My World and
Welcome To It
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
My world is
all I have to share. My world is ordinary. It is not much of a gift. Since it
is all I have to give, I gladly welcome you through my doorway.
Take today.
I got up on the “wrong side of bed” so to speak. Instead of getting up when I
woke up, I let myself go back to sleep “for just a few minutes”. It’s not like
I have a schedule. When I did get out of bed, much later, I felt like I was
living in a vat of molasses in January, every movement forced through a fugue
state. You ever done that?
Walk dog.
Make coffee. Slog through my morning reading, good stuff but with a presentation
dry as dust. Seems to fit my day.
My daughter
calls on her hands-free phone on her way to work; our chat part of our morning
routine. Suddenly I interrupt her. I hear a whap of wings, and the
black-bottomed whistling ducks fly over my wall into my neighbor’s tree, first
the female, then the male.
And just like
that, my world of woe turns upside down. (Or is that right side up?) “The
whistling ducks are back. The ducks are back!” I shouted and laughed. Inside
me, I sang and danced.
These ducks
delight me. These strange and beautiful ducks have a distinct whistle-call and
nest in trees. I’ve watched them return to set up summer housekeeping every
year.
I won’t say
they are the most intelligent of ducks. They return to the same tree, to the same
hollow where at one time years ago, a large branch was cut off. Every year I
watch them nest and lay eggs in the hollow. Every year I watch the iguanas
climb up the tree and eat the duck eggs.
One year
this pair of black-bottomed whistling ducks laid two clutches of eggs before
giving up, flying back over my wall the other direction into the huge tree in
Lani’s yard, a tree whose branches spread to cover more area than the average
city lot, a tree which houses numerous varieties of birds, seasonal tourists as
well as residents.
It is spring
here as well as there. My day fills and ends with birdsong and cicada shrill.
Well, it is difficult for me to call cicada racket a song, but then the world
is filled with all kinds of song so who am I to judge.
The cicadas
are early, quite early, this year. Local lore has it that they sing down the
rains. Oh, please, let the rains come early too.
Among the
songs and sounds, the roosters’ crows punctuate the airwaves. It is a myth that
roosters crow when the sun comes up. They sound off any and every hour of the
day and night. It is by happenstance when their crow coincides with sunrise.
And the
donkey. The neighboring donkey is further away from us than his piercing, intrusive
bray sounds. That’s all I need say about the donkey. The two burros next door
have gentle voices in comparison.
The
whistling ducks are still atop the tree, preening and posturing. My daughter
and I are still exchanging yesterday’s news. She pulls into her friend Vicki’s
coffee stand for our morning treat. Dee Dee generally orders a honey bee latte,
iced, and I mull over the special of the day for my virtual coffee. Today it is
caramel macchiato. Perfect. A sweet drink for a sweet day.
I thank
Vickie for the drink as my daughter prepares to drive to her office. I hear
Vickie yell back, “Bye, Mom.” I love that. It’s a marvelous day in my world
when the whistling ducks return.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
May 19, 2022
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
No comments:
Post a Comment