I’m relatively low maintenance. Especially now that I’m retired. I may or may not have makeup on (except I’ll probably have applied some eyebrows–my mother used to say she had to do that so as to not scare the horses). If I’m going to the doctor or to lunch, I might make a little more effort. I’ll wear foundation on my face and something fairly “nice” that will match, no doubt. But to Publix it’s hit or miss. I might be there in my gym clothes, even. On the day I met the lady in the parking lot, I was a very pale example of decked out compared to her. She had so much bling it was blinding. Her makeup was impecable, including lip liner and frosted lipstick and lots of eye makeup. She reminded me of Dolly Parton or maybe Jennifer Coolidge (look her up; she’s a dead ringer for my new parking lot friend). Anyway, I had just gotten some reusable bags from the back of my Subaru when she pulled up in the aisle and called out, “Excuse me!” I turned and there she was. She said the cutest thing, “We women,” which made me immediately like her. I walked over to her car–a big white sedan of some kind. She said, “Can you help me put an address in my car’s gps?” Nope. Wrong person. What I said was, “I’m older than you are; we need to find someone young to do that.” To be fair, I could have put an address in her phone, but I’m not any kind of expert on car bluetooth thingies. Anyway, I asked where she was going, she told me West Palm Beach, which is where I was born and raised and spent a good deal of my life, so we had that to talk about, and I had no problem telling her what she needed to know to get down 441 to I-75 to the turnpike (“stay to the left; don’t go to Tampa”) to I-95 at around North Palm Beach or so (she was going to Singer Island where as a kid I attended plenty of beach parties, but that’s another story.) She was divorced, sadly, her husband wasn’t taking it well, and a girlfriend invited her to come stay for a bit. She needed to get away, and I completely understood. We bonded–the low-maintenance eighty-five year old and the bombshell who had been married 46 years but had divorced the hard-driving, take no prisoners, otherwise nice guy. She questioned her decision, but I told her I thought it was because she looked at how much longer she had and decided she couldn’t spend it unhappy. “Exactly!” she said to me. I waved goodbye as she took off to see her girlfriend for a much needed visit, and I went on into the store to buy dinner. And a few other things. I love days when stuff happens that makes me smile. Don’t you?
Metaphors
As a writer, I’ve never really liked metaphors–or similies for that matter–and I’m not sure whether it’s because I’m not clever enough to come up with them or that they feel contrived. Most things, I think, are what they are and don’t compare well to something else. I’m not ever sure why one would need to compare things, anyway. Does the comparison help you to understand the thing observed better? Like I said, contrived.
Spring sneaked up on me, and I wasn’t paying attention until it was full on summer. That’s when I saw that my crepe myrtle bush–the one that got chopped in half during Hurricane Helene last September and had its dead half hacked off and thrown with no mercey on the burn pile. In that moment, I debated sawing off the half clinging crookedly to its little section of earth and decided to simply trim it back and see what happened.
Here’s what happened: it bloomed. And bloomed some more. Even the little straggly parts near the bottom of the poor thing have beautiful purple flowers on them. Beat all to hell by nature–a freaking tree fell on it–broken in half, mind you, reduced to a couple of crooked sticks, and it bloomed. I took one look at it and thought, If that’s not a metaphor for my life, I don’t know what is.
All I want to say about that is that my life right now looks nothing like what I thought it would. Can I leave it at that?
But I’m still blooming. Me and my crepe myrtle.

