Like Falling
in First Love
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Out of
nowhere, no foretaste, foretelling, forewarning, it dropped from the sky,
swooning, gobsmacked us in the best way. Rain, glorious, wondrous, wet, rain.
Before the sun settled, the rain swung low like a sweet chariot, and dropped
love from the sky.
The trees,
the grasses, the flowers, the chili peppers, the weeds, me; we all lifted our
arms in glad welcome. Lola The Dog scurried into her wee casita and hovered
against the back wall.
Lola is not
a water dog. She cools herself by digging down into the dirt shaded by a lime
tree or the giant philodendron leaves, with her feet makes the dirt fly up into
her fur, much in the same manner as a chicken. Makes me wonder, who was this
child’s mother?
The rest of
us, all our little world, gloried in the welcome first rain. One hour, one
solid hour of solid straight-down good hard rain. When the sun set, the huge
fireball of scarlet-red sun, it seemed to sail beyond the horizon like a ship
upon the sea.
All night
the air smelled like wet dirt instead of our usual smoky dust alternating with
dusty smoke. This morning the air is soft, gentle with flowery scents.
Now I ask
you, doesn’t that just sound like somebody who has lost her mind in the
infatuation of first love, first rain?
In the same
way that the wild crocus popping through the melting snow doesn’t mean winter
is over, this first rain doesn’t mean our hot season is done. One rain does not
a drought transform. But it is a start, a welcome start. I’ll dub it our crocus
rain.
The biggest
difference to me is a shift in my attitude. Suddenly the world is fresher. I
have regained lost energy. Before the rain, despair. After the rain, hope. That
is big.
I left my
casa with gusto this morning for Leo to take me shopping. I didn’t need much. I
had made arrangements with Leo on Saturday to take me for a haircut. Like a
weather change, I made a decision to buy bacon instead of get a haircut.
Inflation hits us all. My stomach won this round over my head.
At the
fruteria, I bought strawberries, among other things. I had three choices of how
to buy my berries. I could get a hard-shelled pack of berries just like in US
stores. K aching! I could pick handfuls from an open crate. Ching, ching. Or I
could buy a large container of culls for a mere few pesos.
I bought the
leavings. I end with the same amount of discards and the berries are sweeter,
smell like strawberries. Last week, my container, a good mounded quart, cost 10
pesos. This week the same container was 30 pesos. The young man filling the
container, which I have him pour into a bag, topped it high and threw in a
half-dozen extra handfuls of berries. Inflation which came with kindness.
At the
checkout, Pepe, the owner rattled on to Leo in rapid Spanish for five minutes.
As we turned to go, Leo told me, “He said, the prices go higher each week.”
At the
cremeria, where I bought a half kilo of bacon, my treat for not cutting my
shaggy hair, the price of crema media had gone up 5 pesos. Crèma media is a
heavy cream, a treat with strawberries, not a necessity.
On the way
out of town to the rancho, I asked Leo to stop at the hat stand along the
highway. I wanted a new straw hat. This man sets up daily with a wide array of
hats, mostly hats for field workers. That’s what I wanted, a hat with a wide
brim which hung downward to shield my eyes.
I have a
small head so the man had to dig to find a hat that didn’t rock and roll around
my head and slide down over my eyes. Finally, the perfect hat. Paid 270 pesos,
for a hat to sit happy on my shaggy head.
As we left
the hats, back onto the highway home, “Remember when this hat cost 25 pesos?” “Yep,
seven, eight and nine years ago. Inflation!”
With the
heat dome slightly tilted, not lifted, we are not yet into rainy days. The forecast
ahead shows afternoons in the higher 90s, nothing triple digit; small relief
and I’ll take it. The rains will come. My new hat will keep off rain as well as
sun, the hat man assured me. Meanwhile, I have strawberries and cream. It’s a
pretty fine world when one is in love.
Sondra
Ashton
HWC: Looking
out my back door
Sweltering
in June
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