Golden moments in Daydreaming on the Porch
- May 18, 2022, 8:47 p.m.
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- Public
I wondered today, walking slowly along the road, how it was that so many simple things give me such exquisite joy. I saw a gray cat curled up on a window ledge in the morning sun, and stood looking at her with such a sense of fitness, such an understanding of comfort as I cannot describe. Why should a cat in a window please me? Why should I care to stand and watch her there luxuriating in the sun? Why should I recall the experience for several day afterward with a warm sense of remembered delight?
David Grayson writing in “Under My Elm”
It was one of those golden moments I can look back on fondly now with gratitude, bittersweet though it may have been.
At the large pet supply store, I walked in the door and stopped almost immediately by what caught my attention to my right. At a pet adoption table, a small boy about 7 was clutching to his chest with sheer joy a sizable, tan-colored puppy, perhaps six months old and a labrador mix, something like that. I stood transfixed by that brief scene of pure, unadulterated bliss, not wanting it to end. But a bittersweet experience, too, in the knowledge that it was something I never have or will enjoy witnessing as a parent, not being one myself. Life is filled with many of these types of “golden” and bittersweet moments, mainly because I tend to notice more keenly that which I don’t or can’t have or experience in a more personal sense. It’s difficult to explain.
Not so with another golden moment I cherish during the time I was caregiving. It was the middle of the night when my mother called and had to use the bathroom (actually the portable potty next to her bed). I had a monitor and I could hear her from upstairs unless I was very soundly asleep, which fortunately was rare considering the caregiving responsibilities I had back then. I came into the room, turned on the lamp, helped her, comforted and gave her a hug. I turned off the lamp and passed back through the den and stopped at the sofa where our sweet old tabbby cat, Ginger, was sleeping, now awake, and she, too, got a hug and then commenced her deep purring.
It is during brief moments like those in the deep and quiet shelter of night, when all the outside world is asleep and the anxieties of life fade briefly, that caregiving seemed very doable. Would that life could always be that way — peaceful and secure. During those fleeting and treasured moments it is, and I am thankful for that.
gypsy spirit ⋅ May 19, 2022
it is good though that despite not being a parent yourself you still manage to find delight in such golden moments as that little boy's delight. Yes, joy can be found in many ways and in many places....its about having an eye for it and a great appreciation of everything an everyone around us. A child's happiness and love for a creature is a universal thing. hugs p
Oswego gypsy spirit ⋅ May 19, 2022
Those truly “golden” moments don’t come along too often so I especially treasure and try to write about tgrm! ☺️
ConnieK ⋅ May 19, 2022
I think memories are bittersweet. They give you comfort. My husband and I were watching a public service ad for seat belts where a woman answers her door to a policeman who tells her that her son died (because he didn't wear the seat belt) and the camera did a close-up of a mother's face. My husband got a bit angry, saying it was too in-yer-face. I reminded him that having lost a child we could feel that mother's pain because we know how it feels to be told your child is dead.
My point, I guess, is that the perspective depends on the person absorbing.