I'm sitting in my chair buzzing. The time change, of course, but I didn't handle it well. Go to bed earlier or later? I don't know. I did what I often do on beautiful Saturday's and sat inside for a large part of the day. It was coming on two when I finally drove over to see my mother. I feel guilty leaving my cousin there alone with my mother so much, and so I was dripping with it yesterday. I stayed for an hour and told them I would be back later. I went to the gym, then home for a shower.
And a nap.
I woke up around five-thirty. Shit. The day had gotten away from me. Not me. I was fine. It had gotten away from the caretaker. I didn't have anything to make for dinner. I would have to go to the grocers, so I decided that I would go to my mother's after dinner. That is what I told myself, but I don't think I was actually convinced.
Still, I had the makings of a plan.
I made a Rum Negroni and sat out on the deck. Perfect weather. The neighbor across the street was blowing leaves out of his pebbled driveway just as he had the day before. Not an intellectual, not a thinker, he likes things that make noise. He walked around in a marijuana and beer stupor as usual shouting out instructions to some unseen person in that volume of the hearing impaired. That is what happens to people who like noise, I think, loud trucks and power tools and the like.
Fortunately, he's gotten a battery powered one, so the volume wasn't quite that of a gas powered blower. I had to give him that.
Halfway through my cocktail, the neighbor next door came over and sat down. This is not so very common and occurrence, so I figured something was up. He asked how I was doing, so I launched into my sad and lonesome narrative concerning the life of a sole caregiver and the stunning pleasures of being home for a bit. Just then, my favorite dog came loping up, a giant, blond labradoodle. He's the most solid boy you could imagine. Patting him is like patting a slab of granite, but he looks you straight in the eye and smiles--I shit you not--and appears to be talking, then he'll put his head in your lap and lean heavily in. He's just a big old lover dog.
The son of the owner was walking him, a kid in his twenties. I'd seen him the day before I went to Bike Week. He and his father were going over that day, too, so I asked him if he had fun. He'd gotten food poison that night, he said.
"Did you eat carnival food?"
He had to miss the next couple days of going over.
"I thought about going again today. Saturday should surely be the show. I guess tomorrow will be everyone leaving."
"Yea, Sunday isn't much. People are partied out and going home."
He stayed and talked a long time, and when he finally left, my neighbor said he had to go. It was after six, and I still needed to go to the grocers. Reality creeped in, so I called my mother.
"I got jammed up here, mom. I don't think I'll make it over tonight."
Guilt. I don't believe in it. It is a terrible thing.
But I am surely driven by it.
At the grocery store, I decided on a T-bone. I spied one that was cut more like a Porterhouse with a big hunk of filet, so I thought it a big score.
Brussels sprouts and a baked potato. Not baked. Microwaved.
It was after seven when I sat down to eat. I had taken a chance on a bottle of red I had never tried before. It was a terrible choice .
A little scotch. A little t.v. Off to bed. It was only ten.
I woke at midnight. Oh-oh. I decided to take a sleep aid.
When I opened my eyes, the room was bright. But when I looked at my old 1970s analog LCD screen radio clock, it was just before seven. I hadn't changed the clock. It shouldn't be this light before seven. Spring ahead, and now it was eight. None of this made sense other than that DST is a horrible thing for the body and the mind. I'd fucked up and would pay the governmental price. Nobody likes changing the clock--but we do. This alone should tell you something about democracy and the power of elections. This simple example alone should tell "the people" that what they want doesn't really matter if it doesn't coincide with what lobbyists are paying for.
Democracy at work.
So there is the Xanax and there is the day and there are my plans which already seem shot. I promised myself I would work in the yard today, would rip out my dead garden and put weed killer on the lawn. I went to the university ag website yesterday, and I am already a week behind schedule. Gotta be done. Fertilizer at the end of the month.
But all I want to do is go to the giant Farmer's Market around the "famous" lake in Gotham and keep practicing and experimenting with my camera. Maybe I will give up thinking about studios. Maybe I'll develop a new way and a new interest.
"Go, Buddy, Go!"
But my mind and body are swampy just now and the day could easily get away from me. It already has. We've time warped into the future once again.
Boy. . . I've got pictures to show you, but now as many as I originally thought, so I am going to show some restraint and not post them all at once. They won't last so very long, not the best ones, and I'm still tinkering with post-production, so. . . I'll hold off.
Besides, I still have the story of the kooky barmaid to tell one day if I ever get my head on right. Not today, though, that's for sure.
Funny thing about my photos, I'll confess. The crowd was more than 80% male, but the majority of my pictures, I think, are of women. Don't know how that happened, really. Beats me. But I'm sure. . . well. . . we will eventually see.
But today. . . in the spirit of old hillbilly and redneck bikers, let's play something apropos.



























