Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Sort of attacked by giant birds, but not really

So I’m sitting in my office at 5 pm, about ready to leave for the day. For those of you who’ve never seen my office, it’s quite large, and quite full of stuff I inherited from my predecessors. One corner is full of books, files, accession records and my desk. One corner is full of Native American artifacts that have yet to be accessioned. One corner is full of dollhouse furniture and toys that were kept in various parts of the old museum and need to be relocated to permanent new homes. And the rest of it is allegedly work space that has somehow morphed into storage space – it’s all covered with stuff that comes to me from old exhibits, old closets, people’s desks, etc., and I have to find a home for it at some point.

My office is notoriously cold and the relative peace and quiet it offers in a loud museum is a secret I don’t share with many. I’m isolated from almost every other staff member. My closest neighbors on this floor are the (usually empty) staff lounge and bathroom, two telephone utility rooms and a fax machine.

So, like I said, I’m sitting here, about ready to go, when loud enormous bird tweets started pouring forth from the far corner. Not real bird tweets. Recorded ones. And at such a volume that upon hearing them I can only assume this is what a bug feels like when a bird stands over it and sings about its supper. HUGE bird tweets.

Then they stopped. I immediately emailed this information to various people on staff here to see if loud bird tweets were supposed to be coming from the very walls or if this is a special treat just for me. Everyone assumed I’d gone more than usually crazy. No productive information about the tweets from my colleagues.

Then there were loud beeps.

Then nothing.

Then loud rock music. Someone was clearly rocking out.

Then nothing.

For nearly 10 minutes there were alternating blasts of noise and silence. The noises were so loud that they made me feel small. I felt like I’d stepped through the looking glass and while everything around me looked the same, if I stepped out of the office I would find that everyone here in this alternate world was invisible, enormous and possibly hard of hearing since they're all so loud. While none of the dimensions in my office had changed, my perception of my own size had shrunk considerably. I felt like I was about the size of a Tootsie Roll.

Suddenly the normal sized phone on my desk rang. It was my friend and colleague Claire (the one who is sometimes also known as the Easter Bunny of the Keys for her habit of leaving keys wherever she goes.) Turns out Claire left her cell phone in my office after our most recent meeting.

Four people had called her. Some left messages. And her battery is low.

Apparently those 3 statements explained all the weirdness that has been happening here.

Except that it’s been so surreal I’m not quite ready to open my door and check on whether the world out there is as I left it, or if it’s all spooky and wonderland-ish…

3 comments:

Pumpkin said...

LOL.....seriously!

Both husband and I have just finished reading that post. He's still smirking and I am still howling out loud...even whilst typing!!!!

I totally imagined you sitting in your office (which sounds an incredibly cool place to be...I have a passion for Native American history, stories,artifacts..etc) peacefully minding your own business when all of a sudden you are tweeted at......lol.

Brilliant post....absolutley brilliant....can't stop grinning!

You have a great night!

(maybe your friend should give you a list of the ring tones on her phone so that if this kind of thing happens again, you can check the list first to see if it's aliens attacking or just the theme tune from '3rd Rock From The Sun'.)

xx

Anonymous said...

Our director got a new cell phone a few months ago. Last month, he and his wife got chickens (they live out in the country). Director has recorded angry, clucking chickens on his cell phone and uses it as his ring tone.

I swear that I am not exaggerating when I say that every time the phone rings and we hear the angry clucks, we laugh our asses off. After weeks, it's still one of the funniest things I've ever heard.

LaLa said...

I will add to the story of the chickens that seeing a chicken run at a dead sprint is one of the funniest things I've ever seen. Avian comedy.