Grandma Gertie always said there's not a savory dish that can't be made tastier by just a touch of tarragon.

Tsunami and Me

Tsunami and Me
too big to escape now....

Thursday, January 11, 2018

Aglow Are We

Celebrating Frank's 81st Birthday, December 2017
Earlier this week an acquaintance asked if I were still seeing my gentleman friend.
"Sure am," I replied. "We're planning a couple of trips for later this year."
She smiled. "Isn't it nice that you have somebody in your life at your age?"

My age is not a secret...never has been. Yes, I'm old. But I've always thought it nice to have somebody in your life at ANY age. Here's a story I wrote a few months ago about one of the reasons why. I'd finished it a few weeks before our "fail safe" arrangement  played a part in rescuing my friend after he lost consciousness from smoke inhalation related to the Canyon 2 wildfire that swept the neighborhoods surrounding his condominium. When he didn't respond to my calls from his doorstep, I called 911. Just as we'd always agreed we would do.


Aglow are We

“When one door of happiness closes, another opens, but often we look so long at the closed door that we do not see the one that has been opened for us.” --~Helen Keller

Frank and I serve as one another’s “fail-safes.”  Octogenarians who live alone, we prize our twice-a-day assurances of knowing we’re still alert and alive. We agreed when we first met and fell in love, a little over a year ago, to take turns calling one another every morning at 7:30 and every night at 10.
So, though it’s a joy to hear the phone jingle at these anticipated times, when it rang close to midnight a few weeks ago, I rushed to my desk to snatch up the receiver. My free left hand flew to cover my suddenly thudding heart.
Did he need a ride to the ER? Was there another leaky water pipe? Had something happened to a grandchild?
I’d been on a bad luck streak the past several days. It had started when I’d taken my car in for what I thought would be a minor adjustment to the air conditioner. Instead, I’d learned that the engine needed major repairs. The following day, when I recovered it from the shop, my lunchtime tryst with Frank had been spoiled when I backed into a yellow safety stanchion in the restaurant parking lot, denting the back fender.
Even the check I’d requested from my credit union to cover these unexpected repair bills hadn’t arrived when I expected it, apparently lost in the mail. I’d even phoned my son, whose name is on all my financial accounts, and he hadn’t received it either.
I’d nearly forgotten what it felt like to expect good news. Earlier that day I’d closed an email to my closest friend with the words “woe is me.”
 Frank’s voice seemed reassuringly calm. “Sorry to call you so late, sweetheart, but you’d said earlier you were going to be reading for a while.”
“What’s happened?” I asked, raking my fingers through my bangs. I hoped whatever it was wouldn’t require me to get dressed and drive to his condominium a dozen miles away. But of course, I’d do it, I thought. After all, he’d do it for me.
Before he could answer, I continued, “Are you all right? Do you need to go to the ER?”
“Calm down, honey. It’s wonderful news,” he said.
“It better be at this hour,” I said. “My heart’s pounding. I’d expected the worst.”
“Remember that story you helped me edit? The one about the fire at my synagogue?”
A retired university professor, Frank had published several scholarly articles and even a textbook. For the past year, though, he’d been working on some personal pieces, and a historical novel.   I’d been helping him adopt a more informal style. He’d worked on a piece about how members of two completely different religious faiths had banded together. I’d helped him shape it and revise it. Finally, we decided it was time to submit it for consideration to an anthology.
I waited impatiently for Frank to continue. “Well?” I barked.
“I got an email from the editor that it’s under consideration for publication.”
A tingle started at my toes and worked its way up to my scalp. I flushed, and my fingers felt shaky.
“That’s wonderful news, sweetheart. Wonderful. I can’t believe how happy that makes me feel.”
Frank laughed. “I knew you’d be delighted. I so much appreciate all the suggestions you made. I didn’t check my email today until I got home from a meeting…and even though I knew how late it was, I couldn’t resist phoning.”
“You’ve given me a lovely way to close the day,” I said. “This is my second piece of good news. You remember I told you once that my Grandma Gertie insisted that good things come in three?”
“Why threes? Why good things? After all, it’s three strikes and you’re out.”
I grinned. Frank and I both love research. I’m always consulting the Oxford English Dictionery and he’s constantly checking his Encyclopedia of Judaica. Once when I’d complained that while I knew that “schadenfreude” was the German word for pleasure derived from the misfortune of others, I didn’t know what its antonym was, the opposite that meant taking joy in others’ good fortune.
Frank had looked it up. “Mudita,” he’d told me. “It’s Sanskrit. It means unselfish joy in the good fortune of others.”
Even though it was the witching hour (and I planned to look up the origin of that phrase the next day), I couldn’t resist explaining how Grandma had arrived at her conclusion.
“Well, she explained that here on the third planet from the sun, three wise men once traveled to a faraway manger to greet a newborn baby. But a few years ago, I’d looked up ‘third time’s a charm,’ in the Oxford English Dictionery, and it apparently traces back to Shakespeare’s Merry Wives of Windsor.”
I could hear Frank’s grandfather clock begin to toll twelve in the background. I needed to say goodnight. Once we got started on etymology, Frank and I could go on for hours.
“Honey, it’s midnight. Thanks so much for letting me know your good news. I’m all aglow for you.”
“Wait! What are the other two good things that happened to you today?”
“Only two so far. While we’ve been talking, I’ve been checking my email. I have one from my son who says that the credit union sent my check to his address. It’s not lost after all. But I’m certain a third will come along. Maybe I’ll have sweet dreams about you.”
I crawled back into bed, assured that Frank would be calling me at 7:30 to make certain I was safe. I felt aglow with vicarious joy, thrilled for Frank and his news that his story had a chance at publication, and that I’d been able to help him. Happy we had found each other. Delighted that we took such pleasure in each other’s good fortune.
Before I drifted off to sleep, I realized that our fail-safe calls should count automatically as two good things that we share every single day. Then it struck me. Alive, alert, and able at our age to be in love…that’s a third good thing right there.
Intoxicated with joy, I could hardly wait to call Frank the next morning with the news.


Celebrating my 80th birthday, June, 2017



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