Staring at a
blank piece of paper
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Here I am
again, sitting at my computer, staring at a blank page of paper that’s not real
paper, waiting for inspiration to write, to share with you, the latest
happenings in my real life.
And one of
the most real things that occurs to me is guilt. I feel guilty. Real good ol’
Catholic guilt.
Let’s take
the little things first. Every day it rains, here on the high plateau
surrounded with mountains in central Mexico. Beginning in June, through July
and now into August.
The elders
in this area say they haven’t seen rain like this since they were children.
We’ve been experiencing extended drought for years. Finally the aquifers are
being replenished, though it takes more than one rainy season. In September
I’ll be grumbling again about how dry it is. Dry from September until June.
Meanwhile, I’ve
been pruning and plucking out plants plagued with curly leaf, black leaf, rust,
green mold, black mold and white smut. These are not scientific descriptions
but words I use to identify problems induced by too much rain. Much of my
bucket garden rotted in the pots. I’ll replant in September.
Where is the
guilt in this? Obvious, I would think. I am only too aware that you, my friends
up north, cannot breathe through the drought induced dust, the smoke from
out-of-control range and forest fires, while watching crops wither on the vine
or be decimated by grasshoppers. In the evenings lightning starts more fires
than rain can put out. In Glendive, where my daughter lives, today one can wade
across the Yellowstone River.
Guilt is
neither reasonable nor unreasonable. It simply is. Olay, that’s one guilt.
Another
guilt is generated by our high school class reunion, now officially cancelled,
again, due to the pandemic, the smoke and fires, hospitals full up, the dangers
of travel. I had already made the decision not to travel this fall, so why the
guilt? See above.
My two
classmates from Oregon, the planners for our reunion, had to cancel two years
in a row. I’m relieved to not have to make excuses for myself for not going had
they continued. I would have made the circle, Oregon, through Washington and
Montana.
Of course I
miss you all. It’s been two and a half years since I’ve been with friends and
family. That’s a long, long time.
Next guilt:
Yesterday Kathy took Richard to the emergency room. He’d collapsed. We don’t
have a definite diagnosis yet but evidently something might be misfiring in his
heart. Richard is one of the strongest men I know. He’s probably quite calm
through this crisis but Kathy isn’t. Nor are we, his friends.
Later the same
day, Lani who has been in Idaho with her daughter, had a stroke, was taken by
helicopter to a hospital in Spokane, and had surgery. More than that, we don’t
know. Her husband, Ariel, is beside himself and thank goodness we are here to
keep him calm, urging him to get more information before making any flight
decisions to go where he probably would not be allowed in the hospital to see
his wife.
Just as I
sat down to my blank paper which is not paper, my phone rang. Another friend is
care-taking a friend of his through emotional and physical crises. He just
needed an ear. And to know I am okay. But mostly, he needed an ear.
Survivor’s
guilt? Not really but perhaps a second cousin once removed to survivor’s guilt.
I sat myself
down for a good strong chin wag. Guilt, I figure, is a costly luxury, not a
necessity. I pretended I was my Grandma giving me what-for when I was a child over
my latest error in judgement. A little grim but that soon set me on a different
path.
A word or
two of comfort, a little heart-felt care, a little prayer. It doesn’t change
the world but it changes me.
I woke up
this morning, still breathing, still alive as far as I can tell. I walked outside
to greet my dog Lola and the sun, in that order. I took a deep breath of the
morning air, fresh with a spicy redolence of wet earth happy with itself.
Today is
another blank piece of paper.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
August 12, 2021
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