the daily blog

Time is so relative.  Perception is all.  My half hour swim is just right; so is my half-hour nap (I always wake about a minute before time buzzes); the 30 seconds I stand on one foot and then the other, total 60 seconds, with my other leg bent and my heel pressing my bottom, are very long and excruciating; the 3 to 7 minutes I wait for the subway train, depending on the time of day, are bearable because I have learned to be patient.  But the shortest time between daily events is the 24 hours (or less) between blogs.  My, how time flies!

My tiny audience can be forgiven if they don't read me every day, I mean, what for?  So the time between blogs is probably just right for them, casual consumers that they are. For me, however, blogs have become inexorable.  I can think of an analogy:  when I took possession of our second car, it was less than a week before it became a plough. Suddenly I was the one with the time and the means to pick up the dry-cleaning and the booze, renew the car license(s) and take everyone everywhere. What seemed to be a luxury to enjoy turned into never-ending tasks to perform.  So with the blog. 

It's in my sub-conscious all day. I scrutinize random thoughts before I slough them off, pausing to consider whether they are blog-worthy.  It's like menu-planning, taking into account what leftovers I have to use up and making a mental list of what I have to add to make them palatable. Know what?  More lists.

 Oy.

a hunting we will go

I went shopping today, a rare excursion for me, looking for a tablecloth, and came  home with a pair of earrings. That was okay and I won't go into details. What I want to tell you is my discovery, no, not a discovery, - an affirmation -  of my narrowing interest in things and my broadening appreciation of what I have. As I said it's a rare event for me to go into a store other than a supermarket, and even then the market is not very super, so it was a revelation to see what was available, goods set out to delight and to lure the credulous, credit-happy consumer.  This is another of those times I am increasingly coming upon when I am so happy to be so old and beyond temptation (almost). 

It's like the joy and satisfaction I experienced when I first realized that I don't  like cheesecake and that I am not one bit tempted to eat it.  I am so glad when I find something I don't want to eat!  Walking through that beautiful store this morning and looking at all the lovely articles on display and not wanting anything was a delightful experience.  I recommend it.