I’m not saying there are stupid people. I’m saying there are unobservant people. I’m not saying there aren’t stupid people, though.

Author: Laurel (Page 3 of 3)

Please Consider The Environment Before Printing This Coffee

I named her before I bought her. I do that with inanimate objects. I remember a quote from Peter O’Donnell that I haven’t tracked back down along the lines of “You never know when regarding something kindly will be useful to you.”

I named her Carrie. Carrie the Keurig. She was new and red and beautiful and I absolutely didn’t need her. But the garage sale lady priced her at $50. We talked about various things for a half hour and then I asked if she would call me if Carrie didn’t sell. “How much do you want to pay?” She said. “$35,” I said.  Mine, mine, mine.

The challenge may be to justify my purchase to all the people in the college town where I work. Keurig? Keurig? KEURIG? Don’t you know you’re creating more waste for the landfill and killing the environment?

Happily, I don’t feel the need to justify myself. I used to go to coffee shops to write in the early mornings; no more; there’s a cost savings. I buy my coffee pods at Wal-Mart (more college town shudders). I cut open the used pods and put the coffee grounds in our compost. I know the non-profit that shares our office building would be absolutely horrified but they don’t compost, so I don’t care about their opinion.

It all reminds me of the tag line one sees in so many emails: Please Consider the Environment Before Printing This Email. I rarely have a need to print emails but every time I see that tag line I feel a compulsion to print, print, PRINT. My friend Rob wrote an excellent screed on this at his website, Rumblestrip (https://www.rumblestrip.org/2007/03/29/green-signature-drafts/). I have Considered the Environment. And I’m Making My Coffee.

Carrie joins the grand parade of my inanimate object naming. My first vehicle, a Mazda truck, was Ezra, named after a character in Anne Tyler’s “Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant”: “I’m trying to get through life as a liquid,” Ezra had said, and Cody (trying to get through life as a rock) had laughed;he could hear himself still.” Cody reminded me of my oldest younger brother Jack, who never saw a brick wall he didn’t want to hit his head against; and Ezra, my youngest younger brother Sam. Jack said that while he would hit the brick wall, I would charm someone into opening a door in it, and Sam would look at the wall and say “I didn’t want to go that way anyway” and walk the other direction. So perhaps Sam wasn’t so Ezra after all. And perhaps I charmed my way through the brick wall of the garage sale lady to the $35 deal.

After Ezra, who I sold to my dad’s friend, who then promptly cracked the engine block by not putting in oil, came Thomas, the Subaru station wagon named after the protagonist in Joan Aiken’s “Voices in an Empty House.” Then the unloved Chevette. Then Evan, named after the friend who sold him to me. Then Calvin-George (Coolidge and Bush). And now Carly (Fiorina). I talk to her when I get the nanny-sound: your seat belt isn’t fastened, you’re out of windshield wiper fluid; you’re out of gas.” Thank you, I say. I appreciate it. And I do.

So every morning I wake early, get to writing, and have a tumbler of Carrie coffee, then drive to my office in Carly, and sit down to work with — what? Damn. I forgot to name the laptop.

Truck, Lady; Some Baggage

“Where’s the key? I can’t find the key!” He said, frustration rising in his voice.

I didn’t know and wouldn’t have cared, except that we had carried over six bags of groceries along with our backpacks on the sturdy little seaplane. It was only a mile and a half to the house; a doddle if we didn’t have the groceries. The truck could stay at the dock until we reached his sisters and found out where the key now lived.

“I can’t find the key! Why didn’t I ask them before we came?” Frustration turning to anger at himself. The seaplane would be back on Saturday. We could hump the fresh stuff today and come back for the packaged tomorrow.

But we didn’t have to. Another truck rolled up, an elbow resting on the driver’s rolled-down window, and a voice: “ Do you need some help?”

Well, yes. I explained our situation as I tossed bags and backpacks into the truck bed and hopped in before Nate could say no, we were fine, we’d figure it out.

Benoit had motorcycled to Victoria from Montreal. He still had a soft Quebecois intonation, soothing even when he said “the lady I’m working for; yes, she can be a handful. I’ve had more than my fair share of non-enjoyable moments unfold here. But I’ve also had good times. Take some and leave some, smile and nod. That sometimes works.”

We have taken the road through the farm, forgetting it was no longer in the family. Nate jumps out to shoo the chickens away; they cluck reproachfully, wandering away on their chicken legs. As the truck jounces I’m holding my hat on, remembering all the times I’d hitchhiked last century. Strictly forbidden by the safety folks today, but ah, what memories they are. Lying in the bed of a ‘74 Mazda truck in my sleeping bag, looking up at a new moon and old stars, wondering where I’d be the next day and the next day; thrilled to not know. It could be anywhere. It could be anything.

And now we’re pulling up in front of John’s Boston Whaler. Nate gets out and begins pulling the backpacks and bags, and I tip up and over the truckbed, miss the bumper, and tumble ungracefully to the dirt. “I’m fine,” I say, standing up. Not even much to brush off. “That was a nice fall,” said Benoit. “Nice shoulder tuck.” I preen in the glow of his approval.

“Thanks for the ride!” I say to Benoit. “We have some Okanagan cider and Black Canyon wine, if you want to come by later.” Benoit tips his hat and climbs back into the car; slowly steers his way back on the narrow lane. I walk towards the side of the Shelter Logic; variations of which each house has tucked away to store lumber or firewood or runabouts, towards the house key. We know where that is.

Nate says disapprovingly, “I intentionally waited until he was gone. We don’t know his backstory. He could be anyone and be capable of anything.” My very own Safety First husband. I understand his need to make sure nothing goes wrong here; this is his father’s legacy; his sisters’ summer home. In a sense we are just visitors here. Colorado’s distance doesn’t allow for more than one trip a year, and we’re lucky if we make that. Meg and Gabrielle are here three or four times a summer.

If something goes wrong on our watch, it will fall on Nate’s head, and I’ll hear that familiar rise in his voice; the fear that he’ll do something wrong again and everyone will be disappointed but not really, because what else would you expect from Nate? He strives for perfection and doesn’t achieve it, because no one can. I know I’m not perfect and I know I’ve disappointed but somehow that means less to me than this does to him.

Perhaps it’s the difference between eldest boy child and eldest girl child. I’ll be happy to stretch in the decaying Eames chair, in the house’s prow, reading May Sarton’s House by the Sea, in this house by the sea. He’ll be satisfied with no less than writing the definitive novel about A House by the Sea.

The newly-opened house smells like my grandparents’ basement: damp, still; not moldy, but unused.

The next morning I come out to the deck, where he hunches, intent, over a particularly knotty book of speculative fiction; a glass of red wine to the side.

“Are you reading or are you sad?” I ask

“The two are not mutually exclusive,” he says, a bit stiffly.

We sit in companionable silence.

Reunified

The Seabus is a large, industrious ferry, and not what I expected. No wind in our faces, no smell of sea air. We are headed to Nate’s 40th high school reunion, and I am both hoping he will find joy at seeing so many old friends, and wondering where I will squirrel myself away to write a tiny memoir of our trip.

It’s a fearsome thing, seeing young pictures on badges and not so young faces above them. I prefer everyone’s current face. Lived in is better than the aimless gaze of youth. And noise. Noise everywhere. People are so pleased to see one another, so leaning in to hear one another. Age’s advantage over youth: the cliques have dissolved and the hurts have mostly been forgotten. Although not by Nate; he still feels unmemorable, unnoticed; not actively disliked but inactively ignored.

I sit, squirreling.

“Hi, who are you?”

“Married to Nate Higgins”

“You just looked so alone, sitting there. I thought maybe you were a journalist.”

I guess I am, if writing journals makes one so.

I’m one of four spouses here. We all have a slightly hunted look. People peer at my badge.

“And you are?”

“Married to Nate Higgins.”

“Ah. Well. It’s nice to meet you.”

Watching my husband find joy in His People gives my heart happiness. Usually he views the world as What Will Next Go Wrong? His Higginsian harrumph does not give me joy, but it does make me smile. Who could not love a man who sees another lose a quarter while pacing at the ferry terminal, who worries away for minutes until he says, abruptly, “I’m going to find that man to give him that quarter.” And returns to tell me “He has scoliosis and wasn’t able to bend down. I think he was a little nonplussed that I thought it important to bring it to him.”

“YOU. PIPE DOWN.”

Aaaaaaagh. My husband, right behind me. He can be loud. And effective. This time he is helping the organizing girls, lined up to give their speeches. “Thank you to . . . . “. “It’s so nice to see so many of you here . . .” “Please remember those who have passed and cannot be . . .”

Many more men than women are here. One of the organizers says “I think the women are all too worried about their looks.” She’s probably right. I know I look at pictures and think Oh My God, Look At Those Fat Arms. But I remind myself that no one else is looking at my fat arms; they’re all looking at their lumpy midsections and lousy hair, none of which I see. I see the radiant smiles and the light in their eyes when they talk about how they met their husbands, the joy their children bring.

Dishes and napkins appear on platters around us, in the light, competent hands of quiet waiters. Smoked salmon and cream cheese and capers on pumpernickel, sliced veg, potstickers, sushi, sashimi, Olives. Oh. Olives with pits. Little odd tasty tartlets. Dishes and napkins unobtrusively disappear.

I, a slightly odd tartlet, squirreled away in a corner, look around; happy with my life, happy with my husband; the one who looks surprised that people like him. Happy.

Renew

The first place I look for in a new town is a shoe repair shop. And a used bookstore. It’s not that I need more shoes or books; it’s the smell of leather and old paper. I carry one of my dad’s portfolios for the same reason; the paper is old, the leather laced. Dad stamps every personal item with his name and address. He’s lived in the same house for 45 years. Long ago he also used his social security number until Mom said “Honey? No.”

We are in Ambleside and I not only want but have to find a repair shop. My walking shoes have come apart at the edge. Soon we will be at Granville Public Market and since there are coffee shops and fruit and vegetable and cheese and pickle and hand-crushed olive oil stands, I will need good walking shoes. And when we fly above the Salish Sea to Secretary Island, shoes will be as crucial as raincoats and hats and all the books that I haven’t read; usually lined up in sullen reproach but look – I’m reading you. Stop sullening . No Internet. No shops. No restaurants. Blessed, anticipated, feared silence. We will walk through sheep meadows and apple orchards and search for cult leader Brother XII’s fabled Mason jars filled with gold. Walking, walking, walking.

Where to find a shoe man? An Old English sheepdog drowsed at the feet of the gentle man in the Christian Science Reading Room (I took a Christian Science Monitor Weekly as a thank-you). “I think there’s a shoe repair shop two blocks down,” he said. And so to Marcell’s Shoe Renew.

Marcell was not the old Quebecois shoe man I had pictured. Curt, short, Chinese. He did have the cigarette, so I was one for three.

“Repair?” he asked.

“Yes,” I answered.

“Tuesday.”

“Um, this afternoon?”

“4pm maybe.”

“Thank you.”

And then, I returned at 2pm and hopefully, diffidently, sidled in and raised my eyebrows.

“All done. Ten dollars.”

Sometimes it is the smallest things that make the biggest difference.

June 2 2018

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