"Breathe, buddy. Just state the facts."
I can do that. I was feeling down again yesterday morning, and knowing I needed to move, I walked back down to the Boulevard Festival. It was a nice day and I was early-ish, so the crowd had not swollen to what it might be later. I had breakfast in mind at a little French cafe on a side street. Of course, there was a line I had to wait through only to be told they were serving only pastries that day.
O.K. Walk on.
I decided to get breakfast at the end of the Boulevard if they had room at the bar. Just before I got there, though, my buddy who owns the Boulevard Hippie Shop stopped me on the street outside. He's a wild man. Travels incessantly. Just back from a month in India. Going to Brazil for two weeks today. We kibitzed for a long while, but I was getting nervous. We were two doors down from my breakfast and the place was filling up.
And so. . .
I did get a seat right away. It was good to be alone and to eat at the bar on a crowded festival day. Otherwise, the place was packed with locals. Townies. I recognized some, but you could tell by the number of expensive, fancy assed cocktails being ordered. The woman next to me got something that had what I guessed to be an albumen bubble covering the glass. When she popped it, smoke filled the air. Elsewhere, chocolate martinis and other morning cocktails.
When my breakfast came, the woman next to me said, "That looks good."
Two eggs, potatoes, bacon, sausage, and toast.
"It's appropriately named, too," I laughed. "The Old Man Special."
She looked at me and giggled, then went back to her exotic brew.
I watched the rest of the bar and the tables surrounding me. Across from me, two separate couples ate, drank, and laughed. the men each looking like rich sports fishermen, the women younger and appreciative. The crowd, I'd say, was absolutely jubilant.
As I was finishing up, in walked my comedian nemesis. And I'm not going to exaggerate or lie--he looked worse than I did. He looked like shit. His face was creased, his beard spotty. His hair was longer than mine and ratted into a faux-rasta look. He'd died it different colors so that it was difficult to see the old Carrothead anymore. The fucker is twelve years younger than I, but I am pretty sure you couldn't tell. The steroid pump had deflated. Maybe it had made him sick. I don't know. But man, he looked like a wilted vegetable.
I'd finished my meal and had enough of looking at him, so I rose gingerly on my stiff bad knee and shuffle-limped past him to the street.
The crowd looked good. The cruise ship had not yet docked, I guessed. I staggered around for a bit enjoying the day before I limped along the lakeshore home.
I had a text from another redhead.
You’ve been in my dreams every night for the past like 5 nights.
Just 5?!?? 😂
Bahahahaha. More than that, but specifically have been recently.
Things happen when you leave the house sometimes. Life seems to open up. There are adventures everywhere. But it was time to go to my mother's. I would pick up a big hippie pizza for my mother and cousin. I'd start my diet on Monday, I said.
Oh. . . it is time for me to hustle. The clock be ticking.
Last night, I didn't turn on the t.v. I read for awhile, then took a walk in the dark down to the lake's edge and sat a bit before returning home. It was a nice night, the lights of Country Club College reflecting in the calm waters, stars above, a little breeze caressing my face.
Back home, I read until bedtime. I did a little stretching and a little meditating in preparation for what I hoped would become my new routine. My depression had lifted a bit. Just a bit, but some. I was determined to begin to live again. . . somehow. There was much to do before I'd feel good, but getting started was better than fretting.
And it all begins now with an injection in my knee. Then I must call the dentist about my cracked crown. I need to do my taxes.
And so much more. But now. . . I must fly.