It is Wednesday
Hump Day
out my back door
To most of the
people I know it is known as hump day. If you make it past Wednesday it is all
downhill from there. But to my nursing friends that isn’t always true and for
me personally, although I am disabled I still try to have a daily regimen to
keep me going, and this means to us it is just another day to the week. A lot
of that has to do with the profession you are in as farmers and care givers
accept as another day of the week. Also since
part of my present interest includes farming and being retired, the old adage ,
make hay while the sun shines also applies. I find myself at this time of year
weighing personal wants against needs. Trying to prioritize my time becomes
harder as I just want to, indulge my senses with the fall foliage as the
countryside turns shades of gold. A richness of fall colors takes my breath
away at times. I can smell winter also as I know cold times are a coming as well
my 60th birthday. Winter is hastening me to finish projects I am
working on.
moving along with project
Finding a better wood heater and getting it
installed. Starting the foundation and getting footers all dug out and laid out
before the snow flies is a priority. I am also trying to process wood for heat
and storing it in the greenhouse. At some point I would like to plant some more
trees out of the greenhouse and into different areas of the farm. Winterizing this
and that has me a list to keep me busy, well after and up to my birthday when I
turn 60. Thoughts of being six decades old has me a bit scared, yet thankful to
still be around.
I remember back
to the time I was 5 years old and watching my grandpa, a man who I often try to
imitate but can hardly come close to the character this man was. Quiet, humble,
always thinking about the task that needed done. And he was 60 years old then. I
remember seeing the tractor tire tracks where he was run over by a tractor and
had tire marks across his chest and 13 ribs broke from trying to climb on that
runaway tractor trying to save a piece of equipment that was going to stop
anyway. His fingers thick and stubby in comparison to mine, as if scabbed and
scarred so bad from numerous accidents he had while working. He was a carpenter
most of his life and had built houses and was responsible for one right down
the road, the one I live in and many more. Grandpa had more accomplishments
than most his age and was respected by neighbors, someone I always tried to live
up to.
a days work in pile in front thanks to manual, you will notice tools of trade
I have his old
notebooks where he had ordered material for his houses with all his
correspondence so neat and orderly. Something I could never do or was much good
at. I did fine in college and high school, keeping up on my notes. But fell out
of habit, and now I let the puter organize all my writing. If it wasn’t for
that it would be files of unorganized chaos to sort through to find something. Grandpa
died well before the time of computers an so had to keep notes and figures in his notebooks and served the same purpose as a puter, only
it was simpler , except maybe finding the pencil and pad to write it down on. Grandma
kept after Grandpa making him account for every penny he spent. I remember
riding with him when he went to the lumberyard. After picking up materials he
would stop at Mc Donald’s when they still had arches and we would share dinner there
only to be told not to tell anyone because he didn’t want Grandma to know he
was spending money foolishly.
After his life
was over I have to remember it was Grandma and me who would share dinners at Mc
Donald’s and other places at least once a week or more. We did this for a while,
I remember talking to grandma who had always had this man, my Grandpa at her side
telling him what to do, and now he was gone. I can still sympathize with her loneliness
as I miss them also, especially when I look back and think what they have meant
to everyone in the family.
As I reflect on
how my thoughts starting out writing turned from priorities to reflecting on my
Grandpa and Grandma and now I am tasked with bringing it together here on hump
day. In effect it has to do with me judging my actions in comparison to my
Grandpa and Grandma and how they sacrificed personally to get what they wanted
in life. Grandmas a penny becomes a nickel, a nickel becomes a dime, and a dime
a dollar if you have enough of them philosophy , always saving for tomorrow and
doing with less today, attitude, made the both of them at 60 much more worthy
then for what I have accomplished so far in life. Still at 59 and going
downhill rapidly, I just need to put on the brakes and coast along in control
and I am not ready to give up. Only in recent times I have found purpose and a
design to life that somewhere I know I will fit in the nooks and crannies as I go
along. I will spend each day doing the
best I can and looking forward to the next. The rest of my life will be
downhill and easy coasting, as it should be. It is all I can do this hump day.
1 comment:
Haven't read your blog in quite some time. You never cease to amaze me at how hard you work. 60 is just a number. Keep plugging along my friend, your getting a lot more accomplished than me.
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