Sunday, June 9
When I got home from the hospital, Ed and Doug rearranged our living room to make it most convenient for all my needs. In this time of recovery, that means that my world has become reduced to a six-foot wide circle. Most everything I need to get through the day, with just a few exceptions, is found in this span. Take a tour with me.
Here’s the coffee table, and I find it impressive how much stuff it can hold. There are my reading glasses (two prescription pairs, one for books, one for laptop; there are also a couple of drug-store variety readers, too) ), and the laptop charger. There’s my water bottle (best to keep all liquids in sealed containers after what happened with the kicking-of-the-juice experience in the hospital), and normally there’s also a coffee or tea travel mug as well. There’s a physical therapy stretchy band. You’ll see that there’s a small pharmacy of drugs, along with a pill cutter that the last nurse I had in the hospital deeded to us. You might notice the package of pitted prunes: directly related to all those meds. ‘Nuff said. Plenty of remotes for the TV and stereo and fireplace (and yes, it’s June, but it’s also Colorado, and between the fact that it’s only 53 degrees outside today and I spend a bunch of my time with ice surrounding much of my left leg, I’m always cold).
There’s a pair of binoculars; who doesn’t keep a pair at their side at all times? Sadly, the view from my couch doesn’t afford me a wide variety of birds, as the feeders are all in the wrong position from here. There are place mats (we eat many of our meals here) and, of course, serviettes (we may be barbarians when it comes to where we eat, but at least we’re semi-civilized about it). There’s a get well card (with chickadees on it, what else?) and a few pieces of mail and catalogs hidden in the stacks of books and magazines.
There’s also a single harmonica in its case; the rest of my set and all my harmonica music is in a pouch under the coffee table. Lest you think this too pretentious, keep in mind that I just started harmonica lessons at the beginning of the year and I’m still struggling to play clean, clear single notes. Ed has progressed far more rapidly than I have, and is bending notes reliably while my attempts to bend sound like sick squirrels. Also under the coffee table: my laptop is normally stored here, alongside the cardboard scratching pad that Tookie (my faithful 11-year old kitty) likes to tear up. Tookie likes to bring me his brush (that’s the purple thing that we call “the purple hand of love”), so it’s here, too. Seriously: this cat picks up the brush upstairs and carries it all the way down here (meowing all the way) and drops it at my feet when he’s determined to get brushed.
What else? Oh, well duh! There's my iPhone, but it's always in my pocket or in my hand. How else can I keep up with NY Times crossword puzzles? Pretty much the only necessity missing from my reach is the bowl of chocolates. That’s okay: it’s a great motivator for me to get up and move outside of my circle. But for all that, there’s very little I need that I can’t reach from the center of my world.
No comments:
Post a Comment