Be careful what you ask for

LZP sent me a link to the New Peeps highlighted here and started talking about all sorts of fun experiences with the little guys and asked for his input. Well, he sent back an idea that seems at first rather non-scary, but once the image was in my mind, I find myself going AAAAAAAUUUUUUUGGGGGGHHHHHHH.

The suggestion: Peeps with gravy. Do yourself a favor; don’t imagine it. Yes, I know, it’s too late.

March 1st: Looks like I flubbed the link when first published. Let’s see if I’ve fixed it.

Beauty sleep

I went to sleep very late last night, actually this morning – mostly due to someone wanting to talk and then reading, which I had just earlier cautioned Der Bingle about. I woke about six and figured, okay, I’d get on with the day. I changed my mind; I’d give it an hour. My body changed my mind more – I woke to exclaim: HOLY MOSES! IT’S 8:30.

I’m calling it beauty sleep, but common sense calls my bluff and I am not turning on the computer camera and taking a picture of myself. At least I’m awake enough now to not be totally stupid.

Yesterday?

I may or may not have done anything yesterday besides sit around thinking I should be doing something. Today is starting out the same. It may be a phase . . . or the start of a urinary tract infection.

No more jokes; I just remembered what happened last evening that I think I have tried to repress. On the way over to the nursing home, approaching an awkward curving railroad overpass, the speed limit drops. I was at the end of a line of cars, not overly close together, when I realized we were slowing way down. I’ve seen a lot of police cruisers parked along my routes lately and I immediately thought a driver ahead had spotted one.

The slowdown was more than a nonchalantly “you didn’t see me, officer” thing. Car distances closed
and there was minor swerving; but on that stretch of road, on that overpass approach, you don’t swerve much – you just can’t. All I could see out the windshield was the back of the car in front of me. Then I heard something hit my wheel; I thought a frozen clod of snow had fallen from the undercarriage of a car; I glanced in the rear window immediately and saw an animal, I think a dog, lying on the road. I wasn’t the first to hit it, but I don’t know if it was already dead when I did.

A guy in a pick up had already pulled over; Mrs. Feller was waiting for me. I went on, just like they say – life goes on, but, damn it, sometimes it should pause.

Refrigerator and amethyst

We cleaned the refrigerator today, a somewhat daunting task. In a day or so, we will will attack the freezer side.

When I was a very little girl, before I could even remember, I started the habit of running my fingers along the satin on my blanket. My dad dubbed it “the feeler.” It is a habit that has stayed with me, and my mother said that were I to die before her, she would see to it that I was buried with a ribbon laced in my fingers.

I have an amethyst necklace of polished oblong stones that was a present from Der Bingle. I have found myself wearing it more and more often because I have discovered running my fingers over it is not unlike the sensation of the calming and relaxing “feeler.” After scrubbing the refrigerator free of spilled gunk, the amethyst was most appreciated.

A winter walk

I was asked to go for a walk today and so I did. We picked, when we could, sidewalks that had been cleared and as we neared Main Street, I wondered aloud what was playing at the local theater. So we trudged on a bit, turned a corner and saw the Marquee: %0 Shades of Gray and Spongebob 2. The word checker doesn’t like Spongebob, but it says gray is okay; I’m wondering if it is grey. I spell it one way sometimes and the other way on occasions. So now I’m going to have to look up the movie title on my computer and, of course, the Internet will flag me for ads for it . . . and who knows what else.

Of course, being flagged for Spongebob is a tad unsettling as well.

To Fort Wayne

I am off to Fort Wayne today, on an errand to take someone to a doctor’s appointment. It will be cold, but not supposed to snow. And that is what I have been reduced to – minutiae and weather reporting. Probably not a good sign.

Someone found another one of Shane’s Wubbas – under something or behind something or stuck down in a crevice. I was speaking of him the other day, about his death that came so suddenly and unexpectedly. I have for some reason gathered so many people and connections and memories in that dog. The newly-surfaced, but half-chewed Wubba caused my throat to constrict and two tears to run down my cheeks.

They call them Aussie Heart Dogs because of the asymptomatic time bomb in their hearts; I think there is another component to the name. The defect breaks your own heart, over and over again. All he ever did was love people and clown around.

People tell me Shane’s gone and he’s not coming back, and while I understand it, the tears still come and I long for that soft warm fur in which I could snuggle my face.

Not a very brave post, not upbeat, not forward-looking. Still I find mourning Shane comforts me, as if I am sending a message to him of love.

Not my usual day

I have, I believe, looked at an Internet news page once today. I watched a movie starring John Travolta, Bruce Willis and Samuel Jackson while sitting in front of a fire. I listened to music on my phone, sticking it into a glass to enhance the speaker. I read most of a book, finding some parts boring and thereby emphasizing one limitation of the Kindle – you cannot grab a handful of pages and just flip them over. But I managed.

I would have liked to have gone for a long, vigorous walk but we have a windchill alert. I did not do many things that I normally do routinely. Perhaps it is a “change” that is little discussed but follows after the well-discussed change of life experience. More than likely it is a fluke.

I am due to think of a word in a Words With Friends game. I will try to do that now. I am enduring a word block – not to be associated with writer’s block – although this short, boring post may reveal a connection.

A sign?

Yesterday, Der Bingle and I had decided to watch something via the Apple TV and he aimed the remote at the television. My computer was sitting on the coffee table in front of us, supposedly sleeping, when we heard music coming from it. After looking back and forth at each other and the computer, one of us bravely reached out and touched it . . . and opened it.

The song it started playing then was “I found Jesus on the jailhouse floor.”