The Dishwasher Whisperer

The Dishwasher Whisperer

Another exciting episode in the dishwasher saga, as it’s known, far and wide!

Storified by Matt Hanlon· Fri, Mar 22 2013 10:10:58

In more sober moments (when I’m not throwing filth-caked glasses around the kitchen), I wonder if this isn’t a cry for help from the Bosch.Matt Hanlon
Do you think there are dishwasher (maybe even Bosch)-specific whisperers out there or are there only more general appliance whisperers?Matt Hanlon
I mean, I can imagine there being lots of listings for dishwasher-shouters, who’ll just abuse your dishwasher for cash.Matt Hanlon
Off to investigate. Cancel my appointments for the day.Matt Hanlon
So I’m back.Matt Hanlon
My assistant has been posting to Twitter for me, to make it look like I’ve still been, you know, around.Matt Hanlon
But I’ve been on a *journey,* of sorts. Spiritual, mental, actual.Matt Hanlon
So let me tell you about my investigation.Matt Hanlon
I’ve been searching… for the dishwasher whisperer. (Since, you know, the shouting wasn’t working.)Matt Hanlon
So my first thought, that fateful day, was to shout to my assistant: "Cover for me!"Matt Hanlon
My second was to pop my head back in the door and leave a detailed note about just what "cover for me!" was supposed to entail.Matt Hanlon
Once I’d been over that a few times, I swiped a jacket from beside the door and headed out again.Matt Hanlon
When I arrived in Nepal, which is where I assumed most people of the whispering persuasion lived, I put on the jacket.Matt Hanlon
Because it was kind of chilly.Matt Hanlon
The jacket belonged to my assistant, it turned out, who is a full two feet shorter than I am, with arms of similar differing size.Matt Hanlon
After much searching around the villages of Nepal, I came to the conclusion that they didn’t have any dishwasher whisperers.Matt Hanlon
I arrived at this conclusion on my own, because no one would talk to me, assuming I had an arm ailment, in which my arms were too long.Matt Hanlon
From what I could gather, peering in people’s windows, they use hand-made Nepalese dishwashers only in Nepal.Matt Hanlon
This being Nepal, the dishwashers make deep chime-y sort of sounds and radiated peace and love.Matt Hanlon
This annoyed the kid left behind in each household to watch the dishes being washed. Maybe *this* was the key to my dishwasher!Matt Hanlon
I shouted in through one window to a kid, "Hey, kid! Why do you watch the dishwasher?"Matt Hanlon
The kid stopped being annoyed at the radiance of peace and love and focused his annoyance on the guy yelling at him from the window.Matt Hanlon
I waved. It didn’t seem to affect his annoyance one way or another, so I stopped.Matt Hanlon
I gave a shrug, assuming he hadn’t understood me and might understand the universal sign for "Why are you doing that?"Matt Hanlon
This child gave me the finger and went back to watching the dishwasher.Matt Hanlon
So at the next house, I tried again: "Hey kid! Why are you watching the dishwasher?" This kid looked marginally less annoyed to start with.Matt Hanlon
I waved, as well, for good measure.Matt Hanlon
He made a gesture which I took to mean: "Did you know your sleeves are far too short?"Matt Hanlon
I nodded to show him I understood and tugged at my sleeves, imagining myself as Charlie Chaplin, bringing joy to millions via sight alone.Matt Hanlon
Or this one kid, anyway. I was just starting a funny little side shuffle walk when this kid, too, gave me the finger.Matt Hanlon
As I was about to shout through the third window, an elderly man grasped my shoulder and pulled me aside.Matt Hanlon
"Please stop bothering our children," he said. He had a little bit of parsley stuck to his two front teeth.Matt Hanlon
"Ah, I was trying to ask them why they watched the dishwasher," I explained. I also wiggled two fingers at the old man’s teeth.Matt Hanlon
"That’s not a dishwasher," the man said. He took a step back from my outstretched fingers. "We haven’t figured those out yet."Matt Hanlon
He took one last step and a hop away from me and onto the back of a yeti, and bounded off into the mountains.Matt Hanlon
My assistant rang me, asking me whether I’d like to tweet angst about the Bruins or a pic of dinner. Also where we kept the peanut butter.Matt Hanlon
"Did they lose?" I asked. "Well…" he started.Matt Hanlon
"Never mind," I said. "Listen, I’m in Nepal, what place was next on my list for dishwasher whisperers?"Matt Hanlon
I arrived, four days later, sweaty, dusty, and disheveled, in Istanbul.Matt Hanlon
Based on clues given to me by my assistant, who I suspect was upset I never answered his peanut butter question, I was looking for a man.Matt Hanlon
Istanbul had a considerable number of men. But when I was wandering down by the river, I took notice of one particular man.Matt Hanlon
He was tall, reclining in a row boat, one arm slung over the edge, his fist trailing in the water. He held a book in his other hand.Matt Hanlon
As I neared I thought I heard him growl, softly. He pulled his fist up out of the water. He held a large cloth sack in his hand.Matt Hanlon
The sack moved desultorily, as you might imagine one would if it were being dunked in a somewhat foul stretch of a river.Matt Hanlon
When it had stopped moving the man lugged the sack into the boat, and released his grip, spilling the contents.Matt Hanlon
It was a little bearded man and a chicken, both of whom looked repentant. Repentant and wet. The man gave them a very solemn finger wag.Matt Hanlon
The two departed, and the man resumed reading his book. It was "The Bridges of Madison County."Matt Hanlon
I approached the man, "Good book."Matt Hanlon
"No. You want dishwasher whisperer," he said. Or, rather, he whispered. Which was fitting, I thought.Matt Hanlon
"Yes, please," I said. I took a step back, because the sack in the bottom of the boat stank. Or maybe it was the river.Matt Hanlon
Whatever it was, it felt like someone stabbed me with a smell, which was a first for me.Matt Hanlon
He whispered something else, and I needed to take a step forward again to hear him. "Sorry, come again?"Matt Hanlon
"I am the dishwasher whisperer," he said. It appeared to be his breath, was nearly my last thought, as I fought the urge to pass out.Matt Hanlon
"Ah," I said, once I had backed away again. "I have a dishwasher for you."Matt Hanlon
"I don’t want dishwasher," he said, suddenly proud, quite loud, and standing in his little boat, which looked like it was about to capsize.Matt Hanlon
I backed away, tripping over the man and chicken, who were holding each other tight, presumably because of their shared near drowning.Matt Hanlon
The chicken squawked at me and the man sort of hissed. The stench from the river or whisperer stuck with me all the way to the airport.Matt Hanlon
When I returned to the house, filthy, feeling Indiana Jones-like, but without a whip or golden idol, candles were flickering in the kitchen.Matt Hanlon
"Hal?" I called. Because that’s my assistant’s name. And he has attempted to burn the place down before. "I have a knife."Matt Hanlon
When I got into the kitchen, there was the tall man from the boat in Istanbul.Matt Hanlon
He was kneeling beside the dishwasher, his lips nearly touching the buttons along the top whose function I haven’t figured out yet.Matt Hanlon
He held up one finger as I entered the room. I nodded and stepped back against the wall to watch.Matt Hanlon
I watched the man for a few minutes before my thirst won out over my curiosity about what the whisperer was doing.Matt Hanlon
I grabbed a beer from the fridge, which is opposite the dishwasher in our very small kitchen.Matt Hanlon
As I thought of it, I offered the whisperer a beer, which, due to the close quarters, bonked the back of his head a little bit.Matt Hanlon
I made apologetic noises, since I was trying not to interrupt his whispering, which he had still not stopped. I put the second beer back.Matt Hanlon
Thinking better of it, I grabbed the second beer again and tried to grab a salad that looked edible.Matt Hanlon
I retreated to the kitchen counter and made myself comfortable. I had dropped the salad once, and managed to pick up most of it.Matt Hanlon
A few spinach leaves, I believe, lay, crestfallen, or so I assumed, on the back of the whisperer’s shirt.Matt Hanlon
A good while later, I awoke, the smell of smoke, of candles just extinguished, in the air, and the whispering gone quiet. It was dark.Matt Hanlon
The whisperer remained by dishwasher on his knees, his head bowed. The spinach leaves, I noticed, were gone.Matt Hanlon
I ran a hand over the dried spittle on the side of my cheek and the crouton crumbs on the side of my nose and remained quiet, too.Matt Hanlon
At last, he spoke, "I am finished."Matt Hanlon
"Oh, excellent!" I leapt up from my seat. Since my legs were a little numb from sleeping in the barstool chair, I wobbled and sat back down.Matt Hanlon
I looked up, expectantly, as a child expecting a circus to burst out of the dishwasher. A clean circus. Actually, that’s not a simile.Matt Hanlon
I sort of *actually* expected a freshly washed circus to come marching out of the dishwasher.Matt Hanlon
A thump sounded and my heart thrilled with that sort of excitement you get when you think you’re about to see a dish-washed circus.Matt Hanlon
But it was just the dishwasher whisperer stomping his boot. One solitary arugula leaf fluttered from his jeans.Matt Hanlon
"So is it fixed? Will it wash?" I asked, with breathless anticipation.Matt Hanlon
"Oh, no. No, is not fixed. That is one stubborn dishwasher."Matt Hanlon
And with that, he was gone.Matt Hanlon

Storytelling Tips from a Pixar Story Artist

This list of 22 tips recently made the rounds, thanks to Aerogramme Writers’ Studio, and was originally compiled by former Pixar story artist Emma Coats.
It’s one of those lists you could keep pinned up to the cork board in your office that you look up to for reminders of where you’re going, where you’ve been every once in a while.
I’ll generally have one of those on a digital cork board nearby, at least. When you’re slogging through the doldrums on “that novel you’ve been working on” it’s easy to lose heart and sight of why you sat down to write the story in the first place. At the moment, mine’s been an excerpt from Henry David Thoreau’s “Cape Cod”. A good portion of the book takes place there (the Cape, not Thoreau’s book), and I just like this particular scene and characterization of the driver as Thoreau and his traveling companions await their ride in the coach down the Cape:
This coach was an exceedingly narrow one, but as there was a slight spherical excess over two on a seat, the driver waited till nine passengers had got in, without taking the measure of any of them, and then shut the door after two or three ineffectual slams, as if the fault were all in the hinges or the latch, — while we timed our inspirations and expirations so as to assist him.
Emily’s items are a little more prescriptive than simply inspirational, which I also like, to change things up, to think directly about the work at hand. My favorite rule of hers is #16:
• What are the stakes? Give us reason to root for the character. What happens if they don’t succeed? Stack the odds against.

 

Pixar's campus
Pixar’s campus

Lorraine and I got to visit Pixar back in November for a charity thing. I came back from the event so jazzed about the creative process. They talked a lot about their way of making stories and then re-making them and all the input that goes into them before they become a final product. It was some pretty fascinating stuff, especially to someone who largely works alone. Every single person who got up and talked about their role at Pixar and how they worked — it was a great drug, listening to all these bright people, obviously very happy with the company they keep and work they were doing. One particular highlight was a walk-through of the new animated short “Partysaurus Rex” by the director, Mark Walsh. At the end of the evening, we found ourselves walking away with a sketch of a scene that didn’t make the short by Valerie LaPointe (don’t worry, it was acquired legitimately). I don’t think you need to have walked through some of their halls (again, legitimately) to know that Pixar has this special touch, the great storytelling DNA that’s made it so successful. But you could do a lot worse than following their advice, when telling your own stories.

by Valerie LaPointe
by Valerie LaPointe

 

My Favorite Children’s Adventure Story

Every so often they’ll ask us (challenge us — it’s not like I’m getting an engraved invitation to write things for people these days) to write a little blog post on RedRoom.com on a certain topic.

At any rate, I’d been meaning to do this for some time, and when Huntington, the Red Room editor, posted a challenge Wednesday, I found myself with a little free time in the evening to comment on my favorite book.

http://redroom.com/member/matthew-michael-hanlon/blog/my-favorite-childrens-adventure-story

My favorite, to kill the suspense, was The Monster at the End of this Book, by Jon Stone. I’ll bet you didn’t even realize the book had an author, and hadn’t just been written by Grover, himself. But, alas, it was simply starring lovable, furry old Grover. I thought I had my reasons for giving it the esteemed title as “My Favorite Children’s Adventure Story,” very high praise, especially considering all the worthy candidates.

But, in the end, it was for a very different reason than I thought I had that I realized I consider it my favorite children’s adventure story.

The Guide for the Procrastinating Writer: Tip #1

Get a time clock. One of those cool old time clocks they’d use in factories that gave a satisfying clunk when you put in your timesheet like it could bite your hand off if it wanted. The kind that was bolted high on the wall, but near enough a desk, under which a stool for the children who would come in and work the loom was surreptitiously kept.

The best place to pick one up is in an antique shop, somewhere in Concord, Massachusetts. It doesn’t matter where you live, get yourself to Concord. Make sure it’s got that satisfying bite to it. Preferably bring your own paper with which you can try this out, because otherwise you’ll be in the nearby hospital, which is a pleasant one, nursing a puncture wound to the flap between your forefinger and thumb. The same will be true if you use low-grade paper, as most time clocks worth your time will buck and snort at thin paper, leaping off the antique table on which they sit and, in a dreadful arc, come crashing into your right knee.

Do not attempt to engage the shop owner in conversation about time clocks. That will only waste time, and you will find they encourage loose talk about the vast and somewhat shocking number of time clock-related accidents they have in these parts.

Once you’ve picked your time clock, clear away a section of the wall near your desk. Go out to the shop and buy a stud finder, if you don’t have one. Resist all urges to engage in conversation or even ask where you might find a stud finder, lest you get pulled into a painful conversation with lots of innuendo. Aisle 8. Under the steel wool pads and a large package of plastic sheeting someone has mis-filed.

With the stud finder, find the stud in your wall nearest your desk. If one isn’t within a few feet, you may wish to go back to the hardware store and pick up a large 2×4 piece of wood, a claw hammer, some plaster, and maybe a slim piece of wallpaper. Upon your return home, open up the wall near-ish your desk where a time clock would look good. Jam the 2×4 in the empty space, looking in first to ensure that it is, in fact, empty. Most often you will find rats, mice, vagabonds, and once I found a hawk, living within the walls. Give them a few minutes to get their stuff and go, if they haven’t tried to leave already, with your peeking face still in the way. Otherwise you may find yourself en route to the hospital again. The one in Concord is lovely, so you may find yourself making a long journey to return to some old friends.

Once the 2×4 is jammed in there, plaster over the hole in the wall. If you didn’t pick up a plaster spreader thing at the hardware store because I forgot to mention it, return to the store and grab one of those. Also grab a candy bar, while you’re at it, because they’re right by the counter and will taste good just before you settle down to write.

With some industrial-strength nails, nail the time clock to the wall. It is best to do this sitting down at your desk, so you can see the ideal place to set it for easy access during the writing process.

Make sure the time clock is in solidly in place on your wall — you can test this by putting your full weight on it, lifting yourself like an Olympic gymnast on the pommel horse. Do not attempt the move in which the gymnast spins themselves around in a circle. Because, as you’ll have noted, you have just nailed the thing to the wall, which presents an obstacle to spinning around. Even if you hired a very tiny gymnast it is very unlikely that they could perform the spinning move on your newly installed time clock. And, if they could, it still wouldn’t be testing the true mettle of your time clock-mounting skills.

You’ll want the clock attached to the wall well because you don’t want the thing falling down in the middle of writing a sentence, disrupting your entire train of thought and scuppering the work in progress. And, as you’ve bought a hefty one on my recommendation, they can do quite a bit of damage to your floors, be they wood or carpeted.

Once the time clock is up on your wall have a seat at your desk. Give it a good, long stare. Time may appear to stand still, if your staring is particularly intense. There is also a good chance you’ve forgotten to plug in the clock. Get up from your desk and plug it in. Don’t risk remaining seated and trying to plug in the clock, especially if the plug is under the desk, because heaven forbid anyone should walk in on you at that very moment, and you know it’ll happen the day you’re wearing the peppermint-striped thong.

Set the clock to an appropriate time at this stage. Grabbing an index card from a nearby stack, chu-chunk it into the time clock. Thrill at the meaty crunch of the teeth stamping the paper! Now that’s getting down to work!

Start scribbling out to your heart’s content. Resist the temptation to make sure the time clock is still working and hasn’t broken after that mighty clunk of a punch in. Keep your fingers and that meaty part of your hand away from the time clock’s gaping maw. Keep writing. Keep writing. That’s it… You’re not procrastinating! You’re really writing! Sure, you’re occasionally staring at the time clock, implacable on the wall. You’re probably thinking about child labor, and how you might be able to get the kids down the street to write a few pages for you. You could even provide them with their own time cards. Give them lunch breaks. A discount on… well, you’re not making anything, but a free pass at the fridge, at any rate.

If you’ve been really smart, you’ve gotten the model on which the hands, themselves, clunk, every minute on the minute. *Chick-chunk*. You may pause in your writing, as each 60 seconds passes, to observe the noise like it’s a message from above. *Chick-chunk* What could it mean?

The heavy glass from of the clock looks durable enough to withstand mortar attacks, and probably did. But will it withstand the nubby end of a pencil? Experiment by throwing a pencil, end over end, at the time clock. It will take a good deal of practice to get it just right, the eraser making a satisfying poinging noise as it rubs against the glass, kisses it hard, and then ricochets off into the gloom. At this point, you notice the gloom, since you hadn’t bothered to turn on lights, and realize it’s rather difficult to see the time clock, let alone the stuff you’re writing on. You also seem to have no more pencils at hand. So rise, Dear Writer. Grab that index card, if you can see it, with which you so gloriously punched in.

And then, with your feet set and head held high, punch out. Punch out like you’ve never punched out before! You, yes you, were working.

 

If the time you punched out is the same as the time you punched in you may not have plugged the time clock in.