This is the house a few doors down from us that over the past twenty years I have watched deteriorate until now I doubt it would be possible to bring it back without investing far more money into it than would be worth it. Its lines are still relatively straight but the roof has peeled back, leaving gaping holes and once the roof is gone, it's over.
A few years ago before the roof really started going, it looked as if someone was doing some work on it but that didn't last long and since then it has remained untouched although I think the "No Trespassing" signs may be new. There's one to the right of the front door which has obviously been there for a long time but the bright orange and black ones have only recently appeared. There is always a sadness attached to a house which has been abandoned, let go, left to ruin. I can't help but think of the people who lived in these old houses, the families and their births and deaths, the gatherings of neighbors and friends, the meals prepared and eaten in them, the dreams dreamed, the hopes sustained or finally let go of, the laughter, the sorrows. And so few clues left behind to reveal any of this to us now.
The walls remain silent even as they fall.
The walls remain silent even as they fall.
I took a walk today. I have decided that although exercise of all types seems to send the kidney stone into action mode, I simply cannot let that rule my life.
I say this as if I was the least bit brave when it comes to the FKS. I'm not. I admit it. But I am going to try and risk it.
The purple and the golden wildflowers are blooming now. Fall is the time here for the colors of royalty.
While I was walking I saw Harvey coming towards me pushing his walker and when he was still a long way off he moved off the sidewalk, crossed the road and onto a driveway that leads into a sort of compound of pre-manufactured homes where I am pretty sure a family group lives. This is not uncommon around here. Families who have been on the same land for many years sometimes choose to continue living near each other on that land. I think it's rather beautiful. Anyway, Harvey left his walker on the drive and took a plastic bag which had been on the seat, which I assume had something in it, to one of the houses on the property. I passed before I could see if anyone came to the door or if he had even knocked on the door.
I suppose I should be bored by now, or at least less impressed with the same signs of the passing of seasons but I am not. They are a reassurance of the continuity of life on earth as I know it and as such, they are a comfort and a beauty to be noticed and appreciated as they appear.
We have had a sadness in our family today. Lily and Lauren's sweet girl Chloe, a dog Lauren rescued years ago and who was diagnosed with cancer a few months ago, died last night. Lauren had decided that as long as she was eating and not in pain or uncomfortable, they would let her go on as she was. Last night she showed signs of not being able to get comfortable though, and then began having obvious trouble breathing. They decided to take her to the emergency vet to see if there was something simple to be done or, to have the vet end her suffering if it was that time.
Before they'd even gotten to the main road though, Chloe left on her own. I am glad that Lauren did not have to say the words that no pet owner wants to say about their beloved dog or cat. I saw Chloe yesterday when I picked up the kids at Lily and Lauren's house and she seemed fine then so I know she did not spend much time suffering.
A blessing.
Chloe was Lauren's baby in the way that our pets can be. As Hank said on the group text, "Animals can give us so many wonderful moments and then one of the worst moments."
On we go.
Happy Friday, y'all.
Blue mist flower. I, however, see more lavender, more in the purple range than blue. Perhaps a periwinkle blue, a periwinkle purple. Maybe I am seeing the color through lavender-colored eye glasses. Can you see the young pine tree there?
Swamp sunflowers. I love that name. These do grow in the lower areas by the road. Not IN the ditch, but beside it.
And of course-
Goldenrod. Which is not what makes us sneeze. That would be the ragweed. I am not bothered in any case. When I was young I had so many allergies but I seem to have outgrown them as I've aged. I used to get hay fever so bad I lived on Benadryl throughout the summer months. I was well into my thirties when I noticed that my annual bouts of it had not appeared. That was a summer I was spending on St. George Island and there were far fewer plants, especially in the area I was living in, than anywhere else I'd ever lived. And since then- I have rarely been affected.
While I was walking I saw Harvey coming towards me pushing his walker and when he was still a long way off he moved off the sidewalk, crossed the road and onto a driveway that leads into a sort of compound of pre-manufactured homes where I am pretty sure a family group lives. This is not uncommon around here. Families who have been on the same land for many years sometimes choose to continue living near each other on that land. I think it's rather beautiful. Anyway, Harvey left his walker on the drive and took a plastic bag which had been on the seat, which I assume had something in it, to one of the houses on the property. I passed before I could see if anyone came to the door or if he had even knocked on the door.
But I knew that he wasn't home and I thought to myself that I could take a picture of his yard, his place knowing that he wasn't there and I did. I took two pictures but it occurred to me that if I felt I couldn't grab an image of where he lives if I knew he was there, I should not be posting pictures I took when I knew he wasn't.
I will show you this one small slice of his lot and yes, I'm a hypocrite, but the cross on the pile of siding or roofing is one that he has had standing for almost the entire time I've been walking that stretch of road.
I will show you this one small slice of his lot and yes, I'm a hypocrite, but the cross on the pile of siding or roofing is one that he has had standing for almost the entire time I've been walking that stretch of road.
The fact that it's laying there is so worrisome. As I said recently, it looks like he has given up. But I don't know. I don't pretend to begin to understand how he thinks or what he thinks. I just know that he is a neighbor and has been nothing but kind to me when I pass, giving me his hands-in-the-air blessing or greeting, unless he is not feeling like acknowledging my presence at all in which case he ignores me.
My walk was uneventful. I went to the Post Office, collected our mail and then came home. But I did see something that is my official notification of fall.
Way up in the trees which grow in a deep green arc across the sidewalk from the yard of my next door neighbors, the sasanqua variety of camellias is just beginning to bloom. The sasanquas are the first of the camellias to flower and soon all of the branches will be filled with these beauties and the sidewalk below them will be a carpet of pink.
I suppose I should be bored by now, or at least less impressed with the same signs of the passing of seasons but I am not. They are a reassurance of the continuity of life on earth as I know it and as such, they are a comfort and a beauty to be noticed and appreciated as they appear.
Mr. Moon has made it home safely. He is sitting in his recliner, shelling peas as we speak. He has performed his husbandly duties in the making of martinis (and what were YOU thinking?) and of course there are clean sheets on the bed although I think they were hardly in need of washing. Still, clean sheets are a luxury and as such, worth going to the small effort it takes to wash and dry and put them back on the bed.
We have had a sadness in our family today. Lily and Lauren's sweet girl Chloe, a dog Lauren rescued years ago and who was diagnosed with cancer a few months ago, died last night. Lauren had decided that as long as she was eating and not in pain or uncomfortable, they would let her go on as she was. Last night she showed signs of not being able to get comfortable though, and then began having obvious trouble breathing. They decided to take her to the emergency vet to see if there was something simple to be done or, to have the vet end her suffering if it was that time.
Before they'd even gotten to the main road though, Chloe left on her own. I am glad that Lauren did not have to say the words that no pet owner wants to say about their beloved dog or cat. I saw Chloe yesterday when I picked up the kids at Lily and Lauren's house and she seemed fine then so I know she did not spend much time suffering.
A blessing.
Chloe was Lauren's baby in the way that our pets can be. As Hank said on the group text, "Animals can give us so many wonderful moments and then one of the worst moments."
So we are all loving Lauren at the moment and Lily and the children too because of course Chloe was a sort of sibling in their household. A constant presence. A part of the whole whom they had loved.
On we go.
Happy Friday, y'all.
Love...Ms. Moon








There is no love like a beloved animal. There just isn’t.
ReplyDeleteI agree.
DeleteRIP dear Chloe. My most loving condolences to Lauren and all of her nd your family. I am glad to hear her end came rather swiftly....and with love surrounding her to the end.
ReplyDeleteSusan M
Me too, Susan.
DeleteI hate that for Lauren and Lily, and kids. Chloe was family. God that sucks. Sorry. -Nicol
ReplyDeleteChloe was no spring chicken when Lauren got her at the shelter but still, it seemed she went to soon, even though she did have a white muzzle.
DeleteI've been down that Rainbow Bridge Road too many times. My heart goes out to Lauren, Lily and the kids.
ReplyDeleteParanormal John
When you get a pet and fall in love with it, you are opening the door to so much happiness and so much grief.
DeleteSo sorry about the Loss of Chloe, sad about the Historic Home being laid to become a ruin that cannot be brought back. Tho' I have seen some amazing transformations of Structures that one would think couldn't be Saved and if the right person buys and is willing to invest what it takes, they can be resurrected. The worry about your Neighbor who may have given up, hard to say for sure if he has or if he's just tidying up and discarding what no longer suits him to keep up... the pile looks like it qualifies as possible debris to be disposed of finally.
ReplyDeleteI don't know that it's an historic home. Just an old one and I have no idea how old it was. I would love to see inside of it but I feel certain it wouldn't be too safe. And no, I don't think anyone around here will find it special or charming enough to sink a bunch of money in.
DeleteThe pile of siding and roofing on Harvey's property was not there a few weeks ago. It has come from seemingly nowhere which is how it often happens in his yard. And how he gets rid of it I do not know. He doesn't have a truck. I've seen no signs of tidying in quite awhile.
So sad that our family animals have such short lives. But I expect hers was a lovely one.
ReplyDeleteIt was a good life. She had a sister of sorts, Chloe did. Lauren already had a dog named Pepper when she saw Chloe who looked very, very much like Chloe. So...the two girls bonded quickly and did everything together. And of course, there was all the love from Lily and Lauren and the kids.
DeleteOh no. I am sorry about Chloe.
ReplyDeleteBut I do love your bumble bee picture though, his legs fat with pollen.
It was hard.
DeleteAwesome photo of the bee on the goldenrod!
ReplyDeleteThank you! She was so drunk on nectar, I think, that she just let me take her picture.
DeleteRIP Chloe ❤️
ReplyDeleteYes. I hope she does.
DeleteOh, I'm sorry about Chloe. But yes, it's a small comfort that she left on her own and without suffering. That's about the best any pet owner could hope for.
ReplyDeleteI love seeing your posts about the seasons turning and the wildflowers in Florida. Makes me miss my home state.
I also had hay fever when I was young -- I used to have to take antihistamines every time I mowed the lawn as a teenager. But somehow it mostly vanished when I was in my 20's. Funny how that happens.
You're so right about that Steve. As you know well, even when it is absolutely the best and right thing to have an animal taken out of its misery in the most humane way possible, it is still so hard to say those words.
DeleteI used to be terribly allergic to cats, too. I still get a little redness and itching where Maurice stabs or bites me but nothing like the full blown reactions I used to get around cats.
The curtains hanging in the window of that old house really touched me for some reason!
ReplyDeleteMe too- it's always those remainders of what a person who lived there left behind that are so poignant. Like the wallpaper in the fally-down house.
DeleteTwo sadnesses, Chloe and the abandoned house, offset by the beauty of fall and clean sheets. Harvey is a curious character and even without knowing him I still hope he is okay. Love the Camellia.
ReplyDeleteI hope he's okay too, River. Thank you.
DeleteSo sorry to read about Chloe. Takes a bit of one’s heart. Wishing Lauren and the entire family sweet memories.
ReplyDeleteI hadn’t thought about it, but my hay fever has lessened over the years. I used to have a terrible time. A good thing about getting older?
As for the abandoned cross, maybe Harvey has seen the light!
There are, I suppose, one or two good things about getting older. I suppose we should be counting our blessings, right?
DeleteSure.
I really don't know why Harvey has laid down his cross. I doubt he's lost his faith. It seems to be a central part of his existence. I wonder if Jesus is as close as he gets to the idea of being loved and cherished. Of course I have no idea.
I share the sadness of lives leaving us (whether friends, pets, or relatives) as well as bemoan the slow demise of a home that heard many footsteps during it's time of sheltering a family. But the good news is the allergy lessening with age...mine also has retreated, which is good after all the other parts seem to be slowly crumbling.
ReplyDeleteI just looked up why we sometimes outgrow allergies and there are several reasons, I guess. One being that we can have immune response shifts and also that as we get older we become more tolerant due to exposure over the years. That makes sense to me.
DeleteI guess a house truly dies when it is empty for too long. You can see it happening. You can hear the silence.
Why do people abandon houses? Why not just sell it. I suppose the last living relative died. What happens then, how long before the property can be claimed by someone else?
ReplyDeleteI too had horrible allergies when I was a kid but really outgrew them in my early 20s. I read that if you have them as a child you outgrow them as an adult and it you don't have them as a child you develop them as an adult.
One patch of my mistflower that gets more sun is blooming but the other is not yet. And my goldenrod is just about to bust into bloom.
Oh, who knows? If the guy who owns that house is the same guy who owns the little block house next to it, it may be that he just doesn't have any desire to do anything with it. He's pretty darn old. He rents out the block house and keeps it looking pretty spiffy. He also may not want to sell it because of a common attitude that the more property you own, the better.
DeleteI know I don't get enough sun here to grow either mist flower or goldenrod which is fine. I can just walk down the street and see them.
Old, abandoned houses radiate sadness and silent memories as time and nature attempt to reclaim them. You can almost hear the echoes of laughter and daily living... but not quite. Just out of earshot. And farewell to faithful Chloe.
ReplyDeleteThis house does not project an especially happy vibe to me but I could just be imagining things. Who knows? And with every very old house there is no doubt that very happy things have happened within its walls and as well as tragic things. I do hate to see it go, though.
DeleteSweet Chloe seemed to pass quickly and without lots of pain. Our pets are truly imbedded into our hearts and lives, and their passing is never easy. I'm sending heartfelt condolences to Lauren and the family on the loss of Chleo.
ReplyDeleteIt is sad to see a home abandoned. Wouldn't you think it better to sell rather than watch it fall to the ground and even become a hazard.
Abandoned properties are not great for any neighborhood.