We are spending six quiet easy days here at the Elks Lodge
in Goleta, California. I’m not disturbed by the occasional whistle of the Amtrak
that roars past our campground. The sunny salty days are calming, peaceful, lulled
by the rushing traffic on Highway 101.
I live for days like these and I know Judy does too.
Although she still spends many hours at her computer, she takes breaks and we
walk through the forested picnic area on the lodge grounds. I could do this forever.It is probably good
that I cannot talk because we would get tangled in too many discourses about
the quality of life.
I believe we should follow our nose. Even Judy’s rving friend,
Vicki, who spent her life in the company of horses, quoted the philosophy of
the steeplechaser:“Through your heart over the fence and the horse will
follow.” Judy just finished reading to me from the book titled, “The Art Of Racing In The
Rain.” by Garth Stein. She read the lines in the book over and over, “That which you
manifest is before you.” I would tell Judy that every day my thoughts are to be
free and wild. If I am not actually experiencing the “ the wild,” I am manifesting our next adventure, except when I am sleeping in the safety of one of our two
homes, So, if I had the words, I would
argue with Judy who, I know in her mind, has already thrown her heart over the
fence. Her eyes are on retirement. Another quote from “The Art of Racing in the
Rain,” “Your car goes where your eyes go.” Or in this case our motor home.
But like the Enzo the dog who is now my hero, my tongue‘s function is limited to lapping
water and combing my fur. So I watch Judy fight and kick the temptations of
retirement like knotted bedcovers. The bedcovers are soft and warm, comforting
but entangling. She retorts with, “How much is enough?” I can’t answer, but as Enzo related, "No race is ever won in the first corner..."
Hi Sportster-Great blog. I'm glad you and Judy are having fun!
ReplyDeleteTell her I said hi. :)