My amaryllis today
on my messy desk
My
amaryllis is glorious today and a great source of cheer during this snap of winter
in Texas, although today was sunny and bright. Subie’s amaryllis story is not
so happy, although I understand she has a second plant. Jordan and I gave her
one for Christmas (she is hard because her birthday is just before Christmas,
and I am sometimes stretched to choose two imaginative gifts). So we saw amaryllis
on sale in November, and I thought it was perfect for one or the other of those
occasions.Subie's amaryllis
Recently
she told me when she opened it, it had already bloomed—in the box. There were
stubs at the stalk where the blooms had been and died. I was embarrassed to say
the least, but she saw the bright side—the plant was growing a new plant. She
plans to leave it in the pot and see what it does. I’ve never heard of one doing
that before.
And on
the subject of plants, the orchid Subie brought me went into the house today to
what I consider Christian’s orchid hospital. He has a remarkable record of
getting them to bloom a second and third time. This one had a lovely striated
cream-colored petal with a dark purple center. The thing is I sometimes have to
remind him that a certain plant that is reblooming needs to come back to the
cottage. The main house has two west-facing greenhouse windows in the kitchen,
and orchids love it there.
Cabin
fever got me yesterday. These are the things I did not do: write my daily
quota on my work-in-progress; get dressed; make my bed; cook my supper; do my
exercises. These are the things I did do: spent the day in the clothes I slept
in (Jordan would frown); took a long nap; reheated frozen leftovers for my
supper; spent way too much time on Facebook; started reading a new mystery, the
eighteenth Coffee House Mystery by the husband/wife team who write as Cleo
Coyle. (Reading for an author can always be justified as continuing education.)
Today
is a much better day. As twilight sets in, I have gotten dressed and made my
bed, fixed a good lunch, and planned dinner for all of us—we’re still
quarantining, so we’ll transport part of it from cottage to the house. I’ve
written a bit more than my thousand words for the day and am writing my blog
earlier than usual, and I’ve put away clean linen and done some other household
chores, including watering my plants.
The
world outside this evening reminds me of Chicago or Missouri—the snow is
melting, so what’s left is dirty, gray, sparse. My patio looks like a swamp,
awash with dirty water. But because we are north-facing my front steps are
still iced, and there’s a patch of ice on the driveway and snow outside my desk
window. My mom used to complain long and loud about the gray snow in Chicago,
because when I was young so many households, including ours, heated with coal.
And it’s true—clean white snow was dirty gray almost as soon as it fell.
I
remember the same when I was in school in northeast Missouri. I was in a
relatively small town, Kirksville (12,000 population not counting students at the
two colleges in town). Most people heated with coal, and snow stayed on the ground
forever. They don’t call that northeast corner of the state an icebox for no
reason. I remember getting up morning after morning and seeing a dirty gray
world. And I drove a VW bug which didn’t fit the ruts in the roads, so getting
to and from school and work was an adventure. I really longed for spring. The
nice thing about Texas (except last year) is that we are pretty sure the snow
will disappear in a day or two.
A
friend said to me today she doesn’t understand how I can stay in the cottage
day after day, because she was stir-crazy being in for two days. I think one
reason is that, with my walker and because I no longer drive, getting out is a
bit more complicated. And when Covid was new and a much bigger threat, I got
used to staying in. In fact, I kind of liked it, and most days I still do. I have
lots to do and a comfortable pattern to my days. When it’s six and I pour
myself a glass of wine, I think, “Well, there goes another day.” That’s a bit
of a mixed bag, because at my age I don’t want to wish the days away, but on
the other hand it’s good to come to the end of a day and feel satisfied about
it. Can you tell I’m feeling a bit defensive?
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