Grass is greener, both
sides of the fence!
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One day last
week Leo asked, “Had breakfast yet?”
I grabbed my
bag and we headed to the gordita place. I’m certain there are a hundred gordita
places in Etzatlan. This one is on the man street; that’s what I call it. Block
after block of repair shops, tire and tool stores, that kind of thing. Man
stuff, man street.
These aren’t
stores like we are used to seeing. Might be five or six to a block, open
fronts, no signage. Might be more workers than tools.
I sat in a
plastic chair, at a battered red metal Coca Cola table, waiting for my gordita.
Across the street, a dozen men hung out around the moto (motorcycle) repair
shop. Judging by the number of motor bikes in front, my guess is some are for
sale.
The tortilleria
next door had a fair number of customers in and out, each taking time to chat
before leaving with a kilo or two fresh tortillas in hand.
Crosswise is
a farm seed store. A spotted white roof dog is asleep on the upper corner. The
other lot has a dozen big trucks parked in and around, in various stages of
repair and waiting for parts.
Constant
traffic streams past; walkers, school children in uniform, a young man picking
up trash. A truck delivering bags of cement, the propane truck, a garbage
truck, a lawn and garden truck, another stacked with homemade bricks. An
ordinary day.
“I miss
this,” I told Leo over plates of assorted gorditas. “I miss the constant street
activity, watching people, feeling like I’m part of it all. I had that in
Mazatlan.”
Leo, who is
an old man in a young body, said, “Sondrita, sometimes you lonely. I see you.”
Well, that
was last week.
This week I
am in Mazatlan, not at my old stomping grounds, but a hoot and a holler south.
I’m staying at a resort with friends. Altogether there are nine of us. Plus, I
get to see other friends. Hard to be lonely with this group!
We love
Mazatlan. Kathy and I hit the ground running, seeing old friends, knocking items
from our Mazatlan “to do” lists.
Ironically,
last week, I wrote about finding friends in the Obits. This week I nearly got
to write my own. That is a terrifying thing.
I left my
studio unit to meet Kathy and Richard in the lobby to catch the shuttle to the
Marina for dinner. I am wobbly enough without sea water on the elevator floor
to add to my woes. My wet shoe sole slid out from under me. I didn’t fall; I
soared and hit the marble tile head first.
Kathy said I
had the biggest goose egg she’s ever seen. I thought my head split open and
there was nothing funny about it.
Within
minutes, trained staff, a lifeguard from the beach and the hotel doctor were
caring for me. When they could move me, they transported me to Kathy and
Richard’s rooms where I was incarcerated for the night, under Richard’s good
care. He is a retired GP.
I’m so very
lucky. No broken bones, no concussion, no permanent damage, not even to ego.
Details are fuzzy and may they ever remain so!
Colorful.
That is me in shades of purple and blue. And black. Black from above my brow to
mid-cheek. I’ve the best fright mask for Halloween. May it please not remain
that long!
Blind-folded,
we poke our hand inside a bag of life and pull out our day. From now on,
whatever I reach, I’m calling perfect. It might be gorditas and the street
scene. It might be my balcony over-looking the beach. Might be my back yard.
As usual,
I’ve caught myself pining for grass on both sides of the fence. Do I never
learn?
Meanwhile, I
shall work on a new definition for “Golden Girl” as purple, my main skin color
of the day, segues into gruesome gold. It is an annoyance, not a disaster!
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
September
19, 2019
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