Springing forward or falling back, daylight saving time was something my father always dreaded.
Having to reset all the clocks in his house behind or ahead by an hour twice a year meant he had a lot of work to do — and he didn’t enjoy doing it.
The chief cause of his pain was my mother. She loved clocks so much she had 14 scattered all over their house.
There were clocks in my parents’ bedroom, the laundry room, two guest rooms, the car and on the back patio.
Changing each of those clocks was an annoying and time-consuming task for my dad.
It didn’t take him too long to figure out how to change the microwave’s clock, but the stove was brand-new and its clock always caused him great grief.
“For gods sakes, Betty,” he’d complain to my mother, “I’ll never figure this daggone thing out.” He particularly disliked the clock in the basement family room.
Everyone in our family thought this framed “picture clock,” which displayed a mill on a river, was hideous. But my mother loved it because 40 years earlier I had used my meager high school savings to buy it for her as a birthday gift.
My father especially hated it because in order to reset it he had to use a stepladder.
“Why don’t you take it back?” he’d often plead with me.
“I don’t want that ugly thing in my house,” I’d reply.
The three clocks that troubled my dad the most all had chimes. One was a beautiful, hand-crafted wall clock that my Uncle Jimmy had gotten for my parents in West Germany nearly half a century earlier.
Copyright 2024 Tom Purcell, distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.