second marriage, which I didn’t even think was possible, so I threw the trash compactor away, too. 

Which left an oddly empty space on my kitchen island, a blank square among the white cabinets, like a missing tooth. 

I called the kitchen contractor, whose phone number I still had from ten years ago.  As soon as he heard my voice, he said, “Told you,” and came right over.

Last week he installed a new cabinet, including a drawer, then asked, “What are you going to use it for?”

”I’m not sure yet,” I told him, excited by the possibilities.  It was almost too much to hope for – a nice empty cabinet and a whole extra drawer.  After he had gone, I pulled up a stool and contemplated my course of action.

The decision required me to consider the problem areas of my kitchen cabinets, which are many.  My pot-and-pan cabinet is a mess because I hate to stack pots and pans in their proper concentric circles.  I just pile them up any way, playing Jenga, only with Farberware.  Also I can never figure out how to store pot lids, so I stick them in upside down, setting them wobbling on handles like the worst tops ever.  Every time I open the cabinet door, they come sliding out like a stainless steel avalanche. 

I also have a cabinet containing Rubbermaid and Tupperware, but it’s all mixed up, so that Rubbermaid lids are with Tupperware containers and Rubbermaid containers are with Tupperware lids, making the whole thing feel vaguely illicit, like a orgy of plastic products. 

Then I have a cabinet of kitchen appliances I have never used once in my life, but feel compelled to keep close at hand, namely a juicer, a waffle iron, and a salad shooter.  You never know when you’ll have to shoot a salad.

My kitchen drawers are equally problematic. I have one drawer for silverware, and four others for junk, junk, junk, and junk.  All the junk drawers contain the same junk, just more of it, namely, pens that don’t work, pencils that have no point, extra buttons that go to clothes I’ve never seen, rubber bands I got free but can’t part with, menus for restaurants I don’t order from, and pennies.

In other words, it’s all essential.

I think I know what to put in the empty cabinet.

Trash compactor bags.

Copyright © Lisa Scottoline

Column Classic: Reading is Fundamental

by Lisa Scottoline

With the start of a new school year upon us, I’m reminded about Mother Mary and her grammar patrol.

Cute owl wearing glasses reading a book, cartoon style

Mother Mary has a new job that benefits us all.

Before I reveal it, let me explain that over the years I’ve made a few author friends, and I buy their books and get them to sign them to my mother, which gives her a big charge.  Last month I shipped her five books, including my newest one, then I called to ask her, “How’d you like my book?”

“I loved it, it was great!.  But I have some corrections for it.  And for the others.”

“Corrections?  How many?”

“About five.”

“Five corrections?” I ask, surprised.  “Like typos?  That’s bad.”

“No, five pages of corrections.  And for the others, too.”

I am astounded.  “Five pages of typos?”

“Not typos, corrections, and I have five pages per book.  So, twenty-five pages of corrections.”

Now, I officially don’t get it.  “Give me an example of something you corrected.”

“Okay, in your book, you use the word ain’t.  Ain’t is not a word.”

“Is it used in dialogue?”

“Yes.”

“Then, it’s fine.  That’s how the character speaks.  That’s not a mistake.”

“Yes, it is.  Nobody should use the word ain’t.  You know better than that, you went to college.  I’ll mail you the sheets.  You’ll see.”

“Okay, send them.”

“Ain’t!  Hmph!”

So Mother Mary mails me the alleged corrections, twenty-five pages of notebook paper, each line written in capitals in a shaky red flair.  AIN’T IS NOT A WORD! is the most frequent “correction.”  A few are typos, but the rest are editorial changes, different word choices, or new endings to the plot.

Bottom line, Mother Mary is a book critic, in LARGE PRINT. 

Still, I read the sheets, touched.  It must have taken her hours to make the lists, and it’s really sweet.  I call to tell her so, which is when she lowers the boom:

“You need to send the lists to your friends,” she says.  “Your friends who wrote the other books.  They should know about the mistakes, so they can fix them.”

“Okay, Ma, you’re right.  Thanks.  I will.”

I don’t like lying to my mother, but I’m getting used to it.  I figure I’ll put the sheets in my jewelry box, with daughter Francesca’s letters to Santa Claus.  Those corrections are going to the North Pole. 

Then my mother adds, “You don’t have to worry about the one set, though.”

“What one set?”

“A set of corrections, for your new friend.”  She names a Famous Author who isn’t really my new friend, but Somebody I Wish Were My New Friend.  I can’t name her here, as she will never be my new friend, now.  In fact, she’s probably my new enemy.  Because my mother sent her five pages of unsolicited editorial changes to her terrific, number-one bestseller.

“You did what?” I ask, faint.  “Where did you get her address?”

“Your brother got it from the computer.”

“Her address is on the computer?”

“She has an office.”

Of course she does.  “And you sent it to her?”

“Sure.  To help her.”

I try to recover.  I have only one hope.  “You didn’t tell her who you are, did you?”

“What do you mean?”

I want to shoot myself for never changing my last name.  My last name is Scottoline and so is Mother Mary’s, and the Very Famous Author signed a book to her at my request, so in other words….

“Oh, sure, I told her I’m your mother, in case she didn’t know.”

“Great.”  I sink into a chair.  “And you did that because…”

“Because I’m proud of you.”

Ouch.  I can’t help but smile.  How can I be angry?  I tell her, “I’m proud of you, too, Ma.”

It’s not even a lie.

Copyright © Lisa Scottoline

Column Classic: Lift and Separate

By Lisa Scottoline

Once again, you’ve come to the right place.

If you read this, you’re going to LOL.

But this time, I can’t take the credit. 

Sometimes the world hands you an ace.  All you have to do is set it down on the table and play.

I’m talking, of course, about the SmartBra.

Have you heard about this?  If not, I’m here to tell you that at the recent consumer electronics show, a Canadian tech company introduced a smartbra, which is a bra that is smarter than you are.

Or at least smarter than your breasts. 

Microsoft is reportedly developing a smartbra, too, and I’m sure the other tech companies will follow suit.

Or maybe bra.

If it creeps you out that the male-dominated tech industry is thinking about what’s under your shirt, raise your hand.

Just don’t raise it very fast.

They’re watching you jiggle.

Bottom line, the smartbras contain sensors that are supposed to record your “biometric data” and send it to an app on your mobile device. 

It’s a fitbit for your breasts.

Or a fittit.

Sorry, I know that’s rude, but I couldn’t resist.

Like I said, the world handed me an ace. 

Anyway, to stay on point, the biometric data it monitors is your heart rate and respiration rate, but Microsoft has taken that a step further.  According to CNN, their smartbra is embedded with “psychological sensors that seek to monitor a woman’s heart activity to track her emotional moods and combat overeating.”  In fact, their “sensors can signal the wearer’s smartphone, which then flash a warning message to help her step away from the fridge and make better diet decisions.”

Isn’t that a great idea?

It’s a bra that tells on you when you’re hitting the chocolate cake.

Forgive me if I’m not rushing out to buy one.

I already know when I’m being bad, and I don’t need to be nagged by my underwear.

By the way, the smartbra sells for $150.

If that price gives you a heart attack, the bra will know it. 

Maybe the bra can call 911.

Maybe the bra can even drive you to the hospital.

Don’t slack, bra.

That’s for breasts.

The Canadian company says that wearable tech is the latest thing, and that it developed its smart bra because it had “a plethora of requests from eager women who wanted in on the action, too.” 

Do you believe that? 

I don’t. 

On the contrary, I know a plethora of eager women who wish they didn’t have to wear a bra at all. 

I also know a plethora of eager women who take their bra off the moment they hit the house. 

Plus I know a plethora of eager women who skip the bra if they’re wearing a sweatshirt, sweater, or down vest. 

Finally, I know a plethora of eager women who would never use the word plethora in a sentence.

Okay, maybe I’m talking about myself. 

Frankly, I don’t want “in on the action” if the action means a bra that will tell the tri-state area I’m pigging out.

However, I want “in on the action” if the action means Bradley Cooper. 

And nobody needs a smartbra to monitor what would happen to my heart if Bradley Cooper were around.

By the way, researchers are not currently developing a pair of smart tighty whitey’s for men.

That’s too bad because I have a name for it.

SmartBalls.

But maybe men don’t need underwear with a sensor that detects their emotional changes. 

They already have such a sensor. 

In fact, they were born with it. 

Too bad it doesn’t make any noise.

Like, woohooo!

Copyright © Lisa Scottoline

Cats and Dogs in 500 Square Feet

By Francesca Serritella

Francesca’s new novel, FULL BLOOM, an Instant USA TODAY National Bestseller, is in stores now. Here is a Dear Reader guest column she wrote recently:

I recently welcomed a puppy into my life. A roly-poly tricolor Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, with russet eyebrows that tilt with cartoonish expression and a penchant for belly rubs. I named him “Bobby Baby” after the Sondheim musical Company, because company is what I needed most.

Especially after I’d lost my beloved dog Pip. I didn’t know if I’d ever feel ready to get another dog, until I heard about this puppy born on the one-year anniversary of Pip’s passing.

I felt like he was heaven-sent.

My eighteen-year-old cat Mimi disagrees.

I thought hard about inflicting a puppy’s chaotic energy on Mimi’s golden years. But Mimi is aging like the feline Demi Moore.

Click to read the full column on Francesca’s Website

Copyright © Francesca Serritella | www.francescaserritella.com | @FrancescaSerritellaauthor | @fserritella

Column Classic: Extra Extra Crispy

By Lisa Scottoline

My faith in American ingenuity is restored.

We just invented fried butter.

Whew!

You may have been worried that we didn’t have any more tricks up our sleeve, but you would be wrong.  We used to invent things like electricity, heart valves, and polio vaccines, but we’ve finally come up with something useful.

Somebody at the Iowa State Fair developed a recipe for deep fried butter.

It sold like hotcakes.

Fried hotcakes.

What an idea!  How else you gonna meet your daily cholesterol requirements?

They make it by freezing a stick of butter, dipping it in batter with cinnamon and sugar, deep-frying it in vegetable oil at 375 degrees, then drizzling it with a honey glaze.

You know you want one.

The other bestsellers at the state fair were deep-fried pickles, deep-fried corn dogs, and deep-fried macaroni and cheese.

I might move to Iowa.

Land where the tall corn (dogs) grow.

It’s not just state fairs, either.  My favorite fancy restaurant serves microgreens with fried goat cheese.  Guess which I eat first, the microgreens or the fried cheese?  Right, and thank God the fried cheese isn’t micro.

Tell the truth.  Who hasn’t dived into a plate of fried mozzarella sticks?

Bottom line, it’s time to concede that we love fried things.  French fries, fried onion rings, fried chicken.  And we don’t just love fried food, we even love the fried part, all by itself.

Everybody on earth has nibbled the fry off of something.

Case in point, me. 

Back in my non-vegetarian days, I used to love Kentucky Fried Chicken, extra crispy.  Extra crispy was code for really really fried.  When there was no more chicken left, I ate the nuggets of really really fried.  Even after two days in the refrigerator, I ate delicious knots of crunchy, salty, really really fried. 

The chicken was beside the point, because the only thing that mattered was the fried, and that’s true with every fried food. 

It tastes the same. 

Fried.

Yay!

This is why I order shrimp tempura at a Japanese restaurant.  Because all I taste is the fry, and I might as well be at Seafood Shanty.

Tempura is Japanese for corn dog.

We agree that frying will make a good thing better, but the truly amazing thing about frying is that it will make even disgusting things better.

Example?

Calamari.

It’s a squid, for God’s sake.  Have you ever seen a squid?  If you had, you wouldn’t put it in your mouth. 

But fry it, and people fight to get to it first. 

Same thing with softshell crabs.  A softshell is a crab that has recently molted its shell, so that its exoskeleton is still soft.  You wouldn’t normally eat a soft exoskeleton, much less all the stuff that’s inside a crab, namely whatever he ate last. 

Do you think crabs are picky eaters?

I don’t.

So you have to factor that in.

Plus the eyes are still attached. 

Enough said.

If you had to eat a softshell crab as is, you would refuse.  Your better judgment would prevail.

But fried?

Everybody’s there.

The proof is that people in Thailand eat fried bugs.

Now you know why.

Tastes like (fried) chicken.

The next step is only logical.  If frying makes disgusting food delicious, there’s no reason to stop at food, at all.

I’m not only thinking out of the box, I’m thinking out of the refrigerator.

If you can fry squid, you can fry flip-flops.

If you can fry butter, you can fry bark.

If you can fry bugs, you can fry Crestor.

And you’re gonna have to.

Copyright © Lisa Scottoline

Column Classic: Handygirl

By Lisa Scottoline

I just put in a hundred perennials, which if you’re not familiar with gardening terms, means that I never have to do this again for the rest of my life.

Because perennials are supposed to be automatic, in that they come back every summer.

Like a yeast infection.

It took me five days to plant a garden, because I made every rookie mistake possible. 

First, let me just say that I had no idea that gardening is so much hard physical labor.  I toted sod, plants, and big rocks, in ninety degree heat.

Gardening isn’t a hobby, it’s a chain gang.

My back, legs, and shoulders ache, my leg is swollen from a sting, and I got scratches from rose bushes I bought when I was temporarily insane. 

There can be no other explanation for buying a plant that bites.

The problem with gardening is that the very term is a euphemism.

It fools you into thinking that you’ll be swanning around a bunch of flowers.

Wrong.

Remember when you delivered a baby?  It was called labor for a reason, so you had fair warning.  Because it’s work.  There’s pushing and pulling and yanking and profanity.

And that’s just conception.

Sorry.

Anyway, back to my mistakes.  Second mistake, I bought plants online because they were cheaper, then I found out that the nursery near me is going out of business and everything there was 40 percent off.

What I had already spent.

The online plants didn’t come when they were supposed to, so I started thinking I’d need more plants anyway, and I could get them cheap at the nursery. I read through my new perennials books, went to the nursery with my To Buy list, and they had none of them. 

So I bought whatever perennials they had on sale.

It’s the Going Out of Business Garden.

And for what these plants cost, it’s going to put me out of business.

Anyway, the books said I had to take the grass off and make a bed.

I had no idea.  I thought you could just plant flowers in grass.  I should have known I’d screw up.  I never make my bed.

Third mistake, I thought the garden was a big area, but I’m not good at eyeballing it, as my father always said.  Of course I know there are tape measures, but how would you know how many plumbago plants you need to fill a foot of garden?  Until yesterday I thought I plumbago was a back problem.

Now plumbago is giving me a back problem.

Bottom line, it’s a big garden, so I got a great handyman, Dale, to help me, which is what you do when you’re divorced. 

You hire a husband.

Anyway the first thing Dale said was, “there’s a machine that takes off sod.”

Oh. 

So we found out the machine was called a sod cutter, and we rented one right away and started cutting the sod, which is the garden equivalent of scalping your grass. 

It took all day, cutting and hauling the sod, then raking the bed so no grass seeds were left.  Then we started putting in plants, with Dale doing the manly work of digging and me doing the girly work of putting in the potting soil and covering the hole.

I was a cover girl.

Yay!

Next mistake, we used up all the plants I had bought on sale, and still had two thirds of the garden left.  The online plants still weren’t here, so I went back to the garden center and bought more plants.

Three times.

I no longer consulted the books. 

I bought any perennial that wasn’t nailed down.

I would have planted a file cabinet if they’d let me.

But now I’m finished, and it looks beautiful, and it was worth all the trouble, like a brand new baby.

Who remembers their labor anyway?

Okay, I do.

Copyright © Lisa Scottoline

Column Classic: Airport Insecurity

By Lisa Scottoline

You may have heard about the airline that charges passengers according to how much they weigh, which I think is a great idea.

Because airline travel isn’t humiliating enough.

Never mind that when you stand in the security line, you have to undress in front of perfect strangers.

First you take off your shoes, so you can stand there awkwardly in your bare feet.  You lose three inches, but you gain ringworm.

Next you have to take off your belt.  It is not embarrassing at all to have to lift up your shirt and unfasten your belt, especially if you have to suck in your belly.

Not that I would know.

I have a belly, of course.

I just don’t bother sucking it in.

Then you unfasten your belt, and try not to make eye contact with the man in front of you as you slide it slowly through your belt loops. 

I’ve had marriages with less sexual chemistry.

Fifty Shades of Delta.

Finally you take off your coat and your sweater, stripping down to your T-shirt.  Nobody throws any dollar bills at you, and there’s not even a pole.  It’s the Terminal A striptease, and believe me, I’ve seen some of those businessmen in line and I know their wheels are going up. 

Next you proceed to the full-body scanner and lift your arms over your head, so the machine projects a life-size image of your bra to everybody in the tri-state area. 

With some women, it’s free porn.

In my case, it’s comic relief.

Plus I read recently that some of these machines use x-rays, and all I have to say is, TSA is in deep trouble if my breasts glow in the dark.

Whose side are you on, Marie Curie?

Let’s not forget that when you’re in the full-body scanner, you have to put your feet in the yellow outlines on the mat.  But I’m short, and I can never reach the outlines with my feet.  The other day, a TSA guy actually said to me, “Lady, you have to move your legs farther apart.”

Dude.  No, I don’t.

Although I’m a sucker for a man in uniform.

With a big wand.

Besides, I don’t think my legs go farther apart, anymore.  They like to be close together, all the time.  In fact, they might have grown together, so when I travel, I’m a mermaid, with carry-on.

But let’s be real, ladies.  Which machine is more embarrassing – a full-body scanner or a mammography machine? 

How about a show of hands?

Or something else…

Obviously, I’m all for airlines charging us by weight.  Our self-esteem can be dangerously high at times.  So by all means, why not put a big scale right next to the gate?  Make sure it has a large, blinking display, so that everybody can read it clearly.  Better yet, announce it on the loudspeaker systems. 

WELCOME TO PHILADELPHIA.  LISA SCOTTOLINE WEIGHS 132 POUNDS.  ALSO HER LEGS NO LONGER SEPARATE.  SHE MAY EVEN HAVE A HYMEN, WHO KNOWS?

And why stop there, in terms of humiliation?  Get an overhead projector and show the world our W-2s.

And by the way, the airline charges overweight baggage at the same rate as the passenger’s “personal weight.”

Cruel.

You know what I think?

The weight of this old bag is none of your business.

And I feel the same way about my luggage.

Copyright © Lisa Scottoline

Column Classic: Mother Mary and The Retirement Village

By Lisa Scottoline

Sooner or later, most families will deal with the question of whether an aging mom or dad should move to a retirement community.  The pamphlets say it’s not an easy decision, and they never met Mother Mary.

We begin with some background. 

As you may know, my mother lives with Brother Frank in South Beach, and lately they’ve been talking about selling their house.

By lately, I mean the past twenty years.

The Flying Scottolines move slowly.  So slowly, in fact, that we try to sell houses in the worst recession of all time, in which the real estate prices are at an all-time low.  If you need investment advice, just ask us.  We hear that tech stocks are superhot.

If Mother Mary and Brother Frank sell their house, the question becomes whether they should continue to live together, or whether Mother Mary should move to a retirement village.

It takes a village to raise Mother Mary.

And I wish it luck.

Anyway, they can’t decide what to do.  They love living together.   He’s gay, and his gay friends love their moms, so they’re all living in a happy circle of fragrant stereotypes.

And Frank takes wonderful care of her, taking her to all of her doctor’s appointments, grocery store runs, and occasional dinners out.  There’s a special place in heaven reserved for people who take such great care of their parents, and once my brother gets there, he’ll not only get a free pass, he’ll be allowed to park anywhere.

By the way, Mother Mary doesn’t want to live with me, because Pennsylvania is too cold.  Plus she always says, “All you do is read and write.”

To which I plead guilty.

And though we prefer her to live with family, we all know that Frank might not always be able to take care of her, and that even though she’s in great health now, she might not always be.  So we’re all confused, and I decided that we should go visit a retirement village, since none of us had ever seen one.  In fact, we’re so old-school that we kept calling it a “nursing home,” which is the last term that applies. 

On the contrary, it’s paradise.

We were shown through a lovely building, complete with two restaurants and a “pub,” which serves drinks in front of a big TV.  We read a daily menu that included trout almandine, duck with wild rice, and baked Alaska.  We toured a gym that had a Jacuzzi and an indoor pool.  We saw a beautiful one-bedroom apartment with freshly painted walls, cushy wool rugs, and maid service.  We got brochures on discount trips to Egypt and London.  And they have a computer class, a book club, canasta, bridge, and pinochle clubs, plus yoga, aerobics, free weights, and “seated” exercise. 

So you know where this is going:

I’m ready to move in. 

Now. 

Say the word. 

Retire me. 

I’m old enough, at least I feel old enough. 

They had me at “seated exercise.”  Exercising while seated is my kind of exercise.  It’s a piece a cake. 

Just do it.

For example, I’m seated right now, watching football on TV, which I gather is “unseated exercise.”  How conventional.  All that moving around. 

Who needs it?

But to stay on point, I fell in love with the place, and so did Brother Frank.  It even had a huge model train set, which he began playing with immediately, pressing the button to make the toy locomotive chug through the fake forest, until it derailed, careened off the track, and vanished into some fake shrubbery.

He walked away quickly.

I blamed it on my mother.

Why not?  It’s the American way.

And I bet you think you know what Mother Mary thought of the place.

She loved it. 

Surprise!

I think they got her thinking at “maid service.”

She’s hasn’t decided she wants to move there, and they’re going back to Florida to let it sink in.  We’ll see what happens, and I’ll let you know.  I’m just happy that’s she didn’t reject the idea outright.

Or throw food at anybody.

Copyright © Lisa Scottoline

Column Classic: Just Desserts

By Lisa Scottoline

It can be a problem when your kid comes home to visit.  You’re not used to living together, and even the littlest thing can cause a fuss.

For Daughter Francesca and me, it was dessert.

We’re finally on the same page, food-wise, which is a nice way of saying that we’re both trying to lose weight, so we’re eating healthy foods.  She’s home this weekend, so for dinner I made politically-correct pasta.  By which I mean, I sautéed a few tomatoes in olive oil with whole cloves of garlic, and when the mixture got soft, I took it out of the pan and dumped it on top of whole wheat spaghetti.

By the way, the best thing about this recipe, which I invented, is that it uses garlic without having to chop it up.  I hate it when my fingers smell like garlic, and I don’t buy garlic already chopped, because that’s cheating.  But this way, if you toss whole cloves in the pan, they get mushy, and you can mash them with a fork.  Mashing is more fun than chopping, and doesn’t involve your fingers.

You pay nothing extra for these culinary tips.

Go with God.

And before I tell you about the fight, let me mention also that I’m working on portion control.  I know that’s my main problem.  This should have been a reasonable-calorie dinner, even though it’s pasta, but I always up the ante by getting a second and a third helping.  You might ask, why do you make so much food in the first place, Lisa?  The answer is simple.

I’m Italian.

Actually the truth is, I like to make extra of everything, like scrambled eggs, so I can give some to the dogs.  Every morning, I make six eggs, knowing that I’ll eat two and give them the rest.  They wait patiently during my breakfast, knowing that their eggs will come.  It’s all very easy. 

But I was doing the same thing with whole wheat pasta, making extra for the dogs, until I realized I was using them as my portion control beard.

I busted myself and stopped.

To stay on point, I made a delightful spaghetti meal, and Francesca made a side salad.  We had a fun dinner, yapping away and trying not to eat more helpings of pasta, even though it was calling to us from the colander.  When we finished our meal, I wanted dessert.

This, I can’t help.

I love to eat dessert right after dinner.  And when I say right, I mean immediately.  Timing is everything.  It doesn’t have to be a lot of something, just a taste.  It’s not my fault, and I figured out why this is so: 

It’s because dessert sounds so much like deserve.  Also, we say that people get their just desserts, which means they get what they deserve.  So, ipso fatso, I feel as if I deserve dessert.

Right now.

But Francesca doesn’t like dessert right after dinner.  She can wait, which I consider a four-letter word. 

This is a long-standing battle we have, because I like us to eat together, and the conversation usually goes like this:  I ask her, “Want some dessert?”

She answers, “No, thanks.  We just ate.”

“But don’t you want something sweet?  I’m having mine now.”

“No, I’m not hungry for dessert yet.”

I get cranky.  “When do you think you’ll want dessert?”

“I don’t know.  Later.”

“Sooner later or later later?”

Okay, so usually I don’t eat my dessert then, and we retire to the family room, where we watch TV and work, and I spend the rest of the night asking her, “Is it later yet?”

Just like she used to ask me, “Are we there yet?”

Payback, no?

So last night, I figured I’d solve this problem.  All I wanted was a small helping of vanilla ice cream, with a banana.  And because I wanted it right after dinner, I decided to have it then.  If I had to eat alone, so be it.  Plus, this way I’d have more time to burn off the calories, by reaching for the remote throughout the evening.

So I had my ice cream and banana. 

Delicious.

Copyright © Lisa Scottoline