10.14.2012

An interesting week behind us here at the Old Same Place. Some disappointments, some confusions, but much accomplished and a lot of love thrown into the bargain.

It was a record-setter for sleep and dreams. I slept easily (hooray!) and woke early to write down several every morning - vivid, detailed, atmospheric dreams that all the same (and in the maddening way of dreams) defied description except in skeletal particulars.

In a lengthy one from last night my Grandma Erma grudgingly bought me a queen-sized bed with stereo and TV built into the foot of it. When the policemen (?) delivered it to my room they wondered how I could live in such a decrepit joint - ancient-of-days linoleum bits clinging to exposed weathered wood, peelingwallpapered walls full of holes that let the weather - and wildlife - in. I laughed and said I'd grown up in just such a room and found it comforting. I especially liked the little lizards who visited: I greeted a little green gecko poking his head in high on the wall.

In other dreams I moved to New York again and again, and again and again was ripped off by scamming real estate agents and scheming thieves. I took hikes along dusty trails and encountered soldiers playing war games. Walked a gauntlet of loitering menaces alone in a latenight city park. Phoned Billy Idol while on a date with James Marsters (Spike!), who teased my hair into a beautiful bouffant.

Anyway, I do not want for material this week.

In the brick-and-mortar world, the bookselling business is great. I have almost 500 titles posted online and sales have made possible little improvements: I got a filling in a molar, and the exposed plywood on the roof of my house has been shingled over, and the propane guys are going to plumb for a stove on Monday. (A stove! No more hotplates!) On the other hand, Husband had to rescue me from an unpaid water bill, and I argued with the storage people to have their lien-lock removed. All our winter clothes are in there and my payment wasn't that late.

I gave up on the garden tomatoes and pulled the plants up, heavyladen with green orbs as they were. The nights were down in the 20s F. all last week and there was no hope. They ripen in the trailer now, slowly slowly on the vine. We have yet to taste one. It was a weird year for tomatoes.

I leave you know. Time for work.

It's very very autumn out there.

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