So far, so good…

I know that it’s only quarter-to-nine, but I’m already suspicious about the day. I’ll shake it off, though, because the feeling is unwarranted. This is the problem–

Everything is going really well.

I don’t always know what to do with “really well”. If the day was crappy, I’d know exactly in which pigeonhole to stuff the thing, but the past 3 days have gone so perfectly, with no sense of rush or confusion, that I am feeling wary. This is all normal, I’m told.

My mom and I have been invited to a brunch this morning. It should be pretty fun. The folks serving it are old friends and they live just up the road. They were originally summer people from Croton-on-Hudson, but they moved here permanently many years ago. I grew up with their children for some of the time, and playing with them was a welcome relief from playing with the local kids. I guess there was a point in my growing up that I realized that there were all kinds of social structures active in my life of which I had never been aware. I suddenly saw that many people in the small town were resentful of how my family was able to live. This mostly had to do with the fact that my father was not a farmer and my mother stayed at home and raised the kids. We toiled neither in the fields nor in the nearby paper mill. “What does your father do?” was a common question in school. The answer that he was a writer was more than not greeted with a confused scrunching up of the face and more questions–“What does he write?”. You all see where this is going. How I wished, sometimes, that my father dug ditches and my mother was a truckstop waitress. Anyway, the kids up the road, Danny, and his sister Jessica, were a welcome change from this pattern. They were familiar with artists, writers, and so on. It was not unusual to them. I’m afraid, though that it was not always the easiest of friendships. I must have seemed pretty messed up and somewhat backwards, socially inept, and, if I was lucky, painfully shy.

We lost touch around the same time that I went to boarding school, in 1980.

I ran into Danny in college in 1984. But since then, nothing. Jess has just finished a long tenure working for ‘Market Place’ on Public Radio International. I haven’t seen her since I was about 12. And now we are having brunch in less than an hour? Wow. What could happen? I’m really excited about this whole thing, and a little nervous. Should I remember that maybe Dan and Jess, for all their worldly aplomb, might just be a little nervous as well? Stay tuned, readers, for tomorrows update!

Johnnyboy

Gardens and growth…

After dropping my new sponsee off at rehab yesterday, I left with a feeling of a job well done. Even though I still had a commitment for later in the evening, I felt that my day had been complete and that I could finally relax. So I went home and had some dinner, not rushing for the door and scrambling to make it to my next appointment. The night ended very well and I drove home, pleasantly tired, and ready for bed. In the end I watched 2 episodes of The X-Files on DVD, and slept until 9AM this morning.

I made a pact with myself that I would get some work done today, before I goofed off. I have fulfilled this promise and finished my entry essay for college. I have also begun some quick work of self-evaluation for other prior learning. The instructions say that this will not be the end-all and be-all of this process. I just need to write some stuff in order to get an idea of what I have learned or where I have worked that may be applicable to my program of study. In the end I became a bit confused, and decided it would be OK if I stopped for a spell. So I went out to my garden for a bit of weeding and tending.

The past weeks rain has showered the thirsty little plot, and today the sun has come out. My tomatoes are showing, and my zucchini are blossoming like nobodies business. Need I mention the basil, once a humble 8 plants, now a medium sized bush? Even my cucumbers and peppers are beginning to trellis, reaching up to the sun and sprouting little flowers. All I did was plant the things, honestly, and give them some water and fertilizer, and off they went. A good example of ‘letting go’, IMHO.

Good advice for me, always.

Johnnyboy