Although I had admired a lovely large
tree across our lake with yellow leaves for a couple of weeks, I kept
wanting to see some reds and bright orange colors. Other trees in our
yard and those across the fields were mostly still green. I remember
when we used to be able to count on bright-hued leaves by the middle
of October, and I noticed the last couple of years that was no longer
true. I thought maybe it was just our region, and then I read that
autumn coloration is arriving later elsewhere also. But finally a
week ago, I looked out the kitchen patio door towards the lake to see
the maple Gerald planted in the yard when we moved here, and it was
at last a brilliant red. On beyond the maple was a Bradford pear
tree Gerald planted that was now lovely with deep wine leaves.
Rains and winds came, and the maple looks all snaggly now with half
its red leaves on the ground, but it had brought me a proper measure
of pleasure before that happened. I drove through that blinding rain
to Katherine's one night; and driving home later after the rain
stopped, the blacktop road glistened with red and orange fallen
leaves shining in my headlights. Even better, a breeze would ever so
often blow more leaves down to shower me with additional loveliness
in my car lights.
Although the maple is worst for the
wind's wear, the pear tree with its crown of wine leaves is still
there to please my eyes. The trees in the woods across hills and
meadows surrounding us have gradually turned from green to mostly
brown. If we were able to walk under them, I expect there might be
some brown leaves to shuffle through; but like our pear, these trees
seem to be clinging onto their leaves for a bit longer. As much as
I enjoy the coloration, I am also fond of the beauty of bare stark
branches, which I've always associated with November. Maybe now with
global warming, those bare branches will wait to decorate the sky
until the latter part of November.
Our son-in-law finished his harvest
over a week ago before that heavy rain came, and we are grateful for
his good crops and a completed harvest. With memories of the
fortunately rare years when weather made harvest impossible until
after Thanksgiving or even Christmas, there is always a certain
anxiety until the crops are in. Perhaps our worst year was the one
when Gerald was still combining in late February after he had made a
trip to northern Michigan to buy tracks for the combine. Horror
stories of farmers' combines stuck in mad that year stick in our
memories making an early harvest that much sweeter.
My summer was full of tests that
mostly turned out good. (A false positive on a sonogram necessitated
an angiogram, so I was grateful for that good report.) Now I am
finally able to have time to start physical therapy tomorrow to
improve my balance. One morning last summer I woke up to find that
the arthritis and other problems in my right knee were joined by
arthritis and tendinitis in my left foot, and that day I had to
start using a cane to walk safely. Those pains have mostly subsided
on their own, but I still need that cane when I am away from the
house. Nevertheless, I am looking forward to walking better yet
after physical therapy.
I also tire easily, and it has been
necessary for me to realize that I cannot go to town and complete
four or five errands in a half day as I have done all my life. Such
adjustments do not come easy for me. Gerald helps me more than he
ever needed to in the past when he was working 12 hour days or
longer. I think his gardening is over for this year; we ate the last
tomato from the fridge two days ago. I failed to wrap up any green
ones in newspaper to use on Thanksgiving Day as I often have in the
past. Yet now he is busy doing such things as replacing 16-year-old
faucets or putting back up the large wire shelf in the garage, which
I've used for a clothes line when clothes come out of the drier. (We
learned there is a limit to how much weight that long wire shelf
could take when he washed and dried a summer-full of shirts worn for
only an hour or two, and I suggested hanging them there temporarily
before they went back in the closet. When Gerald walked out the next
morning, the shelf was down and the shirts were on the garage floor.
So I have now taken off that wire shelf the antique shoe last that
belonged to my father. Daddy used to have it secured on a stand in
our basement in Jonesboro, and he sometimes put half soles on our
shoes when they wore out. I like to think he inherited the last from
his father, but I don't know that. It is small to fit inside the shoe, but very heavy since it is made of iron. I like seeing it and holding it
and thinking of my father, but I think it is probably time to give it
to a local museum.)
Gerald received a phone call from his
Union County friend Irma Dell Eudy Elkins telling him of yet another
death of a high school classmate. I had a small grade school class,
and five of my closest friends have been dead for a few years now.
They did not live close enough to see them often, but I miss knowing
they are out there with their minds holding many of the same memories
I have. And I miss not hearing from them at Christmas--or at all. I
do not consider death the end, but losing people from your life here
on earth is a natural part of growing older. Frequent deaths are to
be expected at our age just as leaves fall off trees as winter
approaches. What happened in Las Vegas and Sutherland Springs,
Texas, is not a normal or expected occurrence, and we Americans must
determine to put an end to it. Such massacres are not occurring in
Japan or European countries, and we have a responsibility to stop
them here. I liked seeing a post from one of Katherine's friends
down in Nashville. Her photo showed a handful of postal card messages
to congress. That is a small action any of us could do.