You can
please some of the people . . .
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This morning
a friend whom I’ve not yet met sent a photo of foliage turned colors in Maine.
Everywhere the season is turning a corner. Maine. Montana. Mexico. Everywhere.
Rains are
tucked back into their rain locker until next rainy season. We’ve a week with
nary a drop of moisture, nary a cloud in the sky-blue sky. Immediately the
daytime temperatures ramped up fifteen degrees.
I put away
the rain towels, draped across my windowsills since June. Just like that, I’m
out dragging hose, watering plants, potted and otherwise.
Familiar
birds flew to greener—or possibly browner—pastures. New birds arrive. However,
the AAA Bird Map has scrambled the flight plans. There are at least two
stranger-type birds. One has a shrill call like an old-fashioned telephone ring
tone. Makes me whip about my head to alert every time I hear it. The other has
a sound that imitates the name of an expensive beverage, one with an umbrella
on the rim.
The huge
white bed-sheet butterflies are back. But what is that strange black one? This
whole year has brought more butterflies than I’ve ever previously seen. See
scrambled flight plans above.
And, ah,
yes, the snowbirds return. My neighbors. Some of whom I’ve not seen in two
years. Like animals to the Ark, two by two, they will arrive.
Ordinarily,
this would be cause for rejoicing, excitement, anticipation of celebratory
meals and adventurous treks to explore the countryside ‘round and about. Most
years.
What is
wrong with me? Have two years of reclusive living turned me upside downside?
At times
like this, I sit myself down and have a heart-to-heart. Have I gotten this
selfish? Have I, who have always been flexible, ready to change paths on a
whim, cemented myself into my routine? I hear my friend Peggy from years past
ask me, “What’s your motive?” Ah, yes, that.
It’s such a
small thing. Petty, really. I’ve always been a people pleaser. If I do what I
think you want, maybe you will like me. Some of my more recent friends would
roll on the floor snorting to hear me say those words. But they are true.
Sure, a few
years counseling and some heavy personal work pretty much eradicated the
problem. But it never goes away. A shadow of my old people-pleaser will always
live within me.
And my
solution is so simple. Two by two, I tell my friends, “We will visit after
you’ve done a trip quarantine.” I will follow up with “Masked, outside on a
patio, no hugs.”
Nancie and
Pat, my cousins, will arrive first. Nancie is our group social coordinator. She
loves to gather all the neighbors for a pot-luck dinner. “Nancie, I think that
is a great idea. You all have fun. I’m not ready to join large group
activities.”
Then another
couple will invite me out to dinner in one of the few restaurants still open.
“That’s lovely. You all go and have a good meal. Maybe I can join you in a
later month. I’m not ready yet.”
I intend to
host small meals on my patio, one couple at a time. I’m not a total
stick-in-the-muddle-puddle.
Most of all,
I dread hearing. “But you are vaccinated. We are vaccinated. We all are safe.
You’ll be okay.”
I’ve been
practicing my lines: “You might be right.” “You are probably right.” “You are
undoubtedly right.”
Finally
common sense returned. “Sondra, you are not that important. Who cares what you
decide? These are your friend and neighbors. They like you. They will respect
your decisions.”
Maybe.
Probably. Undoubtedly.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
October 21,
2021
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