”Roller skating is the closest you can get to flying.”
Sometime last night thunder boomed overhead. The sound was like canon shots, not the usual claps. We all woke up, the dogs and I, but it didn’t happen again so we fell back to sleep. It was odd.
Last night it rained. I didn’t hear it. Everything is still wet. The sky was cloudy this morning, a light gray, but the sun has made an appearance as has the blue sky. It is warm at 62°. Rain is predicted for later.
When I think about growing up, I have good memories. I had everything a kid could want: a bike, a sled, roller skates and ice skates. I was equipped for every season. My roller skate key was on a string around my neck. I used it to tighter the grip of the skate clamps to the top sides of my shoes. Sometimes my shoes fell out of the clamps, and I had to reattach the skate to the shoe. I remember the silly walk with my skate hanging, still attached to my foot by the strap. It was lift the leg and swing the hanging skate in the air. I’d then sit on the curb and retighten the clamps. I loved the clicking sound of my skates on the sidewalk, and the way the bottom of my feet felt when I wore the skates.
The eighth grade was the last grade in my grammar school. I had attended the school since first grade. I had nuns one year and lay teachers the next, all women. One, my second grade teacher, Mrs. Kerrigan, was an old time teacher. She had gray hair she wore in a bun. Her dresses were flowered. Her shoes, her black shoes, had clunky heels. She always carried a pocketbook. Mrs. Kerrigan lived on the second floor of a house across from the church. She walked to school. She was soft-spoken. In my mind’s eye, I can still see a glimpse of her.
I remember a trip we took, my family and I, to the White Mountains. We saw it all. We took the last bus to the Flume and had to walk back to the parking lot. The Man in the Mountain still protruded from the ledge. I thought the man looked amazing, craggy, grizzled. He would fall in 2003. I was so glad I had seen him in all his glory. My father drove up Mount Washington. I remember how slow he drove. I kept looking over the edge glad for the slowness. When we got to the top, it was cold. I couldn’t imagine living on the top of the mountain in winter. When we went back to the car, a bumper sticker had been attached, “This car climbed Mount Washington.”
My dance card has a uke concert tomorrow then nothing until Tuesday. I’m going to do some yard cleaning of Nala’s trash and fill a couple of feeders. That’s it.