
Jackie Wells-Fauth
It’s sad when we have to part with old friends. You know, in that moment of separation, that you will miss the times you spent with them, all the joy they’ve given you. That is, unless what you are parting with is a skin growth that has dogged and annoyed you for a minimum of ten years. Today, I parted with that old friend, and I was never happier.
One of the first questions the doctor asked me when I showed her this thing (hereafter referred to as TAG—for skin tag) was just how long had I had it. That was a tricky question, because TAG located itself on my hip, and my fat rings above it have always hidden it from my immediate view. And, since I don’t examine myself in the mirror (I just can’t) I failed to be aware of its existence until it started giving me problems when I wore my jeans. The first protest came about ten years ago, so we’ve been together a while.
The doctor’s next question was: How much has TAG grown over the past ten years? Well, you know, had I known that this question was going to be important, I would have gotten one of those growth charts and marked down TAG’s progress over the years and hung it on the kitchen doorway. Since, at first, I wasn’t paying a lot of attention, and since then, I tried very hard to just ignore it, I have no concept of if, or by how much, it has grown.
The next step of the doctor was probably the weirdest: she took pictures—of TAG—while he was still attached. She had perfectly good reasons for this procedure, but until she did that, it never occurred to me that TAG might have a future as a model. But the doctor assured me that TAG’s only chances for a future would be in a specimen dish in the lab…without any more pictures.
At last, it was time for TAG and me to part ways. It was emotional, but only because I had to have shots to numb the area and I hate shots. The actual separation was over in a matter of minutes—lots of blood, but no tears. Because TAG is going to leave such a hole in my life, three stitches were necessary. I told the doctor to be very careful with those…I didn’t want her to scar me and ruin my chances as a stripper. She didn’t seem overly concerned and she took no more pictures, which doesn’t bode well for my chances in the field of entertainment.
So now, I am back home and TAG is on the way to a lab where they can determine how such a hideous little thing had the nerve to attach itself to me. I have several theories, but I think the most likely is that I was kidnapped by aliens and TAG was the spy they attached to me so he could gather information for the inevitable alien invasion. I guess we put a stop to that!
My hip is kind of sore and I can’t seem to remember that I had that tiny bit of surgery there because I keep hitting it, turning the wrong way and bending straight over it. I worked with my drama kids this afternoon and discovered that apparently I have a tendency to stand like Captain Janeway on the bridge of the starship Voyager—with my arms and legs akimbo and my hands on my hips. Every time I tried that today, and it was a lot, the Captain had to give a little whimper and find another place to put the hands!
I know that once my stitches heal and the soreness leaves, that I will not miss TAG at all. No more careful donning of my jeans or hitting it with the bath brush. As for now, I think it is important, after ten years, that at this parting of ways, I finally say to TAG, “Good riddance!”