In times of both plenty or panic, but not with reliable frequency, I have been known to send the
laundry out. It’s so nice. The clothes come back folded and sorted by size. All
the underwear is packaged together, and all the socks, (ohmagosh, the best
part), all the socks come. back. matched. Do you know how many socks three kids
have collectively? Sending out my laundry is a luxury. If I could do it every
week, I would. For the sock-matching service alone, I would send out my laundry
if I had the means.
These days my pennies are pinched a little tighter and I can
no longer pay someone to do my laundry for me. I must go to the
laundromat. It’s not so bad. All within about a block of the laundromat there’s a bakery, a taqueria, a burger joint, a sandwich shop, a market, two liquor stores and a bar. (There is also a pizza place, but the last time I was there, someone changed the total on my receipt, turning a 55 into a 65, thus turning a 20% tip into a, into a … I don’t want to do the math. Whoever changed it, upped my tip by $10. I was super pissed about it. The tip was on a take-out order, not table service. I ordered a pizza and salad to go and sat at the bar and drank a beer while I waited for my food to be ready. A 20% tip on a beer and a take-out order is a good tip. I noticed the modification, changed it back and took a picture of it. In the end, I was only charged my original tip amount. I don’t know if the offender was the guy sitting next to me or the counter person, but I haven’t been back since.)

At first I hated the idea of going to the laundromat. But after a few months I started almost enjoying the time; not the actual doing of the laundry, but the time it affords me to have a moment to myself, accomplishing a chore, yes, but also having a few hours of (almost) free time. While I would rather pay someone to pick up my clothes from my house, wash my clothes, fold my clothes, match my socks and then bring it all back to me at the end of the day, I'm not complaining.