It makes me more than a little sad to turn the calendar to September. I did it today, but I didn't like it.
Despite memories that include the bicentennial and disco, my face still occasionally breaks out with a typically teenage monster zit, a reality I accept and no longer question. Or bemoan.
The perfect lifetime reading list alternates fiction and non-fiction and always allows for short stories when more immediate gratification is needed.
Most nights, I get 8 1/2 to 9 hours of sleep, a fact for which I make no apologies.
Acacia is as constant as the northern star and I have yet to be disappointed with a meal there, including tonight's of ceviche and avocado followed by steamed pork belly buns. My friend's pork shank looked like a Fred Flintstone snack, meaty and enormous.
I don't hear my name said to me by anyone as often as I'd like.
That moment when the lights go down, just before the band I want to see comes onstage, gives me the same thrill now that it did when I was 16.
My whole life might have been different person had I not been born with an outgoing personality, dimples and good legs. Fact.
Two things make me feel like anything is possible: the colors and light of late afternoon at the beach on a sunny summer day and the smell of lilacs in spring.
A friend tells me at dinner tonight, "I wish I'd figured out who I was and what I wanted sooner than I did." She muses about when it was that she got "old" and wonders how she'd not realized.
Are we supposed to? Discuss.
Being grateful for what we have, (and most people really have plenty or all they really need) sounds like such a cliché however I suspect many fail to grasp it. Perhaps as one matures it truly is best to live in the now for at that moment that's all one truly has....that's not a bad thing either.
ReplyDeletecw2
Firmly in the now, cw.
ReplyDeleteI know I can count on you K.
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