All day long, as far as I know,
nothing is happening.
It’s not the day for grocery
shopping.
I visited my mother yesterday, and
she has no doctor’s appointments, needs no forms filling in, has milk in her
fridge, and my sister is visiting her today.
No visitors are coming.
It’s not a day when I’m needed to
give a lift in the car.
The magazine article deadline was
yesterday – done, sent in.
It’s not the day to go to church.
There are no postal deliveries
expected.
Nobody is needing extra attention
because they are leaving or coming home today.
We have no builders.
There’s nothing to take to the
post office.
I have no proofs to read.
These last months I’ve been
writing writing writing, every day writing writing writing – and yesterday I
finished the second of two novels written this year and sent it in, with all
support documents – the ninth book in the Hawk & the Dove series, the last
of that series. I have nothing else planned, contracted or scheduled.
I am booked for no funerals.
I don’t have any laundry worth
doing.
The wild rain storms have stopped,
there’s a breeze and a beautiful sunrise.
Other than feeding the crow
family, the fox family and the badger family (the wild furry woodland one, not
my husband), I have nobody who can’t get their own meals, here.
The house is clean and tidy.
I have everything I could possibly
want and don’t need to go shopping.
There are no charity kerbside
collections to get up and put things out for.
It’s not garbage collection day.
It’s not recycling collection day.
I (finally) drove out to Catsfield
to drop off various people’s unwanted books at the charity book bank.
I’ve fed the young trees and the
rain storms have watered them.
This week, nobody has a birthday.
I have no
speaking/preaching/retreat leading engagements.
Nobody I live with cries several
times a day, needs their bottom wiping or can’t tie their own shoelaces.
I don’t have a dog, watching me,
waiting . . . waiting . . .
There’s nothing I feel guilty
about because I ought to be going to it and don’t want to.
The others who live with me have
tended the garden.
This whole day there are no plans or obligations and nothing to worry
about, nothing to dread and nothing to accomplish. The last time I can remember
that happening I was four.
Well, hallelujah, eh?