Giggles

Dear Ms. Doe, I’m So Sorry (Otherwise Known as My Most Embarrassing Story Ever)

Dear Ms. Doe, I'm So Sorry (Otherwise Known as My Most Embarrassing Story Ever) | www.therescuedletters.com

February 23, 2017

I’ve sat on this story for almost a year now. When life gives me a good story, I usually mull on it for a bit until I can make a Biblical connection with it. Generally, it doesn’t take that long before something pops in my head because, well, it’s life. And I tend to believe that real life stories are just our hearts crying out with our deep need for a Savior. So the Biblical connection thing is not hard to find.

This story is different. I’ve tried really, really hard to find some sort of Biblical truth in here. And there just isn’t any. Unless you want to go all Proverbs 17 on me…

A joyful heart is good medicine, but a broken spirit dries up the bones.

-Proverbs 17:22.

Sure. Let’s go with that.

Okay, I’ve dragged my feet long enough with this intro. Remember when I said you might find a wee bit of humor here at The Rescued Letters? I’m about to deliver on that promise. Without further ado, here is THE most embarrassing story of my life…so far. Also, do not proceed if you are eating.


It is late March. In North Carolina. And that means your car is covered in pollen and your purse is overflowing with tissues because it’s allergy season. But it also means that gardens are resplendent with tulip blooms.

So off I go across the county with my pockets full of tissues to meet my son’s third grade class at Duke Gardens for field trip day. Side note: If you’ve never been to Duke Gardens in the Spring and you are local to North Carolina, you should absolutely go. It’s beautiful.

See?

Dear Ms. Doe, I'm Sorry About the Loogie | www.therescuedletters.com

After successfully getting all the children off the school bus and out of the bathroom, we gather for the start of our tour with the garden docent. Except there is no docent. And no guided tour.

Here’s some maps and plant identification guides, parents! See you in three hours!

Wonderful. I am actually going to have to chaperone as a chaperone.

Enter Ms. Doe, my son’s student teacher. (To protect the innocent, Ms. Doe’s name has been changed.) We are splitting the children up into groups and Thomas wants to walk around with Ms. Doe. Because he’s in love with her. Because she’s blond.

Side note: WHY does my child always fall for the blonds? Simmer down, Barbie…my best friends are blond. I have nothing against blonds. But I’m a brunette. And I’d like to feel confident enough in my skills as a mother that if I have taught him nothing else, at least I have taught him to fall for an identical version of me. Blonds: 5. Motherhood: 0.

The good thing about walking around with Ms. Blond Doe is that she does, in fact, know what she is talking about. Yay! I won’t actually have to chaperone as a chaperone.

Around the gardens we go, examining bloom sizes, leaf patterns, seedlings, and bamboo etchings, and listening to Ms. Doe give my child the education he deserves while I snap away with my SLR to satisfy my wannabe photographer bug. Aaah, finally, we find ourselves in the tulip garden.

Pretty ain’t it?

Dear Ms. Doe, I'm Sorry About the Loogie | www.therescuedletters.com

Okay, I need to make an honest confession with you here and trust me, it’s important to the story.

I do not know how to hock a loogie.

I’m sorry. I’m so sorry! It has taken me almost a year to find the nerve to type that word. And I still feel the need to apologize for it. No question, I’m a Southern Baptist, through and through.

Okay, but really. I don’t know how. It’s just not something I was taught. (see: I’m a Southern Baptist). (see also: I’m southern.) (see also: I’m a girl.)

So just take that tidbit with you into the rest of this story, k?

As my child and his friends are running amuck among the tulips and I am snapping away with my camera, I feel the slightest bit of snot slide down the back of my throat. No big. I’ll just swallow it. It’s allergy season. It’s just what we do in March.

Except that the slightest bit of snot turns into a bit more. And you know at this point that you have to do something with it, right? You can’t just fill your stomach with snot. Gross.

I am completely out of tissues. It’s been a Spring day outside in a 55-acre garden. You’d run out too.

No one is near me at the moment, and neither is a restroom, and hello…I’m chaperoning. I have to stay near the children. So I sneak behind a cedar tree among the tulips and start hocking. Ok, let me be clear right here: my intent was to spit the thing ON THE GROUND.

So now would be a good time for honest confession number two:

I do not know how to spit.

If you ask me to spit something out the car window, it will drizzle down the side of the car door every.single.time.

MY LOOGIE LANDED IN THE CEDAR TREE. About chest-height. Just hanging there right on the end of a branch like a glistening teardrop. My only regret at this part of the story is that I did not take a picture of it.

If this were a tragedy, now would be the perfect time for our group of knowledge-thirsty children to take an interest in my boring cedar tree, instead of the millions of brilliant tulips surrounding us. Which is, of course, exactly what happened. The children start inspecting this tree as if their elementary grades depended on it and I am just over here praying DEAR GOD DO NOT LET THEM SEE MY LOOGIE.

Wait. There IS a Biblical connection to this story: God does not always answer prayers in the way that you want Him to, people:

Knowledge-Thirsty Child: (points at my loogie) What’s that?

Ms. Doe: (runs over like Fraulein Maria) I don’t know. Let’s investigate.

Knowledge-Thirsty Child: (sticks his face right up close to my teardrop loogie) It could be sap.

Ms. Doe: Wait a minute, back up a bit. Let me take a look.

Me: (eyes wide open)

Ms. Doe: (sticks HER NOSE RIGHT UP ON my loogie and sniffs it)

Me: (frozen)

Ms. Doe: (DIPS HER POINTER FINGER IN MY LOOGIE AND PUTS HER FINGER IN HER MOUTH)

Me: (still frozen but gagging inside)

Ms. Doe: (scrunches face in disgust) That is NOT sap. Move along children, don’t mess with that any more.

Me: (silently hustles the children to the lunch area)

Ms. Doe: (still with the scrunchy face) That was not a good idea.

SHE ATE MY LOOGIE, Y’ALL!!!!!!!

It’s alright. I’ll give you a minute. I told you not to read this while eating.

Okay, now some of you are wondering how I can be human and let that poor girl eat my loogie without saying anything. And my answer is…I don’t know. It all just played out in front of me like some freak show and my neurons just weren’t firing fast enough to do anything about it.

Either that, or I was just too chicken to say “hey, that’s not sap. It’s actually my loogie. My bad.” This is probably a more accurate justification for why I am a horrible person.

Which is why I am writing this post. To Ms. Doe and the good people of Duke Gardens, you have my formal apology. I am sorry I hocked a loogie into your cedar tree. And I’m sorry I let you eat it.

Next time, I’ll bring more tissues.

PS – Pretty sure this chic saw it all go down and was not at all happy about it:

Dear Ms. Doe, I'm So Sorry (Otherwise Known as My Most Embarrassing Story Ever) | www.therescuedletters.com
Dear Ms. Doe, I'm So Sorry (Otherwise Known as My Most Embarrassing Story Ever) | www.therescuedletters.com

Oh hey you’re still here!

I do love a good laugh and I hope you got one while reading this today. But I also love to read the Bible. Why? Because I believe in the power of God’s Word to change lives. If you want to read the Bible, but have no idea where to start, I can help with that.

I teach an online community of over 800 women as we read the Bible together. Our goal? No dusty Bibles.

Every year we read straight through about six or seven books of the Bible, three in-depth Bible studies, and forty or so Psalms. To do that, we read about two chapters a day Monday through Friday. On most Fridays, I host a live teaching video which can be viewed in my private Facebook group or on my YouTube channel. I’ll send out a recording of the teaching in the following week, so no worries if you can’t make it to the live teaching – it’s just more fun if you do!

Each week I’ll email you the reading plan, along with any resources and study aids that might help in your study of God’s Word. 

And occasionally, there are giveaways, so stay tuned for those!

What will you get by joining this community?

  • daily reading plans to keep you on track
  • weekly live video chats with teaching and encouragement
  • study aids to help you understand what you are reading
  • if you’re in the Facebook group, a meaningful community with like-minded women
  • no loogies, pinky promise

All of it is aimed to keep you in God’s Word, daily. I’m bridging the gap between dusty Bibles and intense Bible study because I think that reading God’s Word doesn’t have to be complicated. Want in? Sign up at the link below.

Add a comment
+ show Comments
- Hide Comments
  1. Helena says:

    That was hilarious. …and yes I was eating breakfast at the time of reading. …no, it didn’t gross me out, been a nurse far too long to let a little snot talk stop me far eating.

  2. Denise Pass says:

    LOL. Definitely a belly laugh. Yep. We were separated at birth. Lots of embarrassing blonde stories on my end, only I’m no longer a real blonde, lol. Sounds like something we would have done, too, sniffing an unknown specimen along a trail in nature – being homeschoolers, lol. Investigation goes awry sometimes, though. And there was laughter. Good medicine. Thanks for sharing, sister!

  3. OMGosh! This story is hilarious. Disgusting, but hilarious in a gross kind of way. (I just typed a long comment, but it appears to have disappeared.) I had a lump in my throat the whole time I read it. I don’t know how to hock a loogie either, sister! Some people may not even know what a loogie is. I’m not sure that’s universal word. When I read it, I thought, “Surely she’s not talking about snot!” But you were. I wouldn’t even have known how to spell it if you hadn’t. I would have died!! I am still laughing!!

  4. Kaylie says:

    I literally belly laughed! Oh my word Heather! I just imagine this from Ms. Doe’s stand point and it is too funny!

  5. Tracey says:

    I am crying!!! How you didn’t fall on the ground with laughter is beyond me! 🙂 I know you were mortified, though, so I’ll leave you with this thought…Ms. Doe shares some responsibility in all this. After all, who goes around tasting weird things they find on trees??? 😉

    • Heather says:

      Thank you!!! You know, I really have a ton of respect for Ms. Doe – she’s all in when it comes to educating kids. But still…it was super hard not to completely lose it out there.

  6. Kathy McLain says:

    Oh my gosh! That was hilarious! Certainly makes me feel better about any gross thing I’ve ever done! Blessings!!

  7. Karen says:

    Hilarious! I can just imagine the look(s) on your face through that whole saga. Thanks for the humor.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse By Category

Bible Study

Prayer

Courage

Anxiety

No Dusty Bibles

On the Air

The No Dusty Bibles Podcast

Helping you hit the easy button for making Scripture a part of your everyday life.

LIsten in
WORK WITH US

Our Services

The Rescued Letters Collective is a united front of Christian ministries with a shared vision: to help women everywhere cultivate a richer faith. 

what we do

TOP RESOURCES

Powerful Scriptures to uplift and anchor you during tough chapters. Find hope when your story feels heavy.

TOP RESOURCES

If you've ever felt overwhelmed by the Bible's complexity and wondered where to begin, this is for you!

Seeking a dose of hope, inspiration, and Biblical wisdom delivered right to your inbox? You're in the right place!

Instagram

Daily doses of faith-filled wisdom, Bible study snippets, and behind-the-scenes glimpses of women's ministry in action.

@RESCUEDLETTERS