Autumn is singular.
It is the only time of the year with a name and an “aka.” You can always predict the exact moment
autumn arrives. We do not ease into this
season as with the others. It accosts
the world precisely at 8:00 a.m. on the first day of school. It is abrupt and unmistakable and startling.
Its entrance is heralded annually by a homogenous collection
of children sporting new clothes, new backpacks, new braces, and new teeth –
all under a canopy of sun-streaked hair and bronzed faces. In attendance are mothers sporting tears and
relief.
Summer careened by with cold-blooded speed, leaving my
catalog of well-intentioned adventures woefully undischarged.
I do not sleep well the night prior to the beginning of
school. Never did. I’m preoccupied perfecting my saber-rattling
and flapping my excessive arm flab to ward off bad karma regarding my
tribe. I once saw a warning posted on a
trail we were hiking in Washington. It
read: “BEWARE! There are new elk calves all along the Hoh
River trail. You may be perceived as a
predator. If you are chased by the
mother, run until she stops chasing you…and then a little further.” The same can be said about grandmas. Personally, I’d rather hazard an encounter
with a whole herd of mother elk than confront one protective matriarch.
Anyway, Monday morning, as per tradition, I arose at an
insomniacally imbecilic hour and prepared for this annual rite of passage. I successfully fogged a mirror without
cracking it, so I felt confident enough about my personal body mass to
proceed. I dressed quickly and hurried
to meet my grandkids for the tri-generational migration to school.
All week I’d rehearsed my taut, maternal
“everything’s-going-to-be-all-right/aren’t-we-having-fun?” smile, but only
succeeded in looking like an over-caffeinated Cheshire cat.
Upon seeing each child safely into class, I loitered outside
the rooms, my heart a little bruised.
This year is the same as all years prior…but not quite.
And then I went home to try to dislodge the smile that
spasmodic muscles held unrelentingly frozen.
And re-gain my equilibrium.
I’m unclear just how to re-gain one’s equilibrium. It’s so easily lost, but not found.
So I asked Auntie Fern, my darling 96-year-old aunt whom I
adore, what her secret is. How does she
stay healthy, centered, balanced, harmonious?
She is the Dorrity Family Yoda.
Surely, she has THE ANSWER.
Without a moment’s hesitation, she replied, “Prune juice.”
Not sure I had heard correctly, I asked incredulously,
“Prune juice?”
She reiterated with enthusiastic accentuation, “PRUNE.
JUICE.”
Then she launched into an infomercial endorsement of this
magical elixir, this nectar of the gods, with unrestrained rapture, making
claims of health benefits worthy of Sham Wow testimonials!
Well, who am I to take issue with someone who once changed
my diapers? She has always been my mentor, my consultant, my tutor. Why, once she explained the technique of
wringing the neck of a chicken with such vivid, graphic clarity, complete with
appropriate hand gestures, sound effects, and chicken-face miming, that my
nerves were left in tatters, and I went clammy. I threatened to go vegen. “Colonel Sanders” is now the anti-foul, and
“chicken tenders” a vulgarity.
Auntie Fern assured me that my life would not only have
harmony, but regularity. And harmony and
regularity constitute equilibrium.
Well, I was convinced.
I became a believer. It all
sounded so simple, and never at any time of my life do I need harmony and
regularity more than I do now. I became
a juice-totin’, hand-clapping, hallelujah-singing convert of “The Potion.”
I sipped from the grail.
At first, nothing happened.
I began to suspect that I’d been a casualty of gullibility and a
delusional aunt.
But then – Harmony hit Regularity with a vengeance. I couldn’t leave the house for three
days. Auntie Fern was right. I have never been healthier. Being quarantined, I wasn’t exposed to a germ
– or another human being – for nearly a week.
Ergo, I never contracted a cold, West Nile virus, or the plague.
“The Cure,” however, can be isolating and solitary, and I am
a reluctant recluse. So I now sing the
praises of the prune with diminished vigor.
That’s powerful stuff.
You can’t control it. You can
only adjust.
So I think from now on I will seek equilibrium from
alternative sources than from juice that could blister paint.
Recently, I saw a card with a wise man sitting atop a
mountain. He says, “Life is simple. We are born.
We have birthdays. We
shrink.”
Shrink, heck. I
shrivel. I am beginning to resemble a
prune.
But I’ve also heard it said that the wrinklier the prune,
the sweeter the fruit. I will own that.
I will search for
equilibrium in other places. I am
tired. I will sit in the autumn sun, let
my mind wander, and listen to my thoughts, should any materialize. I will procrastinate. I will pursue coherency and see if I can
establish a new pattern. And claim my
own space.
I will contemplate the efficacy of a diet of chicken and
prune juice. And I will trust that
autumn will bring renewed balance, solace and equilibrium in all things
familiar.
2 comments:
thanks for the prune juice warning.
you looked so pretty yesterday. xox
You so amaze me. I LOL on this one. Especially the part about your 96 year old Aunt. We should get both our aunts together and I am sure we would be laughing forever. My Aunt will turn 99 on the 19th. I ;oved all of your thoughts on your first day school adventure. You are such a brave one. I am glad the prune juice worked. However, I am not going to try that one. How about lunch soon?
Hugs!
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