It was a
dark and sleepless night.
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
It was a
dark and sleepless night, not a storm cloud in sight.
I did the usual
when I don’t sleep. I gazed out the window. Turned from my right side to my
left side. Threw back the blanket. Turned from my left side to my right side.
Pulled up the blanket and tucked it around me, a cocoon. Too many times.
Sensible
people, I am told, get up and do something. Binge on Netflix. Scrub the toilet.
Read until their eyeballs fall out. Work an entire book of Sudoku. Drink a
bottle of Old Grandad. Do something.
Not me. I
lie in bed, very awake, and let my mind entertain me.
My mind
thinks it knows everything. It doesn’t. It also thinks it is invincible. It
thinks when I die it will go on living. We, me and my mind, have had
conversations about this kind of stuff.
We listened
to road traffic. Car. Truck. Car. Big truck with jake brakes. There are a few
haulers who like to race up to the first tope (speed bump) and slam the brakes.
Evidently that satisfies something in their psyche. I wouldn’t know. I’m not a
trucker.
In Etzatlan,
I live a block off the highway, just off the edge of town limits.
In Oconahua,
I will live on the far side of town, no highway in sight, on a cobble street
going up the mountain to nowhere, among the last houses, no traffic. Please,
soon.
I listen to
the night birds, the tree frogs, to something that might be a kind of cricket.
My mind
wants to visit the past. We argue. It wants to visit dark times I want to
forget. I want to visit more pleasant memories. Why are the good times harder
to hold onto, harder to dredge up the details?
In this tug
of war, I roll over and toss off the blanket. Whoosh, a ripe avocado falls from
the tree outside my bedroom window, through a crumple of thick leaves making a
bumpity racket on the way to a hard landing on the ground.
I hear my
dog on night patrol, whiffling along, checking out the disturbance. Dogs eat
avocados.
My mind
always wants to do a body scan, check for dire diseases. It will find them. I
try to stomp that activity down before it gains momentum. An unnoticeable
daytime twinge can and will, if fed and pampered, erupt into nighttime pain
that only morphine will cure. I know. My mind tells me so.
Roll over,
pull up the blanket. Just as my mind slows, almost restful, along comes a
bobcat with its distinctive skunky reek. The bobcat sniffed around the tree and
passed on to other hunting grounds.
Such was my
night. I’ve learned to not fight it, to relax into it, whether this peculiar
restlessness brings sleep eventually or not.
Want to hear
something strange? I could have come up with any number of real things to worry
about to keep me awake.
Real stuff,
like health of family and friends, lack of money, questioning right or wrong of
past decisions, writing script for if this or if that happens.
The
possibility of Mt. Tequila erupting despite lack of activity for centuries, a
rogue tsunami crossing a range of mountains and drowning all of us. Mass
abduction of our community by aliens. You know, real stuff.
No, I stuck
with the mundane, traffic noises, bouncing avocados and a roaming bobcat.
On a
sleepless night, there is no understanding the quirks and quarks of my mind.
In the
morning, I found on the ground, an avocado for the kitchen along with three
seeds, licked clean.
On that
sleepless night, it seemed, the whole season turned. I went to bed in summer. Didn’t
sleep. Got out of bed in the newly turned fall.
The wind was
blowing. Not a Montana wind. But wind enough to bend palm leaves and wave the stretched-out
branches of the jacaranda. A cooler wind. A wind that chased the daily 99%
humidity down to 50%. Oh, blessed wind.
The air
smelled like spices, autumn air.
In the sky
white puffs scudded along the blue like pleasure boats in a bay. Not a gray
rain cloud in sight. Yesterday was summer. Today is autumn. Tonight I will
sleep like a rock.
Sondra
Ashton
HWC: Looking
out my back door
September
12, 2024
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
No comments:
Post a Comment