How Life Is
It's 11:30.
I am the lone occupant of my house. Everything is quiet and still.
My husband is traveling so I got up early with him and saw him off, woke the children up, got everyone dressed and fed. I made lunches and packed snacks. I wrote the notes about after-school activities, got dressed, hustled everyone out the door and to the school. I worked for two hours in Jane's class, guiding the first graders in small groups through a letter writing exercise. I came home, took something I'd forgotten back up to the school, came back home, ate a little lunch, unloaded the dishwasher, checked e-mail, broke down all the boxes for the recycling, and went through the house with a garbage can and threw away about six tons of small plastic crap that no one will miss.
Outside, it is cool for the first time since March. Our quiet street is shrouded in a gray mist and I have the windows open, listening to the soft drips of water running off of the trees. I decided to treat myself to the ultimate luxury: a nap on the couch with a big fat orange cat. We settled down.
Suddenly, I heard it. You know: IT. The unmistakable sound of an aggressive mosquito buzzing around me.
It bit me.
It bit me again.
I missed it twice and it disappeared.
But now napping was out of the question! Finally, I saw it buzzing about again and I swung and hit it.
I guess sometimes in life, you've got to kill the darn mosquitoes before you earn a nice nap.
I'm sure this has deep and meaningful implications but there's a big fat orange tabby lying on my stomach who is getting a bit impatient with all this typing (not to mention the fact that he's cutting off my circulation) so I'm going to have to think about this later.
I am the lone occupant of my house. Everything is quiet and still.
My husband is traveling so I got up early with him and saw him off, woke the children up, got everyone dressed and fed. I made lunches and packed snacks. I wrote the notes about after-school activities, got dressed, hustled everyone out the door and to the school. I worked for two hours in Jane's class, guiding the first graders in small groups through a letter writing exercise. I came home, took something I'd forgotten back up to the school, came back home, ate a little lunch, unloaded the dishwasher, checked e-mail, broke down all the boxes for the recycling, and went through the house with a garbage can and threw away about six tons of small plastic crap that no one will miss.
Outside, it is cool for the first time since March. Our quiet street is shrouded in a gray mist and I have the windows open, listening to the soft drips of water running off of the trees. I decided to treat myself to the ultimate luxury: a nap on the couch with a big fat orange cat. We settled down.
Suddenly, I heard it. You know: IT. The unmistakable sound of an aggressive mosquito buzzing around me.
It bit me.
It bit me again.
I missed it twice and it disappeared.
But now napping was out of the question! Finally, I saw it buzzing about again and I swung and hit it.
I guess sometimes in life, you've got to kill the darn mosquitoes before you earn a nice nap.
I'm sure this has deep and meaningful implications but there's a big fat orange tabby lying on my stomach who is getting a bit impatient with all this typing (not to mention the fact that he's cutting off my circulation) so I'm going to have to think about this later.
Comments
(I toil away at the needles all year, I can't wait until I can actually wear them.)
Enjoy your quiet afternoon, Barb. You deserve it.
We have a rule in our house... if the phone rings and it's not nearby, we're allowed to say, "I can't get it...I have a cat on me!" Doesn't get better than that!
Will you please get me a cup of coffee?
I can't; I have a cat on me.
Please get the door!
I can't; I have a cat on me.
etc etc.
it's a rule that cannot be broken.
This is the greatest rule I have ever heard. Seriously, imagine if it applied to our government. "Can't invade Iraq today, I've got a cat on me!"
Oh, this rule could change the world. And you know what? It's clearly a universal truth that everyone would understand.
I've been wearing my favorite sweater today. I've decided to make chili tomorrow. I'm so happy for fall. I won't even complain about raking this year (no really, I won't!)
It's been so dry here all summer and fall, we haven't been tortured with mosquitoes the way we usually are. I love drought.
It's great to have a cat again. :)(Sometimes the thought of a sleeping baby is nice, but I'm glad to be past that place in time.)
When Jane was tiny, I used to miss her if she just took a long nap.