The Feeling of Home (Prompt 20)
Begging
the question here. Home ―
now or then? My parents' home or my domestic-era home? My current
home? Must wing it, then.
In
olden days the start of school holidays was when the train from
Winnipeg pulled into the Port Arthur station, signalling I was home.
The heart would feel almost like bursting from happiness. Back in
God's country. That's what we called it. The feeling never
abated.
Then
there were these:
Life gifted me.
Home
was our century farm where they grew up. Horses, ponies, cattle,
pigs, sheep, chickens, pheasants, peacocks, turkeys, capons, guinea
fowl, rabbits, have I forgotten anything? Oh yes, assorted dogs and
cats. Summer corn roasts; winter Christmas-tree cutting parties; the
MerriMar maple syrup business; 4-H for ponies and sheep; Prince
Phillip Games; trucks; tractors; hay baling; rock picking;
boyfriends; drivers' licences. Well, they could tell you much more
than I.
Now,
home is my writing cave of desirable, mostly splendid
solitude. Well-deserved rest as I see it. Substituting Lake Ontario
for Lake Superior, I'm good.
Hobbies
(Prompt 21)
Growing
up, ballet school was not exactly a hobby, it was five days a week of
hard work after school. No time left for hobbies, I was clearly a
social misfit. Maybe school was a hobby. Although I dabbled with
writing poetry, drawing cartoons, collecting LPs, and inventing
pranks to harass teachers.
Late
insertion: Cripes, how could I forget. Sewing. Something good
inherited from my grandmother and mother. Never thought of it as a
hobby, though. It was thoroughly satisfying craftsmanship, creating
half my kids' clothes and some of my own for years. I miss that old
sewing machine, especially when I need curtains or to alter
ill-chosen fashion mistakes!
Genealogy
became a hobby, then a lifesaving job.
Currently
could we call camels a hobby? Could be going full-circle to social
misfittedness.
Daily
Routine(s) (Prompt 22)
Growing
up, my father had a routine. Breakfast at 8, lunch at noon, dinner at
6. I'm guessing that was pretty much my mother's routine by default!
We kids just fell in line. Now I eat at noon and about 9 pm. Okay,
confessing to popcorn/junk food break (cue furtive chortle).
My
routine:
That
comes close to nailing it. Thank you,
free-floating Facebook sources and Genevieve Rhode wherever you are.
Boarding
school ingrains two morning things: You make your bed, you get
dressed. Or vice-versa. You do it at once, every day. Without fail.
Like the army. You don't even have to think when you are putting on
the same uniform each morning. Excellent training to become an
obsessive-compulsive.
Nowadays,
a little variation is required. Getting up is about the same, maybe
with a few extra groans. Getting dressed requires coffee for
stability on the hind legs and to facilitate decision-making about
what exactly to wear. Unless, of course, that was compulsively
decided the night before to avoid heavy thinking first thing. Like if
you never throw out the clothes from twenty years ago, there are
wardrobe choices to debate and slow you down (should do something
about that to increase efficiencies). More coffee is required before
the bed gets made. Scrolling Facebook is like a tune-up to test how
many neurons are blinking. Then to work. Or fitness class, if the
daytimer says so.
Ah
well, structure and discipline are necessary but routines are a
rather dull topic. Mine starts disintegrating after the daily walk in
a futile attempt to blow off the brain fog. Looking with interest at
the FitBit trend. I will say I never leave home without the earrings
in. I'm not dressed unless.
©
2014 Brenda Dougall Merriman
2 comments:
Loved this!
I am the same way with the earrings!
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