Birthday happy hour at the cottage
left to right, me, Pru, Victor, and Jordan
Photo by Mary Dulle
I thought I was off-camera, hence no big smile.
You
know that old quip about growing older being better than the alternative? That’s
kind of how I feel tonight. Friends and family seem determined to mark that I
am about to begin yet another journey around the sun, and I am having a long,
drawn-out birthday. A pre-celebration weekend at the lake was followed by a
neighbors’ happy hour tonight where I was feted (love that word!) with a
bountiful charcuterie, plenty of wine, crème brulee, and lots of good
discussion. “The girls” as we call them turned our regular happy hour into a
truly festive occasion—and Pru’s husband, Victor, joined us so we weren’t all
gossipy girls.
This
happy hour has a history. Several years ago—I’d say six, seven or eight—Mary
Dulle and I used to go on Tuesday night to join several neighbors at the Old
Neighborhood Grill. Mary’s husband played—and still does—tennis on Tuesdays. When
Jacob was quite young, he joined us, and I have funny stories from those times:
like the time I asked if he wanted fries with his grilled cheese and he said
yes. But later when I asked if he was going to eat them, he said, “No, they’re
bad for you.” Pause. “May I have a cupcake?” He was quite the hit of the table.
There was
a regular group—the Alan Barrs, the Paul Harrals, Lyn Willis, and sometimes
others drifted by. Of course, at the Grill, you always saw other neighbors you
knew, and I was pleased that Tuesday was always meatloaf night. The staff knew
and welcomed us, and we all visited. One big neighborhood family.
Somehow
it fell apart—I’m not sure of the chronology. With severe hip pain,
pre-surgery, it was increasingly difficult for me to get out; Peter sold the Grill;
Jacob grew up. Mary and I fell into the habit of having happy hour at my
cottage, either inside or, depending on the weather, on the patio. Two or three
years ago (who keeps track of these things?), Prudence and her family moved
down the block from Mary. There was some unpleasant controversy over a fence,
zoning regulations, and flaring tempers. I reached out to Prudence to squelch
the unpleasantness and welcome her and her family—four children—to the
neighborhood. She came to happy hour one night, and boom! She was a regular.
And Jordan began to join us.
Now we
are a close-knit group, sharing joys, successes, worries, and more. During
pandemic, the others shopped for each other—whoever found Lysol shared it with
the group. We celebrate birthdays and other special occasions, but most Tuesday
nights we just gather for an hour of talk about whatever. I like it best when
we can sit on the patio, and truth be told, it’s cool enough these days, but
some of the others are more sensitive—or attractive—to mosquitoes than I am. So
tonight, we were indoors.
I am
blessed and grateful to have these women as friends who care enough to
celebrate with me.
And a
good day in other ways: Jacob played in a high school golf tournament today and
scored a 77. Pretty darn good for a fifteen-year-old, if you ask me who knows
nothing about golf. But even he, who is reluctant to ever say he had a good day
on the course, acknowledged it was pretty good and looked pleased when we
congratulated him.
And I
worked hard this morning and early afternoon, getting my neighborhood
newsletter almost done—now waiting on articles and reports from others—and got
my Lone Star Literary Life column for August drafted. A lot of detail, intensified
by several people who called with last-minute changes or corrections to their
contributions. Answering emails kept me busy much of the day. Tomorrow will be
a catch-up day as I finish details on the newsletter and edit the column. Plus
a bit of cooking.
Life
is good, and I am grateful to be growing yet another year older, because, yes,
it is much better than the alternative. For the record, the birthday is
Thursday, and I will be 83. I am so comforted by Wally Funk who rode Jeff Bezos’
rocket into space today—she’s 82. Of course, she had a lifelong ambition to travel
to space, something that is the farthest thing from my mind. Different strokes
for different folks.
4 comments:
Wishing you a happy, healthy year!
Thanks, Dede. So nice to be back in touch with you.
Happy Birthday Judy!! Many more! Jackie
Thanks, Jackie. It was a good day.
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