All around my hat I will wear the green willow
and all around my hat for a twelfth month and a day
And if anyone should ask me the reason why I'm wearing it
It's all for my true love whose far, far away
and all around my hat for a twelfth month and a day
And if anyone should ask me the reason why I'm wearing it
It's all for my true love whose far, far away
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Hey babe,
Been quite a year. Not what I
expected, but then everyday is an adventure.
I was in shock when I rode the bus
down to MCV that morning. The firemen were very professional and did what they
do, but they knew as I knew it was over. The doctor asked if I wanted to see
you, but I already had. The emotion therapist or whatever she was tried to
soften the moment and asked how I was. I replied I was OK, to which she
responded “Bullshit.” Nice.
I sat outside for a couple of days
getting my thoughts together. I called Chick and Virginia who came up, but
there was little they could do. I put a message out on Facebook since that is
where most of the people I know are, but did not put a notice in the newspaper.
I wrote your parents, not knowing if they were still there, but got no
response. I didn’t expect one.
The next months were filled with
gathering up “stuff”, making list, and calling charities for pickup. What had
begun a few months earlier, picked up pace fired by anger, pain, and
frustration.
Summer passed pretty quickly and
days were filled with dust and dirt and sweat, but I made progress and space.
Once I made room upstairs, I
decided to get a new hot water heater. Or it decided for me.
One night during a heavy rain, the
litter room ceiling starting to leak. Great. A hole in the roof. A couple of
nights later the dining room ceiling started to drip. The old water heater
finally gave up and started to drain downstairs through a rusted out bottom.
I had called a plumber to put a
new facet on the outside where water was continuously flowing, so I called him
in the middle of the night to have the water turned off. After clearing some
more space upstairs and becoming familiar with the Kroger bathroom, I got an
estimate on a new gas hot water heater. Of course, it wasn’t that easy.
The old heater, which was 30 years
old, could not just be swapped out. New code regulations required additional
draining with larger pipes, so walls had to be taken out and holes drilled. It
took awhile for the tank to fill, but there it was all bright and shiny. Of
course, it wasn’t that easy. There was no gas.
So a call to the city and a guy
comes out in a truck looking at the meter and checking the street. He looked
around and got on the radio in the truck. He looked around some more then
handed me a piece of paper and said, “ Call this number.”
A phone call promised me a new
line had to be installed. By this time it was winter and the snows came and the
ice came and finally the city crew came and dug a hole in the street and
planted little yellow flags in the yard.
To make a long story longer, I
finally got the gas hooked up and have hot water. It would have driven you
crazy.
Speaking of winter, it was a wild
one. This winter was colder with a ton of snow. I moved the little heater into
the living room and sat between the two windows basking in the sunlight. Lots
of layers and blankets, but I made it through. I guess I’ve grown accustomed to
the pioneer spirit.
I also went through all my food
cravings last winter. Cookies, cake, ice cream, pie, and all the fast food
places were tried, but they all failed.
I go to the store everyday, just
like I used to, but I buy less. The major food shopping day is once a month on
Tuesday, old folks discount day. I’ve broken my list down to fruit (yes, I have
fruit every morning so I won’t get scurvy), grained bread, kidney beans, soup,
wheat crackers, whole-wheat pasta, canned tomatoes, and jello for desert.
My cooking skills have become
simple. What can I pour into a mug and heat up?
I ride every morning and that
gives me some air and time to focus. I even ride Bianci. A couple of crows
greet me and the peteies and beau-beaus scurry back and forth while the robins
and cardinals do their aerial acrobatics.
And there is a blue jay, that must
be you, reminding me when to feed the yard critters. I fed them all winter and
they are fat and sassy. Frick and Frack have some new cousins who wander around
the tree highway while Beau-Beau’s grand children run amuck through the
grasses. And the fish came through the frozen pond winter just fine. I’ve even
cleaned the filter a couple of times.
I’ve let the yard do what it is
going to do. Cut the crape myrtles on the side to cut down the highway into the
upstairs. I also got rid of the upstairs neighbor.
I had to get rid of all the other
critters. Too much memories and they needed something better. Buffy was the
tough one, but I had to do it.
I went through all your notebooks
and papers. You wrote down everything. Things we had talked about, things we
didn’t talk about. Pages filled with your secrets and plans and concerns and
wishes. I read them all.
And I went through all the photos.
I’ve saved a few of you smiling. Those are the best.
30 years of reliving our time
together. Vacations to Williamsburg, honeymoons to the beach, walks to Maymont
or the museum or the marathons, watching M.A.S.H. or Friends or Quincy,
fighting and making up. I spent more time with you than with anyone else in my
life.
This has also been a time to
review my life. An empty house gives one lots of time for that, but I’m sure
you knew that.
I tried to give you everything you
wanted and needed, and a bunch of stuff you just liked. I tried to give you the
space and freedom to do whatever you wanted. And you always surprised me. Your
energy was non-stop and your ideas were unimaginable, but they worked out well.
I sorry you didn’t get to complete them all.
Looking back and sorting through
all the stuff, I think I provided you with the physical possessions you asked
for, but could not give you the emotion you required. Even a diamond ring fades
over time. It wasn’t I would not, I don’t think I ever could.
4 comments:
Thank you for sharing. Wear the green willow for as long as you need.
It has been quite a year with a lot of big changes. Peace.
Hang on to the treasured memories and keep moving forward.
Your honesty is so powerful. I admire how you coped that first year. Burd
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