Time out for other things in life
There’s a downside to throwing all of myself for months into a
passionate hobby like sailing. Nothing else around here gets done.
The grass grew eight inches, dust settled in thick layers on
windowsills and end tables and reminded me of what an abandoned house must look
like.
The laundry was ignored until I ran out of underwear and was
forced to dig out the dreaded “thong thing” I swore never to don again. Garbage
day was missed so many times that I needed to buy bag tags—and used the whole
package in one day.
What used to be the vegetable garden is now a weed patch
overrun with thistles and crab grass. And oh, yes, let’s not forget about Mr.
Squirrel, who during my sailboat frenzy found himself a mate and had a family of
their own inside my sleeping bag in the garage.
The general lifelessness around here also signaled an
infiltration of 32 geese that have been pooping themselves in just about every
corner of my yard, including at my back door.
My daughters and grandchildren haven’t seen me in so long that
they’ve started to rely on photographs to remind themselves of what I look
like.
While my sailboat is a shiny new penny the other three
quarters of my life has toppled into the red flag district of neglect.
Sometimes I feel like peanut butter melted to a thin paste in
the hot summer sun and spreadable only in transparent layers. Spread thin—very,
very thin.
It was my goal this past weekend to answer some of “today’s”
questions such as, “Do I remember what a dust mop looks like?” “What is a
vacuum cleaner?” and “When was the last time I took a stroll through the
field?”
I was amazed to see during my field trip that the hay mixture
out there is nearly waist high. How did that happen so fast and how did I miss
it?
I also was
reintroduced to wood ticks. A walk in the field made me fair game.
I didn’t
find the tick on the inside arch of my foot until I was in the shower. I
thought it was a piece of fuzz. When I tried to flick it off, the tick got
stuck to my index finger causing me to freak out as I tried to boil it off with
the shower head and down the drain, where I then imagined it clinging to the
side of the pipe until the middle of the night, when it would crawl back up the
drain hole and be waiting for me on the toilet seat in the morning.
It’s
amazing how scared I get of something so small—right up there with thong
underwear and yet am willing to strike out again alone in a sailboat after a
rocky adventure in a storm.
Nonetheless, I am back up to speed around here. I managed to
clean my bathroom, relocate the squirrel family, cut the grass, do laundry,
dust, bake some muffins, and make plans to get reacquainted with my six little
peppers.
And then I took my dad sailing and we had fun. I really can do
it all.
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