rDay Two-Hundred-Seventy-Nine: Missed Opportunities

My old photographer friend, Lee Romero, used to remind us — often from a perch on a barstool — that people are creatures of habit. Today my normal, habitual pattern was interrupted and, as a result, I left the house on a shopping excursion without a camera. Of course, several visual oddities presented themselves as events unfolded while we were out on the economy:

1. While waiting in the car for Kim to withdraw cash at the bank, a pickup truck drove by, towing an otherwise empty flatbed trailer to which was affixed a dental chair, seeming to be ready for action.

2. Striding across the snowy G.O. parking lot came an individual (with a woman on his arm who could have been J.J.) who appeared to be a perfectly-executed human version of Zeke of Doonesbury infamy, perhaps visiting from Seattle.

3. Awaiting the change of a traffic signal, the driver side window of the car in front of us suddenly opened, whereupon an outthrust arm dangled and vigorously shook a pair of men’s pants, jerking it back inside just before the green appeared.

4. My friend Eric, proprietor of an eponymous body shop, appeared driving his Jeep in cross-intersection traffic.  This is a small town, you know.

5. We saw a SeQuential truck slowly slithering through the 4-way on Island and Washington.

SIDEBAR:  While the above underscores the futility of attempting to describe the visual with words alone, occasionally we come upon writers who can do just that in a wonderfully, almost magically, successful way.  In fact, just such an example served to provide my Pattern Interruptus of the morning.  I was gearing up for our shopping trek and was about to grab my camera from the other room, when I saw Kim resting her back on the couch.  So I stopped and sat across from her, picking up my newly-gifted “Up In The Old Hotel” by Joseph Mitchell and continued to read aloud to her, until she was ready to depart.  This is a book not to be missed.

rDay Two-Hundred-Seventy-Five: Christmas Day [continued]

After delivering homemade baked goodies and gifts to Grandma Janet, Ivi returns to join the rest of us in an afternoon and evening of family games … wherein the older generation is soundly trounced by the younger.  Fresh from his victory in an online puzzle design competition, Nik is a particularly formidable opponent. 

rDay Two-Hundred-Seventy-Five: Christmas Day

Up early before daylight to brave a winter hazard alert and temps in the teens, making our way out of the valley and across the mountains to Pendleton, picking up Ivi who had flown in from Portland at daybreak, after riding the train from Seattle the night before.  Upon arriving back home at 9:30 or so, breakfast was the first item of business, then a quick check-in at 103, followed by a series of naps to facilitate the resumption of Christmas festivities by noon.  Charlie and Ivi: reunited.