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A bit of our downtown architecture, from a booklet I designed back in 2006 |
I did something this morning I have not done for years, if ever. I had a 9:30 appointment at my dad's bank. The bank's downtown branch is one block from Dad's apartment, and two blocks from the library, where I had a book to return and one to pick up. My plan was bank, library, and then Dad.
The bank appointment finished much earlier than I had planned—at 9:40—and the library does not open until 10:00. Add to the picture that I was carrying a bag containing three 6-packs of Glucerna (which Dad keeps stocked in his fridge). Let's just say the bag was not light. Oh, and it was heating up (a heat dome day).
What to do, what to do?
It made no sense to walk to the library and wait outside; the library faces east and would be in bright sunshine. Instead, I crossed the street, heavily burdened by my bag, and plopped down on a bench on the east side of the our main drag through downtown, with the buildings casting a solid shade at that hour of the morning.
And then I just sat there.
I watched birds fly on and off the buildings. I looked at our downtown architecture, mostly post-Civil War Italianate structures, more thoughtfully than I have in many years. Back in 2003–2004, I wrote a series of articles about our downtown architecture for the then locally owned newspaper. Some of those very buildings I had written about were next to me or across the street. I found myself thinking of both the then and the now as I looked at changes in the local businesses over those decades, as well as the changes to the building themselves.
And then there was just the act of sitting on a bench in the middle of downtown and not doing anything for some 20 minutes. I wasn't drinking a coffee. I was not texting or scrolling. I didn't even take any notes, because, stunningly, I didn't think I had a pen. I meant to pick one up at the bank, but picked up a bite-size Hershey bar instead. (It turned out I did have a pen, at the bottom of the heavy bag. I found it later.)
I kept sitting.
Eventually, the hour turned. I could hear the bells of the Catholic church a few blocks away chiming. I stood up, picked up my bag, and moved on into the rest of my morning.
Sometimes you step off the beaten path just by sitting. And this morning was one of those times.
4 comments:
I've done similar a few times, but admittedly sitting like that more than 10 minutes wasn't in my nature yet. I laughed at no pen as I'm always seem to be shy of a pen.
Sam, I laughed when I got to Dad's apartment, took out the Glucerna, and there was the pen...clearly it had been hiding out! As for the sitting, I am still on the comeback trail from my June mishap, and am making an effort to remind myself that it's OKAY just to...sit.
You're a woman of many talents! That is some interesting architecture. Just sitting and noticing on a summer's morning sounds like a great start to a day.
Laurie, it was a great start to the day. Thank you for your compliment as to many talents: much appreciated as I think I fall squarely into the "jack of all (well, many) trades, master of none" classification!
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