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Chinook
by George M Hosier II - March 25
Winter Skin
One of the perks of living in this beautiful, savage State is the
opportunity it affords me to sample a wide variety of exotic skin
care products. The unique combination of low humidity, high wind
and severe cold has a way of instantaneously freeze-drying my
epidermis. Guys are supposed to scoff at the use of lotions and
potions, but I don’t. I crave the stuff.
For a while, I too was afflicted by the macho mentality. Whenever
my wife told me that I should take care of my skin, I’d shrug her
off: “I’m fine. Just a little chapped, that’s all. I’m not going
to rub any of that slimy stuff on me and walk around smelling like
a giant peach.” Although I secretly craved relief, the thought of
using a skin moisturizer felt like a betrayal of my masculinity. I
would have sooner worn a scrunchy in my hair, or gotten a
manicure.
Even when my fingertips cracked open and I began leaving bloody
fingerprints on everything I touched, I refused to come to my
senses. Eventually, I began to hear little tinkling sounds
whenever I flexed my skin. I could hold my hand up to a bright
light, make a fist, and watch a puff of dead skin cells explode in
a veritable blizzard from my hide.
For a while it was a great gag. I would invite some friends over
for an old black and white comedy-watching marathon. My wife would
whip up a stock pot of spaghetti, and I would wait until everyone
had settled around the boob tube with a plate full. Then as the
tinny, old-fashioned theme music played on the opening credits, I
would poke my hand in front of the screen and intone “...and now,
ladies and gentlemen, we present the Hal Roach feature film,
‘Laurel and Hardy, lost in Antarctica!’” Then I would clench my
fist.
My guy friends loved it, although their wives were less than
amused. My wife, spoilsport that she is, put an end to it when
everyone started complimenting her on the Parmesan cheese. She
didn’t serve any Parmesan cheese. Wives have no sense of humor.
I didn’t start using lotion, though, until the Chihuahua and
woodpecker incident that happened when I was Outside a number of
years ago. It was a quick trip, while I was at the peak of a
full-fledged flare-up of Winter Skin. The pivotal incident
occurred as I was standing out behind my grandparents’ house in
Pennsylvania admiring the distinctive thick flaky bark that hung
in peeling strips from their beloved stand of shagbark hickory
trees.
I have a vague memory of hearing the hinges squeak on the back
door of the house, simultaneous with the flutter of wings above my
head. I had just begun to register a warm flowing sensation in the
vicinity of my ankle when fireworks exploded in my head and I lost
consciousness.
When I woke up, I was laying on Grandma’s claw-legged, wing-backed
davenport with my head on a rolled up afghan, and she was pouring
a bottle of cod-liver oil down my throat. My pounding head was
swathed in a comfrey poultice, and Grandpa was talking.
“...now, Gertrude, you’re getting yourself too worked up. Why
don’t you just give Georgie a chance to rest, and I’m sure he’ll
be ok.”
“Elmer! How can you be so calm? Land Sakes, did you ever see
anything like it? What do you suppose came over Taco? Bad, bad
Taco! Bad doggie!”
Grandpa snorted. “Hah, nothing your spoiled mutt does could
surprise me, but the thing that has me buffaloed is that bird! I
have never seen a woodpecker light into a person before. The crazy
thing just landed on his shoulder and started pecking at Georgie’s
face like he thought he was a tree or something!”
My grandparents never have figured out what happened--but I knew.
It wasn’t the animals’ fault. Standing there among those shagbark
hickories with my winter skin, I must have looked like just
another tree. Taco and the woodpecker were only being true to
their instincts.
It was at that moment that I came to the realization that I had
two options. I could audition for a movie role as Treebeard the
Ent, or I could use some lotion. I figured that since Peter
Jackson finished filming the Lord of the Rings movies years ago
and probably won’t be making another version until they come out
with holoprojector technology, I was fated to apply some skin
moisturizer.
As soon as I had recovered from Grandma’s cod liver oil
sufficiently to drive, I mumbled an excuse and drove up the road
to the 7-11 convenience store. I grabbed a shopping basket and
sidled over toward the health and beauty shelf. On the way, I
snatched a Guns and Ammo magazine from the bookrack and made a
show of thumbing through it. When I felt certain nobody was
looking my direction, I backed up to a bottle with a picture of an
aloe vera plant on it and nudged it with my elbow until it toppled
into my basket. Quickly I dropped the magazine on top of it and
headed for the Slim Jims and Twinkies as if that had been my
original destination.
At checkout, my face flamed with embarrassment when the clerk
lifted my magazine to reveal the telltale bottle of moisturizer. I
stammered something about picking it up for my wife, threw a fifty
on the counter and fled without bothering to wait for change.
My hand was shaking so badly, I could hardly slip the key into the
ignition. My mouth was dry, and my heart pounded as I pulled out
of the parking lot. Shifty-eyed, I searched for a secluded place
to experience my first hit of skin lotion. About a quarter mile
down the road I found it—a pullout behind a billboard, shielded by
overhanging shrubbery.
I reached into the bag, took a deep breath, and drew my purchase
into the open. I unscrewed the cap and tore off the safety seal.
The bottom of the seal was coated with a layer of a smooth creamy
substance that emitted a slightly herbal scent. It was nothing
like the cheap perfume smell I had dreaded. Hesitantly, I touched
it to the back of my hand.
The reaction was instantaneous! There was a sharp hissing sound as
the lotion met my skin and evaporated in a geyser of steam. The
little foil seal shriveled and writhed, and before my eyes
tarnished to the color of a blued gun barrel before leaping out of
my hand and bursting into flame. I wasn’t sure, but I thought I
noticed a faint soothing sensation in my hand.
With a sudden resolve, I tilted the bottle above my hand and
squeezed. My skin became a gluttonous sponge that sucked in the
lotion faster than I could pour it on. Before I knew it, I had
dumped the entire bottle into one spot on the back of my hand the
size of a quarter.
When the tingling and the steam had subsided, I became aware of a
luscious new sensation. It was the amazing, exquisite luxury of
hydrated skin. There are no words to describe the euphoria I felt
as I peered down at the moist, pink oasis of health surrounded by
the parched, dusty desert that was the rest of my hand.
As I burst back through the door of the convenience mart, the
clerk flapped a fistful of bills at me:
“Sir, sir? Excuse me, you forgot your change, sir!”
“Keep it. Can I get a case of that lotion stuff?
My...uh...wife...no, you know what? Scratch that. It’s me,
actually. I proudly admit it. I want some skin lotion! Do you hear
me, world? Hahahaha! I USE SKIN LOTION! ANYBODY GOT A PROBLEM WITH
THAT?”
Some people may think I’m a wimp, but let me tell you something;
no critters have confused me with a shagbark hickory since I
started moisturizing. However, just in case you happen to be one
of those hardcore holdouts whose ego prevents you from treating
your winter skin, here are a few suggestions that I have come up
with to make the best of your situation:
1. Start a dust mite farm. Then use an electron microscope to take
pictures of them feeding on your discarded flakes of skin, and
make a “B” horror flick.
2. Volunteer your services to the city to lie in Jarvis creek bed
during breakup and absorb any floodwaters.
3. Hire yourself out to outdoor party events as a human wind
chime. Sit in a breezy place and let the wind ripple your scales
for a musical ambience.
There are many other profitable ideas that a creative entrepreneur
could exploit, but these examples should get your creative juices
flowing. Either that or you could break down and apply some
lotion.
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