Neither of us have had children around for
a great number of years now, so there was no need for a child-proof cap. She cranked
on it until her hands were tired and arms sore, then she handed it to me. Having seen what she just went through, I
knew better than to try. I got the
pliers from the junk drawer. “This
should do it.” I announced. It didn’t.
Not one to give up easily, I
carried the small container out to the garage.
I placed it in my vice and snugged it up to a point just before crushing
it. Then I took a larger pair of pliers
and tried to twist the top open. Still
nothing.
I went back into the house and
called the pharmacy. I explained to
them, once again, that none of our containers should ever have child-proof
lids. The pharmacist got on the phone
and told me to read the bottle again. He
said it is not the old-style child-proof system. This was something new to the market, and I
am not the first call he’s gotten. Instead
of the Push-down & Turn system, all they did was to use left-handed
threads. "Turn it the other way and it
will open right up."
I did, and it did.
1 comment:
Wow! I am almost to the point of having the checkout person or the bagger open all my jars!!
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