I am having a hard time getting out of bed in the morning these days. Never once in my life have I stayed in bed all day that I can remember, unless I was quite ill. I do get up and sometimes that is one of the hardest things I do all day. But this morning, when I finally got out of bed, I looked at the bark cloth I have stretched as a curtain over the lower part of the window over our bed with the sun shining through it and it brought me comfort. The light made the flowers come alive and I felt I could get on with it. My life.
Sometimes it is the little things but you have to be well enough in spirit to notice and take them in. And when I am, I am grateful for that, too.
(And thank you, Linda Sue.)
Glen had a Medicare wellness check with Dr. Zorn today and then he was off to the lake to nail up drywall. Lots and lots of drywall. Or sheetrock, same/same. Yesterday he spent all day long dealing with the vines and trees they cover in the border between our property and the church next door. And that is hard, hard work. Hot work. Insect-biting work. I do not know how the man does it.
He doesn't need a Medicare wellness check. He could just send in pictures of what he does in a day.
I wanted to go get my seeds for the fall and winter garden, as I said yesterday. Jessie met me at the nursery where they had a blood mobile set up for people to donate and she did that. Gift cards, a t-shirt, and a Coca-Cola were all rewarded to her! Of course that's not why she did it but it didn't hurt.
I wandered around a bit while she was getting blood syphoned out of her veins and I did not feel good. In fact, I felt like I was getting blood taken out of my body. Woozy and light-headed. This seems to be a new way my body likes to react to certain emotions and moods. This all started, as it so often does, in my teen years with migraines. Then an ulcer, and so on and so forth and I am constantly almost amused at what the mind-body connection can come up with for me.
Almost amused. Almost being the key word because what if it's not a body reaction to a mental state but instead, a symptom of oncoming sure death? How does one tell? Is it safe to ignore these probably psychosomatic symptoms or are they NOT psychosomatic and need attention?
This of course only adds to the anxiety and depression.
Oh, it's just a circus and I am the biggest clown in the tiny car.
But as soon as Jessie found me in the building where they sell seeds, I began to feel better immediately so I think we know what I was dealing with. We chitter-chattered about the seeds we wanted to buy, the possible new plants we wanted to try, the goings-on, the silly and the sad. I bought enough seeds for five gardens but this is what I always do. And of course every year I vow to plant less of everything. How many turnip plants does one family of two need? Especially when one of the two doesn't really like turnips that much. But I got my packets of collards and mustards, arugula, kale, carrots, sugar snap peas, and lettuces. I am going to plant chives this year and also rainbow Swiss chard which I mostly grow because when it is backlit by the setting sun it is so beautiful.
Nurseries are lovely, aren't they? I took a few pictures while Jessie was still getting blood drawn.
I did not buy one.
Sigh.
I didn't buy it. Non-buyers remorse?
My mind could not take in what he meant.
"One hundred and ninety-six dollars?" I asked.
"No. One dollar and ninety-six cents."
"But they're marked higher than that!" I said.
He shrugged.
"Yeah. Well."
I still can't believe it. I love old white damask napkins. They are so sturdy, can survive many, many washings, and can be used for things like lining a bowl to receive and cover bread.
And after all of that, I went to a giant shoe store and bought myself a new pair of walking shoes. The ones I've been wearing were bought online during the Covid lock-down. This says more about how much walking I've been doing in the past five years than it does about anything else, but here we are and I have new shoes in which to walk.
I believe I will go boil some tofu.