Columns

If I’d married the strong, silent type, there’d be no #thingsmyhusbandsays

It’s a new year, and my husband is still unintentionally providing me with plenty of column fodder.

Here’s the first 2026 edition of #ThingsMyHusbandSays.

He’s been talking in his sleep

• Derek’s sweet tooth is legendary, but his dreams about baked goods can be disturbing. One night, I woke up to him mumbling about doughnuts.

“Doughnuts?” I asked, nudging his shoulder.

“Yeah, the big metal doughnut.”

Now, I’m really awake.

“What big metal doughnut?”

“The one from the sign. It’s too late, now.”

“Too late for doughnuts?”

“No, it fell off the sign, and I tried to stop it, but it crashed through the window.”

He rolled over and continued sleeping.

Me? I wanted to know if anyone got crushed by the big metal donut.

• Who hasn’t had a scary dream about dinosaurs? But Derek’s was oddly specific – and alliterative. He was yelling and thrashing around, so I woke him up.

“You’re having a bad dream,” I said. “Hush!”

Then I asked him what he was dreaming about.

“Triceratops,” he muttered. “In the tent! Not the BIG dinosaurs – little tiny ones.”

He sighed and rolled over, but I heard him muttering, “Little tiny triceratops …”

Derekisms

• Derek: I’m at Costco. Can I get you anything to eat?

Me: I’d love a nonfat yogurt swirl.

Derek: Where’s the yogurt squirrels?

I reminded him we don’t live in Idaho.

• He called our youngest son, Sam, to tell him about the business conference we were attending in Austin.

“All the headwigs are here early.”

• Him: I had Thanksgiving by myself in Flight School. I bought myself a Manhandler Dinner.

Me: Oh, my!

• I really hope some of his words become part of our national lexicon. Like this one: “People need to get off the political blandwagon.”

Life according to Derek

• Speaking of politics, after reading about yet another political sex scandal, Derek told Sam, “That’s the problem with mankind. They keep putting their wieners in the wrong places.”

• Reading online local news briefs to him is always entertaining. I read him one about a reported disorderly male Kung Fu fighting with traffic cones in a parking lot. His reply?

“I should go down there and help him; he’s probably outnumbered.”

• Me: How was your day?

Him: Pretty good till that truck ran into our building.

• His wildlife commentary makes road trips interesting.

“What the hell! A turkey just flew across the road! Did you see that? Who knew they could fly? Looked like a basketball flying across the sky!”

• Derek is also known for his critique of popular music. He especially loathes “Grenade” by Bruno Mars in which the singer vows, “I’d catch a grenade for ya.”

“When was the last time anyone threw a grenade at you?” fumed Derek. “I mean, my gosh, Bruno Mars has never been in combat. You don’t CATCH a grenade. What frickin idiot!”

Married life

• While organizing my shoe shelves the other day, I found a Hershey bar. I’d forgotten I’d stashed it there in the summer after the last time we made s’mores.

“Why did you hide a chocolate bar in your closet?” Derek asked.

“Every woman needs an emergency chocolate stash,” I replied.

“But it’s been there for five months!”

“I guess I haven’t had an emergency yet.”

“Well, you’re about to because now I know where you hide your stash.”

• Holidays can be stressful for husbands. One Christmas Eve, Derek was wrapping presents in the bedroom late at night. He came out looking agitated and poured himself a stiff drink. “This is gonna take a while,” he said. “A long time ago, I bought you a really cool gift, but now I can’t find it.”

(He eventually found it in his truck.)

• I was getting ready for work when I noticed something missing from a shelf in our bathroom. We had two Viking rubber ducks, but the lady Viking had vanished.

“Hey, what happened to Mrs. Viking Ducky? Have you seen her?” I hollered to Derek.

Silence.

Mumbling.

“What?”

“She was buried at sea,” he admitted.

He’d knocked her in the toilet when he went to flush early one morning and couldn’t retrieve her before she went down to her watery grave.

• We watched a movie where a young widow went to her husband’s closet and grabbed his flannel shirt to hold close. “I need to buy you some flannel shirts, so I have something to cuddle if anything happens to you,” I said.

“I’ll just wear my underwear for a week and put them under your pillow,” he replied.

His romance game may need some work, but his stellar quotability quotient more than makes up for it.

Columns

Family, friends, foes and Facebook: Election 2016

There’s a reason I keep my Facebook page politics-free, and it has little to do with being a journalist.

I don’t like conflict. I don’t like name-calling, and I really, really don’t like intolerance and ignorance.

Sadly, there’s nothing like a contentious election season to bring out all of the above. But I purposely keep my political views to myself. In fact, for someone who’s written a column about her underwear, I’m actually an intensely private person. Imagine my surprise when I found myself unfriended by a family member following the election.

My apparent offense? I “liked” a comment another family member had left that repudiated a label often used during passionate political posts. The label? “Privileged white male.” The PWM in question explained why he was tired of his opinions being dismissed with this label and I liked his explanation.

Bam. Apparently, hitting the like button on that comment exceeded her tolerance level. Keep in mind I’d never disagreed or argued with anything this person had posted.

I’m not alone in my experience. A friend was banished from Facebook friendship by a family member because he admitted he’d left the presidential spot blank on his ballot. He couldn’t stomach either option, so he did what he felt was honorable.

He was accused of being a sexist, racist jerk and told that he should … well, I can’t print the rest of the rant in a family newspaper.

When imagined incorrect interpretations are applied to Facebook likes, when rage and rhetoric rule the day, how then can our country and our community move forward? Is it possible to stand and fight for causes and people we’re passionate about without dipping buckets into wells of hatred and splattering others with venom and vitriol?

I’d like to think it is. Perhaps part of the solution is getting to know the “other” among us.

In the weeks preceding the election I had coffee with a friend who said she honestly didn’t know anyone who would vote for Donald Trump. She was joyfully planning a small voting victory party for election night.

That same week I had lunch with a friend who said she didn’t know anyone who would actually vote for Hillary Clinton. “Of course, that doesn’t mean she won’t win,” my friend said. “It’s just that I can’t imagine anyone I know choosing her.”

My reticence renders me like Switzerland, so both of these friends felt comfortable tossing around labels about people who would vote for the candidates they opposed.

“Underclass, undereducated, sexist bigots,” my liberal friend opined.

“Sensitive snowflakes, elitists and whiny millennials,” my conservative friend asserted.

And therein lays the problem. The minute we apply a blanket label to anyone who may vote differently from us, we’ve ensured our bubble is intact. We have become so comfortable in our social and political isolation that we have lost touch with the wider world.

This past week I’ve seen an outpouring of grieving and gloating on social media, and while the hateful rhetoric of some shocked and saddened me, I was relieved that my closest circle of friends had more measured thoughtful reactions.

Whether frightened or hopeful about the next few years, I hope the path forward will include listening and learning from those who differ from us. Hatred can never be part of the solution.

Violence won’t beget tolerance or peace. Rage doesn’t lead to enlightenment.

Our children are watching. They’re listening to our words. They’re reading our posts on social media. If we truly want to create a safe world for them to thrive in, we owe it to them to forge ahead with courage and to take every opportunity to choose love.

The words of Martin Luther King Jr. have never been more apt, “I have decided to stick with love. Hate is too great a burden to bear.”

Contact Cindy Hval at dchval@juno.com. She is the author of “War Bonds: Love Stories From the Greatest Generation.” You can listen to her podcast “Life, Love and Raising Sons” at SpokaneTalksOnline.com. Her previous columns are available online at spokesman.com/ columnists. Follow her on Twitter at @CindyHval.