This is Sasha, the sweet dog who lives with a neighbor on the church side of us. As in, the church is right next door and the neighbor is right next door to that. Sasha has visited us twice before and I invited her in for a little exploration of the house which turned out not to be a good idea last time because Maurice did a full blown, full ninja leaping attack to her face with all twenty claws at the extended slasher position and teeth bared too. Remember that?
So I didn't ask her in today although she did whimper when she stuck her head in. She trotted off and I called her caretaker who did not answer her phone but I left a message and then my other next-door neighbor called to ask me if I knew where this dog came from and that she'd seen it almost get hit crossing the street so I went down to Carolyn's (Sasha's caretaker) and got a leash from her. She answered the door when I knocked but only cracked it enough for us to barely talk through. She and her husband both have severe health problems and many other problems too, and I think there is probably some hoarding going on there and Carolyn didn't want me to see it. Or who knows? Maybe they have a pet lion.
So I walked back to my OTHER neighbor's and she told me where she'd seen the dog last (across the street) but then, she told me that she'd lost her mother in October and I could not just walk away. We are not close with these neighbors except for in the physical sense, especially since they cut down all the bamboo between us. He's a Jefferson County Sheriff and I'm not sure what she does and we talk occasionally, but not a lot. Still- this is a woman who was obviously suffering some intense grief and she began to tell me the story of how her mother had died and what the last few months have been like for her and because I have been there and because I knew she needed to tell the story again, I listened and let the dog do what the dog would. I knew there was nothing I could say to assuage her grief but that listening and assuring her that everything she was feeling and doing were normal and to be gentle with herself and to not push herself were things she needed to hear. And Glen called twice while this was going on and I finally answered the phone and of course he had Sasha but my neighbor and I were not done with our encounter and that's all there was to it. I could not just walk away nor did I want to. When she had reached a point where I felt she'd said what she needed to say for that moment, I told her that although I knew there was nothing I could do, really, to make her feel better, I could give her a hug and she opened her arms to me and we did hug deeply and well and I kissed her cheek and told her if there was anything I could do to let me know.
And THEN I went to get Sasha and take her home and that neighbor was now outside and we discussed how Sasha had been dumped at her house and how the dog was very good at getting out. And so forth. And then she gave ME a hug and that was nice, really. This is the neighbor who had all the Trump signs and with whom I had a few words years ago which didn't make either one of us feel better but really enough water has passed under that bridge and she and her husband are just obviously NOT doing well, and the Trump sign disappeared from her yard some time back and I was glad we hugged. I was glad I could bring Sasha home to her.
While all this was going on, a tree service was cutting down a very large tree that had just up and died this summer and so there was all that noise and activity and as I walked from my house to hers and back, the smell of weed was strong in the air (don't take my word for it but I believe a lot of tree cutting guys smoke a lot of weed) and well, there was just a lot happening in my tiny little speck of the world.
But my overall thought on all of this is that I am NOT a very good neighbor but I was glad to be able to listen to one today and to help another with a lost dog.
The rest of my day was spent in just doing little things like making the chili crisp and I am not happy with the way it tastes because I tried to add more authenticity to it and make it a garlic chili crisp and somehow I fucked up the cooking of the garlic although it was not burnt or anything.
Of course I wish all good things, happiness, and health to all of you and all of us here at the Church of the Batshit Crazy but overall, I think what I most want to say is thank you. Thank you for being here for my ramblings and my fears and my profane language and my irreverent and disrespectful take on so many things. You allow me to be me and that is a gift beyond measure.
So. Bless our hearts, y'all, because if anyone ever needed their hearts blessed, it is we, the people, trying to hang on to democracy with our bleeding fingernails, trying to find the light in what appears to be some of the darkest times, trying to keep on, not give up, and work with what we have to the best of our abilities.
Let us listen to those who need listening to and take home the dogs who wander. And hug like we mean it when we mean it.
Love...Ms. Moon


Happy New Year, Mrs. Moon!
ReplyDeleteAnd to you.
DeleteSending you hugs from the Eastern Shore. Love you
ReplyDeleteThank you. I will take those hugs.
DeleteMary, this last post is my favorite of the whole year....warm and honest and 'feet on the
ReplyDeleteground self-examination'. Good tools for anyone's life. Thanks for the visit with you today and Happy New Year to the entire Moon clan. - Karen in Pittsburgh
Thank you, Karen in Pittsburgh. I appreciate all those sweet words.
DeleteYou are a natural observer and writer of life, and your posts are always interesting and worthwhile reading. Looking forward to reading more of them in 2026. Happy New Year to you and Mr Moon and everyone in your world.
ReplyDeleteAnd I wish you and yours a Happy New Year. Thanks for making me laugh every morning.
DeleteI am glad you listen and hug, that is what is most needed it seems. Sasha is lovely though she needs to learn to go home if anyone sees her wandering and says to her "go home". Happy New Year to you and your entire family.
ReplyDeleteWell, I don't think Sasha would take to that training very well. The problem may be that she doesn't want to be at home. Carolyn things she's still looking for the woman who dropped her off.
DeleteHappy New Year to you!
I think you ARE a good neighbour. You were there when one needed to talk and you got Sasha back to where she needed to be. We don't need to live in each others' pockets but you were there when needed. Happy new year Ms Moon!
ReplyDeleteI don't think I'm cut out to live in someone's pocket and that is a good way to put it. Happy New Year to you!
DeleteThis is such a fabulous post to end the year, Mary. Of course you're a good neighbour when needed, we all know that! Wishing you and all yours a very happy New Year and respectfully requesting that you never give up blogging-love Blods, looooong-time reader xxx
ReplyDeleteI think something major would have to happen to prevent me from blogging. I need to write it out. Everyday. I'm constantly surprised that anyone cares to read it but eternally grateful that they do. Thanks for being here, Blods.
DeleteNYE/ NYD are completely arbitrary markers of elapsed time according to my uncle in my head, Neil degrasse tyson. it's another day of us against the political regime.... hope you and yours are well xxalainaxx
ReplyDeleteOh! I want an Uncle Neil too! He'd make an excellent one. As we all know, B.B. King was (well, still is) my daddy in my head. I suppose "chosen family" isn't always aware of having been chosen at all. Doesn't matter.
DeleteI have the slightest bit of hope about the crumbling of the base of this regime. What happens when the figurehead topples over or gets knocked over? I sure hope we get to see.
Love to you and your sweetheart.
I adore you, Mary Moon! “And hug like we mean it when we mean it.”
ReplyDeleteAnd I adore you, Mitchell. I bet your hugs are First Class, A-1, Top of the Line, and cherished by all who receive them. Sure wish I could be one of them.
DeleteHappy New Year, Mary. Write on!
ReplyDeleteThat gave me a little giggle. You too, my friend.
DeleteYou did good Mary and really that's all any of us can do.If ever a year needed to end it was this last one. Surely (hahahahaha) it has to get better from here.
ReplyDeleteOne would think it could only get better from here but I've quit even trying to believe that under this administration.
DeleteSending you a great big hug!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Diaday!
DeleteI was listening to a neighbor the other day, she is a year younger than my sisters and I think of her as my sister. She's been through hell and back, including having her ex-husband threaten to kill her and years of abuse. It's a long story I'll tell another day, but listening and hugging is one of the most important things we can do for each other I think. We all have a story and we all need to share those stories. It's why we write, but not everyone writes. You did good Mary. You gave your neighbor your attention, you were a witness to her life and her story. That's enormous, more than you realize.
ReplyDeleteSending you hugs and love and lets hope for a pandemic of kindness and compassion this year.
Oh, wouldn't that be a wonderful pandemic?
DeleteI remember when I had my first baby and felt an overwhelming need to tell my story of the birth over and over again. It was so earth-shaking and formative and profound. I had never experienced anything close to that and I believe that we all have this urge to tell the stories that shake us to the core, good and bad.
When my friend Sue died in the arms of her loving friends, including me, the same thing happened. The experience was so powerful and profound that the only way to make sense of it was to describe it again and again.
I am sure the same goes with your friend who probably kept her story to herself for many years. Now she has to get it out.
Hugs and Love back to you. As always- thank you.
OK, I am the worst neighbor in my apartment complex, and can't imagine hugging any of them! Well, we speak and sometimes hear a bit of each other's lives, mainly about the other ones who are sick or hospitalized but I have friends who I spend time with and hug regularly! Maybe this year I'll get to know more neighbors.
ReplyDeleteIt's great if neighbors are the sort of friends you want to hug but perhaps, in a way, it is good to keep a bit of an emotional distance from someone who lives in such close proximity.
DeleteI always wondered why older people talked about illness so much. Now I know, more's the sorrow.
From a 'member' of your 'congregation'...lead on. :)
ReplyDeleteHere's to a healthy 2026.
Glad you're here!
DeleteAs the saying goes, you never know what is going on in someone's life.
ReplyDeleteI suspect you helped your neighbor immeasurably by listening to her experience of loss and grief.
The doggy seems a bit homeless with owners (due to health issues) unable to care for her.
Small kindnesses are so helpful. I can and need to do more. You've set the bar MM.
Wishing you all the best for 2026.
Oh, honey. That bar is set pretty low.
DeleteI doubt Sasha has the best home life but I do know that Carolyn loves animals beyond all measure. Still, it has to be difficult for her to physically attend to all of a dog's needs.
Happy New Year, Ms. Moon! That was kind of you to listen to your neighbor and return Sasha to her owners. Sometimes all people need is a listening ear and some empathy. And hugs are always good. -Nicol
ReplyDeleteIndeed! We all need to be heard, don't we? Thank you.
DeleteListening to those that need to be heard and hugging are the best parts of connecting and being human. Sending hugs and thanks to you for writing here.
ReplyDeleteXoxo
Barbara
You know, I do believe that listening can be a mitzvah if we truly pay attention. Hugging is, for some of us, incredibly important too. I do know people that don't want to be hugged and I respect that and don't but most of us yearn for that sort of connection. An embrace. I embrace you back.
DeleteHugs to you dear Ms Moon
ReplyDeleteAnd to you, Anonymous.
DeleteThank heavens for the people like you- the listeners and the huggers. Happy New Year -may it be a good one for democracy.Wendy-SA
ReplyDeleteMay it indeed be a better year for democracy. Otherwise, I think we're doomed. Let us all be a little better at listening, a little warmer at hugging.
DeleteI think you are a much better and more caring neighbor than you believe yourself to be. Listening and hugging someone who truly needs it.....and being perceptive enough to *get that*....is , well....it's wonderful. As is returning runaway dogs! Bless YOUR heart..... and all of your loved ones
ReplyDeleteSusan M
Oh, I am pretty darn sure I'm not a great neighbor in any regard. Let's just say I'm not taking any meals to anyone or offering to pet sit. But I surely can listen and offer what hugs I can. Those things I can do.
DeleteBless your heart too, Susan.