Nothing
like a couple of days of food poisoning to purge your body and clear your mind.
Not that I recommend or condone it.
The
first and worst day I went through wondering if I was going to die, old and
weak as I am, with so many regrets, so many things undone. After a while I
wasn’t sure if dying wouldn’t be so bad. Hey, you’ve been there.
Time
was meaningless. Saturday was a series of delirium dreams in between trips down
the hall. I slept off and on all day Sunday and most of Monday. Okay, some
things cannot be denied: I got up long enough on Sunday night to watch the Masterpiece
Theater programs. Watching Mark Rylance as Thomas Cromwell makes me forget
everything else.
By
Tuesday morning I had regained the will to live. When I woke up I did an
inventory of my body and realized that nothing hurt. This is so rare and
wonderful that I lay there for a while savoring the sensation. Perhaps you’ve been
there, too.
As
I got up and walked around in my empty condition I realized I felt ready to
purge the house, too. My sons would like it very much if I shoveled everything
in my house into garbage bags and sent them to the dump. As I stood there
feeling wan, I looked at the piles and I felt a strong urge to do that very
thing.
It
is unfortunate that I have a hard time letting go of things.
The
pictures are my biggest obstacle. And slides. We must not forget the slides. I
inherited them all, from both sides of my family and from both sides of Rick’s
family, him being an only child. They add up. The pictures are in boxes, and
the boxes are in stacks, and the stacks lean against each other in piles.
I
wrote to my friends John and Julie Blakemore about my house situation and my
desire to clean it out, and they replied that their kids have “firmly requested
bordering on demand that we strip the place down to a level of physical
simplicity that a senior Zen monk would find comfortable to live with.”
Yeah.
Our children see it coming. When we, as John euphemistically puts it, “fall off
the perch,” they will have the monumental task of cleaning out our houses. Poor
babies.
Beloved,
cherished children: I sincerely hope and pray there comes a time and is a world
where cleaning out our houses is your biggest and worst problem.
So.
I’m still a little green around the gills, as my mother would say. Looking at
the piles and promising myself to continue sorting and tossing. It is slow and
tender work. Who are these people my aunt took a picture of in the 1930s?
While
I was ill I had a little time apart from this crazy world. Every time I turn on
the radio and listen to the news, what I hear hurts my feelings, breaks my
heart, upsets my stomach, and pisses me off. Maybe it wasn’t food poisoning
that made me throw up, but an overload of cognitive dissonance and a steady
diet of deadly nonsense.
My
friend Julie reminds me that every time I feel like I’m going to blow a gasket,
to remember that there are millions of people around the world also trying not
to blow a gasket. Is that comforting? It was, a little, to me.
I
make some tea and toast, and continue to recover. The hyacinths and
forget-me-nots are blooming, as are the dandelions, which I don’t bother
because I hear they are good for the bees. The sun is out today, and the leaves
have popped on the trees that looked barren last week. Life goes on, ignoring
human folly.
There
is so much human folly.
Okay,
that’s it for me this time. Please close the door on your way out, so the dog
doesn’t get loose. Thanks.
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