Saying the
Long Good Bye
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I am packing
the long packing. I am saying the long good bye. I am readying myself for the big
move, the great distance of ten kilometers, all the way to far off, exotic
Oconahua, a move which is months away.
I love where
I am living now, this place, this small house, all my plants. Nobody would ever
question my love for this place. And this place has loved me back, big loves.
Everybody’s
financial and personal situations are different. We who live on the rancho are
a varied group indeed, varied in background, varied in life experiences. My
friends here are appalled. “How can you even think of moving?” “You have made
your home so beautiful.” “What will you do about shopping? Medical care? If you
need help?” “You will be alone.” And, “How can you leave us?”
You’d think
I’m moving to the moon at people’s responses.
Alone. To
the moon. I find it interesting that I am the only person living here without a
partner. Interesting, that. And most of my friends are here only two to six
months at the most. Hmmm.
My reality
is that it gets harder every year for me to keep this place up, financially and
because of my own physical creakiness, age, past surgeries, arthritis, the
usual suspects.
We live on
private land. We “buy” the house, lease the land on which it sits. Any
improvements I’ve made are for my own comfort and pleasure. Except for what is
actually attached to the house, many of these lovelies will move with me.
To Oconahua.
Ten kilometers. The house I will rent is being built on a corner of property
owned by my Oconahua friends.
Hence, the
packing.
Ah, yes, the
long packing. I don’t have a lot. Some days I pack a box. Some days none. Pack
and purge and clean, all at once. Thoughtfully. Hence the purging.
I have come
to the realization that I could get by with one plate, one bowl, one cup, and
one set of eating tools. I could. But I’m not ready to live that simply yet. I
am very aware that these simple tools could be reduced to a begging bowl and a
spoon. I’m not there yet either.
Since my
moving date is undecided, I make decisions based on season and time. I ask
myself, will I need this or can I do without this for the next three months?
Winter bedding is lodged in big black garbage bags. Should I need them, I know
where they are.
Other
decisions are more problematic. Already, I’ve unpacked and repacked a basket of
cups and drinking glasses. At the time I packed the basket, I knew I should
give that particular set of cups to Crinny, who likes them and will use them.
To me, they are pretty but I never use them, preferring my rustic Mexican clay
cups.
Some items,
like towels, get used to shredded uselessness, rags. Cups breed. I’ve reduced
my paltry supply of cups to less than one half of what I had before packing.
They breed. I don’t know how. In the sink. In the cupboard. In the night. I
shall never run out of cups.
Everything
comes under my critical decision-making eyeballs. Throw away. Give away. Pack
now. Pack later. A box yesterday. None today. Two tomorrow, maybe. And so it
goes. When moving time arrives, I intend to put my bowl and spoon in a basket
and wave good bye.
Which brings
me to the long good bye. Good byes are harder. Not to people. I’ll still see my
friends. Ten kilometers, remember.
How does one
say good bye to that beautiful double ruffled red hibiscus at the corner by the
clothesline? Or the mango tree? Or the giant philodendron-like plant that often
stops me in my tracks, it is so breath-taking? Or the way the morning sun
filters golden through the Fresno trees on the campground next door? My list of
good byes is long.
Ten
kilometers. I’m going to meet a long list of new “hellos”. New plants. New
trees. New beauties. New people. Old friends. It’s all good.
Did I say
the heat dome lifted? One day the high is 98. The next day, just like a snap,
the high is 71 with rain. Every day is delicious, tidbits of delight, tasty
morsels of perfection, yummy bites of cool pleasure.
Sondra
Ashton
HWC: Looking
out my back door
Half year
gone by
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