Maybe it was because my grandkids went
home and the house was too quiet. Maybe it was just the thought of
growing older and retiring. Whatever caused it, I had dreams of my
brother Donnie, of Jim, and days long gone by. We were all younger in
my dreams. As I awakened from a deep sleep the words echoed through
my head, “Those days have come and gone.”
It’s hard to understand the world of
dreams. Sometimes they inspire me to write short stories or provide a
scene for my novel in progress. This time, the dreams weren’t so
important, or unusual, it was the truism that stood out from my
night’s sleep.
The past is a part of me that lingers
in my mind just to be awakened in my alternate life—dreamland.
Dreams can seem so real at the time. It made me think of Poe’s “A
Dream Within a Dream.” Reality blurs with dreams, and it is
possible to cling to the past of a “surf-tormented shore” while
we watch the sands of our lives slip through our hands.
Unlike Poe, I choose to not weep and
fall into despair over the days that have come and gone. Yes, at
times, it is more challenging to put the past aside than others.
Keeping busy, working toward goals, feeling a sense of accomplishment
are tools to push away the dark sadness of another time gone forever,
another place that no longer exists.
Yet, the very busyness that helps keep
the past from tormenting, can also cause regret. Sometimes, I have to
choose between obligations and inclinations. If I’m not careful, I
find myself having regrets that I let work interfere with family
time. But if I’m realistic, which I am most of the time, I realize
that work has been a beneficial part of my life in more than a
financial sense. When Jim was in need of constant care, I needed work
as a diversion from the overwhelming job of caregiving.
Being around my grandkids this week
reminded me of when my kids were young. Instead of just grabbing
something, anything, to eat, I needed to think about meal planning,
like when my sons were small. Even going to the state fair took on a
retro atmosphere. It had been years since I stood on the Midway while
the kids ran from one carnival ride to another. I’m older, slower,
and somewhat wiser now. I wore comfortable shoes and used the
umbrella I carried to shade me from the sun.
It was a week that took me back in
time, but with changes. Okay, I’ll admit that I’m about a
thousand times more indulgent with my grandkids than I was with my
children. My XM radio station was on the Disney channel all week. My
TV was tuned to cartoons and pre-teen shows. I went to the movies,
twice. I drove by Kentucky Fried Chicken and ordered above the sound
of the “La la la-la” Smurf happy song. The question of the day
became, “Is a Smurf’s butt blue?”
Just like in my dream, the past week of
a house filled with laughter, thumps, and bumps from morning to
bedtime have come and gone. It took me by surprise how much I missed
it the instant the house took on its usual quiet, peaceful
atmosphere.
I decided to go work for a few hours to
take my mind off it. I pulled my car out of the garage and the radio
began to play “Chloe, You’re the One I Want.” I’d heard that
song a dozen times in the past few days. I shook my head and twisted
the dial pausing on Escape, Praise, 80’s on 8, and finally rested
the dial on 60’s on 6. It was obvious that those days had come and
gone. I punched the button my granddaughter had set and listened to
some here and now music to appreciate the blessing of today and the
tomorrows that are mine to enjoy.
Copyright (c) August 2013 by L.S.
Fisher
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Warm Regards,
Tracy
Thanks, Tracy!
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