Imperial Valley Press

Riding the wave

- TRACY BECKERMAN You can follow Tracy on Twitter @ TracyBecke­rman and become a fan on Facebook at www.facebook.com/ LostinSubu­rbiaFanPag­e.

We hadn’t had the new microwave that long when, all of a sudden, it decided it just didn’t want to microwave anymore.

“You had one job,” I said to the microwave, chastising it after it failed to reheat some leftovers. “Is that really so hard?”

Naturally, I had no idea what went into making a microwave microwave. I assumed it probably had something to do with the sun, since it used microwaves, and maybe also radio waves or ultraviole­t rays, and therefore there was surely a solar panel installed somewhere, that made it work, as well as a transistor radio and sunscreen.

Since I had no experience with microwaves or radio waves or UV waves (except that one time when I was 7 and I got a really bad sunburn), I thought this was all well out of my limited range of appliance repair knowledge and decided to call in a profession­al.

I looked online for a repairman in my area and chose Mike’s Microwaves Repair because it had a number of good reviews and also, Mike and microwaves both begin with an M and I like alliterati­on. I had to wait two weeks for Mike to show up because apparently, there was a sudden epidemic of microwave deaths at the same time that mine pooped out. It was like some kind of microwave flu that must have been transmitte­d over the airwaves, or maybe the radio waves, I couldn’t be certain.

By the time Mike finally arrived I was beside myself. I was a child of the microwave generation and never realized that food could also be reheated in an actual oven, so for two weeks I ate cold leftovers and brooded about how difficult life was without a microwave.

“I think it might be the fuse,” said Mike when he finally arrived and did triage on my microwave. “It should be an easy fix, but there’s a chance I might have to do open oven surgery. I need you to sign a release.”

“A release?” I said. “For what?” “Acknowledg­ing that the appliance was not functionin­g when I arrived and nothing I did caused it to further malfunctio­n.”

“Fine,” I said and signed the form. “But before you do anything, you should try pointing the satellite dish in a different direction to see if that solves the problem, because not only is the microwave broken, but also, our TV isn’t getting very good reception.”

He looked at me like I was one burner short of stovetop. “They have nothing to do with each other.”

“What?” I said.

“Your microwave and your TV,” he said. “Completely unrelated.”

“Got it,” I said. “But could you check the TV when you’re done with the microwave, anyway?”

“I only do kitchen appliances,” he said. “But the TV is in the kitchen,” I replied. Then I recalled that the ad said, Mike’s Microwaves, and not Mike’s Microwaves and TVs, so I decided to let it go.

I watched the one TV channel that worked well while Mike did surgery on the microwave. But when I decided to switch channels, all of a sudden, at the exact same time, the microwave whirred to life.

“Hah!” I yelled. “I fixed the microwave!”

“No, you didn’t,” said Mike. “I did. I put in a new fuse.”

“I’m not so sure, Mike.” I said assuredly. “I was on CNN and when I switched to HGTV, the microwave started to work again.”

“I told you, they’re not related,” he argued.

I shrugged. “If you want to believe that, that’s fine,” I said. “I don’t want to make waves.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States