Monday, January 19, 2026

MY CAR WAS HELD HOSTAGE BY JACK FROST

 

I have to admit that when it comes to winter driving, I try to avoid it at all costs.

If I absolutely have to go out, such as if there is no food in the house and my dogs are staring at me as if they’re wondering how many meals the meat on my thigh bone might provide, then I’ll venture out. Otherwise, I’m perfectly fine with hibernating until June.

Last week, however, I finally made a sale on eBay. It was a set of trading cards I’d listed way back when people were still complaining about the heat and how all of the stores were sold out of air-conditioners and fans.

In other words, I’d totally forgotten about those cards.

The temperature was a balmy 20 degrees with a sub-zero wind chill on the day I made the eBay sale. Not exactly a day I was eager to leave my warm house, my cup of hot tea and my heated comforter, and subject my old body to weather that would cause icicles to hang from my nostrils in about 10 minutes.

But experience has taught me that when it comes to eBay, being prompt at sending out packages usually earns some much-desired 5-star positive feedback, so I forced myself to get up early and go to the post office.

By the time I finally gathered the courage to actually set foot outside, however, it was 3:00 PM…two hours before the post office closed. One of the reasons why I was so late was my hair. No matter which way I brushed it, it decided to go in the opposite direction. I tried dampening it, spraying it and using gel on it. After countless failures, I finally found a solution.

A knitted hat pulled down past my ears.

Anyway, I went out to the garage, hopped into my car (which could have doubled as a refrigerator in an emergency at that point) and reached up to the visor to push the button on the remote control that opens the automatic garage door.

Nothing happened…other than a loud grinding noise. So I tried again and heard even more grinding. Muttering, I got out of the car and walked over to examine the door. It was welded to the concrete with a strip of ice the entire length of it.

“Nooo!” I groaned, thinking my car would be stuck in the garage until the spring thaw and I’d lose my great rating on eBay.

So I tried the door-opening button on the garage wall which, in retrospect, probably wasn’t the most brilliant thing to do. I mean, if the door was stuck in the ice and the remote-control button on my car’s visor caused it to grind, then why would the other button on the wall make any difference? Did I think it might be concealing a hidden blow-torch or something?

Sure enough, when I pressed the wall button, the grinding sound not only grew louder, the panels on the door looked as if they were about to rip apart and go flying into the garage. Picturing my cause of death listed as “flattened by debris from a dismembered garage-door,” I dashed back into the house, grabbed my laptop and Googled “How to release an automatic garage door that’s frozen to the ground.”

It suggested that I first disconnect the door from the automatic opener by pulling straight down and then back on the red emergency release-cord hanging from the trolley on the rail. After that, it suggested trying to lift the door manually. If that didn’t work, it recommended using a blow-dryer or a portable heater on the ice.

I hadn’t even been aware my garage door had an emergency release cord, which sounded more like something a skydiver would use as he was plummeting to his death. But I found it and tugged on it. Then, just to make certain the door no longer was connected to the automatic opener, I pushed the button. No more grinding noise, so that meant, I assumed, it was disconnected. That gave me the courage to grab the handle on the bottom of the door and give it my strongest heave-ho upwards.

Nothing budged…other than several of my vertebrae.

I frantically searched the garage for something that might chop the ice away – or even better, something thin enough to slide underneath the ice and pry it up from the concrete. I found a flat, hand-held garden spade that kind of resembled a spatula, and set to work sliding it underneath the ice.

After what seemed like four hours, I’d managed to loosen about one inch of the ice. Even worse, I’d been on my knees for so long, they felt as if they also were frozen to the concrete. Visions of myself having to squirm out of my jeans and walk pants-less back into the house, sent me rushing back inside to search for the blow-dryer. I’d never bothered to buy one for myself after my last one broke, but I remembered my late husband had one…back when he wanted to keep his mullet looking stylish.

Where, however, was it?

By then, it was 3:45 and I was becoming desperate. I found the blow-dryer in a far corner of the cabinet underneath the bathroom sink. Then I searched for an extension cord, which I ended up tearing off my Christmas tree. For once, procrastinating about taking down the tree actually had come in handy.

The blow-dryer also turned out to be painstakingly slow. As soon as I would manage to thaw one section of the ice and move to the next section, the first section would start to freeze up again.

At that point, I knew that barring some miracle, I wasn’t going to make it to the post office before it closed. And the next day, an ice storm, as if to curse me, was predicted.

I had to face reality...I was doomed.

I stomped back into the house and tossed my purse and the eBay package onto the counter. That was when I saw it…the empty salt shaker I’d left out so I would remember to fill it. Without thinking twice about the consequences, I rushed to the cupboard and found a full container of table salt, then headed out to the garage and emptied nearly all of the contents along the stubborn strip of ice that was holding the door captive.

The ice began to thaw more rapidly than I’d anticipated, and soon I could hear crackling noises. I waited a few minutes longer, then tried tugging the door open again.

It was a struggle, but it finally gave way and opened. I stood there, momentarily stunned that the table salt actually had worked. I checked my watch. It was 4:30. If I left right then and the traffic cooperated, I estimated I could make it to the post office just in time. Figuring out how to hitch the door back up to the automatic opener would have to wait until later.

I walked into the post office at 4:55 and successfully mailed the package. I was so relieved, I felt like doing a happy dance right there in the lobby. But I noticed that the clerk had given me a strange look when he'd first set eyes on me, so I didn’t want to give him any reason to think of me as being even stranger.

Puzzled by the clerk's reaction, I checked my reflection in the mirror once I was back in my car...and gasped. Despite the frigid weather, I’d obviously worked up a sweat during my lengthy struggle to open the garage door because my mascara was in streaks down my cheeks. Also, my hat had worked its way over to one side of my head and revealed a section of my hair on the other side that was stuck to the side of my face because of the gel I’d used on it. And there was a smear of something brownish, like axle grease, on my chin. I pretty much resembled Alice Cooper in full makeup.

The first thing I did when I got home was hook the door back to the automatic opener, which required the use of a broom handle and some more grunting. Then I headed straight to my laptop and deleted any items I still was selling on eBay.

I will relist them again in June…maybe July.

I also asked Google, even though it was too late, if it was okay to use table salt on the concrete under my garage door. No problem whatsoever – well, other than the deterioration of the concrete as the salt works its way into the fine cracks, accelerates the freeze-thaw cycle and causes mass destruction leading to expensive and extensive repairs.

Nope, no problem at all.

So after suffering through this latest experience, I’m now more serious than ever about hibernating…even if it means sacrificing some of my thigh meat to the dogs.

Heck, I can spare it.

 

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 Sally Breslin is an award-winning syndicated humor columnist who has written regularly for newspapers and magazines all of her adult life. She is the author of several novels in a variety of genres, from humor and romance to science-fiction. Contact her at: sillysally@att.net.







 


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