CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE EARLY KIND
photography BY BOB MIELKE
Garry was very gentle. He barely touched my shoulder. I was sleeping lightly … because I knew we had to get up early this morning.
A dawn encounter with a clogged toilet had seen to the light sleep, but also, we have a funeral to attend. A neighbor to see off into the next stop in the cycle … and we needed coffee first.
And had to give the dogs a little love before we go racing out of the house.
For once, it’s not a long journey. Just down the street. Don’t need a GPS or map. Show up looking reasonably put together. Merely a left out of the driveway, and keep going until we cross the rickety bridge into Rhode Island. Then look for the stone church on the right side with the white steeple.
My real morning encounter is Garry. Gently letting me know it’s time to get myself out of the warm huddle of blankets and dreams and hit the floor.
Garry does this well. He is a very soft waker-upper. No loud noises, no rousing choruses of anything. So I do not leap from the bed and try to tear his throat out. Because I love him, though early in the morning, I generally do not love anyone until after coffee.
Not him, not the dogs, not those endless telephone solicitors who seem to believe against all evidence to the contrary that they can actually sell me something before I’ve had my coffee.
Hello world. It’s black Friday, the day of the ultimate sales …and I’m done with my Christmas shopping. Except for the wrapping and some tree decorations. We’ve navigated Thanksgiving and the flow of life is rushing us to Christmas.
If we both keep body surfing the wave, I think we’ll make it. Time is rushing towards us and we merely have to stand still while it engulfs us.
Categories: #Photography, celebration, Family, Holidays, Humor
Clogged toilet AND a funeral to attend! Jeez!
LikeLike
Yeah. It was just one of those mornings. Today was a dog-howling-and it’s raining too, morning.
LikeLike
Christmas shopping for me has become a lot less since we moved to Tasmania. The nieces and nephews are older now and it’s harder to know what they would want. Certainly there is not much they need that we would have been able to afford to give. I send small gifts to a few friends and got into the habit of making charitiable gifts on behalf of family members. A donation towards school books for a teacher, donations towards wild animal funds for animal lovers, vaccinations for dogs for a dog lover. Everyone seems happy with this idea and it’s a gift that give twice, well three times really, the recipient, the relative and for me the pleasure of being able to support a good cause as donating is something that doesn’t happen as often now either. My only “real” gifts were for David and my sister. Sister’s present is all but sorted. I’m collecting small goodies to take on our holiday next year and presenting them in a gift box. I’ll only need to shop for doggie presents and cat presents too, cats are much harder to buy for than dogs :). I still send a few real Christmas cards. I’ve bought them so really should start writing them.
LikeLike
For us, retirement as mandated a drastic lowering of spending on every level. Fixed incomes are cruel masters. And, as it turns out, we have what we need. Anything we still need, we can’t afford. What we CAN afford, no one really needs. So we limit spending to small gifts for immediate family, one nice one for the granddaughter … and Garry and I wait until the clearance sales after Christmas and then, we go shopping … assuming we need anything. If we really needed it, we probably didn’t wait for Christmas anyhow.
LikeLike
Small gifts can be just as enjoyable to receive. We never spent a fortune on gifts. It is nice to have something to unwrap on Christmas morning even if it is only tennis balls for Cindy 🙂
LikeLike
It has turned out that for the most part, the small things are as much fun as the big ones used to be. It’s different when you have enough money to give them something life-changing, but it has been years since that was true. So now, I try to find something small, but fun. That’s as good as we can do and it has to be good enough.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I read and relate so well. Life doesn’t seem to care about OUR agenda.
It tries to nudge us .. wake us up … often not so gently.
LikeLike
How right you are! Life run us, not vice versa. If I ever believed I had any real control over events, I’ve long been disabused of that misbelief 🙂
LikeLike
We will have huge discounts after Christmas known as clearance sale. Christmas is just around the corner and I’m waiting desperately for the exercise to finish so that I can see my dear hubby every morning. It was long and killing practice camp this time. Enjoyed the photos and can feel the freshness and joy of festive season.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Happily, I’m done with my shopping and I did it all online, not a single trip to a mall (yay). We keep our holiday buying very small because we have to. It turns out you can spend only a little, but enjoy the same as ever.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I am so worried as Dec. approaches. So many birthdays and anniversaries to deal with. My budget remains tight. Waiting for the sale. Online shopping is big boon as we don’t have to stuck in traffic jams.
LikeLike
I have really cut down on the spending. We don’t have the money and it turns out, we enjoy the holiday more if we aren’t going broke celebrating.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Enjoyed the photo tour of a morning in Marilyn’s life. Loved the eyes on top of the hood. Chef Owen has some interesting morning-wear, also.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yes. The fashion choices were definitely entertaining 😉
LikeLiked by 1 person
we gave up on the entire process of gifts years ago when both mothers were still living, and each of them agreed that they had all the flannel nighties and wooly socks they would ever need and as my mother said at the time, if I want something, I go buy it. It also gave her a chance to accept graciously at this end and then tell all her friends that “my daughter doesnt’ want to exchange presents anymore.,” sigh. shrug. So she got points on both sides.
And I stopped sending cards long long ago when I realized most people were sending only when they got. Which really isnt the point, is it.
If I had a reason now to start up I’d find a reason to not do it. Impending poverty, allergies, anything…
LikeLiked by 1 person
I give my granddaughter something she needs … usually new boots … that no one else will get for her. My husband and I tell each other EXACTLY what we want, or we go after Christmas when there are clearance sales and buy something for ourselves that we want. Otherwise, gifts top out at about $20 per family member. Social Security doesn’t leave us a lot of latitude for big spending and life is already more expensive that we can legitimately afford. Garry finally gave up cards for all but his family. I send eCards to a few people. It’s nice not to dread Christmas because I know it’ll take me the whole year to recover … IF I recover!
LikeLike
I still send “real” cards but only to remaining family and close friends. My Mom used to spend a long day’s journey into night sending cards. She had wonderful penmanship that never faltered. Marilyn and I have simplified the gift thing – telling each other what we’d like. If affordable, it’s a go. I guess I’m too old for a Red Ryder Carbine although Marilyn did get me a little drone last year to ease my paranoia over a cabal of drones I believed to be following me everywhere.
LikeLike
I hate saying good by to old neighbours.
Leslie
LikeLike
Yes, especially since these days, we ARE old neighbors and there’s that little alarming ring of the scythe swinging a little too close.
LikeLiked by 2 people
Yup, that we are. So just get the most out of each day and be happy.
Leslie
LikeLike
We are the old people, the old neighbors and the couple that time forgot.
LikeLiked by 1 person
it just dawned on us, and my husband’s cousins, that since his aunt died he and I by default are the Older Generation. The Old Folks, and his cousins are just behind us by a few years. it is not a lot of comfort.
“Hand me mah cane, me back’s givin out again”.
LikeLiked by 1 person
A busy morning. And that was before the coffee. I am like you. My first thing I do is get a cup of coffee. Then I can get on with the day.
LikeLike
Coffee is the fuel of life!
LikeLike
At times you & Garry seem to be the busiest retired folk I know. 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
I know and I don’t understand why. We don’t do very much, but somehow, we’re always busy. It’s all the doctors visits.
LikeLike
Tell me about it, Bob!
LikeLike
That was a nice soothing read, although sorry about the funeral. We also have far too many at the moment, far too many. People I worked with, neighbours, colleagues, they were not young or old, just around Mr. Swiss and my age. Otherwise keep your Black Friday, we have been infiltrated with this new thing. I don’t even do Christmas shopping, Mr. Swiss and I sort of abolished it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Our Christmas shopping is very minimal and I’m already finished. I bought everything online this year and I keep most gifts to about $20, except the granddaughter gets something she really needs. Otherwise, Garry and I really buy ourselves what we really want, so we don’t need to get all crazy for birthdays or Christmas. It really takes a lot of the sting out of the holidays!
LikeLiked by 1 person
I enjoyed reading your ramble 😊
LikeLiked by 1 person
Thanks. It was rather rambling, wasn’t it 🙂
LikeLiked by 1 person
I enjoyed the ramble 🙂
LikeLike