The rain makes me rethink my life. Also just waking up makes me rethink my life.
There is nothing like the heavy rain to make you find your way to a blanket covered bed, and a dog jumps up to be at your feet, and it's the end of the day with only the barest of light out there, the crumbs of the day thrown to us earthlings from Mt Olympus in the sky and really all I did was labor all day. Make sure things didn't flood. Make sure things didn't float away. Make sure my mom is fed dry warm watered. I like to feel my body tired and used, and my skin happy after the deluge. In the hot tub it started raining so I didn't rush away like my first instinct, like rain was an unwanted asian paparazzi. I stayed instead and tipped my head up. I washed my face with sky water. I'm watered from space now.
I am exhausted though, having to get up at 7 to do all the barn chores before it rained and then running out to get 2 loads of hay in the golf cart hoping it doesn't die on the way home, then getting mom in. Then swimming with B. Making Bess a little breakfast. Making some cheery tuna with lots of colors in it, purple, orange, green veggies. Eating tuna and crackers while watching Suddenly Amish can solve alot of problems. I put it down as research for my Momish novel.
It is weird to go to basketball games when your daughter isn't on the team anymore. We went to the last one of the season the other night, and it's like going shopping with empty pockets, you forgot your wallet but you really still want to shop. I told Bess pretty soon we'll be going to the games just wearing trenchcoats. They lost the playoff game but it was fierce and I said to Bess were you glad you weren't out there playing and she said well when I was out there we won.
Later that night she brought the two basketball kids home with her that she has a lovehate relationship with, the two star player sisters. Their lovehate depends solely on if they're lovehating Bess, it could be which way the wind is blowing, there's no telling. But the next morning I woke up to cozy kids wandering into my kitchen in Bess's pajamas (wearing the shirt that says Best Grandpa) and I made them stacks of waffles and bacon just like in the old days. I told B we should have a boarding house where people only stay like one or two days, he can make spaghetti, I can do breakfast, they can visit and share their stories and then they can leave us to our regular quiet house. This is the ideal.
Rain makes no riding, but we did go swimming. Rain made hardly anyone at the pool I guess people were boating down Foothill, it was like a rushing river. So when I was bored swimming I was staring at the ceiling and imagining this was my mansion and I invited everyone in to come take a spin class or use my gym or swim in my enormous olympic sized pool. You feel better about other people taking up space around you at the gym if you think of them as your guests.
I thought about the olympic boy ice skater from Virginia who trained for 21 years to get to those last 3 minutes on the ice to get his gold and he (as he said) blew it, fell over two times. I think sometimes the promise of gold around the neck throws off your high speed air spins. He's been doing that routine that specific 3 minutes for 6 hours a day for at least 4 straight years. (well not straight, by the look of his game of thrones costume.) As I did my backstroke laps in my olympic gym mansion party, it made me feel kind of comforted that you can be the best in the world and still manage to do your worst at a key moment. It gives me hope.
He had done his best for so long. He was ready for a little worst. The best part is imagine going home in the car that night with his parents, who are both olympic ice skaters. I imagine that car ride was mostly awkward.
Skate on, all of us. Do your worst. Our worst is actually so hard fought and intricate, we're just trying to chisel a little bit of immortality onto this hard rock. We're trying to ice skate slice our souls open and let the pain spill out, because sometimes it's so sparkly, when someone else sees themselves in that very same pain. Then it flips and becomes joy. Because we share experiences. Team earthlings.
