watch out for that.....

When my children were little I had  a very good imagination.  I tried to think of anything that could happen to them or that they might do so that I could protect them, ward off accidents, keep them from harm's way.  Even so, we had our share of emergency trips to the hospital or a visit from a 911 van, and those were always for unforeseen, unimagined events I had not envisioned.  I was always measuring, judging, estimating how far I could reach to catch someone in case of a fall, how close a pot handle was to the edge of a stove and whom to call if someone stuck beans up his nose.

Does anyone use that cautionary warning?  The other one came from the only story my mother ever told: "Epaminondas, watch how you step in them pies."

 When I started down the basement stairs with a load of laundry, and pregnant at that, I'd say to the girls (by that time four and three years old), "Tell me the number you'll call if I fall."  I had taught them 911, you see, in case I wasn't able to use it.

I've been thinking of that recently as I have reached the age where accidents can happen and I am trying to be aware of prevention.  I haven't gone so far as handles and bars all over the apartment but I have banned scatter rugs and I turn on lights instead of trusting myself to find my way in the dark.  I think of how far boiling water might  splash if I drop a pot of spaghetti, how hard I could land if I fall off a step ladder, and - my worst fear - what would stop me if I missed an escalator step. (I can't see them very well, it depends on how they are marked).  Well, it's not fear yet, it's apprehension, well, more like caution. 

I remember after Bill died how careful I was when driving.  I knew that I had to take very good care of my children's only parent. At least I don't have to worry about that any more. They will survive very well without me.

 Besides, I gave up my car.

happy October first

A year ago I was in Eastend, Saskatchewan, in the Stegner House, and beginning to write the first draft of the book I am still struggling with. I'm on the countdown now of my second draft and I think it's better. I've been deterred by a mass of mind-numbing paper work but today I'll be back at it and that pleases me.  We'll see how I feel at the end of the day.

As you know, I call my morning swim wet meditation and I solve problems while I swim: writing problems, people problems, menus, leftover plans, shopping, appointments and so on. But sometimes I am able to free fall. One of my games, then, is  making words out of the words on the warning signs in the pool room.  The signs read:

SHALLOW AREA  (wallow, hallow,allow, aware, etc.)

NO DIVING (don, din, gin, nod, ding, etc.)

DEEP AREA (peer, pear, pare, rare, and so on)

It's a kids' party game, right?  No, it used to be a kids' party game. Now they do everything on computer. Whatever happened to pencil and paper games?

Anyway, this one is quite nice and it takes a few lengths to list words in my head.

Here's another one you can play in an airport lounge, when your flight is delayed or cancelled. (Does that ever happen to you?)  Think back as far as you can in time to what was in that space you are in, as far as your knowledge goes, from Pleistocene or Neanderthal or whatever, through time and history.  Pile everything into that one space you are in now.  Very crowded! It's time travel at its most comfortable because you don't have to go anywhere, except maybe to the ladies', slash, women's room. 

Happy Day.  Use it well.