Tuesday, April 14, 2026

MICROWAVE WAS ALWAYS A FOUR-LETTER WORD TO ME

 

The other night, I swear I saw my late husband’s urn shaking a bit, probably because I did something that made him roll over in his ashes.

I bought a new microwave.

Let me explain…

The first 20 years of my marriage were spent with my husband asking (which eventually led to begging) me to buy a microwave oven, to which my response usually was something like, “Over my dead body!” 

But my refusal wasn't without a good reason. The first time I ever saw a microwave oven, back in the early 1970s, it was in the form of something called a Radarange, a monstrosity of an appliance that stood in the lunchroom at the place where I worked. And posted all around that Radarange were signs with big red letters that cautioned people who had pacemakers not to go near it.

Concerned, one day I asked the custodian what would happen if someone with a pacemaker accidentally did go near it.

He shrugged. “I’m not sure. But I do know it cooks food from the inside out, unlike regular ovens that cook from the outside in, so maybe pacemakers would attract a signal from it that would cause it to roast their internal organs.”

That image stuck with me for many years. And even though I didn’t have a pacemaker to worry about, I stopped eating in the lunchroom, just to be safe.

My husband was persistent, however.

“Think of how great it would be to pick up some fast food on the way home and not have to eat it all cold and dried out anymore,” he would say. “A microwave would make it taste as hot and as fresh as if it were just served.”

“If you want your fast food to taste hot and fresh,” I’d answer, “then just eat it in the car instead of bringing it home.”

“What have you got against microwaves anyway?” he’d ask.

“Radiation! You can’t tell me that radiation is good for you.”

That’s when he usually would roll his eyes and say, “Oh, you’re just being ridiculous. Microwaves are perfectly safe. We have one at work and I use it every day.”

“Well, then just don’t come running to me when you grow a third eyeball in the back of your head!”

Still, he never passed up an opportunity to try to convince me. And I have to confess he nearly did sway me to join the Dark Side when he used my love of baked potatoes for ammunition during one particularly hot summer night.

“Did you know you can bake potatoes in a microwave oven in only 10 minutes?” he pointed out as I stood sweating near the kitchen stove, waiting for my potatoes to bake. “And you won’t be heating up the whole house in the process. Imagine having a nice, fluffy baked potato, perfectly cooked, in only a fraction of the time it usually takes?”

He’d actually managed to pique my interest enough to the point where I was on the verge of finally surrendering and agreeing to buy a microwave.

But that was when I happened to see a magazine advertisement for a gadget called a microwave radiation-leak detector.

“That does it!” I said, thrusting the ad at my husband. “If microwaves are so safe, why would this company be advertising something that detects radiation leaks in them? No way would I risk having anything like that in my house! So don’t ever mention it again. You’ll thank me for it someday!”

For the most part, he did stop mentioning it after that, other than an occasional comment about how soggy, cold pizza miraculously could be resurrected into a crisp, hot and fresh-tasting delicacy in a microwave.

Then something happened that was totally unexpected on the night before our 24th wedding anniversary. There was a knock at the door and in walked the couple who lived across the road. They were carrying a huge box with a big red bow on the top.

“Happy anniversary!” they shouted in unison. “We brought you a gift!”

The gift turned out to be a microwave oven…a really expensive, state-of-the-art model.

I immediately became suspicious, especially since they’d never even sent us an anniversary card in the past, never mind bought us a gift. I narrowed my eyes at my husband. I wouldn’t have put it past to him to buy a microwave and then bribe the neighbors to pretend they’d done it, so I wouldn’t be so likely to reject it.

“I swear,” he said with a laugh, reading my thoughts and holding up his hands in protest, “I had nothing to do with it! It was just coincidence!” He then rushed out to the kitchen to clear a space on the counter for his new toy. If there had been firecrackers in his slippers, he couldn’t have moved faster.

At first, I kept my distance from the microwave. Every time I heard the whirring sound of the turntable inside it, which was often (like 10 times a day), thanks to my husband, I’d run for cover in an attempt to protect myself from the millions of invisible radiation particles I felt certain were just waiting to fly at me and transform me into a mirror image of the Phantom of the Opera.

But my husband was just the opposite. He bought special microwave products like meals, popcorn, and even a bacon cooker, and used the microwave so often, I was afraid to look at our electric bill. He also purchased so much takeout food, just so he could reheat it in the microwave and see how it tasted, we could have opened our own restaurant.

The first time I finally caved in and used the microwave was when I wanted a baked potato on a hot summer day. Instead of running the conventional oven for over an hour and heating up the house, I shoved two potatoes into the microwave and pushed the “potato” button. They emerged looking like big black raisins.

“What the heck is it?” my husband asked, eyeing the potato when I plunked it down on his dinner plate that evening.

“It’s your delicious, fluffy, microwaved potato,” I said sweetly.

Over the years, I did use the microwave for small tasks, such as melting butter when I needed it for a recipe, or heating up a cup of water for tea. But I never cooked a meal in it, or, heaven forbid, meat or poultry, which never browned and came out gray in color whenever my husband attempted it.

Not exactly something that would whet my appetite.

After my husband passed away, so did the microwave shortly thereafter, probably because it was so lonely without him. I didn’t mourn its demise and vowed never to buy another one. But when I spotted a small one on sale for only $29 while shopping one day, I couldn’t resist.

It served me well until the day of the Great Popcorn Fire a few years later, which transformed it into a charcoal briquette inside. Again, I swore I’d never buy another one, but caved in yet again and splurged on a really cheap one on sale.

Two months ago, however, I noticed holes in it where it had severely rusted right through the protective paint on the interior metal. The online advice when I researched it was to get rid of the appliance because the all-important seal might be compromised (and require the aforementioned radiation-leak detector).

“Okay, I’m done!” I muttered after I lugged the microwave down to the basement and shoved it back into its original box, where I figured it probably would end up becoming a housing unit for the spiders. “I’m never buying another one. I can live without it.”

But as it turned out, I couldn’t. And I blamed my husband for ever introducing me to the contraption in the first place. So I hate to admit it, but I recently bought a new one. In my defense, it was a reputable brand-name model for a change, not some unknown brand like my previous one that rusted, Nuke-A-Meal.

And I won’t use it much, so I'm pretty certain it will outlive me.

I mean, yesterday I used it only to heat up a therapeutic neck wrap, thaw out a package of frozen biscuits, melt some margarine for my cookie batter, cook chicken scraps for the dogs, pop some corn for my crows (Edgar, Allan and Poe), reheat a bowl of the soup I made, and boil a few mugs of water.

Like I said, I will hardly use it at all.


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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.




 




Wednesday, April 8, 2026

THE OLDER I GET, THE LESS I ENJOY THE BEACH...(AND IT'S NOT BECAUSE I LOOK LIKE A GIANT PRUNE IN A SWIMSUIT)

 


Every time the weather warms up even just a few degrees, most of my friends immediately start talking about going to the beach.

When I was a teen, my friend Alice (who had her driver’s license and a brand new Mustang) and I hung out at the beach every chance we got. But as I grew older, the seashore began to progressively lose its appeal to me.

It’s not that I don’t like the ocean or a cool sea breeze, especially on a hot summer day. It’s just that at times, it’s pretty difficult to find either one at New Hampshire’s public beaches. The last time I went to Hampton, the beach was so crowded, it made Times Square on New Year’s Eve look like an intimate gathering.

I remember how my husband and I, after driving around for an hour just to find a parking spot, then had to search for another hour before we finally located a postage-stamp sized space on the sand and wedged our towels into it. I sat down and began to rub sunscreen on my right leg, which wasn’t easy, considering I had only about an inch of elbow room. Then, as I applied the lotion to my other leg, I suddenly realized I couldn't feel anything...my leg had gone completely numb.

“Ohmigod!” I cried out to my husband. “I’ve lost the feeling in my leg!”

“That’s MY leg you’re rubbing!” he said.

“Thank goodness!”  I breathed. “I thought I needed a shave.”

Eating also was a challenge on the crowded beach. One time, just as I unwrapped a tuna sandwich, a bunch of kids came running by and kicked up sand all over it. When I grumbled about it to the friend I was with, she laughed and said, “Well, now you have a genuine SAND-wich!”

Nobody likes a smart aleck. 

Swimming never was my favorite pastime at Hampton Beach either. Let’s face it, the water there is so cold, anyone who stays in it for longer than five minutes runs the risk of having his or her body donated to a cryonics lab.  And the beach sand is so hot, only fire walkers can tolerate it. I always feared, after walking across it, that when I stuck my burning feet into the icy water, a huge cloud of steam would rise up like Old Faithful and temporarily blind me. 

I still have to laugh when the local meteorologists try to make the water sound inviting. “It’s a scorching 105 degrees out there today. But if you head on over to Hampton Beach, you can enjoy a water temperature that's a refreshing 42 degrees!” 

Refreshing? For whom...walruses?

But by far, the worst part of the beach is the rotten-egg smell of the salt marshes at low tide. The first time my husband and I caught a whiff of one in the breeze, we didn’t know what it was. We ended up casting accusing glances at a group of people standing near us. 

“I’ll bet they went to one of those all-you-can-eat baked-bean suppers at the local church last night,” I muttered to my husband. 

The one thing I always did enjoy about the beach, however, was the roller coaster at Salisbury Beach.  Every time we went to Hampton, we took a side trip to Salisbury, just up the road a few miles, for the sole purpose of riding the coaster there. It was an old wooden monstrosity, so weather-beaten, it actually swayed and creaked whenever a strong breeze hit it.  And it wasn't uncommon to see a a few nails lying on the ground near it, where they probably had popped out of the decaying wood.  

Still, I loved it.

The part of the ride I enjoyed the most was when the coaster paused at the top of that first hill...just before it took the big vertical plunge. From that height, there was such an endless, breathtaking view of the ocean, I swear I actually could see Queen Elizabeth waving at us from her balcony at Buckingham Palace.

So I was devastated to return to Salisbury one summer, only to discover a flat, empty area where the coaster previously had stood. I was told it had been torn down to make room for a kiddies’ amusement park, but to this day, I still believe what really happened was the last nail holding the coaster together finally popped out one night and reduced it to a giant heap of rubble. 

For as long as I can remember, the one thing beaches always seem to have inspired is romance. I can’t count how many of the centerfolds in Playboy Magazine or the contestants on those dating shows on TV have listed “long walks on the beach” as one of their biggest turn-ons. 

I guess they’ve never taken a long walk by a salt marsh during low tide.

 

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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.




 


Wednesday, April 1, 2026

MORE FROM MY COLLECTION OF HUMOROUS GOOFS, MISSPELLINGS, TYPOS AND MORE!

 

For many years now, I have been jotting down and collecting humorous typos, misspellings, goofs and bad sentence-structure (syntax) seen in newspaper headlines and articles, on store signs, in advertisements and more, that have made (and still make) me laugh.

Nowadays, with so many people posting online and dealing with the joys of “autocorrect” on their phones, I have a plethora of humorous goofs to choose from.

I haven’t shared any of these gems on here in about a year, so I thought I’d do that now. I can’t resist commenting on some (okay, all) of them, so I’ll add my personal thoughts and comments in parentheses.

 

MISTAKES SEEN ON SIGNS, ETC.

 

NO PARKING!  YOUR VEHICLE WILL BE TOAD!

(And if you kiss it, it might turn into a handsome prince!).


VIOLATORS WILL BE TOWED AND FIND $100!

(Not bad. I wouldn’t mind finding $100!).


ILLEGALLY PARKED VEHICLES WILL BE FINE.

(That’s a relief, because I’m currently parked in the fountain at the mall).


TODAY! GARAGE SAIL AT 221 CEDAR STREET.

(Better hurry over there before the wind picks up and the garage takes off on a cruise!).


NO SMOKING ALOUD!

(But it’s okay if you do it very quietly).


CAUTION! BARES SEEN IN THE AREA. DO NOT LEAVE FOOD IN YOUR CAR!

(Nothing worse than a bunch of hungry nudists!).


DECEMBER 14TH – BRING YOUR CHILD TO OUR ANNUAL HOLIDAY BREAKFAST WITH SATAN!

(But won’t that affect their standings on the naughty-or-nice list?).


HELP WANTED:  MANURE WOMAN TO WORK AS A NANNY THIS SUMMER.

(“Manure” woman? What kind of a nanny? A goat?).


In a fast-food restaurant’s restroom: EMPLOYEES MUST WASH THEIR HANDS BEFORE LIVING.

(Hand washing will resurrect the Walking Dead?).


In another restaurant’s restroom: IF THE TOILET KEEPS RUNNING, PLEASE GIGGLE THE HANDLE.

(I’m not sure I’d want to be overheard laughing while in a restroom stall).


In a small boutique: NO PUBIC RESTROOMS

(Funny how leaving out just one little letter can change the entire meaning of a word!).


In a local bakery: TRY OUR LEMON-BLUEBERRY MUFFINS, FRESHLY WARMED IN OUR OWEN.

(Poor Owen. I don’t think I’d want his job…or one of those muffins!).


In a supermarket produce department: HALF  PRICE TODAY!  CANT  ELOPE MELONS.

(How sad. I guess that means the melons will have to cancel their plans to be married by an Elvis impersonator in Las Vegas).


Typos seen in supermarket advertisements: $1.00 PER CAN – VAN CAMP’S PORN AND BEANS  and… THIS WEEK’S FEATURE IN OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT – BLACK ANUS GROUND BEEF.

(Eeeeyuuw!  And eeeyuuw again!).


In a supermarket bakery department: FOR SANITARY REASONS, PLEASE USE TONGUES WHEN SELECTING A PASTRY.

(Must be difficult to find a cupcake in that place that doesn’t already have all of the frosting licked off!).


At a popular donut shop that had only one employee working that day: SORRY FOR YOUR WEIGHT. PLEASE BE PATIENT.

(Yeah, it might take a while to burn off all of those extra pounds after eating too many cream-filled donuts).


And this wasn’t from a sign or an advertisement, but I had to share it. A woman on Facebook was describing the delicious “roast history” chicken she’d bought fresh and hot at a local supermarket.

All I can say is if that chicken had a “roast history,” then that means it was roasted more than once and couldn't possibly be "fresh" and hot.

That’s all for this time…but I’ll keep collecting more goofs to share with you in the future!

 

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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.