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One Of Life’s Great Questions: Solved

Have you ever seen the movie Kiss The Girls? You know, the one in which this guy called Casanova keeps Ashley Judd in an underground cave as part of a harem, and then she escapes and bands together with Morgan Freeman to help unmask him?

I love that movie. Partially because I’d watch Morgan Freeman spend two hours reading the dictionary, but mostly because unlike the heroines of many classic thrillers, Ashley Judd is just unbelievably capable. When she wakes up and hears someone in the house, she goes immediately into offensive mode, and really does quite an excellent job of it.

And I’ve always wondered: if I suddenly discovered a strange man in my apartment, how would I react?

Last night, I got my answer.

And the answer is: poorly.

Whenever I’ve imagined myself dealing with something like an intruder (and I do imagine such things), it goes something like this: I notice a man (or hear a noise). My brain clicks immediately into high speed, generating numerous awe-inspiring escape scenarios. I calmly and constructively evaluate my surroundings and determine what, if anything, can be used for a weapon. And I either brilliantly and stealthily escape without drawing notice, a dog tucked under each arm, or take a golf club to the dude and emerge victorious.

Well, it turns out that what I actually do is scream like someone is charging at me full-tilt brandishing an ax.

Last night around 1AM I was sitting on my computer typing away, and Kendrick was just getting back from walking the dogs. He was crouched in the kitchen, sort of around the corner from the living room, taking off their leashes, when out of the corner of my eye I noticed that there was most definitely someone else in our apartment. I turned, saw a man in a blue shirt walking slowly through our living room…and began screaming. 5-alarm, Jamie-Lee-in-Halloween-style screaming.

Or, according to my husband, screaming like I’d seen a cockroach. Which is why his response was not to jump into action wielding a samurai sword, but rather to roll his eyes and sigh. By the time he realized that I was actually, you know, legitimately frightened, the poor guy in our living room – who, as it turns out, was our extremely drunk neighbor who had accidentally wandered into our place thinking it was his own – had been scared witless by the noise coming from the kitchen (me) and wandered on back out.

I would like to make special mention of our darling puppies here, because last night they really showed their mettle as attack dogs. When a man silently crept into our apartment, you know what Lucy and Virgil, tiny heroes, did? It can be best described using the words “radio silence.” These dogs lose their freaking minds over a squeak in the bathroom pipe and treat the poor FedEx guy like he’s Cruella De Vil, arrived to divest them of their fluff…but when it comes to an actual, for-real Man In The House? It’s all good; let’s just go ahead and give him a nice tail-wag. Maybe a lick. But a bark? A growl? Any indication whatsoever to our loving owners who feed us, house us, bathe us, and give us treats that there is a potential crisis in the making? Nahhh.

So that was exciting!

And at least I’ve solved the question of how I respond to an intruder in my place.

Poorly.

Image via.



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  • http://twitter.com/thatgirlallison Allison M

    sounds like you need to actually lock your door when you’re home at night!

  • Anonymous

    ya think? i’ve always been kinda lax on door-locking when i’m at home during the day, but obviously i need to change that. we always lock it during the evening hours, of course – but kendrick had literally just walked through the door two seconds before and was unclipping the dogs’ leashes.

  • karenwissclark

    Holy crap. I ALSO think a lot about my catlike reflexes springing to action if/when I’d ever encounter an intruder in my house some night (probably my worst and too-common fear.) Well, now I’m thinking I’d probably not be quite as clear headed and nimble in light of your own experience. Great. But in your case, at least your out-of-control freakout did the job! Glad you’re all safe and it wasn’t a sinister event after all!
    re

  • http://www.dailybaxter.com dailybaxter

    Ugh…I’m with you. One time Ryan was supposed to be out of town, but he surprised me by coming home in the middle of the night. As he was walking into the bedroom he called out to me (presumably so as not to frighten me). My reaction? Incessant, girly screaming while I curled into a ball and dove under my pillows. Is there some sort of fight or flight training I could undergo to be a whole lot more Ashley Judd and a whole lot less murder movie victim??

  • Iggiher

    This made me laugh. :)
    Wouldn’t it be great to have the strength to kung-fu kick the intruder like they do in the movies? I usually can find a book to throw—so lame.

    Thanks for your story…made my day.

  • Anonymous

    you know, when i lived in los angeles i did actually keep a driver (the golf club with the big head) by my bedside table. because that would be such a GENIUS thing to introduce into a conflict.

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  • Ashley

    Well, at least you had the presence of mind to scream! I had a very similar incident happen a couple of years ago. My boyfriend and I woke up at the sound of my apartment door opening at 3:00 in the morning. In stumbled a strange man reeking of booze and cigarettes… and a tiny fluffy dog!!??!? Later, we figured it must have been a random neighbor who drunkenly wandered into the wrong apartment. At the time, though, my brilliant reaction was to remain frozen in terror. I did a little research, and found out that it might actually be more common than I thought: http://www.ucm.es/info/psi/docs/journal/v11_n2_2008/art516.pdf

  • Anonymous

    oh my god! we were just saying – imagine if we had already been in bed and for some reason had forgotten to lock the door before we went to sleep…and he had just come into the bedroom (or, god forbid, gotten into bed with us)…i would have DIED. what did you do to get him out?!?!

  • Anonymous

    and i’m guessing baxter was very little help? he may look tough, but they seem to cave under pressure ;)

  • Anonymous

    zero clear-headedness. zero.

  • Ashley

    Well, my boyfriend had the sense to get out of bed and yell into the living room “get the hell out of here!” The little dog turned and ran and the guy followed it out of the apartment. It was definitely the most terrifying/surreal experience I think I’ve ever had. And now I NEVER forget to lock the door at night!

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  • http://twitter.com/dianeshipley Diane Shipley

    Oh God, that sounds scary. But so glad it wasn’t some kind of malevolent intruder.

  • http://twitter.com/dianeshipley Diane Shipley

    Oh God, that sounds scary. But so glad it wasn’t some kind of malevolent intruder.