On Friday, I will return to work
after ten weeks of long walks in the forest, afternoon glasses of cinnamon iced
tea with cookies, hours spent watching the birds at the birdfeeder,
opportunities to make memories with my kids and grandkids and the blessed
luxury of reading a book without watching the clock. Thus, I will return to work with heavy,
dragging footsteps. Oh yes, I love my
job; the kids are funny and warm and refreshingly honest and idealistic, and
they teach me new things every day. But…
This is what teachers do: In April and May, when others are digging out
of the winter doldrums and doing spring cleaning or home improvement projects,
we who spend at-home time grading and planning lessons tell ourselves, “That
project can wait until summer break.”
But when school lets out, do we dive right in and start completing all
those tasks we set aside for summer?
No. For the first two weeks we
revel in not having to live our lives according to a bell schedule. We sleep in till oh, say, 7:00a.m. Eventually, the true meaning of “vacation”
sets in, and we begin to relax… and read… and have long, luxurious lunches with
friends and dinners with family that have been postponed for weeks, sometimes
months.
On some days, we actually make
lists of those projects that need to be completed. In fact, I feel productive just for making
the list. But let’s face it, if I am
faced with a choice between spackling a mouse hole or taking my granddaughter
to the beach, I’m going to opt for the latter every time.
This insouciant behavior does,
however, eventually lead to sudden anxiety and a sense of panic when we
realize—oh expletive! I have only one more week to spackle and paint and I
wanted to get to the beach one more time and see one more movie in the theater
and is there any money left for new clothes? (no) and I never did get to the
Huntington Library this summer. Sigh.
I am especially guilty of the
‘not getting around to stuff,’ even though I tell myself every summer that I
will go off the mountain to have adventures at least several times a week
(Safari Park in San Diego to see the giraffes, the Sawdust Festival in Laguna
to traipse for hours through the booths and chat with the artists). But more often than not, what I look forward
to most is simply staying home, having lunch on the back deck with the cats and
the bluejays, sitting in the front porch swing later and reading for hours as
the sun filters through the oak tree canopy and the red-shafted flicker
complains to the acorn woodpeckers.
I try to feel guilty about not
spending more time on home improvement projects, but I just can’t. Because when the school year gets into its
full, exhausting swing, I won’t be longing for the days of spackling and
painting. I’ll be longing for those long, quiet days of uninterrupted time to
read… and write.
Traipse: wander without purpose: to walk around casually or without a specific destination.
ReplyDeleteThat's what I'm missing.
Thanks for the idea . . . and happy "Back to School." We start on September 4th. Just enough time to go out and traipse somewhere . .
You have captured my sentiment exactly, Carolyn; I love traipsing around in the forest during the summer... because nothing is pressing me to get home and get things done. And those long days "without purpose" always take me back to my childhood....
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