Friday, September 8, 2017

Song of Fire and (Liquid) Ice


Walked out early this morning into a face full of hot wind and a yard full of smoke. For one frightening moment, I looked to the east, expecting to see a towering wall of flame and ash, but all the trees were still green. Well, green-ish. We need a break from the heat and a good rain shower. At least on this end of the country.

We live in interesting times, as the old Chinese curse goes. One third of the United States is on fire, one third is under water and the other third wants to argue about if humans impact their environment. (Note to the Mathematicians/Scientists/Sticklers for Fact among you: all statistics/ratios/data I cite will totally be made up on the spot and shouldn’t be considered based on any hard data other than how I feel at this moment in time. It’s entirely possible there is yet a third portion of the US that is watching cat videos on the internet and doesn’t care that I must now go back and redo all my math because even I know that you can’t have four thirds of a single whole. Thanks a lot, video watchers.)

Because I grew up in a small town, it came as no surprise to me that neighbor would help neighbor when the water came for Houston. It’s what neighbors do. I am reminded of the famous quote from Mr. Rodgers’ mother who said, “In times of trouble, instead of despairing, we should look for the helpers.”

Look for those running towards the problem, not away.

Instead of feeling overwhelmed by the problems facing our neighbors, our country, ourselves---ask “what can I do?” and then . . . do that thing. Small kindnesses can be a quiet form of heroism. Small monetary donations can add up. Individual snowflakes can add up to a blizzard. We can all do something to make it better, to mitigate suffering.

Good neighbors give me hope.

Go, Good Neighbors, go!

Friday, September 1, 2017

Mixed Feelings

Summer.
I’m kind of over it.

Shocking, I know, and selfish. Since the elk have come in and eaten every last flower in my flowerbeds and have started in on the flowerpots ON MY DECK I’m thinking fall thoughts. Bring on the pumpkin scented candles and the tulip bulbs and let’s DO this thing!

Selfish.

Also crazy; as soon the unrelenting rain will return and after about two days of that I’ll be over rain and dreading the snowier than usual forecast. Dreading; because shoveling my driveway is only fun the first time. And by fun I mean not really.

So let’s recap: I’m tired of Summer, Fall is too rainy and Winter snow is beautiful only in theory, and not at all beautiful in the shoveling. Which only leaves us with Spring.

It’s clear to me what I need to do. Certainly not any of the gardening chores I’ve put off all summer: edging, weeding, spreading bark, thinning perennials. What I really need to do is buy a whole bushel of daffodil bulbs and plant them everywhere. Bring on the bulb buying!


Think how pretty that will look in the spring, when the snow finally melts and I step outside and cast my eye over all the daffodils that aren’t blooming because I missed the small window of opportunity between cool, frosty nights and frozen ground to actually plant them. Probably because I was watching the Seahawks---hopefully they were winning--- since I gave up my window to plant 194 bulbs and stayed put through the third quarter. (In this version of events, the ‘Hawks would have spent some serious money on a O-Line and kept the defense strong.) So at least I wasted the 194 bulbs I haven’t even bought yet for a good reason.

See? I can do optimism.


Go Hawks!