Simple Things

One card to make out of the current batch, then I need to write in them, address them, stamp them and take them to the post office. If they go today, they’re a week ahead of the final posting date. Two more to make, for my children, which I want to make a bit more special, but haven’t got a clear idea yet what I’m going to do. Hopefully I’m going to be able to deliver them both in person, but if not… maybe I should plan on trying to get them posted in advance anyway, because who knows what might happen in the next fortnight?

Yesterday I showed my therapist the Christmas jumper, she seemed particularly excited that it was blue and not red or green. I’ve still got to weave in the ends. Over Skype, she couldn’t see that, or the way the stitches pull around the motifs – besides, she’s not a knitter, so she’s probably impressed that I managed to finish it at all. She said at one point that she was ‘in awe’ of me – I’d rather she admired my writing or my academic prowess than my knitting, but I don’t think she meant that anyway.

She said last week how impressed she was with my routine, how I get up and do my yoga, tai chi and meditation, and then my writing, and yesterday she added to this the way I do my crafting. I showed her the current weather blanket and she asked what I do with them when they’re finished, so I told her the first one is in the spare bedroom, last year’s one went to my son and daughter-in-law and this one’s going to my daughter – to mark for both of them the years in which they got married (my daughter’s idea).

But all of that: getting up at seven (when usually I’ve been awake for at least two hours already), the exercise and meditation, the five hundred words, the square for the weather blanket and other crafts (and the reading, listening to the radio and su doku as well) – is about self-preservation, keeping myself this side of the line that tips over into darkness. I do them because I need to. Yes, I’d quite like it if I was writing a novel, or some great academic treatise that would put the world to rights, but at least all these activities are doable and pretty harmless and don’t involve anybody else. One day, no doubt, I’ll stop doing one or more of them, and then this year will become, not just the (first) Covid-19 year, but the time when I ‘…used to do that stuff’.

Years ago, I used to do cross stitch, and I remember thinking my life was pretty sad on the days when that was the most satisfying thing I’d done – like the wife in the Paul Simon song for whom a good day ‘…ain’t got no rain’. But I’ve learned to appreciate losing myself in simple things.

Calling

Sunshine outside the window, and Miko has just come to join me at the computer. I thought last night that maybe I would get up and walk to the seafront for sunrise this morning, but although I was awake in plenty of time, I didn’t do it. Maybe I’ll go later, but probably I won’t.

The word ‘hibernation’ comes from the same root as the French hiver, winter, so it literally translates as ‘wintering’, but is mainly used to describe the ways in which some animals adapt to winter conditions by slowing down, conserving energy, and in some species entering an extreme state which can last several months (I’m not a zoologist, this is just my layperson’s understanding of the term). I don’t know why I just wandered into saying that, all of which I’m sure you already know, it’s just the link with hiver that I find interesting. I thought that was going to take me somewhere, but I’m not sure where – or to put it another way, I don’t have a bloody clue.

Sitting here staring past my computer and out of the window and thinking about the Purpose of Life, and wondering how to say that I don’t believe there is one – I’m pretty sure mine doesn’t have one, anyway. Last night I was listening to the Paul Simon song ‘Slip Slidin’ Away’ and thinking I’d never noticed before quite how nihilistic it is – especially the verse about the woman who ‘…became a wife…’

Like Descartes, the only thing I can say for sure is that I must exist, because I am always thinking, and something must generate those thoughts – plus I receive sensory messages which tell me I have a physical body which interacts with an external world; accumulated memories of past events; and the ability to anticipate and prepare for future ones. I have experienced joy and despair, but never anything which convinced me of the existence of any higher power or God outside of those created by human cultures or explicable by science – although I don’t think this has affected my appreciation of the beauty of the world. So I’ve never felt ‘called’ by any such higher power, and insofar as I’ve ever felt ‘called’ to anything, I suppose I could say it was to writing. It may seem a little harsh not to mention my children at this point, but although since they appeared, my commitment to them has  been total and overwhelming, they came as the result of choices made by myself and their father, and I can see alternative lives in which I didn’t have them (though of course I am eternally grateful that I did).

Back to writing then – the one thing which has always been there, the closest I’ve ever been to having a ‘calling’ or to ‘following my bliss’. And here I am, still following it, doing it every day, in however limited a fashion.

And wondering what it was that I meant to say about hibernation.