The Sublime and the Frightening
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I would like to tell you that my trip time in Washington is
all sublime, that every moment is perfection, that my head is in the clouds
with happiness. You would call me out on it, right? You might sing, "Liar, liar, pants on
fire."
So let me start with the sublime, the uplifting, the part I
am trying to hang onto and not let go.
My time with family takes first place in my reckoning. My
son Ben, my granddaughter Lexi, our talks are most precious.
How do I put into words my gratitude that my son is doing so
well, is nearing four years clean after three years on the streets, a time in
which we were estranged? It is not easy for him. He works hard at cleaning up
the debris of his past, of creating a
new road for his life.
It does not help that I live 2500 miles from family. Or,
perhaps, it does. It makes us conscious that time together truly is a gift, not
to be taken lightly.
Know what has been best about being with Lexi, my
granddaughter? We have several times, simply sat and talked. Nothing dramatic.
Just talking. Listening.
Our passion for gardening is the glue that makes Kristen,
Ben's girlfriend, easy to know. I like her. I have met her family. Good people,
which in Montana terms is high praise.
Steve and Theresa, who visited me
in Etzatlan in April, are putting together a proposal to offer for a casa on
the Rancho where I live. So you might imagine, our time together is full of
lots of plans, laughter, exchanging ideas and information.
Then the icing on the cake of my sublimity: Saturday night,
as featured reader, I read my poetry at the Poulsbohemian Coffeehouse on Front
Street, a monthly event, twenty-five years in the running. It has been twelve
years since I have been able to read my work to an audience of poets.
With the exception of two short pieces, I read all new work,
written in the past year. I stood before the mike in terror, knees and hands
shaking. Once begun, I settled down and enjoyed my reading, enjoyed the
responses from my audience.
I walked out that night needing
weights on my feet to keep me from floating off into the cloudy night sky. It
was hours before I scraped my self off the ceiling onto my bedcovers and was
able to get to sleep. What terror! What fun!
Flip side. Last night at dinner with Larry and Ellen, two
long-time favorite friends, I felt a foreign object in my mouth, along with my
food. I fished it out. A crown from a molar. Okay, it is not the end of the
world.
Got up this morning, threw a load of clothes in the washer,
and somehow missed keeping aside an article that bled blue onto a favorite
white Mexican blouse.
While the blouse soaked in bleach water, I worked on an
article, not this one, the one I began days ago. Entire chunks of my article
disappeared. I am still learning how to use this new device, but losing whole
chunks, while writing new chunks, is more than disconcerting.
Meanwhile, Kristen called around to dentists. They all want
to do hundreds of dollars of research into my mouth before being willing to
reattach the lifted molar.
At that point, I considered screaming. But who would care,
other than myself. I next contemplated throwing tooth, blouse, new tablet and
my entire body off a cliff. Fortunately I have forgotten where the nearest
cliff might be.
I calmed down, washed the bleach out of my blouse and rinsed
it, newly white again. I threw my old article into that little trash can at the
top of the page. With Ben's help, I was able to start a new document without
having tablet monster eat chunks. And I just might try to wait until I get back
to Mexico, where I can walk into my dentist office with tooth cap in hand and
walk out a few minutes later with device re-attached for a modest amount of
pesos.
Tomorrow I meet for lunch with Sharon and Gary, get the
grand tour of their new home. Sharon hosted the first poetry group I joined and
had a huge influence on my writing. Afterward, we will go together to Nancy's
poetry workshop. I have to soak up all I can when I can.
The next day long-forever friend
Vidya and I meet for lunch and a rummage through Goodwill, a favorite hangout for both of us. One never knows what
treasure one might find among the trash. I doubt either of us care. It is about
being together, catching up, laughing, which we do quite well.
And, on to Montana. See you soon.
Sondra Ashton
HDN: Looking out my back door
September 13, 2018__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
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