Exasperation –
The computer malfunctions
So again I’m lostThis is a shot taken when we were standing outside the Hospital de los Reyes Católicos, kitty-corner from the famous Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela, in northwest Spain. It's your typical tourist picture, and had likely been captured many thousands of times from the very same spot. The components are Old World, picturesque, with elements of history, and religion, alongside ancient and modern culture, and perhaps even myth as well.
If you look closely, you will see along the hills in the background that there are new houses either being built, or recently completed. A cluster of three of them in a row appear no different than tract homes seen in our American suburbs. A larger house in the middle distance is much higher than its neighbors, and shows the current European trend towards large skylights. Its roof tiles are modern and regular, unlike those of the older buildings in the foreground, some of which have become discolored over the years, and indeed show signs of decay and tufts of weeds along their courses.
The climate does not allow whitewash to remain white for long in rainy Galicia, and you can see the stains of mildew on the walls of the older houses, which stand cheek-by-jowl alongside houses that have, at least on their façades, a cleaner look.
The street on which the foreground houses stand is very steep and narrow. Some of the houses have wrought-iron balconies, others have roof terraces. The street lights are, of course, electric, but their design suggests that before the advent of electricity, they may have been fueled by natural gas, and maybe even tallow.
To the right are visible the decorative pillars on the outer wall of the Hospital, and the stone of which they and the supporting base are made is grey and weathered, much in contrast to the incongruous modern spy camera mounted a metre or so below, which points down towards the street, and whose coiled cable forms an elegant calligraphic lower-case letter 'g'.
On the wall to the left the pillars are of a newer design, and one might suppose that they were either added later, after the originals had crumbled through age, or the entire lighter-toned stone structure might have been erected next to the original wall centuries later; a couple of windows lower down seem to favor this second thesis.
In the street below two commercial enterprises are visible. Their entrances are surmounted by canvas canopies which appear to have been well-maintained. One is a restaurant called "Las Huertas", and the other is a pharmacy. Between them is a "No Parking" sign. A couple of people stand outside the restaurant, looking at the printed menu outside. They appear to be locals rather than tourists, who have all recently dined at the quite impressive refectory within the Hospital de los Reyes Católicos.
From outside come the steady beeps of the garbage truck as it backs into the cul-de-sac. But we don’t call it a garbage truck these days. The environmentally correct term is ‘waste management conveyance’.
On alternate Thursdays three trucks arrive, at different times, to pick up respectively 1) household trash including garbage; 2) the recyclable items, paper, cardboard cartons, plastics, glass, and metal; and 3) garden cuttings and yard waste.
It used to be that the plastics and glass had to be placed in one bin, old newspapers in another, and paper items and cardboard in yet another. Things are simpler now – mixing disparate recyclables in the same bin is permitted. Presumably sorting will take place later at the recycling plant.
The trucks are large. These days each household trash truck is operated by one man. He drives and does the picking up all by himself. In the past there used to be three men, one to drive, and the other two to run around pushing large steel bins on casters, into which the contents of householders’ trash cans are deposited, usually with a considerable amount of noise, all up and down the street.
One never sees women doing this kind of work. I am guessing that the physical strength required to lift heavy trash bins may be the reason.
I would often be awakened by the noise of trash collecting. Some Thursday mornings I would wake with a start upon realizing that I had forgotten to put out the trash container the night before. But that sort of oversight happened only infrequently, I’m happy to say.
I have settled into a ritual on Wednesday evenings. I go around the house collecting all the rubbish I can find: old magazines and newspapers, wastebasket contents, empty or near-empty plastic water bottles, plastic bags filled with shredded paper from the paper shredder. Using a hand-truck that I had acquired specifically for the purpose, I wheel the cumbersome bins of recyclable items up the driveway and over to curbside for the next morning’s pick-up.
The job is harder if we had a house party the previous weekend, as we just did.They are those
who listen
and help where able
when needed
They are those
whose voices
are the most pleasing
on the phone
They are those
older now
who once were children
beside us
It’s been some years since I exhibited any of my oil paintings, and it’s gratifying to have three of them on display again. They are at the clubhouse of the retirement community across the Bay where we have lately been spending time. I do not yet have any photos of them for posting here, but one day I’ll get around to it. There is a very active art association at the community, with talented artists in various media whose works are also being exhibited. I plan to spend more time over there, and do more painting. It’s the time I need, always. More time.
* * *
A leaf from the maple
falls upon the deck
with a solidity
that surprises –
not a rustle
nor a whisper
as you might expect,
instead there’s
a robust
plop.
Clinging to the window glass
with the light from my room reflected
in its incandescent eyes,
the little moth displays five,
and only five, skinny legs.
Why five? I wonder, leaning closer
to count again –
where is number six, little moth?
how came you to lose one?
And will you, like a crab,
grow a new one in time,
as strong and nimble
as the one you lost?
Soldier on, little moth,
may courage
be your companion
while you still
have life.We bought a couple of lamps recently: a floor lamp and a table lamp. These were manufactured, of course, in China, where else? But proudly designed to U.S. specifications, and containing so far as we can surmise, no toxic ingredients.
The lamps, like so many other household appliances nowadays, come in large cardboard cartons, and are kept in place within the cartons by molded blocks of lightweight white material which help protect against breakage or damage. This material is generally called Styrofoam, but that is a brand name which has taken on a generic life of its own, like Kleenex and Band-aid. The correct term, as I was able to discover on the Internet, is polystyrene foam.
It is used for things like single-use coffee cups, life jackets, insulation, and things of that kind.
In the course of opening the cartons and assembling the lamps (yes, there was some assembly required, though the task proved not to be too arduous for your average senior citizen), bits of the Styrofoam came off and flew all over the floor, like crumbs. These tiny bits of material are very difficult to clean up. They are ultra-light, and they tend to be attracted to almost any surface in their vicinity: upholstered furniture, trouser legs, fingers, shoes. Trying to sweep them up is a hopeless task. The little beads fly every which way except into the dustpan, and the act of sweeping seems to generate a stronger static charge, making it even more of a chore to shake off.
And to make matters worse, Styrofoam is not ecologically friendly. It may not dissolve back into the earth for hundreds of years, though there now appears to be a way to use bacteria to assist the process.