Monday, April 28, 2014

A Day In The Life


I have been vacillating on whether or not to buy a KitchenAid stand mixer. After recent success with making focaccia, I want to get more into baking bread. Mid-stream into that adventure however, without any question, the limitations of my hand mixer became apparent. It turned into a wrestling match, and it’s hard to say who won. Given the little machine still works and the focaccia came out pretty well, I call it a tie.

But back and forth, and back and forth I go. It’s very infrequent I splurge on something like this, and this would be a splurge - a matter of want rather than need - and a pricey one. I grab a coin to flip. Heads I get the KitchenAid and the coin comes up heads. Humph. I need to think about it some more. After breakfast I decide to go for two out of three and flip the coin again. Heads, I get the mixer. And again it comes up heads. OK, OK. When fate speaks it’s best not to question.

The local Bed Bath and Beyond store doesn’t have my first pick in color. If I’m going to spend the dough, and if I’m going to live with this thing for the rest of my days, the color is worth waiting for. The manager I speak with offers to order one, and I accept, but we learn their network is down. The folks who work at this store are really putting in the effort and are very accommodating. The manager is frustrated, he wants to make the sale and I feel for the guy. I thank him, let him know that I’ll order a mixer online and will be sure to be back.

At Pep Boys I drop off a few quarts of used motor oil for recycling. A woman is leaving her car for service. She’s very friendly and talkative. Her dad, her old boyfriend said this and that about caring for her car and we joke about solutions to idiot lights when they come on; putting a piece of electrical tape over them has worked for me.

Maybe if the woman and I continue to talk we’d go out for a coffee while her car is getting fixed and maybe agree to get together again, and, and. This is a pleasant sequence of possibilities to consider, but as much as I’d like to have a gal in my life again, the last sucker-punch I was the bag for left too-deep an impression. I thank the guy at the counter and wish the woman good luck with her car and make my exit.

I get home and order the mixer. Now I’m jazzed and looking forward to it. Full steam ahead. Visions of great golden loaves and no regrets… slices of toasted homemade raisin bread with generous slatherings of butter…

After dinner, the inclination to stay put is strong. It’s a hard sell to get myself out for a walk. Nonetheless I put on my boots for a quick lap around the plaza. Once out the door and up the driveway I know this is the right thing to do. It’s a beautiful spring evening, cool, a kiss of a breeze flits about, late sunlight comes in low.

Near the capitol, among non-descript government office buildings stands a crab apple tree, resplendent in bloom, it is a mass of rich pink blossoms. A shaft of sunlight streams in-between the buildings onto the tree. The full crown glows in warm chiaroscuro. I stop and stand and look at it for quite a few moments. The tree stands quietly and asks for nothing, it flowers because this is simply part of what it must do. The laden branches sway ever so slightly in the breeze, light and shadow flicker. Partially opened buds resemble miniature roses. Where sunlight has found its way through the maze, brilliant spots of pink burst from the dark side of the tree. Like stars, such beauty.

On the way home I make a point to stop and admire the tree again. The light is becoming less but still it is well worth standing and looking at. Continuing, I encounter a gang of boys goofing around on skateboards. Hooting, jeering one another, they are bundles of froggy, gangly energy. It does my heart good to see not one of them entranced with a phone. Before crossing the street, which is torn up for utility work, they do not simply pick up their mounts. No, they each kick the tail of their board down causing the body of it to catapult up into the air which they then catch mid-flight. Boys. They school across the street. By the time they ripen into men, the world, their world, will be quite a different place.

Gordon Bunker

1 comment:

  1. Yeah, that focaccia was successful. Looking forward to more!

    ReplyDelete