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Exposing Hollywood's anti-German agenda

I'm not ashamed to be religious or a liberal

'Beat Me with a Stick' Elmo and other great toys

Making a difference: why I do what I do

Telemarketing ban has ended a great pastime

I don't rule the world, and that's fine with me

Making the journey from prejudice to understanding

There's no comparing genocide and killing geese

All that's left is an empty feeling

An unrequited love for some really neat words

Foster dads offer hands and hearts ... for the time being.

Thanksgiving dinner and other forms of ritual madness.

Zen and the art of not getting run over by a Mack truck

A lifetime of regrets as another year goes down the tubes

Reform Party Convention ends in shoot-out

Virtual immortality isn't all it's cracked up to be

Insider's look at the Republican National Convention turns up many surprises

Car Repair for Dummies, Part One: This is a Car

Sadness marks the passing of a beloved mattress

At last, something worse than 'Jane Eyre'

Every town has a story. Tombstone has a fixation.

Forget the Trekkies, the real nutcases are on the Luce

Chalk one up for the faceless restaurant customers

Feeling sick? Maybe it's time to get a shave.

Guest Writer: Toto, I don't think we're in Mayberry anymore

Guest Writer: The need for speed

Does this mean we won't get free popcorn anymore?

Out of the way, Martha Stewart -- I'm in the kitchen now

How I'm surviving my brush with 'Jane Eyre'

First blizzard of the year evokes frivolous memories, no deep thoughts

Isn't it time to jump on the bandwagon with the Real Thing?

Forward this column and you can turn e-mail into $300!

Trips to the moon, disaster figure in mildew prognostications

True confessions (more or less) of a closet survivalist

Who understands what dreams may come?

Hey, everyone, look -- it's an elephant!

Wouldn't 'Senator Learn' have a nice ring?

To my little girl: while you're sleeping . . .

Special Report: Entering the Baby Zone

Battling the suburban white whale

Wanted: Politician to tackle key issues

Something else to worry about this fall

Wanted: Dumber Mice and Better Mouse Traps

One More Stop on the Road to Adulthood

Follow the fashion leads of the journalist from Krypton

This is why naming children by committee never caught on

Psoriasis may be ugly, but at least it doesn't leave scars

Another casualty of the ancient family curse

Quest for baby names too big to handle

How the seniors taught me to get down

And don't forget your scarf when you go inside

Guest Writer: No room for Paradise as vandals force Dew Drop Inn to close

The samba of the mad Vulcan

Maybe I could be directed by Spielberg

The aliens in Rhode Island don't want you to read this

Voice of nostalgia is a call to destruction

My wife is having the baby, but I look pregnant

The end of the world as we know it

Run for the hills - Y2K’s a’comin’ fast

What's in a name? Shakespeare had no idea

Don't waste your energy on the 'gas out'

Career choice leaves a lasting mark

One Easter leftover, hold the ham please

 
  Feeling sick? Maybe it's time to get a shave.

The worst part of having facial hair is all the mucus that gets caught in my mustache when I'm sick.

One hairy fellow I met back in 1992 complained that catching food there was the worst part of having a beard. With all due respect to Cookie and his greater number of years of experience with facial hair, I have to disagree. Aside from the slice of watermelon that was stuck there for three weeks after a picnic last summer, I've never once had food caught in my beard..

I wish it were the same for other items as well. But every time I've blown my nose the past three days, there have been not-so-subtle trails left behind, and when I've woken up in the morning, the hairs under my nose have been painfully stiff, like the spears of a tiny army on my upper lip, poised to strike the first enemy they encounter.

All that's stopped me from shaving it all off and being rid of the nuisance is the prospect of having to clean my electric razor afterward.

For the past few days I have been as sick as the proverbial dog. It's not as debilitating as the time I had amebic dysentery, nor as painful as when I had dengue fever, but in the past three days I've coughed so much that my head feels like a tree that's gone two rounds with a lumberjack. My joints ache, my muscles are sore and even my toenails feel too tight.

Nothing saps the spirits like a summer cold. This one has left me ill-tempered, out of sorts and delirious. I've slept later and for longer hours, and even when I'm not asleep, I just lie around and generally am unproductive. (Once I figure out how all this differs from when I'm healthy, I'll let you know.)

And yet, despite the incongruity, I find that colds actually bring back some nice memories. When I was a child, my mother had a special knack for taking care of us when we were sick. Aside from the usual benefits of being sick - staying home from school, sleeping on the sofa and watching TV all day, and getting out of delivering our paper routes - my mother would say at least once a cold, "You know, you would feel a lot better if you could throw up that big glob of mucus in your stomach."

Something about those words gave them a measure of healing power. Mom would trot out her magic phrase, and in no time the sick person would rush to follow the prescribed treatment, along with anyone else who had been within earshot. To this day, whenever I get sick, I can still hear her saying those magic words.

Niki of course has extended her wifely sympathies to me the past few days. Earlier today, after I had taken a shower, dressed and changed the baby's diaper, I announced I was going back to bed for a nap.

"What?" she said. "But you just woke up!"

It was less than an hour later that I saw how much she truly cared. The bowl of cereal I ate for breakfast proved to be too solid for my stomach to handle, and I found myself rushing to the bathroom to follow my mother's timeless advice.

I could read Niki's thoughts like a book. "Poor Dave," she thought. "I can't stand to hear him suffer." And with that she closed the bathroom door and played a Steve Taylor CD as loudly as she could.

Of course, now I seem to be on the mend from my cold, while Niki is just beginning her turn. Since I've had what she is getting, she has my full sympathies.

But at least she doesn't have a mustache.

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"Scarred for Life" is written by David Learn, Copyright © 1999 - 2002 and appears here by permission. All technical content of this site is Copyright © 1999 - 2002 by Blair Learn.