At the Orderaria
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What a week.
When my son flew back to Washington, along with a bundle of two-foot long
cinnamon sticks for gifts to friends, he took my energy. I wasn’t worried. I
knew that the following day my supply would be replenished.
Sure enough,
the next day I flew into a cleaning frenzy. Order was soon restored but I have
a question. Where does order hide out that it needs to be restored?
At the
Orderaria, of course, Spanglish for the Order Store. You know, like
“carneceria” (meat), “lavandaria” (laundry) or “tortillaria” (obvious).
Okay. So I
like jokes an eight year old would tell.
I’m not sure
order is important. What order? Whose order? Order by which definition? My
disorder might be your order. I learned to shut the door on my son’s bedroom
when he turned teen because it drove me nuts. He explain that he was
differently organized. I quit fighting the mess.
Shut the
door. Good advice for a lot of situations.
I got busy
cleaning and re-arranging shelves and puttering in the yard to keep from so
badly missing my son, missing from here but not missing from there. Keeping
busy is my therapy, or is it my avoidance?
A strange thing
happened last week while shopping. I chose to stay in the car and watch people
rather than go into the store and watch stuff.
I believe a
limited number of cookie cutters make people. We’ve all had similar experiences.
Unexpectedly, we spot a person we know, or knew, in a place impossible for them
to be.
This man, so
familiar that I almost called out to him, walked up to the pickup truck in
front of me, big as life. He was the lick-spitting image of a man who married
one of my friends from high school, a man who has now passed on. I dropped my
jaw but was able to pick it up, dust it off, and restore it only slightly
bruised, as he drove away.
Do we all
have a doppleganger? How scary is that!
As scary as
my avocado tree is loaded with fruits half the size of a football? The tree is
a local variety, the skin of the fruit thin, not engineered for shipping. I
like avocado, sliced for salads or sandwiches or mashed into guacamole. But I
don’t eat it every day.
The first
green globes I hoard. After a couple weeks feasting, I give away most of the
fruit. I hide piles of fruit in Josue’s driveway or sneak them into the back
seat of Leo’s unlocked car. Then I run. That’s a metaphorical run.
My daughter
suggested I whip up an avocado cheesecake. I haven’t convinced myself it would
be good.
However, last
week I made a mango cheesecake. Ben took a platter of slices to Erika.
I heard
through the grapevine, that Erika threatened to return my platter laden with
avocado slices. And run.
Reminds me
of zucchini. Those are scary. Delicious too.
Today Leo
will climb the tree, harvest buckets of the fruits, and give them away in town.
I will keep two avocados. A ripe one for tomorrow and a hard green fruit for
next week.
When my son
left, he took the rainy summer season with him. Which is appropriate, I guess,
since September harbors the end of our rains and the beginning of the Olympic
Peninsula rains. If only I could have talked him into staying another couple
weeks!
However, in
a snap, summer twists into autumn.
Most times
the change seems gradual, meanders along in such a way one hardly notices. On
August 27, temperatures plunged from 84 to 64. The rains stopped two valleys
over the hills. Two species of seasonal birds showed up, adding their songs to
the stay-at-homes’. And the air smells like fall, like change.
I like
change. Order is overrated. I’d gladly send all my newly established order back
to the orderaria for another visitor to disrupt routine.
Now that the
rains have abated, I shall plant my garden buckets. Gardens like disorder,
weeds and bugs, the mystery of seeds sprouting into fullness of beans and
peppers and squash and maybe a carrot or twenty.
I don’t mark
my buckets so only know what I planted if and when it shoots out of the ground.
I did not get that trait from the Orderaria. Probably inherited it from my
children.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
Firstest of
September
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