essays on life...by me

Author: Hilarie Page 20 of 31

Jungle fever

Saturday morning, 5 am. I awake all sweaty, my head hurts and I have a massive sore throat. I lay there for awhile in the bed, taking stock of how my body feels. Finally I get up, go into the kitchen and down a couple of Alvedon with a glass of water. I go back to bed to wait for the pills to kick in.

7am – I’m awake again- still with a serious headache and that sore throat. I decide to stay up, have some breakfast. Tea with lemon and honey and two slices of buttered toast. Still feel like crap though. Still sweaty but I can’t decide if I’m hot or cold. Restless but not enough energy to do anything. I sit down with Facebook for a bit but I’m bored and don’t want  to sit at the desk.

All day Friday, the rain came down. Jungle rain – warm, windless and continuous, coming straight down. We were planning on going out to the countryside this weekend. Its been several weeks since we were there and the grass needs mowing.  Håkan needed to work all day Friday at his client’s place so maybe just for Saturday and Sunday. They predicted sunny weather on Saturday.

But we decide to skip the countryside for this weekend, too. Håkan has work to do. Bevin doesn’t really want to go and I’m sick. And it would be too wet out there anyway to mow the grass. So we stay home and everyone goes off to their individual corners.

I still don’t feel well. I can’t decide what to do – should I take a shower, should I get dressed, should I go to the food store, should I do something? I give up. The day is so grey and the rain is still pouring down. I decide to give up any intentions of accomplishing something and go back to bed with my book. I read for awhile but the black letters keeps turning grey and fuzzy. I put the book aside and close my eyes. The french doors are open a tad. I doze, listening to the sound of the rain – louder than tinnitus. Jungle rain.

Its sooooo green

It was almost 20 years ago when we first came out here to Stavsnäs, the country property my husband’s parents first bought, back in the early 50s.

The old sofa

One of the many things we found out here was a teak, outdoor sofa that was very much in need of love. One of the first summers here, in between my many other duties as a mother of a young child, I spent a lot of hours sanding and oiling that sofa. For many years now, it has been one of the main pieces of outdoor furniture we have out here. We would store it indoors during the winter and take it out again when we came out here the following spring. There it would be, first on the deck outside our little house and for the past 4 years on the deck outside the new big house. Each year it would sit, soaking up the rain and drying out in the sun and one year, when we didn’t get to put it inside, even withstanding the snow. But all those years of use had taken their toll. Our once lovely bench had turned grey and rough and no longer so pleasant to sit on. So, yestarday, I decided to spend some time fixing it up again. It didn’t take as much sanding as it did 20 some-odd years ago but the oiling took longer since the oil I had was old and needed to be applied very carefully. Now, it can once again sit on the deck, dark and smooth and warm to the touch.

It’s hard to believe that so much time has gone by since I first came out here – to the Swedish countryside. I have spent many hours sitting on that bench looking out at the growing things on our property. I believe my husband often felt guilty dragging his New York City wife out of the city, first on his sailboat and then later out to his childhood’s summer paradise.  Those early years, on the sailboat, I kept up my standards. My nails were polished, I wore eye makeup and I didn’t go anywhere without my earrings. I have to admit that walking through spider webs when going ashore to tie up the boat was icky but I did it. Once the boat was anchored, I managed to crouch down on the rock cliffs next to the little grill we set up to grill on. Then, when Bevin came along, we switched from the boating life to livet på landet. There we spent our summers, in 25 square meters of house – with an outhouse to use instead of indoor plumbing. I washed dishes, outside, next to the house wall, sometimes in the sunshine and often in the rain. Wearing my first pair of green rubber boots, I used my new weed-wacker to force some semblance of civilization onto the growing things surrounding us. When the poop buckets got filled and needed to be switched I did that too. And when we were forced to compost our own poop, Håkan bought and assembled a latrine compost container and I emptied 6 poop barrels into it, garbed in old clothes, rubber boots and plastic gloves. I then washed out the empty barrels with the garden hose and left them to dry on the lawn in the sun. By now, I hardly even complain about it anymore, though of course it wouldn’t be me if I didn’t complain a little bit. I still need to go back once a week to the city, to our apartment, to wash clothes, to check mail and to wash my hair in a shower that the wind doesn’t blow through and where the warm water lasts long enough.

I sit on my bench and I look up at the tall tree tops, the birches, the oak, and the pines – I watch the way the leaves move in the wind. I listen to the sound they make as they move. I watch the birds as they fly by or as they peck at the ground, hopping around. Sometimes a deer comes by. I watch the few flowers we have planted as they open to the sun. My three ölandstok bushes have burst out into bloom just last week and that gives me pleasure to look at them. Proud that I planted them and glad that they still are alive.

Long ago, before Sweden, I was visiting my friend Tom and his wife Wally up at their country house in the Catskills. Their idea of a fun thing to do on a sunny afternoon was to pile everyone into their minivan – themselves in the front and me and the dogs on the back seat and then drive around on the county roads up there in the Catskill Mountains. Up and down and around we drove. Passing unkempt houses with 3 or 4 broken down cars on the front lawn. Sometimes small, quiet villages too. Looking down into deep valleys and up to tall tree covered mountains. The goal I think was to get to some cafe or something, eventually. After about two or three hours of this, sitting in the back, fighting for seat space with the dogs, I just had to complain. I asked them in the front seat, for certainly the upteenth time, “When are we going to get there?” meaning the cafe. And when they turned to me and asked me, “Whats the matter? Aren’t you enjoying this – looking out at the nature?” My response to that was, ” Weeeeell, its OK, but its just soooo green!” To this day, they have never let me forget that.

So now as I sit on my newly oiled bench, I look out at all the green around me. I have no makeup on. My fingernails are cut short and unpolished. I have a very unflattering pair of sweatpants on, a black tank top and a red cotton shirt with paint splashes on it and my feet are filthy. The city seems so far away. I hear its call but dimly. The wish to have nice shoes on and be dressed in a great summer dress, to have my face on and earrings too, while I walk along city streets looking in all the shop windows, is still there. There is definitely a part of me that misses that life. Perhaps the fact that as I walk along the city streets I’m now surrounded by a lot of 20- and 30-something girls who look so great in their summer clothes and I am now a 60-something old lady (though people tell me, a very well preserved 60-something) who just can’t compete with all those lovely young things, makes me less willing to want to be there.

With love

So now I’m content for the moment to sit on my 30-year-old rejuvenated bench and watch the eternally old and eternally new, ever changing face of Nature surrounding me.

While deep down inside me is still that memory of my New York-self, I no longer mind just sitting and looking out at all that green.

A new itis

There is a new illness going around and its killing off the joys of conversation.

I love to talk, as anyone who knows me, can attest to. Some people might say I talk too much. Some people might claim that it’s just arguing that I like to do. But, I like discussing things, ideas, anything. I like to experience the back and forth banter between two or more people – like a tennis match or like a good game of ping pong. Back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. I think that the back and forthing connects people together. It doesn’t really matter what is being talked about or discussed – just the simple act of tossing words over the net and hitting them back with a clever response is the connecting factor. Even if the banter turns into an argument it is still connecting the two participants. Unless of course someone takes out a gun.

While there have been a lot of conversations that I have forgotten over the years, there are still quite a few that I remember. A lot of the more recent ones often start out and run along like this:

“I just saw a great movie the other day. It had what’s-her-name in it. You know, the one who was married to that guy in that film about the mafia? What was his name.”

Oh yeah, I heard about that movie – his name was David something. Did you enjoy it? It had some actor in it who was in some sort of scandal when the police came to his house, right. Was it in London or LA?”

“It was in LA. He was found with that woman in the Western, her name was Jane something.”….. she used to be married to that musician.”

“Yeah, right, the one in that rock band.”

The conversation continues on like this until all the names of people and movies and places are finally figured out by however many people are participating in the discussion. Each participant contributes what little or more knowledge they can to the match. However ditzy the conversation sounds it connects people together. Everyone feels like they are contributing and are participatory and everyone comes away with a bit more knowledge than when the conversation first started.

But now there is a killer on the loose. And it has found a willing host just waiting to spread this new disease into each and every conversation it comes into contact with. The willing host bares a similarity to Sergeant Joe Friday. You remember him, from the old Dragnet series on TV. He was the character in that show who’s famous line was always, “Give me the facts–just the facts.” Well, this new host specimen just wants the facts too – it isn’t interested in conversation or feelings or “I think”s or conjecture of any kind. Just the facts and don’t waste my time with anything else.

The new disease is Googlitis. It is spread by hand-held Smart Phones and through Joe-Friday-like host-bodies.  A converstion might start with, “I just saw that new movie with Brad Pit in it. Whats its name.” The contagion-riddled host picks up his disease-infected smart phone and taps into Google.com and within seconds we know that the film is named Inglourious Basterds. We know who is in it, what their characters are named and what other movies they have been in. END OF CONVERSATION! Now there is nothing to talk about – and as soon as someone mentions something with any form of doubt, the infected person with the smart phone has all the answers.

My husband suffers from this and I admit I am feeling very susceptible to this disease. I have found myself often looking his way and wordlessly imploring him to pick up his smart phone and tell me the information that is just on the tip of my tongue but I can’t seem to find. It is a very insidious disease. I’m beginning to feel like I am in the middle of that Science Fiction film – from the 1950s –  when pods land and take over people – what’s it called? Oh no!! I’ve done it! I just went to Google.com on this computer and Googled for the movie name – Invasion of the Body Snatchers. I’m infected……..

The fuschia coat

Hi Mom, Did you see me? I was wearing that bright fuschia jacket. You remember –  the lightweight down one which you used to wear as a winter coat. I never had a chance to ask you if I could take it back with me to Sweden. You had already left by then, but I figured that you wouldn’t mind my taking it. Its more like a jacket on me and it’s been perfect for the chilly Spring and early Summer days we’ve been having here in Stockholm. I never had a chance to say it, but thanks Mom.

I think about you a lot since those days back in December. Every time I’ve worn that jacket I’ve said a silent Hi Mom. But, mostly,  in the evenings, when dinner is done and I haven’t quite decided what to do next, I think of you. I remember how every evening, for the past 4 or 5 years, I would think “Okay, I have to call my mother now”. I admit that it wasn’t always a pleasant thought – it was more like a chore – something I felt I had to do. I always called you, because it was more difficult for you to be able to call me here in Sweden. Since you got sick and had to leave your beloved house in Homestead and moved into Monroe Village, the kind of conversations we would have weren’t really about much of anything anymore – just superficial chatter, both of us trying to be cheerful.  Before I would start up Skype I sat for a bit to try to think of cheerful things I could tell you about my life here in Stockholm.

Back when I was still young and living in New York, I called you quite frequently – just to chat or to ask you your opinion, or how to do something or just quite simply as a sounding board for some of my own thoughts. But I wasn’t able to have those kinds of discussions with you much anymore. Mainly I called just to make sure you were still answering the telephone.  I also was trying to edit what I talked to you about. I tried to only tell you good things – to cheer you up – so you wouldn’t worry about me. Successes Bevin was having in school, what I was working on at work, the funny things our cat had done and what I was making for dinner. If potatoes were involved in the dinner, I always made sure to tell you. You liked hearing about us eating potatoes. I know you tried not to ask but you always wanted to know if I would be coming to visit and when. I know it saddened you when I had to say that I wouldn’t be able to come visit until later. Sometimes I would hear the regret in your voice that you were no longer able to come to see us anymore but I would say, that’s OK we would come to visit you. Later.

If I wanted to discuss something from the past it seemed like you couldn’t remember what I was referring to or maybe it was just that you  didn’t want to remember that long ago. Your days had become a routine of indignities and infirmities and I think you were trying to protect me from hearing about them – to keep me from worrying. And you were always trying to be positive and cheerful too. You would never tell me if you had fallen or hurt yourself. I often found that out much later. I was so glad when you met Marty. The world changed then for you. You had something to look forward to each day and to brighten your life. And when it got really tough the last year, he was always there to be with you. I am so grateful for that. You weren’t so alone.

Its summer now, I’m on vacation and we are at our summer place. A few days ago I was wearing a short-sleeved, navy blue cotton cardigan over my tank top. That was also yours – found in your closet, never worn. I wear it now – its perfect for Swedish summer and I’ll wear the fuschia coat in the winter. That way a part of you is with me all year round.

Page 20 of 31

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