My head is in the clouds.
Every
morning these past few days, when Lola and I take our early morning walk, the
clouds are rolling down the mountains. We move through the mist, feet on the
ground, heads in the clouds.
Another hour
and the sun burns the air crisp and brilliant with shadows of orange.
As happens,
my day turned topsy turvy.
I was all
self-hyped to go to Dr. Imelda, my dentista, to finally have my last crown set
onto my tooth. This crown has been a process and practice in delay and
patience. Dr. Imelda nixed the first attempt immediately.
Turns out
that the trusted lab she has used for years had a machine break down. Please
understand I’m telling this to the best of my Spanish to English understanding.
The lab farmed the tooth crown out to another lab while awaiting their new
machine.
Dr. Imelda
also rejected the second attempt. The lab tech said new machine takes new
skills and new learning. She filled my mouth with goops, 1, 2 and 3, yet again.
Each goop a different color. Not fun. I have great respect for this woman for
not accepting less than perfect.
The third
attempt has arrived but Dr. Imelda’s son was very sick and she was nursing him.
I understand. No problem. We are now into this process two months. Finally, today
is the day. I gear myself up for the ordeal.
Then, while
waiting for my ride, my dentist called from the hospital in Guadalajara where
she accompanied her husband who is very ill. Another delay. What can I say. Please,
take care of your husband, my tooth can wait. I’m happy to wait.
Back in the
day, I learned to drive a stick shift. We all did. I have no problem shifting
gears, actually or metaphorically. I had chilis and tomatillos and tomatoes and
extra limes to deal with in the kitchen. I’ll have a jolly kitchen day.
Then Leo
showed up to water the gasping, thirsty plants. “When I finish watering, I’ll
hang your baskets and hearts. I need you to show me how you want them.”
Down shift a
gear while I fill in the back story. Several years ago I bought baskets to hang
on the rafters of my covered patio/outdoor kitchen. Each basket is a different,
size, shape, color, all made with natural reeds. I don’t put light bulbs in mine
for the same reason you probably would not light yours—mosquitoes. I don’t
entertain at night. No reason for a well-lighted patio.
I live in
farm country. While not in the middle of the corn field, dust is still a
constant. Last week I had Leo take down the baskets and hose them clean, hang
them on the gates to dry in the sun.
Another year
I bought a multitude of colored blown-glass hearts, which I hung on the brick
wall to the side of my house. Meanwhile a tiny ivy-like plant, purpose bought,
grew and grew and grew, like Jack’s magic bean, until it completely covered my
bare-naked wall, entwining and encompassing the hearts. I searched out the long-invisible
hearts, cut them free and cleaned them.
Why not hang
some of the large hearts from inside the baskets, and then hang the extra
hearts on strings from the same beams? I question my ideas because I never
know.
Today, we
hung baskets, each with a large colored heart hanging from the center. We
strung together the extras, five sizes, and hung them from the beams, blue,
green, gold, aqua, red and orange. Baskets. Hearts. I like the colorful effect.
Back in the
kitchen, I blanched the chili peppers; jalapenos, the long banana peppers, and
the little scrunchy green ones, hotter than firecrackers, and put them in my
freezer. Same process with tomatillos. I squeezed the limes to make limonada
and aqua frescas.
I eye-balled
my half bushel of tomatoes, knowing an equal amount or twice more is yet to
come. I don’t eat that many tomatoes so why do I plant so many? My daughter,
who is recuperating nicely, by the way, suggested I can my good tomato-apple
catsup again. Yes, good idea. Out in the bodega, I counted the jars left from
my last batch. I’ve at least enough for another year.
I bagged my
tomatoes, kept a half-dozen for my own use, and handed Leo the bags to
distribute to the neighbors and to his sisters.
We don’t
know, do we? When I got up this morning,
I was prepared to go to the dentist and spend the rest of the day, down-shifted
to grandma gear, reading and napping, my usual routine on dental day. We just
don’t know.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
The exact
middle of September
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