Saturday, August 28

Colleen's Column of August 25th

 I am sharing Colleen's column for many reasons; I know lots of widows these days and I am sure there are more to come, maybe her column will be comforting to some, and the story of her 3-year-old son made me smile.

Much Love,

Barb

Widow words

August 25, 2021

 ~a column by Colleen O’Brien

Writing, for me, is an inquiry into what I think. When I write, my thinking clarifies. I learn things I didn’t know I knew. I can even get well, writing.

I therefore think that writing is magic. I think writing not only can get the story out of me but reveal to me why I’m telling it.*~~~

In the piece I’m writing right now, I’m thinking of a friend struggling with the recent death of her husband. She tells me she is okay, she is not okay. She is doing fine, she is scared to be alone. She doesn’t know how to pay the bills, she paid her own bills for years.

My friend is a writer. She has published several books, both fiction and non-fiction; and many poems. Until the day her husband died, she wrote every day toward a goal – a new novel usually. Now, in alarm, in crisis, in numbness, in adrenaline panic, she says she can’t muster the energy.

But her habit of being nudges her. Writer that she is, she dredges up words that culminate in an obituary for her dead lover, and eloquently, she remembers him, defines him, explains his oddities, eulogizes him in a way that brings him alive to her, and to us, once again. “. . . acts do little to convey his multiple virtues—and an equal number of quirks. He was that rare thing, a man who talked wisely about his and others’ emotions. . . intuitive, generous, and patient….”

Many years ago, I too used the handy – unbeknownst to me just then as reliable – outlet of writing to understand my widow’s plight. After my husband’s death, I wrote poem after poem; scraps of paper littered the floor. I questioned how I was to survive alone, exactly was I to do to take care of the car, the maintenance of an old house, the going out into the world without his having my back? I wrote memories, about how I’d been pole-axed the first time I saw him: it was on the playground in first grade, and I never got over it. I wrote about how his absence made my toes feel as numb as my heart and how was I to survive either weirdness? I wrote a poem about our son who called me “Honey” because that’s what his dad called me. One day in the grocery story, my 3-year-old wandered off, and soon I heard his little voice calling, “Honey, honey, where are you?” The rest of the poem was about me at 64, a fresh widow, calling for his dad – “Honey, honey, where are you?”


I look up my fat packet of poems from that time and read them through – tears and laughter, embarrassment at my poor-me-ness despite my arrogant vow long before I was there that I would not play the role of weeping widow; and a now-and-then wonder at my occasional clarity. The words I used then to describe myself – “terrified, isolated, dumbstruck”; the words I used to condemn him for leaving me – his “vanishing trick,” his “slick disappearance,” his “abandonment” – were all true. Then.


After 13 years, I return to writing again of that once gray area of my life, that were it not for my poems would remain gray, perhaps completely inaccessible. I believe that because I wrote about such a common plight – part of the fear being the ineffableness of it – I am at ease in my solitary life today that is full of endearing substitutes: they are books and friends, trees. Writing. And the memories that writing elicits. Not all-consuming memories, just good stories. The man I love did not abandon me, nor vanish. He was somewhere near me when I first wrote the terror. He remains.

“Keep writing,” his voice said then and says now. “Especially about me.”

This story that I just wrote reminds me – he always did make me laugh.

*Seventeenth-century French philosopher, Rene’ Descarte wrote it much more succinctly– “I think, therefore I am.”

Wonky?

 Every now and then I will experiment with the blog...or I might make an error and then correct it. So if the blog does not work as you expect that most likely is the reason. Just sayin'...

Friday, August 27

The latest happenings

or until I get tired of typing... Trivia night went well. It did seem that our Deja Vu friends are also very busy with their own fire irons but 8 of our friends showed up and we had a great time. I used one of my trivia questions from 2 years ago and told them if they could remember the answers more power to them. We decided to change the night we meet to Tuesday at 6:30 so some who could not make it on Thursday might be able to on Tuesday. I need to get back in the groove before heading south and that time will be here very soon. 

I had one item that I saved that did not sell on the garage sale. An older NuWave Pro Infrared oven. It is the round one and I prefer the rectangle one. My pans fit better. I posted it on the Facebook Marketplace and sold it today. I got my asking price! I am used to haggling a bit so I set it high enough to do that and then didn't need to. Going to Progreso for 20 years trains you well in the dickering business. I even find it kind of fun now.

Years ago my good friend and coworker, Connie Jones, gave me a small replica of us as a memento and I ran across it the other day. Thanks, Connie!



And it seems there is another fan of the Gary chair! 
Miss Elise.




Wednesday, August 25

Irons in the fire

 



We have had several irons in the fire lately and fortunately things are beginning to fall into place. First off, we THOUGHT we had purchased an extra lot on our block to assist in keeping our alley access open for our RV comings and goings. In fact, we thought we had owned it for 6 years and it turns out we have not owned it at all but we soon will. The good news is we have a buyer and the bad news is we have paid for mowing and snow removal for the past 6 years. Big mess!  Well on the way to being fixed.

The second "iron" is the motorhome. Maintenance is required on whatever homes you own whether you live in it or not. And the motorhome has been overdue to have it serviced. And then another issue arose with the airbrakes. So we have a local place that we trust to a great degree and although RV's are not his main line of customers he was willing to take on the task. Saving us from having to take it out of town or stopping somewhere on our trip South this fall. The airbrake issue was pricey but we know we got the best deal we could have found anywhere and it was done right. We and many of our friends speak very highly of 

Danielson Auto Service Inc

(515) 386-4915

101 E Harrison St

JeffersonIA 50129.


 
Next up...I promised a friend of ours that I would start trivia in the pool hall this summer and I have procrastinated until now. I am signed up to do it again in Trophy Gardens, the park we winter in, so I need to brush up on my skills anyway and it is asked of me often when we were going to get to it. So tomorrow night is the first one in the pool hall.
Next up...We might have a second pool table, an 8 footer, coming our way. No, we do not need it. We would be doing a favor for a friend. Not at all sure of this iron yet...

Tuesday, August 24

Chair...next chapter

 Here are pictures of the chair in its new home in Missouri.

Gary enjoying his new-to-him chair


The chairs new setting.


The guy most likely to inherit the chair: Little Leo.



Audiologist

Yesterday Butch and I went to the Audiologist in Carroll IA so he could perhaps try out a new hearing aid. The jury is still out if he will go with the new ones or stay with the old ones. But that is not what prompted this post. In our conversation with Doug the audiologist he was telling Butch about an attachment to his current hearing aids that would behave like headphones while watching TV and that sounded like something he would very much like to have, BUT they are not available because of a chip that is extremely hard to find. It is affecting the tech field and the automotive field to a very large degree. These chips are in short supply globally and could take years to catch up.
Fast forward to today and the following article was one of the first I laid eyes on this morning. Good News!

Monday, August 23

High Trestle Trail Bridge

 High Trestle Trail: Iowa Tourism Map, Travel Guide, Things to Do: Travel Iowa 

On Facebook I placed an old photo of myself on the High Trestle Trail Bridge near Madrid Iowa and it sparked a lot of interest. It is a very special place and very popular. It happens to be 38 miles from our house but we have made the trip over there a few times. It is particularly beautiful at night when it is lit up.

We do have an extra RV site if you are thinking about it.

Ten years ago today

 I thought I would give you a blast from the past, so I went back to 8/23/2011. And this is what I found.

Barb and Butch's Big Adventure: Sunday Ride (brooker3.blogspot.com)

AARP Article

 Interesting article:

The 7 Worst Habits for Your Brain (aarp.org)

Butch's supplemental insurance is through AARP so I signed him up for daily articles and this is one of them. Just skip on by if you feel like it.😉