Tuesday, January 18, 2011

corner



I was standing at the corner of Thames and Prospect Hill at some point recently — thinking I'd never noticed the schooner sailing across the street sign (do other signs have it?) — when it occurred to me that we've turned our own little corner, Mr. Betty and I. We're in a different place, parentally and otherwise, with different prospects (and hills) facing us ...

Take this past weekend, for instance. First I drove Darling Daughter back to college, where we arrived rather late (by my clock): pushing midnight. The school sits, as most do, atop a hill. And when we pulled up to the dorm to unload several trash bags (who needs suitcases?) full of clothes, shoes and ski equipment (just in case the opportunity arises), it became apparent immediately, given the roar upon opening the door, that there was a party underway.

I offered to go around. To take my (DD's) trash bags and trudge through the snow to another entry, lest she be mortified at having her mom in tow. Nothing doing. She didn't care (!); we marched straight through. And no sooner were we inside than some REALLY BIG GUY pulled my little baby girl into a way-too-affectionate welcome-back-to-college (drunken) hug with cries of, "DD!!"

Well, I just stood there, feeling pretty old — even though "college" felt so close at that moment it almost could have been my own dorm, my own party, but here I was holding my nearly-grown daughter's trash bags, though I have no idea (really I don't) how that happened — until the guy-in-question finally looked up over DD's shoulder, and I dragged myself back to the here-and-now fast enough to say, "Don't mind me. I'm just her mom."

Whereupon he set upon me with the same uber-hug treatment and exclamations of: "DD's Mom!!"

Mind you, I'd never seen this guy/kid/man in my life.

So, when we finally made it to DD's room, I asked (of course), "Who was he?"

"Oh, he was in one of my classes. He's ..... outgoing."

And then, after driving home (solo) the next day, I regrouped with Mr. Betty and we loaded up our own winter gear (in duffles) and headed North to join Super Son, Super Girlfriend and a gang of their college friends amid another party-of-sorts involving another hill-of-sorts: a ski weekend. They wanted us to come. Seriously, we gave them every out, every excuse, and they just kept saying, "We really hope you guys can make it ... "

So, now that we've turned whatever corner that is (rounded the mark, perhaps?), we need only hope for smooth sailing from here on out, or as smooth as possible, at least for a little while, with nary a thought about looming bridges let alone the inevitable downward spiral ...





Saturday, January 15, 2011

calm


Perhaps there's no good reason (excuse?) for wandering around by the waterfront — behind the always-antique-filled Armory next to H2O — on the day before the big storm, during which I really wonder how the Rose Island Lighthouse and its keepers (if it's "kept" at this time of year), who travel back and forth via Starfish, fared ...

But such senselessness is far preferable (isn't it?) to going the other way, i.e., uphill — away from the seeming security of lines, cleats, moorings, pilings — instead past peelings and signs (of neglect) I'd never noticed before, and thinking, in light of recent events (in the news, I mean), that I really just want to turn tail, tuck in, and hide ...














Just a reminder: Any/all images get bigger/closer with a click.

Saturday, January 8, 2011

skating


I was walking around downtown the other night — I never know quite where I'm going 'til I get there — and came upon, well, not much of anything. The streets were deserted: no traffic, few people. Lights were still lit (lighted?), but they weren't shedding much light or warmth or anything upon anything, given there wasn't much of anything upon which to shed light (yes, I realize I'm going in circles here). Seriously, there weren't even any skaters skating round & round at the Skating Center on America's Cup (sigh). Just some tracks-of-sorts indicating that the zamboni had finished its circular (or, more accurately, ovalesque) business for the night.

There's something sad about lights still lit, or just hanging around, after it's over (isn't there?). After the holidays are over, I mean. And the skating, too...

Which reminded me of something. Of two things, actually: one past tense (click to see), one more recent, but both somewhat gut-wrenching in their reminiscence of a certain after-the-fact feeling of unplugged emptiness and renewed loss (if there is such a thing) around here ...








It's a pair of skates ... get it??
(Sorry, couldn't resist.)

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

spike


Once upon a time — way back in the Old Year, as opposed to the New Year — Mr. Betty and I stopped in at Chaves for some sort of Christmas necessity. Boxwood roping, perhaps? We were too late (as usual); it was sold out. But that's not the point. In so doing, just being there, I remembered something: April and May. Not the season so much, though that's part of it, but the dogs. There are two dogs at Chaves named April and May. And I wanted to say hello to them, in a manner of speaking. To get a doggie fix, a lick, a wag, something. But, as it turned out, April and May weren't "at work" that day. There was a new dog on duty: Spike. He was doing a great job — retail is the perfect life for a dog, don't you think? So I got my fix, if not my roping. Then we went on with our day(s) ...