The “Real”
meaning of life and other silliness
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When I sit
at a blank page with no idea what I want to write, I go through who, what, when, where and how of the
past several days to see what might pop up and out.
My life is
simple. I read a lot. A lot. I read the phrase, “explains the real meaning of life”, in a book blurb. Blurbs operate
as the worm on the end of the line that is meant to hook me into choosing to
read that book.
“Real meaning?” I kid you not. Is there other meaning
of life? Several meanings? Isn’t life simply life? Of course, I’d not choose
that book, just on the basis of the blurb alone. But I laughed. It is funny.
A week
later, still giggling over the phrase. I spread it out, applied it to include
the “real” meaning of such disparate things as socks, wealth, peaches, truth, compassion,
and other “reals”.
Take socks.
When I wear athletic shoes, I want socks. Can’t stand sweaty feet. Athletic
socks, short and tight. Girl socks. Stretch out to here but fit my feet like Chinese
bindings.
When Dr.
Cruz Armenta X-Rayed my body in preparation for surgery last winter, he tsked,
tsked, and said, “You have arthritis in every joint of your body. Look here and
here and here.” Until that moment I had no arthritis. Now arthritis plagues me,
especially my feet, with tight socks.
Leo went to
Costco Saturday in the Big City. I asked him to get me real socks, boy socks, socks that would let my toes stretch out.
See, the “real” meaning of socks.
I gathered
all my worn girl socks to throw in the basura. Leo asked, “May I take those to
Julio’s mom. She is real poor. Real
poor.” His actual words. Of course, I handed them over. I pass on my discards
when they don’t fit well or were a poor buying choice. I would never have
thought anyone else might want my old socks.
Peaches? For
several years every peach I’ve bit into has been woody, tasteless, no juice.
Finally “real” peaches showed up at
the Mercado. Delicate, bursting flavor, juice to run down my chin. I bought a
bounty. Sliced a bunch into a pie, oh,
my, a “real” peach pie. My favorite, uh, along with rhubarb. But rhubarb doesn’t
get imported to Mexico. Not that I’ve ever seen.
Friday night
a situation was staged that had an impact on me. I was angry. I need not
qualify angry with any adjective. Because another person is involved, I won’t
reveal detail. I could have stomped over and demanded justice. Or recompense.
Or revenge. I was that angry. I chose, because I’ve learned the hard way, to
wait three days, to let reaction cool down to action, appropriate, if
necessary.
I simmered down,
decided to let the dispassionate universe (slowly ticks that clock) take care
of the situation. The other person is, with a soul sickness, mowing down any
who get in the way. Confrontation would of necessity be painful, most likely
painful only to me.
I am a
notorious chicken. I’d like to say I’m inspired by Gandhi. Or did I just bury
my head in the sand? I don’t have an answer. This seems right to me today. What
is truth? What is cowardice? What is compassion?
It is
possible the “real” meaning of life
is different for each of us.
Perhaps, for
you, life means high excitement, bungee jumping, cliff diving, conquering
Annapurna.
Life to me
seems to be an ever-changing book of many chapters. My chapter today is pretty
simple. My floor needed to be swept. I swept my floor. I hung a load of laundry
on the clothes line. I fed myself a bowl of veggie/fish chowder. And a slice of
peach pie.
Each of
these simple tasks I did with a small sense of satisfaction.
Clouds are
darkening the sky. I’d better bring in
my laundry, surely dry already in this hot sunshine. I’ll probably grab a book
and sit on the patio, read, look up now and then to watch butterflies. The huge
white ones I call “bedsheets” have returned.
I’ll
probably never figure out the “real” meaning of life. If you do, please let me
know. Meanwhile, I live a simple, satisfactory life.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
September
24, 2020
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