Not My Best Day
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Every day should be my best day!
There I go, thinking I “should” be grateful and, truly, I am. However, “Should” can take a hike into the out
beyond and stay there. But my reality is that I feel shaky, in pain, and
morbidly fixated on possibilities: broken bones, concussion, blood spatters.
None of which happened.
My day started with pleasure. I woke
to the musical prayers of the procession of thousands from Etzatlan marching
with the Statue of the Virgin from here to San Jaunito Escabedo, about twelve
kilometers from here. My casita is a couple blocks east of the road on the edge
of town.
Families, many in traditional regalia, gather at 4:00 at the
Cathedral for ceremonies to begin the procession, walking in prayer the entire
route. It bestows great honor to be chosen to carry the Virgin. The faithful
have made this pilgrimage every second Monday in October for hundreds of years.
Once they reach San Juaniito Escobedo, the Virgin is received
with a High Mass. The Presidente of that city hosts a barbeque. Everybody from
both cities are invited to the feast.
I did not join the procession. Perhaps I should have. There
goes that “should” again.
Leo picked me up for shopping. I had a long list. I don’t see
the sense in supporting an automobile. For a few pesos a trip I can ride with
friends or take a taxi.
Walking through my garden, I put my foot, toe first, into a
hole where it lodged. I could move neither my foot nor the hole.
Consequently I fell on my hunky-dory, my back and my head, in
that order. The earth moved. I couldn’t breathe. I lay on the ground for an
hour though that time was compressed into two or three minutes. Josue saw me on
the ground and rushed over to help Leo raise me from the downed.
Once upright, my knees and ankles went wibbly-wobbly and did
not want to work. But with help I made my shaky way to Leo’s car. Nothing
broken but my confidence and minor pride.
I had a lengthy shopping list, many stops. I sat in the car,
shaking. Leo shopped with my list. I couldn’t keep my thoughts controlled. I
have a prosthetic right knee and prosthetic left hip. It could have been bad. I
was certainly in shock. I kept telling Leo I was loco-loco. He didn’t argue.
We went to the shoe store to adjust one of my shoes. I say
“we” but Leo did all the back and forth work. I handed him a list with my
money.
He bought eggs from the egg lady, a woman in her 90’s who lives
in a tiny house and has little but her chickens in her courtyard. From there we
went to the woman who sells chickens. Leo selected a beautiful chicken, cut
into quarters and a handful of chicken livers. Then on to the store for olive
oil and cat food. Two cannot live as cheaply as one. At our last stop at my
favorite fruteria, Leo gathered pineapple, melon, bananas, spinach and squash
for me.
On the way back to the Rancho I said, “Let’s go to Dona
Mary’s for carnitas de puerco con nopales.” The last thing I wanted to do was go
home to make lunch. I could feel my bottom turning purple.
Dona Mary’s Restaurante is in one of the little colonias on
the road to Magdalena. This eatery is a favorite place, like nothing anywhere
in Montana. All the food is fresh, cooked on wood-fired stove, in an open
tin-roofed shack. Whenever we pull in front, family faces light up with
welcome.
The drive to Dona Mary’s and back helped me to settle down
and gain perspective, to be grateful I didn’t badly hurt myself.
Alongside the road are millions of orange flowers that herald
the end of the rainy season. The
mountainside above the village looked as if a blanket of orange had been
dropped from above. The blue sky, white clouds, orange flowers, green
cornfields were the most brilliant colors I’d ever seen. The bedsheet butterflies have returned. The
iguanas sunning on rock walls looked goofier. Leaves on trees seemed sharper.
All my senses seemed heightened.
Back home, my chicken simmers in broth. Wasps build a nest in
the window arch above my desk. (Outside—I’m inside.) I have a good book. I have
food. Cat has food. Bruises will heal. The loco-loco part of me may or may not
go away. So it’s not my best day. So what!
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
October 12,
2017
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