Yesterday was September equinox...the season of transition, and after my very warm summer, yesterday was the first day I actually felt so cold that I was uncomfortable! I didn't expect to need to be more appropriately dressed for the season, so I got caught in the rain wearing shirt sleeves.
Desmond and I spent the day together, staying warm on my bed watching movies, eating blueberries and bananas, and playing games for a while, and then going out to look at pumpkins. Here in Northern Utah, we have a wonderful stretch of old highway known as the Fruitway, dotted with orchards and farm stands which fairly bulge with harvest bounty. In town also, is a local farm stand and the grocery stores also carry a lot of local produce this time of year. To me, it's paradisiacal.
Since the first time I asked Desmond to help me pick out a watermelon, that's what watermelon shopping is...helping Bayou (me) choose the melon...even if that's not necessarily what we came for. If there are boxes of melons on display, he marches confidently to the heap, pats or taps the melons, or as he did yesterday, straight-up picks up a small one, and announces, "I choose this one," turning to the next task. Fait accompli.
We also picked up some corn, to add to the September celebration we're having later today. My mother and my grandson both have birthdays this week, and we have other family birthdays in September, so the sheet cake will have a few names on it! Or we'll have a few cakes, more like!
The last several months have been bursting at the seams with various activities of transition. I retired, I moved to Utah, I traveled to and from New Mexico a few times to help my mom prepare for her big move and to attend a lovely, sunny mountain wedding.
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We took a couple of little road trips in between packing and organizing. Bonito Inn, now a tourist B&B, was a place Mom lived in as a little girl in Lincoln, New Mexico. |
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Stephanie and Greg's wedding near Durango, CO. |
My sister and her husband built a sweet little "independent" apartment for my mom to move into (in their home) and traveled down there to bring her back up to Ogden, and others of our family gave extra labor, love and money towards the "event."
I'm going to chronicle, later in more depth, those changes we've been navigating, and for now, this is about today; the day after equinox, when we are winding down and settling in a bit, accepting some peaceful moments, harvesting the fruits of our summer labor, literally and symbolically, and feeling gratitude for hard-working, hard-loving family, for living on the earth, for the miracles that buoy and see us through.
I like change.