In the hours before my mammogram,
I try to remember the rules
for this particular scan.
Can I eat breakfast?
It was a beautiful wedding. I took no pictures because I wanted to travel light, the way I did when I was a girl with just a credit card and a lipstick in my pocket. I left the credit card behind, but I did take the hotel room key and my driver's license, even though we were riding on chartered vans and wouldn't have to drive. Before September 11, 2001, I went a lot of places without my license, which I left in the car so I wouldn't be without it when I drove. But that event was the beginning of the surveillance state in which we find ourselves now.
But that's not a happy turn of paragraph. That paragraph doesn't do much to support the topic sentence. I have no pictures to prove the topic sentence, and I don't want to spend too much time on describing in words. The bride and groom were beautiful, but I don't think I've ever seen a non-beautiful bride and groom. They pledged their love and support, slipped rings on each other's fingers, and then we celebrated the rest of the evening.
I am intrigued by urban and non-traditional spaces that transform themselves into celebration venues. My sister's wedding reception was at The Torpedo Factory in Alexandria, which was once a torpedo factory but is now artist spaces and celebration areas. Last night's event was at an old train depot, right under an interstate highway. It worked.
The food was sumptuous, the drinks free flowing, the music loud. I couldn't do this every night, but I was glad to be there last night.
Most years, wedding seasons come and go, and no one I know gets married. This year, we have two family weddings, just like we did a few decades ago, when my cousin got married in early Spring and my sister in late Spring. Then, as now, there was a war in the Middle East. Then, as now, we celebrated love despite a world that seems intent on coming apart faster than we can patch it back together again.
Then, as now, I think that love is the only way we patch this world back together again.
I'm a bit more tired than is normal for me in the morning. I do feel like I've been pushing myself harder than is normal: I wanted to get the pastor work for the coming week-end done by last Sunday, which I did, but that meant I was behind with the short paper that is due tomorrow. So yesterday, I finished that draft, then went and taught, and then came home, doing some grocery shopping along the way.
So, in the past week, in addition to the blog posts that I've written, I've written 2 sermons, 2 shorter meditations for Wednesday night worship, and a short paper (850 words) for my Lutheran Confessions class. So, in January when I look back and wonder why my poem writing trailed off in mid-March, that's why.
This morning, before writing in my offline journal, I spent some time reading old entries from the past year. That can leave me tired, since I usually write in my offline journal about non-bloggable stuff, usually heavy stuff, and reading those types of entries can leave me sad and slightly hollowed out.
So why do I do it? I'm usually looking for information, of the when did that meeting happen or when did I apply for this job kind of information. That's what took me to my journal this morning, at least. Often I'm looking through my offline journal for sadder information, like medical details or when someone died.
Today is a heavier teaching day than I had planned, in part because of Monday's tech glitches. Happily, it was a fairly easy pivot. Based on yesterday's Poe/horror discussions, I'm looking forward to seeing how my afternoon classes react. It should be a good teaching day.
But if my weariness persists, perhaps I'll treat myself to a delicious coffee indulgence mid-morning.
Once again, my writing time is fragmented by all the writing I'm hoping to get done this week-end: tomorrow's sermon and a meditation for Wednesday night, next week's sermon and a meditation for the last Wednesday in March, and my short paper for Lutheran Confessions class which is due on Thursday. I can get it all done, but it doesn't leave much time for other writing, like poetry writing or blogging in depth.
Yesterday I also worked some doctor's appointments into my schedule: our annual eye exams and my 3 month dermatologist exam. After my melanoma, I'll be going to the dermatologist every three months for the next few years. Yesterday I had some spots zapped, along with three spots sent in for a biopsy. Now that I've had the weird melanoma that didn't look like a melanoma, we're both a bit spooked and erring on the side of more information.
By the end of yesterday, I was a bit overwhelmed, so I unplugged for a bit. This morning I woke up with "Ophelia" by The Band in my head. I heard it while I was waiting for my skin exam. My dermatologist has a great playlist, and she told me that she had it done for her exclusively. There aren't ads, and it's a great mix of music across all genres.
This morning I did a bit of a deep dive into some music by way of YouTube, which has an algorithm for me that I don't resent. I wanted to see if I was remembering correctly that it was The Band that did "Ophelia," and then I wanted to hear a few more songs that I remember from that Greatest Hits album. And then there were others, including a dance-in-my-seat session to "Hold On! I'm Coming."
It was a great way to start the day. I should probably do it more often.