Home Alone booby trap success.
(c) forallthosesleeping.buzznet.com
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When I was a junior at the University of New Hampshire,
there was a campus creepster on the loose. Not only did he peep like a Tom, he
sought out girls leaving parties, followed them home then once they went to
bed, broke into their apartments, scissors in hand.
His signature move was snipping the straps of women’s tops
or cutting their clothes off altogether so that they’d awaken naked, confused
and terrified of what happened to them in the night. The media quickly dubbed
him “Jack the Snipper” grabbing headlines in the sleepy New Hampshire town with
this juicy story – something destined for Dateline.
Meanwhile, the more his name popped up, the more it terrified us.
In the span of a month, seven women reported having their
downtown Durham apartments broken into. Some recalled waking up to a strange
man standing over them, others reported waking up surrounded by their own
tattered clothes. The 27-year-old non-student was spotted staring into windows
and lurking in shadows.
My roommates and I lived on the first floor of one of those
downtown apartments – the Red House. It was a very decrepit historic home
converted into way-too-many separate apartments. Locks could be picked with a
paperclip, if they even locked at all. Before the Snipper, we left it open for
each other knowing inevitably we’d forget a key.
Our windows were on ground level, my roommates’ bed pushed
against the porch window in our tiny room that was just large enough to fit our
two twin beds with nothing more than a human wingspan to separate us.
The premise of Jack the Snipper was sick, twisted and
frightening. During the heat of the police warnings of his presence, we took it
upon ourselves to set up our own defenses in the form of booby traps. We pushed
furniture up against our front door, dropped balls on the living room floor,
laid out trip strings, and broke into our Christmas decorations hanging bells
and noisemakers from door handles and doorways – anything to create a ruckus
for a would-be intruder, ruining his attempts at stealth intrusion. We would
not be his victims. Makeshift weapons were at the ready by our beds: brooms,
maybe a bat or two. It was akin to McCaulay Culkin’s Home Alone set-up to catch the Wet Bandits, minus Matchbox cars and
hot tar and feathers.
As ridiculous as it seems now, it allowed us to sleep
soundly. We made it through that month with all of our tank tops intact and
were able to discontinue the nightly obstacle course set-up after he was taken
into custody – crisis averted.
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if all fears could be sated with
such simple solutions? Even if they realistically don’t stop the bad guys and
bad things from coming, there’s something to be said for creating a safe zone –
false security or not.
I haven’t yet been able to fashion a booby trap for cancer, something
that’s impolitely invaded my personal safe zone for years now. However, I
always have my thinking cap on cooking up solutions. I don’t think cancer would
be phased by shards of glass Christmas ornaments nor a doorknob invisibly
heated to burning temp by an electric charcoal lighter, just waiting for an unsuspecting
hand to singe. It seems to be a warranted fear that can’t be blocked no matter
how many safeguards are put up around it. I’d live surrounded by a ring of fire
wearing a garlic bulb necklace if it’d keep the lymphoma from crossing – as
long as the good stuff could still break through.
(c) thefw.com |
I like how you think! Put those "outsmarting" skills to use against the "creepy cancer"! I KNOW you will win out; just like you did at UNH! Stay the course sweetie....
ReplyDeleteThis story made me smile, Karin. Glad you and Frankie had each other! Sometimes just knowing you're fighting with the support of friends can help, too. Wishing you wellness :)
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