The horse
sat on my chest
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Let’s start
with the back story. Way Back.
Last year,
because of the pandemic, I took my travel money and gutted my bodega which was
a mishmash of shelves cobbled together from scrap wood. Shoved in rather
randomly were what I call man tools and that which I didn’t want stored in the
house. It was a mess, but needs must.
Once my
bodega transformed into my guest bedroom, I kept imagining how nice it would be
to have a bathroom alongside my bedroom. In back and along the outer side of
the bodega runs a hallway which I call a tunnel. One afternoon while sitting on
the patio, I noticed that the back tunnel is an integral part of the bodega. And
it was seldom used, man-tool (mostly mine) stuff now neatly arranged in the
side tunnel. Hmmm.
Front story
begins here. A couple months ago I beckoned Leo and Josue. “Would it be
possible to knock a doorway through the bodega back wall, wall up the ends of
the ‘tunnel’ and in that narrow space put a tiny but functional bathroom.
The men
measured, drew air pictures with their hands, talked about how to hook up to
the septic, you know, man stuff. (Chuckle, chuckle.)
Both said,
yes, we can do it and it won’t be that hard. So. How much will it cost?
I figured that
tripping around the planet was not an option for me, yet again this year, due
to the ding-donged new and revised issue of Covid.
Hot diggity
dog. I could build a bathroom with this year’s trip money. “Yes. Do it.”
The
following evening my son Ben phoned. “I’m on the computer to book my Mexico flight
while we talk, Mom.” How sweet is that? I knew he was coming but now it is
real. Know what I mean?
“Mom, I need
a quiet place away from everything, a place to relax and get some direction for
my next step in life.”
“Ben, this
should be perfect. I’m building a bathroom for the bodega. You can have complete
solitude when you want it.”
Next day I
sauntered across the lane. “Josue, can my bathroom be done by Ben’s arrival?”
He looked at his hand device on which ‘everything’ is stored, nodded his head,
“Yes, I think so.”
Immediately
I went from excited to EXCITED. Several days passed. No activity. I emptied the
bodega into my house, with squeak through pathways.
Several more
days passed. No work. Then Abel, a master with brick and tile work, came and
began digging trenches, through the tunnels, across the patio, to hook up with
the septic line. He and Josue began working evenings, after their regular work.
Some days three hours. Two hours. Some days.
I began to
worry. How could the job possibly be done in time? When I say worry, I mean I
lay in bed nights figuring out worst possible scenarios up to and including Ben
and I killing each other for lack of privacy and alone time.
Little bits
got done. Little things. Big lots of mess. The men all assured me the job would
get done in time for me to clean, repaint and put the bodega back together. It
will happen, they said. I nodded.
My ability
to believe had come undone. My anxiety shot ever upward. I could see myself
spinning myself upward and couldn’t stop. Normally, I don’t worry about what or
when or how. This is so unlike me. It is. Really.
Then one
night in a dream more vivid than real life, I was trying to move a balky horse.
The horse pushed me down and sat on my chest. I couldn’t move a muscle with his
big quarter horse rump holding me in place. I woke up. The dream felt too real.
I asked my
daughter who is more conversant with these things, “What means this dream?”
She said, “A
horse is opinionated. You have to work with them to make them feel they are
doing what they want. Anything like that going on in your life? You feeling
pushed? Or feeling like you’re doing the pushing?”
“Oh.” Though
I wasn’t being pushy outwardly, I certainly was pushy inwardly. It was all in
my own head. With that light bulb moment, the horse got off my chest. I got off
the ground.
I fired
myself from the position of CEO of Worry. Though I was quite good at the job.
Every day
when Lola and I walk, we visit horses in the next field. I’ve named them Pretty
Boy and Lawn Mower. I pet them but I don’t let them get too close.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
First week
in August perhaps
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