Winter wisteria |
Sunrise left Saturday night. Gina left this morning. The rest of the horses leave tomorrow evening, followed by the last one, Elbow Beach, in another week, or so. Annie flies down and back tomorrow to see her horse run. Agata is taking care of the horses that will stay behind, Chantal will reign over vastly emptied yards home in Maisons-Laffitte, and she and I are left to wait for Gina's business to return in late February. Me? It's time for me to return to my own yards.
I lifted my head and looked around me this morning, and what I saw did not make me happy. Dust. Dirt. Decrepitude. The house and the garden have been left to themselves. They cannot make their own projects happen. I have been left to myself. I have been incapable of making my own projects for them happen. There is only one person who can change that, and it is not in lifting my head and looking around that I will find her.
I have preferred the warm, velvet muzzles of mares in my neck, blowing softly into my ear and nibbling my hair, the smell of oats and Guinness, apples and alfalfa. A pitchfork or branch broom to a rake in my hands. Horses to plans and orders and decisions over how much to spend on what, and how. It is time to put on my own oeillères australiennes and to do my work.
Why is it so hard? I know that when I will have done it, there will be a release, the chance for a relâchement and a relancement, a stretch of time for other things, finally, without guilt, and satisfaction in spades, a heavy, heavy weight off my mind. Sometimes, it seems like procrastination is a sort of protection. But, against what? Everything that comes once the task is done, perhaps? It's not like I have not been busy. I have, but it is not as if these things that have occupied my time amount to my work being done, my home being something of which I can feel proud. My garden, too. How many times have we heard that the state of one's room, one's home is a reflection of the state of one's mind?
This is not good.
Imagine the house is finished. There will still be the housework to do. The dust that comes to lay itself in layers to dépoussiérer. The dirt that fills the corners to s'en débarrasser. The things that will continue to accumulate and not find a home in the still too limited space to ranger. The only solution is to determine the best systems of rangement and to build them. A good word, rangement, with its root rang, or to order or to arrange in nice neat lines, from the old franc work chramne or hramne, qui a ce sens dans la loi salique.
I prefer the sense of "rang" dans "rangement" à celui de "la loi salique".
Homes need their backstages. They need their stagehands, their carpenters, painters and managers. I need a staff; but I am not getting one anytime soon.
I have six weeks, six weeks measured in Cagnes until spring's work in the garden and Gina's return with the horses and the courses beginning in Chantilly and Saint-Cloud, to get my plans done and off to the builder to reserve his time in the clement months to come.
....
Frost on amaryllis bud in January |
1 commentaire:
Oeilléres -- that's what I need. Two days ago I laid out/marked the rafters' positions on the patio cover beams. Since then I have been waiting for the rain and wind to abate so I can install those 2x6's. Ramsey has decided to tile the washbasin cabinet and adjoining wall in the upstairs bedroom. I've been helping prep that area, making garden plans, ordering seeds, repairing Ole Blue and the '86 Cressida, reading, writing (not enough), scanning old family photos (I love the B/W ones), corresponding, renewing friendships with several old newspaper buds via FB.... last night I was in my shop, sorting through forgotten auto parts, belts, bolts, screws, and found an single-bit axehead that belong to Dad back in the '60's. I found the 3' handle and wedges I'd bought maybe five years ago. In about an hour of focused effort the axehead and handle were one -- it's edge sharpened. I'm sure you can appreciate the sense of accomplishment I felt. I also found a double-bitted axehead, old, rusty but of good metal I bought at an estate auction when the daughters were toddlers -- I will put a handle on it tonight... and chalk one more thing off the list -- and have another useful tool that gives one a bit of pride. I think it good to have lots of interests... certainly better than the alternative. Les chevaux will return soon, printemps winds, too...
Enregistrer un commentaire