We had to search a
bit for a place to stay when the rain stopped us hard. We were
a good hour from Lakes Entrance where there'd be shops and hotels.
Orbost was a tiny town with barely a supermarket open. We bought
instant noodles and a can of soup, dancing to stay warm in the
freezing aisles. The little motel we found didn't have microwaves,
and the newly installed free wi-fi (a real rarity in Australia) must
have been weakened by the rain. We couldn't pick it up at all.
It absolutely
poured down all night. I dreamt strong and realistic of driving out
the next morning and getting caught in a nearby town by flooded
streets. In my dream a local family took us in and we became
embroiled (and indebted) in a day of their lives. They owned a small
store that sold stockings and hosiery.
This morning was
not sunny, but it had stopped raining. Also, I finished a poem that I
had started back in June (in my tiny little apartment in the city,
with Chloe, the gorgeous Garfield cat).
One Attitude to Have
(started June 3, 2011 - finished December
13, 2011)
Another cockroach scuttles across the
tiles and
the cat's sprawled lolling on her back
- legs flung out
in two directions. I send her a look.
Just now, though
she watched the thing for a whole long
minute
even took two slow steps toward it, as
if hunting,
before stopping, turning, meowing back
at me like,
Now what do I do? the question we all
ask, sooner
or later in a cold brick and cement
apartment when
it's just us, the spiders, and a few
fifteen watt bulbs.
Replace the light bulbs. Scrub hard at
the dirty floors
when it's day, and bright. Spray the
hell out of the corners
at night sit, knees drawn, in the
center of the bed.
Learn to ignore dark corners and jump
less often. Let them
crawl on certain walls. Then, remove a
slipper from one foot
and cooly smash the ones that come too
close. Or
Vow to do no harm. Like another
American teacher
friends once whispered, his house was
full of bugs. They
were horrified because he refused to
kill the spiders. Though
he was no Buddhist. Teacher Li tells us
the rat running
up along the shelves in her tea shop
usually appears
about this time in the afternoon and
once in the morning.
She pours wine-colored tea into our
tiny, rounded glass
cups. We watch, wait, drink, listen,
hoping to learn
something of her grace.
1 comment:
love this part:
"Now what do I do? the question we all ask, sooner
or later in a cold brick and cement apartment when
it's just us, the spiders, and a few fifteen watt bulbs."
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