From Fish to Furniture--The Three Day Rule
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I try to be cognizant of the three day rule when I am a
guest, whether I'm visiting with friends or family. After three days, fish or
guest, one stinks. One notices the speculative eyeball, "When do you think
she'll leave?"
There is a slight difference when one is a paying guest,
such as I am at the hotel in Hot
Springs where I spend hours each day soaking in
steaming pools, sleeping, reading, and healing.
Just this morning when I was warming a chair in front of the fireplace,
a young man who works here, Willy, I believe his name is, asked, "You
still here?"
The day I arrived I committed to three days. One or two
would not be enough so surely three would be perfect. However, the second day I
found myself thinking about leaving and a mild state of panic set in. Not real
panic but pseudo-panic, which feels the same. So I added another day. Then I
asked for yet another day, or maybe two--no, let me see the calendar. So will
my room be available for another week? Aw, let's just run my stay through a
full two weeks.
So the first three days I am indeed a guest, rather pampered
with my needs catered to by the cheerful staff.
Day four segues into an interesting blend of being a guest
and being family. Definitely, I am
family the rest of the first week. I
help myself to coffee. I know where the
pot sits on the burner beneath the coffee maker. When I need fresh towels, I
know which staff is doing house-keeping this day. Silverware is wrapped comfy
in a roomy napkin in the basket on the table around the corner. I helped a guest get some this morning at
breakfast.
Now and then, someone checks to see if I need anything. But
mostly we have short conversations. They know my name. I am getting to know
them.
And like with any blended family, tasks are shared. The
woman taking reservations might also be waiting tables in the dining room, two
phones stuffed inside her apron pockets. The maintenance man doubles as the
breakfast chef. Job descriptions at the hotel must be either a nightmare of
paperwork or everyone simply signs up to do whatever task needs doing. See what
I mean--family.
After the first week I feel like furniture, quite
comfortable perched in my corner, ignored by everyone. Any day now I expect to
be dusted as 'house-keeping' makes the rounds, especially if I've already been
to the hot pool and am sitting immobile in my favorite chair before the fire,
seemingly comatose but actually in perfect imitation of a Zen meditative state.
I will leave eventually, honestly, I will. Saturday I will
be on my way to Washington,
happy to have use of my phone once more. Oh, dear, the maintenance man is
coming my way with two light bulbs and a lampshade. Oh, dear, do you suppose .
. .
Sondra
Ashton
HDN:
Looking out my back door
October 17,
2013
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