Well, Change My Mind!
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Two weeks
ago a shepherd dog running full speed body slammed into my knee. Maiming me was
not Chebella’s intent. She was fleeing from my Lolita, half her size, but in
full protect-my-mistress mode. Size means nothing in dog world. Lola still
quivers, after all these months, when Snowball, an ancient, tottering mini-poodle,
growls when we walk past her people.
No bones
were broken. The doc sent me home to bed and chair. The first week flowed
rather smoothly. Leo showed up every morning to make me coffee and water my
extensive garden. I don’t realize how extensive my garden has become until I
can’t go out to check it.
Neighbors,
Crin and Kathy, along with Leo, kept me fed with all my needs catered. I
assiduously followed doctor’s orders, not because I wanted to but because pain
forced me.
Day by day
the pain is less except when I forget and try to take a step without support.
A week, to
the day, everything changes, my comfy world implodes. Kathy, Richard and Crin
leave for sandy beaches. Leo phones to say he has all the symptoms of the other
Big C, Covid. “Stay away. Get tested,” I say. He does. Flu is flu is flu. He
has the regular one.
Now I am
back to full quarantine and on my own to feed and water myself. I would not
want to pass any flu to any friend. I know I can do it. This is not my first
solo bronc ride. Slowly. Carefully. Little by little.
I rub soothing
gel into my leg. The bruise from knee to ankle looks like dark storm clouds in
the west, carrying hail.
Oh, hail.
That reminds me, my garden will die without water. I can feed me but I cannot
water my plants. With temps in the upper 90s, all my buckets on concrete, my
entire crop is doomed. I remember hailstones wiping swaths through acres of
wheat. I know it is not the same thing, but this small disaster looms huge to
me. Doomed. Flowers and vegetables. Doomed. My beautiful garden a barren
wasteland.
Poor Lola.
She sits by the door, whimpers. I talk to her. What does she understand? I fill
her food and water dishes but no walks, no outside sits and no fun. In my
absence she becomes super-watchdog, barking at friend and foe.
Oops. Lola
was supposed to take her worm pill last week. I watch her scratch her belly.
Oh, yeah. She hasn’t had her flea drops either. Poor Lola. Sitting, whimpering.
I watch the flesh drop off her skeleton. Doomed.
My house. My
poor house that I just deep-cleaned, overtaken with dust bunnies, the floor,
the corners, every surface crying out for attention I cannot give. Pig sty. Bricks
crumble to dust. Doomed.
I open my
refrigerator. The shelves are almost bare. I’ve not been eating much, not been
buying much. Now I’m doomed to beans and rice. The flesh falls from my own skeleton.
I waste away in my chair, covered in cobwebs. Doomed.
Good thing I
am in quarantine. I have only four more days of clean clothing. I will rummage
in my laundry basket for my cleanest dirty shirt. Ewww. Nobody will want to get
near me. Ewww. Stinky. Abandoned. Doomed.
My mind is
wonderfully creative and inventive. Within hours after my friends drove off to
the beach and Leo phoned with his bad news, I had doomed my garden, my dog, my
house and my own self.
Fortunately
I am aware of propensities to run-away imagination. So I did a simple thing.
Not easy. Simple. I changed my mind. I let it go.
Somehow,
life usually works out, often not the way I’d like, but life happens without my
interference.
Ana and
Michelle showed up outside my door. “We heard. We are shopping in town. What do
you need? What can we bring you?”
My
refrigerator hummed coolness around fresh fruits and veggies. Lola was wormed
and flea-ed. A load of laundry hung on the clothesline. “We’ll be back. If you
need us, call.”
Josue came
to my door after he’d finished his workday. “What do you need?” He brought my
sun-dried, fresh and clean, laundry off the clothesline for me. He changed my
empty drinking water jug for fresh water.
In the
mornings, Josue shows up early and waters everything, flowers, veggies and
herbs in pots, trees in the yard.
My house?
Don’t be silly. I just finished a deep clean. It’s not that bad. It will wait
for me.
My own self?
Day by day, I’m on the mend. I have friends galore. My only enemy is my own
mind.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
May 12, 2022
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