I open my eyes this morning still moored to a fading dream, not fully awake, not fully asleep. One of my legs escaped the tangled sheets in the middle of the night and the crisp morning air assaults my bare thigh. Transparent dreams pull at me as the day struggles to take hold and now I am more here than there.
Soon I will release myself to the demands of the day but in my opinion, the only reason the day wins is coffee.
Just thinking about it makes my mouth water for a dark, hot, amber liquid that never tastes like it smells. I can almost feel the bitter, pungent, phenolic flavors roll over my tongue as I breathe in the smoky aroma.
This might be considered an overly enthusiastic response to a mere liquid but I didn’t think so.
A deep breath actuates a series of dry coughs, asthma-related, not COVID. The air quality up at the lake has been hovering in the highly toxic zone for several days, where everyone experiences serious health effects if exposure is prolonged, but the Bay Area is just as bad.
We’re surrounded by raging infernos, an oddly flawless parody of my life, I checked for air masks on Amazon, but they’re out of stock. Figures.
Clearly the force is not strong with me as I try and manifest a cup of coffee with my thoughts. Soon I’ll be compelled to get up and forge for myself. #sacrifices
The bed is still warm where my three year old granddaughter snuggled with me in the wee hours of the morning, playing with my hair, her soft movements familiar against my skin. She left with Nono some time ago and I let myself drift back to sleep.
We dream too big or not at all, we walk a thin line and try our hands at the things we hope can save our lives. Allison Marie Conway.
Minutes later I hear the door open, Audrey climbs up onto my bed, she has the same look, here, but not fully awake.
She says something profound in her soft sleepy voice, “you want to play high lows Grammie?”
The wisdom of these words will eventually hit me, but at the moment I smile and say, “with only a scrap of the day with which to choose I believe my high and low are one and the same.”
She gives me the look (that must be hereditary) and says, “Bunk’d started a new season, you want to watch it with me?”
“Sure,” (this is absolutely the last thing I want to do) and the coffee has yet to evince itself. She finds the remote on the nightstand, and with a click of a button, she weaves through the options until her show appears on the screen.
I would prefer to stay cocooned in the sheets, wrapping myself in the silky quiet, my thoughts weaving in and out of range, tantalizing my senses, rippling across the infinite expanse of my mind as if water. I lean towards the dramatic when I’m neither here nor there.
Instead, I’m listening to an abrasive camp counselor school a child on the etiquette of apologizing when you’re clearly in the wrong. Oh, that is rich.
I want to write. I’m starving for words and I can no longer hold out for coffee. The bed frame is super high, I have to jump off the mattress to reach the floor, I don’t know why but it occurs to me that this will be a struggle when I’m 80.
Grabbing my computer by the chair in the family room, I tuck it under my arm, and head to the kitchen, reaching into the back of the cupboard for my favorite mug, filling it to the brim before returning to the screech of the television, an impossibly high mattress, and my lovely granddaughter.
Opening my MacBook in my lap, I wait for the words to come, but with Bunk’d as my backdrop, my muse remains suspiciously quiet.
Cassandra Clare says we live and breathe words…they made me feel that perhaps I was not completely alone. They could be honest with me, and I with them. Reading your words, what you wrote, how you were lonely sometimes and afraid, but always brave; the way you saw the world, its colors and textures and sounds, I felt–I felt the way you thought, hoped, felt, dreamt. I felt I was dreaming and thinking and feeling with you.
This is why everyone should write.
I must have started three different storylines on this blank page, deleted all of them, you wouldn’t believe me if I told you. The truth can often be stranger than fiction. Brene Brown says we are all imperfect, wired for struggle, but worthy of love and belonging. That might be debatable?
Relationships are all bliss and blisters, we know exactly what buttons are capable of obliterating the emotional landscape, which on occasion we arrogantly push, knowing the fallout is unamendable. Allison Marie Conway says time passes and you arrange yourself into the habits and kinks, making of commitment and attraction as nuanced a cocktail as you can divine.
Feels more like a burr in my shoe but I’ll go with a cocktail on principle.
I’m exhausted from weeks of workshops designed to expose my biases, hidden prejudices, and expedite my zoom skills so I’m ready to manage my classes next week. I feel raw, defenseless, vulnerable. My focus is as unstable at our internet.
“Strange, I thought, how you can be living your dreams and your nightmares at the very same time.” Ransom Riggs
Have you ever had the unsettling desire to be somewhere else, to be someone else, or maybe just live in an alternative universe? Someplace not infected with a virus, smoke, and vast discord. Is that asking too much?
The smoke is thick as molasses, my asthma has gone from disconcerting to dire, and I’m suddenly grateful to have left an old inhaler up here years ago. Shaking it fiercely, I spray the mist into my mouth, and attempt to hold my breath. Standing in front of the bathroom mirror I search for evidence of tight muscles relaxing their hold on my belabored airways. If only we had a spray for relaxing irritating people? I even have a name for it. Detoximen, it’s actually a suppository. Perfect.
Holding unanswerable questions is not my forte and I consider if a long walk, a break from blogging, a good book, or a glass of wine will restore me?
I am here but I want to be there.
As Audrey’s potent words return to my mind, “high low Grammie?” I realize I didn’t stop to think a little deeper about the difference between the beginning of a minute and the end, it has the capacity to change everything.
I’m Living in the Gap, I am here, but want to be there.
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