| |
|
|
|
Meet the
Columnist
Columnist, Sheila
Moss, is a free-lance writer from Tennessee. She writes
funny stuff about southern life, women's issues, family
matters and anything else that she finds amusing.
She is
seen weekly in the Daily News of Kingsport, Griffin Journal and Hill
Country Times and
appears in a monthly humor publication called Foolish
Times. She has written for Atlanta Woman Magazine, Aberdeen Examiner, Angleton
Advocate, and Smyrna AM, a supplement of the Murfreesboro Daily News
Journal. She has been
published by Voyageur Press, McGraw Hill, and the good folks
at Guidepost Books have recently published a number of her
articles in their Let There Be Laughter series of
books. Her articles have appeared in
numerous other publications, both print and online.
She is a board member and the Web
Editor of Columnists.com, website of the National Society of Newspaper
Columnists, the
oldest and largest professional organization
for news columnists. She is also the Web Editor of
Southern
Humorists.com as well as a founder of the Southern Humorists writers
organization and this website, Humor
Columnist.com.
To carry her self- syndicated weekly column in your
newspaper, or
to republish an
article, please contact her. It's that easy.
|
|
|
|
Sheila Moss

Create Your Badge
Write on my Wall
National
Society of
Newspaper Columnists
HumorColumnist.com
Online Since 1999

|
 |
 |
 |
The Missing Toenail.... |
 |
| |
|
The Case of the Missing
Toenail
When
it comes to minor ailments, I'm always trying to figure out "why
me", usually while applying Neosporin and a Band-Aid.
As soon as I bought those cute new sandals, Murphy's Law kicked in. If
you buy a new pair of sandals and spend an hour giving yourself a
pedicure, you can pretty much count on something bad happening.
I put on my cute new sandals and wiggled my five little piggies only
to notice to my horror that one of my piggies was turning purple. I
tried soaking it in Epsom salt and warm water. I promised to return
the sandals and wear only crocks if only the toe would return to being
its own pink self.
But it soon became obvious that a podiatrist was in my future.
I checked the Yellow Pages before it occurred to me that the Yellow
Pages might not be the best way to find a doctor. So I called the
Physician's Referral service of my insurance company and after
spending an hour on hold and being transferred several times, they
finally gave me the name of the same podiatrist that had found in the
Yellow Pages.
I called and made an appointment. Of course, I had already looked it
up on Google and found that black toenails come from injuries to the
base of the toenail and there is nothing you can do about it except go
to a doctor or let it fall off.
By the time I filled out all the paper work at the doctor's office and
found out about all the horrible foot deformities that I did not have
and had never heard of, I was feeling pretty healthy and was wondering
what I was doing there. A large lady in tennis shoes sat across from
me glaring as if she knew I was taking up the doctor's time for
something insignificant.
Before I could escape, however, the receptionist grabbed my insurance
card, and the nurse whisked me into a back room where I was told to
remove my shoes and sit on the chair that reminded me vaguely of a
dentist chair. I looked behind me and saw no drills, so I must be in
the right place.
I thought perhaps they planned to steal my shoes when I wasn't looking
so I couldn't run out the back door. I kept an eye on my shoes and
waited for them to soak my feet and trim my nails, like they do at the
nail salon. But apparently they didn't know about pedicures.
The doctor came in and glanced at my sick toe briefly then informed
me, "The toenail needs to come off."
Wait a minute. I need all my parts. I hadn't planned on surgery.
"Won't it come off by itself?" I asked.
"That is not an option," he huffed."You don't want it
to get infected."
He gave me a couple of shots in the toe to numb it. "This is the
worst part," he said.
I knew the man had dentist genes. There is always a needle the size of
a jack hammer lurking somewhere.
"It is loose already," he said.
"Yes that is what the dentist said," I thought, "right
before I kicked a hole in the ceiling."
I don't remember what happened after that. I couldn't look and I don't
want to remember. When I came back to earth my toenail was missing and
the nurse was bandaging my toe and telling me that it would grow back
and only be sore for a few days.
I wondered how I would get my shoes back on over my fat toe, but I was
highly motivated to get out of there before he decided to remove
anything else. So I jamed the shoe on and hobbled out the door.
"Do you come back in two weeks?" asked the receptionist.
"No, he said he does not want to see me again," unless I
have a problem.
That makes us even. I don't want to see him again either.
|
|
|
Copyright 2011 Sheila Moss
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
 |
 |

|
Sheila Moss
Nashville, TN 37219
E-Mail

Seen In

|

|
|