When I woke up this morning my mind was in a very dark place. The idea of going to the cabin, spending time there- well, it wasn't good. I almost decided to tell Glen that I wasn't going but how could I?
I laid there, not sleeping, for at least half an hour, trying to convince myself that I was making far more of this than I should have.
And of course I was.
But that's what I was feeling- that darkness, and it was not good.
I finally got up and had a moment of vertigo. The room spun around me but I took a minute, breathed, the room sorted itself out again and I was able to center myself in it. I'm still not sure what that was about but I think surely it had something to do with my dread.
Things didn't change much before we left and I was fairly quiet on the drive over. We stopped at Walmart to exchange my dutch oven for a non-chipped one and I got the shelf liner I wanted. I also bought fruit for our lunch and tortilla chips too.
When we got to the cabin, Vergil and the boys were playing basketball. First thing, Vergil told Glen he'd really gotten a lot done since the last time he saw it. I know that pleased my husband. The boys were in good moods and wanted to go fishing. We'd trailered the small bay boat with us and they were so ready to get out on the water, fishing poles in hand.
But first, of course, lunch had to be made and eaten. I wandered around the kitchen, trying to center myself in that room, a room that has given me the creeps with its olde timey, "Early American" decor. The hideous island was gone and that helped. So much more space. The shelf liner that Gibson had put in looked great and when I told Mr. Moon that he hinted that he'd done a little "fixing" of it after Gibson was gone. I am not surprised. The man cannot stand a crooked line.
I had the Fiesta Ware which the boys were surprisingly interested in. I asked them both to pick out the color plates they wanted for their lunch and I hand-washed those and loaded the dishwasher with the rest of the dishes.
Those things can even cheer up a dishwasher!
I made a stupid-easy lunch of hot dogs that Mr. Moon had in the freezer along with buns also stashed there. It was not a big deal lunch at all but it was a big deal for me to put a pot on the stove, turn it on, and cook those hot dogs. The Walmart in Quincy only had one Dutch oven and it was not blue, like the one I was returning, but cherry red and I put it on the stove top, turned on the...burner?... and I surely did boil those dogs.
I have to tell you that the water heated so fast. And of course the pot was too big for the six hot dogs I was cooking but it was what I had and why not?
So that went well. There was fruit and there were chips and everyone was happy. Oh, and an entire jar of dilly beans got eaten.
Vergil was working on our internet and I won't even pretend that I had any idea at all what he was doing but I think he fixed the problem of calls dropping.
Do not ask me. I'm just grateful for him.
After lunch I read a little to August and Levon. I had pulled my old, old copy of Sterling North's Rascal, a book I had read so much that I'd loved the thing almost to pieces.
This was the cover my copy had a long, long time ago when it still had its cover.
I'm not going to try and give a book report here. I'll just say that it's a story of another time but timeless all the same. A boy whose mother has died, whose father is sweet and loving but distant to the point of almost invisibility, finds a baby raccoon and this is their story.
As I read, there were parts of the book that I could almost recite word for word in my head.
Levon was okay with it. "It might be my favorite book," he said. But he said that right before he took off to the dock to see what his dad was doing. August, however, was listening. He knows the power of story, that one. The power of story from the page.
I sent it home with him.
And then the men went fishing, indeed, taking the boat to a ramp at the marina, and Glen got to be in a boat on his lake for the first time. They didn't fish too long or stay out too long because it began to rain and then storm.
While they were gone I decided to get busy. I put all the dishes in the dishwasher, ran a load, cleaned the counters, put some more shelf liner in the cabinet under the bar after I wiped the shelves off. And then I tried to decide how to arrange things.
Plates and bowls go where? Which cabinet? Should the glasses stay where Glen has been keeping them? What about the pots and pans, of which there are, so far, very few. And the bowls? The two pyrex casserole dishes I've bought at thrift stores? The colanders?
And where will I be keeping the food?
Such important decisions.
But as I worked and frittered and tried this and tried that, I was allowing that kitchen to become familiar. As I sprayed Fabuloso and vinegar and wiped things down, I felt like I was a dog, marking my territory with my own scent, and I have used this metaphor before but it is what I felt like. I did a load of towels and cleaning rags while I was there and I like the washer and dryer but it is the kitchen which is the heart of wherever I may be and that is where I put my energy.
Sweet Baby Jeebus, I love it.
I don't even want to bake anything in it because I do not want to mar its blue perfection in any way.
Perhaps not in the most healthy way but they were hungry and then they were not.
So it was a good day but I have to tell you- I am so tired I cannot believe it. That took more energy than working in the garden for three hours.
"Of course!" I answered.
"What kind of sounds did they make?" he asked.
A very interesting day for you, Missy!
ReplyDeleteI love that stove, too!
Wouldn't it be funny if a stove I didn't think I wanted turned the corner for me on that house?
DeleteI would definitely paint those cabinets, or just replace them. But look at you, settling into a new kitchen, making it yours. I have to agree with you about the inside of that oven, it's beautiful!
ReplyDeleteDeep breaths, you're doing good:)
Painting is something I have never been able to really do. And Glen, being a former professional painter, will not tolerate sloppy work. It makes him cry. So...
DeleteI am doing better and that is for sure.
Mary that remark about the Fabuloso was very funny. Baby steps is right. Just noticed in your photo, you have two sets of table and chairs?
ReplyDeleteThe boys are sitting at the counter/bar. On bar stools. There is another table and a set of chairs. I really detest them but they work for now, I guess.
DeleteMs Moon - we all have things that terrify us. - some mysteriously so. For me most recently it was some large brown empty boxes in the living room. Long story. You are brave to approach the fear which has remained unknowable.
ReplyDelete—- Also …. I’m wondering if painting that big brown door in your favorite color might cheer things up, sending the gloomies away? Just a thought. You did good today. It was a hard thing.
Chris
We do all have things that are mysteriously terrifying. Or at least a whole lot of people I know do. I have many, one being that I have the hardest time mailing anything. I mean ANYTHING.
DeleteSee my response to Pixie's comment above about painting.
Sigh.
Hahahahaha, love your answers about the dinosaurs. I remember that book "Rascal" and its cover illustration from when I was young. I don't remember any details of the story, however.
ReplyDeleteIt's about the joy and the heartbreak this boy experiences raising a raccoon. It's beautifully written.
DeleteBright colours, full bellies and family. Yes, you are marking your territory.
ReplyDeleteThis is how I do it.
DeletePhew. What a relief. And of course there will be other hard days in the future, but this is such a good start. And how nice that the kids got their fishing (even if they didn't CATCH anything, we all know it's called "fishing" not "catching", right?).
ReplyDeleteCeci
Exactly. They do indeed call it fishing for a reason! I've always found that to be a most satisfying saying.
DeleteWow, you've had a very full day.
ReplyDeleteThe blue inside the oven is bright and such a great surprise. It's a very happy color. The Fiesta dishes provide a good pop of color too and the boys seem to love picking out their favorite-colored dish.
Best of all is your Internet is working well. Bless Virgil.
Bless Vergil indeed! He teaches me things all the time.
DeleteThat blue oven is about the prettiest thing I've seen in a long time.
I'm glad the boys are still of an age to enjoy picking out what color plate they want. It will not be this way forever.
I hope you sleep well tonight. Long day. Those dishes and blue oven are so lovely.
ReplyDeleteI did indeed sleep very well.
DeleteWe moved a lot when I was growing up. Some of our homes were gorgeous, others were total crap. Ultimately what mattered was sharing them with family and friends. I hope you have more good times there with family.
ReplyDeleteI hope so too, Celie.
DeleteSome of the houses I've lived in that I have loved the most and which remain in my memory as sweet places to live could indeed be defined as "crap." It's not the walls. It's what goes on within them.
Granny kind of crazy is a must actually. AND we have license! We have earned it. I love the RED of the dutch oven. Yes, indeed, that cabin will be yours one day! Good woman getting on with it! The fiesta ware is splendid!
ReplyDeleteI am surprised about the stove and that it works to your satisfaction...I am still in the "nope" lane. Hot without fire- some sort of sorcery that I do not trust.
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DeleteAs I said in another response to a comment- wouldn't it be ironic if the stove that I did not think I wanted turned out to be the thing that makes me accept the house?
DeleteIt works by MAGNETISM, Linda Sue. Which is magic, as we all know.
We switched out our blue oven for the dull regular one. (Before the tariffs hit.) I was sad to see it go. I cooked a lot of meals in that oven. My husband repaired it twice, i think but it was time to let it go. The new one is not the same. You’ll love it! You’re off to a good start in the ‘new’ quarters.
ReplyDeleteI'm feeling a bit more optimistic indeed.
DeleteMs Moon, Sarah from Vermont here.seeing that book brings to mind that I have a 1938 edition of The Yearling, Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. I would love to gift it to you and your grandchildren if you’d like. If so, let me know where to send it. I’m at sarah sabbatical all one word at gmail 💜
ReplyDeleteI will email you, Sarah from Vermont! You are so sweet and so kind.
DeleteFess up now, Mary. Isn't it a little hard to dislike the kitchen when your lovely grandsons are there, smiling and laughing and chompin' cookies?
ReplyDeleteOh yes. It is.
DeleteA little nesting never hurt 😍
ReplyDeleteAnd some of us are just natural born nesters.
DeletePuttering about to get the kitchen familiar and just right is what I do when moving into a new place. Those shelves do need food, in cans and jars and boxes, spices too and dried herbs. Love the blue stove interior.
ReplyDeleteI will figure it all out as I go. I will always be more able to see what I need to get yet for the kitchen. Definitely more pots and pans. Also, cooking utensils! I have nothing but a few knives!
Delete"I felt like I was a dog, marking my territory".... Well, I don't know about any of your other visitors but I would never have guessed that you smell of "Fabuloso" and vinegar! Personally, I imagined summer lavender in the cottage garden of a French chateau...Nice to read that you have taken such a vital psychological step in accepting your ownership of the lakeside abode.
ReplyDeleteWell of course I smell like Fabuloso and vinegar!
DeleteActually, that's only when I'm cleaning. I really don't know what I smell like but it's nice to think of you imaging the lavender in the cottage garden, etc.
That was a vital step in acceptance.
What a spectacular surprise to open that oven door! We have an induction stove (switched from gas, reluctantly, but we love it - it's as fast and adjustable as a gas flame). Our one word of advice - don't turn your back on a pot as it's coming to a boil.
ReplyDelete"Rascal" is one of my childhood (and adult) favorites too. Glad that August was listening with his heart as well as his ears.
These baby steps are good ones. No need to rush. Chris from Boise
I am very aware that learning to use that stove is going to be a process. Thanks for the advice!
DeleteI love to hear that Rascal was important to you too.
No need to rush is also good advice.
Those are wonderful grandma tales regarding the dinosaurs. The boys will be quoting you with fondness for the rest of their lives. It makes me so happy to know you’re making that kitchen your own. You’re right about the Fiesta Ware cheering up a dishwasher. And that oven interior would thrill me, too!
ReplyDeleteThere were more dinosaur tales. August asked me if I remembered some dang dinosaur that of course I've never heard of and I said, "Oh course! I gave it it's name!" Then he made one up and asked me about that. I told him that no, that dinosaur had lived on the other side of the planet but that my friend Gladys named it. I love the fact that those boys have a sense of the absurd.
DeleteI am inappropriately thrilled by that oven interior. I swear.
What joy you bring to the lives of the boys. I’d be thrilled with the oven interior, too. I’d probably leave the door open!
DeleteI'm thinking of having a picture of the oven enlarged, printed, and framed. I could hang that on one of the cabinets as decoration. What do you think?
DeleteI can't get over how big those boys are getting! For me, cleaning out a new space somehow makes it "mine." And that Fiestaware is just lovely; really brightens up the kitchen.
ReplyDeleteThey are growing fast, indeed. All the grandkids are. I can't believe they're going back to school tomorrow.
DeleteI agree about the Fiesta Ware.
The Fiesta ware is the best part! Definitely cheering.
ReplyDeleteTrue!
DeleteIf I was into shelf paper, which I am not, prefer paint, I would choose that. But next time I went there I would bring some paint and paint the front and sides of those shelf like drawers. I would think that arranging the kitchen would be something you would enjoy. You've already brought a lot of color into that cabin with the shelf paper and fiestaware. You know what else I would do? Paint the trim around all the windows and doors and paint the doors as well. I think that would go a long way to brighten the place up. And what about a nice blue, not too intense, ceramic tile for the floors.
ReplyDeleteSee my response to Pixie in regard to painting. I am just no good at it and have never taken the time to learn. And as I said, Glen is very, very picky about doing it perfectly. Besides that, I am not sure he'd be happy with the colors I chose. I'll figure out other ways to color things up, I guess.
DeleteAt this point, we're thinking of putting down the vinyl laminate flooring. It's easy to install, waterproof, and strong. We both love tile but honestly, it may be a harder surface than we need at this point in our lives.
I'm glad the Cabin visit went well, better than you thought in the beginning, dread is a difficult thing to move past. That Fiesta Ware indeed makes everything more Cheerful. It's making me Wish I'd mebbe kept my Cereal Bowls at least of every Color. *LOL* And that Blue Oven... yes... I'd swoon over it too. The Shelf Liner also looks Cheerful, you're putting your Stamp and Essence into it and eventually it will feel like a perfect Space to go to and unwind.
ReplyDeleteThe shelf liner patterns delight me. They just do. They are so vintage looking. I hope I can make this place feel more like my own.
DeleteI love that Fiesta Ware so much. It's nice that you had a good day at the cabin and you love that blue inside your oven!
ReplyDeleteIt is SO nice to have had a good day at the cabin.
DeleteI'm so glad you're making the place yours. You will undoubtedly feel more comfortable there as time passes and you do more of that. I'm surprised both boys chose blue plates, with that wealth of available colors! I don't think I've ever seen a blue oven before.
ReplyDeleteThe boys looked at all of the colors of plates and chose those two. The blues aren't your everyday blues. They are special, pretty blues! But I was surprised too if you want to know the truth.
DeleteWhy aren't all ovens blue?
Does Glen know how all that brown makes you feel? He seems willing to do things to make you happier there, so maybe he’d be willing to paint the kitchen some color you could agree on?
ReplyDelete