Back to the
future?
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
One must
make one’s own decision, must do what each figures is best for self and family
and community. As for me and many of my friends, we choose to continue staying
home, having no touchy-feely (sigh) communication with others.
We are
retired. It is easier for us to hole up, to forego the little extras, the
advantages of modern life to which we’ve become accustomed, as if those things
are our due.
Have any of
you elders noticed how living this pared-down life in self-isolation is similar
to life in the ‘50s?
Listen up,
young’uns and I’ll tell you about it.
I think the
main difference between now and then is that we had more alone time. We did not
have organized summer sports or year-round activities such as yoga or martial
arts, Zumba or pedicure parlors. Gym was at the high school. We swam in muddy water.
We did not dare get bored. We had parents watching every nuance.
We got in
trouble. You did not invent fast cars, booze, cigarettes or sex. We had the
drive-in theater.
Can you imagine,
those of us who are older, imagine our parents motoring through Hot Shots to
order a daily dose of skinny salted-caramel latte venti, double shot at $5.00?
I can see my Dad’s expression as if he were in front of me as I ask that
question, a mix of incredulity and horror.
We lived on
a farm. A daily shopping trip would have been incomprehensible. Even for town
dwellers, shopping demanded thought and planning, picking up necessary
groceries for a week, that item at the hardware store and socks for Junior, all
in the same trip on “sale day”.
Trip? A trip
for me was to ride my bicycle down the mile-long lane to the mailbox.
If we ran
out of an item in the kitchen we did without. Not that we ever ran out of any
staple. We bought baking soda before we emptied the box, flour in fifty-pound
sacks.
The only
emergency requiring an unscheduled trip to town was when a piece of farm
machinery broke down. Dad taught me to drive at twelve so I could make those
trips, unlicensed, terrified of being ‘found out’, in a community where
eight-year old boys regularly drove to the parts store or the John Deere or IH
garage.
Dining in a
restaurant? That was a luxury my family never enjoyed. A special dinner meant
Sunday roast or fried chicken, after Mass.
A vacation?
A weekend jaunt to Glacier Park? Not even in my family consciousness.
Do you see
how rich we have become, how we live with a wealth of possibility?
A piece of
my own going backwards to go forwards is my new bucket garden. Never thought
I’d be planting vegetables, other than year-‘round herbs, lettuce and a few
stalks of corn. Not me! I plant flowers. In hand-made clay pots because I am a
clay-pot snob. No plastic for me!
Since my
investments evaporated and with prices of everything on the upshot, I’ve gone
practical.
Pinto beans have doubled in price in two months, from twenty to
forty pesos a kilo. Frugality rules.
Josue helped
me collect a gathering of buckets, empty of paint and building materials. Plastic,
ugly, practical. David from Centro Vivero delivered bags of tierra. Leo drilled
holes in the buckets, filled them with rocks and dirt. With hope, I planted
parsnips, squash, turnips, beets, chard and cabbage, carefully settling three
or four seeds in each bucket. Potato in one, sweet potato in another.
Michelle
brought me mystery-tomato starts garnered from their compost heap. Leo begged
pepper seeds from his neighbor who works at a greenhouse. With farmer’s luck
I’ll be regularly supplementing my meals with my own produce.
Don’t let
anybody fool you that life in the ‘50s was paradise. It was not. It was
differently miserable and differently wonderful.
Living here
in this paradisiacal piece of Mexico You might say my everyday life is a
vacation. And it is. But I’ve spiced up daily drudgery (PT—ugh) with imaginary road
trips on my stationary bike.
Today I pedaled to Durango without leaving my
patio, crossing that engineering marvel of a bridge between Mazatlan and
Durango. Tomorrow I’ll go from Durango to Monterey. Mountains are no obstacles
in day-dreams.
I admit, my
tablet is a handy aid to imagination. Back in the olden days I used to pull
“Around the World in 1,000 Pictures” from our bookshelf and dream of travel to
foreign lands. You might say I still dream the same dreams.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
May 28, 2020
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
No comments:
Post a Comment