At two-o’clock Friday last, my schedule finally
cleared. Now I could leisurely read the daily papers that had piled up. I could
check blog stats, Facebook, online news-and-opinion as long as I wanted to.
Keeping me from that retirement ritual was not
anything I couldn’t control, but things happened in an odd confluence of events
and time. First, was a week’s writers retreat at Hemingway-Pfeiffer Museum in
Piggott. Then Florida son flew up for the weekend. The extensive, quarterly
Calliope poetry column was due. Finally, I was to host the local writers group
on Friday last.
In this case, the hostess gives the guests gifts;
those were bought earlier: a flower-motifed clip, a box of Vanilla Honey tea
bags and a gel pen, fine point.
The
hostess must clean the areas that writers access: living room, from entry
through the room, dining room floor and path to the bathroom, plus said
bathroom. The work area—the dining room table—must be redressed. The
correct-sized table cloth scrounged for, from either the buffet or the linen
closet.
I don’t think I’d be called a slob, but cleaning for
company is about the only time I bother. With only the cat as “family” I DO
make sure his area is cleaned enough to keep down the odor.
Our group schedule is to snack first since it’s a mid-morning
meeting. I determined in a Facebook conversation with Linda Ann Yarberry Bragg
to use my “good” dishes from now on, so I pulled out snack plates and cups,
large and small matching bowls to center the two partitioned platters—all in
the Dewdrop pattern. Oh, and we had tea.
At Harvest Foods on Thursday, I’d filled bag after
bag with fruit: 4 plums,4 peaches, 2 grapefruit, 4 nectarines, a container of
strawberries and 4 Kiwi. At the cheese display, I selected Cheddar cuts, Colby
cuts, Provolone, and Muenster slices. I searched for gluten-free crackers, to
no avail, but in passing, I spied a package of Simply White Cheddar Cheetos. It
was mine! On the back side of the sack, clear down to the last line was: GLUTEN
FREE. Hallelujah!
We got down to the meat of the day: critiquing
previously-submitted pieces. Mine was a new incident for the memoir, which I
devised at the H-P retreat earlier in the month. Another was Chapter 7 in a
novel. A third was a 10-year look-back on the anniversary of the moon landing,
and a fourth was a blog post from an earlier time. It was 12:30 when we
finished commenting and praising and asking for more.
We adjourned to Tacos for Life for our meal. Noisy!
Full! A queue! But we all enjoyed our selections. Two of us took boxes of
uneaten (too much!) food home for later.
Serendipitously, we were offered a week’s getaway in
July, so our next assignment will be due then.
One member commented, “Why is it so hard to write
when you have so much fun doing it?”
3 comments:
Nice to see you back in the blogosphere - and I am so glad that your busy time was also fun. Which should be true more often.
Enjoyed the lovely "spread" and the lively conversation at Couchwood! Thank you!
This all reads like a dream. And I am right there in it!
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