Monthly Archives: December 2017

Another cold day

A coyote trotted along that fence line yesterday. Two sightings in a month! He was about Finn’s size, in seeming good health, and headed who knows where. I texted my neighbor to make sure their cat, Max, was inside. He was.

This cold spell makes a New Englander grateful for shelter. And for gloves, cars with heat, boots, down coats, felted hats, and fireplaces. Yesterday as I ran out for bagels and lox for the boys (you can’t beat Rosenthal’s!), I worried about the homeless. How awful this must be for them!

Tomorrow at the Patriots’ Home game, they are allowing blankets. Better yet, the team has offered to collect and launder the blankets afterwards and donate them to The Pine Street Inn — a day shelter in town. K and son number two will be watching from the comfort of our couch. Son number one will be back in sunny California.

Yesterday it was potato leek soup. Today it will be chicken, ginger, noodle and chic pea with tumeric. A restorative brew!

Back to basics

There are a few more slipper days remaining but it’s back to basics here. The tree will come down today and two flights west are on the near-calendar.

The bitter cold continues but that’s okay. Up in New Hampshire a new record low was recorded on Mt Washington with a jaw dropping -34! (Sometimes K reads part of the news aloud).

We have wood and we have heat (unlike our neighbor whose upstairs is frigid. The oil trucks are out front of their house again). And though it’s mostly leftovers now, the fridge is still impossibly full.

Not a bad way to end the year.

the Irish goodbye

The Irish goodbye is a thing, you know. I’d done it, more or less, my entire life before finding that out.

What is the Irish goodbye? It’s the swift, some would say ungracious, nonverbal exit from company — often well before a social event’s natural end point.

My husband sometimes accommodates me. Last night, all I had to say was, “time to go” and in a matter of minutes, we were donning our coats and inhaling the bracing December air.

When you consider how much we would’ve had to interrupt our hosts in order to say ‘goodnight’ and ‘thank you’ — it’s not THAT ungracious a maneuver. I sent a beautiful picture and note by email this morning, along with a dinner invite for January. I’m not a monster!

You have to understand — this internal, possibly genetically-imparted pressure has absolutely nothing to do with the society involved. Last night’s party, for instance, was filled with folks I don’t get to see much anymore. People I really, really like. Interesting people.

Plus, there was a long dining table sagging with a glorious array of home-cooked dishes. You don’t always get that at gatherings.

No, it’s my disposition — some weird mix of ADD, impatience, and thorough-going introversion (recall the touchstones of an introvert — energized by solitude, drained by company).

And, just so you know, sometimes I accommodate my husband, generally when visiting his family. My in-law’s style of goodbye is the polar opposite of the Irish goodbye. Picture long, drawn out exchanges, often on the driveway with coats on and motors running. Future plans are outlined, routes home discussed. Entire conversations rise and fall, then rise and fall again. There are hugs and more hugs. I married into such a kind and considerate family!

Where am I during that second round of hugs, you ask? Often sitting in the car preparing to deal with my husband’s abject failure to abide by a generous, pre-arranged limit.

Fortunately, there is humor and self-acceptance in all of this. That’s the really, really good news.

Days and wondering

Happy Solstice everyone! Boys due home the day after tomorrow and much prep left, so I’ll also take this opportunity to wish you a Happy New Year!

And to ask a question.

After literally feeling sick watching Maddow yesterday, today I heard a new blog title in my head : Pattern and Refuge.

And it makes me want to ask, although there is no getting away from the current political mess, where do you find Sanctuary?

The kitchen remains a place of refuge and solace for me. Today, it’s a hearty vegetable soup.