Friday, July 1, 2011

Boom, boom, sigh.

At some point last year, when I wasn’t paying attention, fireworks were legalized in Rhode Island. Not the big, star-spangled types they shoot off from barges or the end zones of football fields, but sparklers and those things that snake along the ground, hopefully not setting other things or people ablaze. These are sometimes known as “why bother fireworks.” For the ones that bang – the still-illegal ones – you have to head to Connecticut or New Hampshire, where the biggest fireworks name in town is Three-Finger Eddie’s, which has to win the award for making business lemonade out of the oh-so-lemony dangers of a product.  (To get your karate supplies at the same place you get your fireworks, you’ll have to go a bit further.)

Last year they didn’t pass the law in time for vendors to get permits and set up shop in Rhode Island. This year is different. This year, they are everywhere. There are fireworks displays in the produce section at Stop & Shop. Pop-up stores line Route 2 in Warwick and Route 1 in Pawtucket to the Mass line. Farm stands. Farm stands! The storefront next to my favorite Chinese restaurant, where Curves used to be in Cumberland:
The "TNT" may be a little misleading.

They are everywhere. You’re probably sitting on some right now. Someone was selling them out of my car this morning, and that doesn’t even make sense.

The hilarious thing about this is that these aren’t even the kind of fireworks that go boom. The kind that someone in my neighborhood, wherever I have lived, has set off on a nightly basis for a week before and after the Fourth of July. It doesn’t matter if they’re legal or illegal. There is someone on my block, wherever I happen to be, who feels the need to blow shit up in the street, and I have a feeling that almost everyone in this country either has someone like that as a neighbor or actually is that person. And somehow those people will find the kind of fireworks that go boom, no matter how far they have to drive, no matter how much it costs. Did you know that the fireworks industry is utterly recession-proof? It is! Nothing – but nothing! – will stand in the way of people’s favorite way of saying “Happy Birthday!” to America: causing explosions.

To those of you looking forward to lighting fuses this weekend, I’d like to introduce you to someone:

This is Becky. She is my dog. Look at her sweet face! Look at it. Not only is she adorable, but she is super gentle and nice to boot. She is also enormous, weighing in at about a hundred pounds. We adopted her from a Southern rescue last year, and somewhere along the line in her previous life, she became terrified of loud noises. Know what she does when she hears one? She sits on you. Wherever you are, whatever you are doing, she will find you, climb on top of you, and sit on you.  So, as it is for many dogs, the Fourth of July is hard on Becky.

Now, I would never ask you not to set off fireworks on the Fourth. I know it isn’t reasonable to ask people not to partake in a treasured tradition because it scares some people’s dogs. But could you toss her a bone, at least? I mean that literally. Toss my dog a bone. Or some beef jerky. She’s not picky. And you know what? It doesn’t even have to be Becky. Blow stuff up, but take something over to your neighbor’s dog, who’s probably cowering under the couch. It’s all about karma.

And if you see someone walking around with a gigantic dog wrapped around her shoulders like a stole, that’s me. I could probably use some Advil.

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