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FRESH YARN PRESENTS:

What Plastic Patio Furniture in my Living Room?
By Tiffany Zehnal

PAGE TWO:
White Trash Red Flags #4 & 5: Alcohol abuse and unemployment. Alcohol and unemployment are to white trash what peanut butter and jelly are to toddler.

Because my new stepfather was a Vietnam vet, he had been carrying around a duffel bag of problems. Social ones, drinking ones and the ever-popular employability ones. These kinds of issues often resulted in him being drunk and unable to communicate to my mother about how frustrated he was that he couldn't get a job -- a delightful scenario that played out night after night. My brothers and I never missed a performance.

White Trash Red Flag #6: Outdoor furniture indoors. And/or a car on the lawn.

Well, my stepfather never parked his El Camino in our yard.

But the summer my mother and her husband separated, Lorne moved out and took his entire five-piece tiger-striped couch set with him. Our living room was devastated. My mother covered the carpet indentations left by the fake tiger ensemble as best she could. With our white plastic lawn furniture. Not a teak piece in sight. Our backyard looked like it had been robbed. On the bright side, watching One Day at a Time in a chaise lounge is as comfortable as it sounds.

White Trash Red Flag #7: "One Day at a Time." Ann Romano had some real tough times. Real tough.

Watch what you know.

* * * * *

The trailer park was located smack in the middle of an industrial park in Canoga Park. Sight fully seen, it was clear there was no amusement in these parks. I was surrounded by gray. Gray buildings. Gray signs. Gray roads. Gray heads. Yes, my mother's new double-wide was located in an "over 55" trailer park. If you listened closely, you could almost hear the AARP circling. Like vultures over an old cow carcass.
I turned off my car and locked the doors. A last minute attempt to delay the inevitable.

Cue inevitable.

Tap tap tap. I'd know that tap anywhere.

"Honey? Aren't you coming out?"

I could see her out of my dirty rolled-up window. My mom, my mother, the giver of life, beaming, so happy at the prospect of independence, stood patiently by my door, waiting for my exit. Her "realtor" Ivan, melting, so sweaty in his tweed-like sports coat in the dead of summer, tried to catch a break in her shadow. And the two of them got to me. Who was I to poo-poo her dream? Even if that dream came with an aluminum porch and a neighbor who had a "Never drive faster than your angels can fly" bumper sticker on her '91 Camry.

It was time to buck up and I knew it.

So, with a smile on my face and a shoeless baby in my arms, I followed my mom and her realtor's perspiring upper lip up the green-as-grass carpeted steps that led to the front door. This was it. Since I could no longer deny my past, it seemed pretty unfair of me to deny my future. Two seconds and two steps later, I was in a double wide.

"Wow, it's big!" were the first words out of my mouth. Neil Armstrong, I am not.

No one was more surprised by my declaration than me. I entered, expecting to be met with a God-awful trailer smell (one part hospital to one part public ashtray to one part poverty) and toxic black mold spores. Instead, I found myself greeted by the fresh scent of lavender and the cleanest, sporeless paneled walls I'd ever seen. The new carpet was white and plush and the living room, sunken and inviting. Dishwasher. Microwave. Washer AND dryer. And on the wall? Central freakin' air! I kid you not. With a little Restoration Hardware Silver Sage paint on the faux wood walls, I could live there.

And it got me thinking.

Maybe trailers are a practical housing option in this overpriced real estate market. Maybe it is perfectly acceptable to use a wooden cable spool as a living room coffee table in a pinch. And maybe just maybe I don't have white trash in me after all. I mean it's not like I don't know who my baby's daddy is. I do. And I have the paternity test to prove it.




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