I sit decadently on my deck each night and eat the newest freshest peas right off the vine. To heck with acid rain,
this is my version of organic.
Nothing has ever tasted better. I made this food.
I chase it with a beer.
I grow things now. I never used to. I can't get past the addictive nature of creating something from a seed, food I can actually eat. In my kitchen are jars of seeds, sprouts in pans, little tiny tendrils of nutrition. I fend off the apocalypse for one more day. Surely with these seeds, I can survive a while longer. They are my mid-life babies, my menopausal offspring. They surround me with green when the world feels bloody gray and hopeless.
My deck is my sanctuary, my neighborhood not the best, the boards under my feet warped and worn, my grass not always trimmed the way the HOA would like, this is middle class, make no bones about it. The cops who visit the courts don't see the irony of all of the "being in court" but they come here often anyway. They are our entertainment through the windows as the crazy neighbor screams illogical nonsense at her boyfriend and child. I am grateful for police diligence but allow myself to watch the craziness, that was me once, long ago, so I see both sides.
I sit and listen, I feed my birds, I thrill in the bright yellow finches, the mischievous chickadees, the tiny chipping sparrows with itty bitty rooster combs that pop up at odd times.
Right now it's fledgeling time; adolescent birds holler and beg their way through the day while patient parents feed them the seeds they could easily get for themselves. I like these mom and dad birds, the way they shield their children from the eventual reality for as long as possible.
A robin has laid two clutches in my shed this summer, on top of a humane trap I used for catching baby stray cats. I love this irony as well, she chose the perfect spot, no predator can reach her chicklets. She lets me see them, I anthropomorphize enough to think she trusts me.
Here's my morning - feed the cats, make tea, grab a book, go check on the garden. Examine each leaf while wearing reading glasses. Add food to bird feeder. Sit on deck and read for as long as possible before life calls.
I have no hot tub, no expensive trips, but I can see the mountains from my deck, and things are growing. Everywhere I look, I see green. My neighbor cut my grass the other day. My other neighbor offered me steamed crabs over the fence. My neighbors are all colors, shapes and sizes. Make no bones about it, this is middle class. Life is good. I choose this.
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