Old dogs learn new tricks
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How quickly
we progressed from refusing hugs and handshakes, to isolating in voluntary
quarantine.
In the
mornings when Leo came to work our gardens, he calls out, “Sondrita, are you
alive.”
“Just a
minute, let me check. Breathing? Yes, Heart beating? Yes. I’m alive.”
Our governor
of Jalisco has asked everybody to stay home for five days, to help ‘flatten the curve’. How quickly we learn the new language. Will everybody stay home? Of
course not. For those of us who are ‘of an age’ we might recall when we, too,
were invincible.
Churches and
bars, restaurants, street markets, government offices, all are closed. The
streets are empty. Schools closed weeks ago.
Never have I
washed my hands so frequently. I wipe down patio chairs with soapy bleach water
after neighbors visit. We maintain ‘social distance’ of at least two meters in
the open air patio. Short visits, no sharing food or drink.
Visits will
soon be a memory. Like rats abandoning the sinking ship for a leaky raft, my
neighbors are all headed northerly. It is not an easy decision. The Rancho with
few human contacts is probably a safer place, each of us in our isolated
enclave. But home is home.
For me, this
is home. My children tell me, “Mom, stay,
you are in a good place.”
But, let me
tell you about yesterday. I thought I was dying.
Within a few
minutes of sitting down with morning coffee, I began to feel strangely
disoriented.
My world
wobbled. If I closed my eyes, I felt like I floated out of my body. In a rather
pleasant way, but . . . My thoughts were erratic, disjointed. Did I have a
stroke? Shouldn’t there be more pain? I’m not afraid. I sat with that thought a
moment. Yes, I am afraid. A little. I wonder if I am dying. This is not a bad
way to die. I just wish I didn’t feel so loopy.
Like a
drunk, I weaved my way to the bedroom. Blood pressure measured 122/70. So my
heart must be okay, right? Back to the chair.
But sitting
in a chair is not the best place to die. What if I fell onto the floor? I’d
rather die in bed. I weaved and wobbled to my bedroom. While trying to stay
focused, my eyes fell on the basket on top of my shelf, a basket containing
aspirin, Vicks, paracetamol and my anti-inflammatory. In the middle of the
basket the CBD oil caught my attention.
After my
morning shower, in preparation for therapy exercises, because I felt more pain
than my new usual, I had grabbed the CBD, which I had not used in two or three
weeks. The stuff helps.
Distracted, I unthinkingly squirted the dropper bulb
and shot a dropper’s worth under my tongue rather than the carefully measured
drop.
This particular
bottle is a home brew from a friend. Who knows how it was made, or of what.
But, a drop at a time, it was effective. I wonder if . . .
About that
time, Leo came by. I called him to my window. Told him how I felt. He asked a
few questions. “Sondrita, I think you are stoned.”
Jim and
Josue showed up at my window screen next, asked their questions. When I giggled
my answers and told them I was dying, they hoo-hawed with delight. “Hey,
trippy! You are stoned. Wait it out. Enjoy. It will pass.”
John came by
next, bringing me another pint of hand-sanitizer. Goodness, these men got a
hoot out of my near-death experience.
I relaxed. I
certainly felt no pain. I could barely feel my body. Over a several hours, the
feelings of disorientation passed. I could close my eyes without entering
another universe.
In these
grave times, pardon my pun, I am happy to report I am breathing and my heart is
beating.
Without
panic, please be safe, be sensible. I send you virtual hugs with real love,
along with these words from Pope Francis:
“Tonight
before falling asleep, think about when we will return to the street. When we
hug again.
When all the shopping together will seem like a party. Let’s think
about when the coffees will return to the bar, the small talk, the photos close
together. We think about when it will all be a memory but normality will seem
an unexpected and beautiful gift. We will love everything that has so far
seemed futile to us. Every second will be precious, swims at the sea, the sun
until late, sunsets, toasts, laughter. We will go back to laughing together.
Strength and Courage.”
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
March 26,
2020
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