The Onion Fairy and Other Tales
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I grew up
reading Hans and the brothers Grimm and Aesop. I love fairy tales and fables. Back
then we had the unexpurgated versions, full of blood and guts. I’m not saying
that was better. I’m simply saying that is how it was.
The stories,
which I read over and over, never gave me nightmares nor did they leave me
pining for the handsome prince to hack his way through the brambles and rescue
me from the wicked step-mother. Naïve as I was, I knew that wouldn’t happen.
A few months
ago, in a set-apart corner of my garden, I made a compost pit. Frequently, a
couple thoughtful neighbors contribute their kitchen parings to my pile. If my
kitchen door is closed, I often will find a bag of bits hanging on one of the
fussy details of my wrought iron gate. When I take my own kitchen debris out to
the pit, I grab theirs to dump also.
We all win. Our
kitchen trash cans never stink. In a turn-about I cannot explain, the compost
pit smells like fresh new earth.
The other
morning, going out for my walk, I found a bag hanging on my gate. I gave it
nary a look nor a thought.
Later, I
grabbed the bag, and instead of carrot peels and over-sprouted potatoes, I found
a perfectly wonderful bag of onions. My very first thought was “The Onion Fairy
came by and gifted me.” Similar to the Tooth Fairy. Except I didn’t have to
sacrifice something in return.
Speaking of the
Tooth Fairy, my daughter told me that children are getting $10 and $20 dollar
bills in return for their baby teeth. Inflation. Crimininaly. (Root word—crime)
I’ve lost two adult teeth. They should have been worth a few thou. I saw nary a
penny. But, in all fairness, neither did I put the well-used teeth beneath my
pillow in hopes. Now there is a fairy tale that should be re-written.
Onions and
tomatoes. My kitchen is overrun with onions and tomatoes. Tomatoes are from my
own vines. They are so heavily laden that I’ve had to pick green tomatoes so
the weight of the fruit doesn’t tear down the whole vine. I gave away two large
colanders of green tomatoes last week. Tomatoes ripen quickly, so every day,
tomatoes sneak into my meals.
Living
alone, I have no restrictions or restraints on meals. I eat what I want when I
want. I had a couple days when I didn’t feel like cooking. I made tomato
sandwiches. Tomato and onion. Tomato and mayo. Tomato and lettuce and onion.
Tomato and jalapeno and cheese. Tomato and re-fried beans and onion.
My favorite sandwich
I concocted with a smattering of peanut butter, mayo and thick tomato slices.
All my friends said, “Ewww.” I didn’t say it was gourmet. Think outside the
box. It tasted surprisingly good enough to make twice and again.
Here in this
area of Mexico we have an expression, “to cut face”. It is easy to figure the
meaning.
My neighbor
Lani had surgery. The bottom part of her eyelid was falling down and needed to
be clipped and stitched up. Lani looked like a raccoon which had run into two
doorknobs.
When I went
to around visit her and saw her face, I figured she needed to be cheered up and
what better than a session of cutting face. I told stories and we laughed. We
laughed a lot. Most of the stories were on myself. But not all. When I walked
home, I thought, not all that we label ‘bad’ is bad. That hour of cutting face
was the best medicine. You just never know.
One of my
stories involved a huge fifth-wheel camper which looked like it was going to
park itself in front of my wall. This is not the campground! I got on my high
horse, got quite volubly territorial, pacing my living room, keeping an evil
eye on the camper plus a couple cars and the truck pulling it. I mean, I was in
a huff.
I was on the
phone with my daughter while this beast invaded “my” back yard. Shame on me, to
think it “mine”. Lola was outside pitching a fit. Dee Dee told me I sounded more
territorial than my dog. That burst my bubble and brought me back to earth. The
evil machine finally got turned around and found the campground. I blamed Lola
for spinning me up.
Today I have
a bowl full of ripe tomatoes. Wonder if Lani would like to find a bag of
tomatoes hanging on her gate.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
The
Springing Week of March
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