For years, I never had a washing machine. From the time I left home for college, I spent hours in laundramats, fussing with the quarters and jockeying for dryer time.

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Marriage brought me to a Victorian house in Iowa, equipped with a Maytag washer and dryer. I was in love. But the town was predominantly Dutch, and the Dutch don’t waste money and power on dryers. I caved under social pressure and pegged out the wash. That proved to be a dicey proposition, because rain blows into central Iowa quickly. I’d have just left the flapping clothesline when the sky would open and I’d be back out in the yard, tossing wet laundry into the basket.

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We moved from Iowa to the New York farm. The washer came with us. I don’t know what happened to the dryer. Perhaps it is rusting away in the barn. The problem at the old farmhouse was the well. It was shallow and the water supply couldn’t handle my beloved Maytag washer’s demands.
At first, my sister-in-law generously let me do the diapers at her house. That soon got to be an imposition. When my son started preschool, I’d take the laundry to the laundramat near his school. With two kids and a house, I grumbled at having to return to my college laundry life.
As a newly single mom, I got the washing machine in the divorce agreement. It sat in the tiny kitchen of the apartment where my kids and I landed. Trusty as ever, the washer washed, but I did have to peg out the clothes on the back porch. After that apartment, we moved to a complex with a laundry room. I don’t remember where the washer stayed while we lived there. I do remember the panic over weekend laundry days, when I’d rush to the laundry room at first light in order to beat the other residents to the machines.
I bought a house. The washer came with us. I bought a dryer to be her lawful wedded machine. The main complaint at the house was the effort and danger of carrying baskets of laundry from the top floor to the washer in the basement. Every time I lugged a heavy basket of clothes, I thought of the nurse at my school who fell down the steps while carrying a laundry basket, and broke her collarbone. When, after at least thirty-five years, we had to put the Maytag down, it was a sad day. The new machine simply wasn’t as good.
Not long after, we downsized and sold the house with all appliances. I bought a stacked washer/dryer from the previous residents of our new apartment. The glory of this arrangement is that the laundry center is on the same floor as the bedrooms. Hallelujah! I love the ease of it. I love my washer/dryer. I love how the scent of clean laundry fills the upstairs. I even love that the washer’s agitation cycle sounds like a dog about to throw up.
It’s a wonderful thing to have a washer and dryer. I am blessed and I know it.
Hi, Kim! It was so nice to see you and your cute story about your laundry—very creative! I hope your are happy, your children all grown adults making their way in the world. I think it’s wonderful that you are able to pursue your interests.
We are in FL. Never got up to be with our kids and 5 grandkids this summer—COVID. I’m reading, writing, doing some artwork. We’ve had lots of dogs; 2 now, but up to 5 at one point, plus 3more with my kids’ dogs. Fun! Every time I see a chicken, I think of you saying how you did NOT like them and how they’d even fly right at you! Maybe you have a better pet now. Anyway, stay happy! Stay safe, stay healthy, and wash your hands!
Mary Jane (Lundholm
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Hello! How lovely to have a former colleague tune in to the blog. I’m still living in New Paltz, at the moment in an apartment with no pets allowed. Grandchildren are the best, and yes, I’ve not seen our three since December and January. It’s a real heartache to be missing out in person. Thanks for reading and writing, and be well. K.
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