![]() Half hidden behind the drooping branches of a bottlebrush bush, I watch him doing pushups on the top of the wall. Even in the mild March sunshine, the blocks radiate too much heat to rest his abdomen on their flat surface. This guy is big: fat, in fact. It’s been a good spring for lizards. Early bug hatching and lots of tender weeds provide a plentiful food supply. I sit quietly and lay my book down. Stilling the movement of the glider, I barely breathe as a hummingbird whirrs toward me. She hovers, taking me in, and then darts up and down the tall stem of a penstamon, drinking from each trumpet-shaped pink blossom. Her wings are a fast-forward blur, while her body’s a still life in concentration. I am surprised by the deep drone emanating from this tiny creature. She tips her hat to me before zipping away to sample the next stand of flowers. Monarchs dart between the bees and the penstamons, stopping to feed on the blue ageratums and salvia leucanthas. The butterflies have arrived early this year. The red bloodvines they so love are not in bloom as yet, but they make do. Overhead a hawk circles, riding the currants. I wonder if he’s the same red-tail that thinks a wide limb of our mesquite is his dining table? The garden is a crazy quilt of color: pale and hot pinks, white, a creamy peach, bright yellow, and a touch of burgundy. Wildflowers take root wherever they choose to propagate. The old saying “one man’s weed is another man’s flower” is never truer than in my desert version of an English garden. Three’s a crowd does not apply, and the hummers and butterflies seem to agree with me. I’m usually quite happy to ignore the spacing guidelines for both planting seeds and placing bedding plants, so they live shoulder to shoulder, one variety blending into the next. No social distancing in my garden. A bee buzzes a little too close for comfort. This curious yellow- and black-striped boy lands on my hand, sniffing—if bees can sniff—my skin. I stay very still. As soon as his curiosity is assuaged and he lifts off, I move swiftly away. I’m not afraid of bees but treat them with cautious respect. Those that are Africanized have temperaments that are not to be trusted. Not ready to go indoors, I settle into a cushioned patio chair and breathe in the sweet cinnamon fragrance of the hyacinths and the frilly, party-dress stocks. A breeze kicks up. This morning’s white, angel-wing billow clouds are now overrun by their grey-bottomed, cumulous cousins, who are striding across the sky from the south west: a portent of a storm moving up from Mexico? I smile, realizing I won’t have to stress about driving across town in a desert downpour. There’s nowhere I have to be. Social distancing has its benefits. Mandated self-isolation has become a vacation of sorts. Two weeks in, and I’m relishing my cleared calendar. My soul feels more nourished than in longer than I can remember. My disappointment at events being cancelled has melted into satisfaction in having time to sit in my garden with a cup of tea and a book. Being still and watching sparrows flirt in flight and woodpeckers rip at the fruit on the hanger is a rare treat, but it shouldn’t be. I realize that my ambitious to-do list was becoming a self-dictated lifestyle of over-commitment. The red-tail swoops down and lands in the largest mesquite tree: a thwarted attempt at hatchling stealing perhaps? A smallish bird, squawking and cursing, dives after the hawk, circles and then races away. The hawk shakes out his feathers, disgruntled but tenacious. He tilts his head sideways. I relate to the look in his eye. His focus on achieving his goal is absolute. He’ll bide his time and then take flight again. For now my wings have been forcibly clipped but, once the feathers grow back in, I’ll be more judicious with my flight plan. I look forward to reconnecting with the friends and activities that enhance my enjoyment of life, but I won’t forget that, to rejuvenate, I need to occasionally withdraw into a shell of solitude. Social distancing just might have made me hit the reset button.
8 Comments
sandy
3/27/2020 04:41:14 pm
"Mandated self-isolation has become a vacation of sorts. Two weeks in, and I’m relishing my cleared calendar. My soul feels more nourished than in longer than I can remember." YES! THIS! So much THIS!
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Lynn
3/27/2020 05:21:50 pm
I was hoping someone out there would relate :) Thanks Sandy.
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Nancy Morse
3/28/2020 01:48:43 pm
Yes, I relate too. I do enjoy not having to set my alarm early for various and sundry appointments. I keep a regular schedule of waking and sleeping, eating and activity and I try to complete a task or project every day, or almost.
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Nancy Morse
4/21/2020 03:23:06 pm
I finished Dancing Between the Beats Sunday afternoon and wrote my review just now. It's posted on Bookcrossing, on my "Bookshelf." Also LibraryThing. I'm not a member of Goodreads.
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Lynn
4/22/2020 03:15:33 pm
Thanks Nancy ! If you could post on Amazon, that would be great. They have some kind of a rule that you need to have made $50 worth of purchases in the past year to post a review. I'm not a LibraryThing member, so I'll pop over to BookCrossing. Reviews are very much appreciated.
Lynn
3/28/2020 02:47:53 pm
Thank you so much for commenting and sharing. Honestly, if we have to be confined, I'm grateful it's this time of year when I can give my garden some needed attention. Latest project is creating a vegetable garden using large pots. Had to get creative to find the space :) SO pleased you are enjoying the book. I know you'll "get" so much of the ballroom mentions.
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4/9/2020 01:51:27 pm
I can relate to your past over-commitment because I tend to be that way too. And hard to believe that Covid-19 could have positive influences on our behavior by allowing us to spend healthy leisure time. Now I’m admiring 6 huge blooming Bottlebrush in my backyard, spend more time with my vegetable garden. Also watching my dog, Reba, chasing lizards; sharp vision for an old dog!
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Lynn
4/10/2020 12:16:03 pm
It's great to have time to walk the neighborhood and admire all the gorgeous cactus blooms as well. The dogs are LOVING having us home.
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