Much About Nothing

A cloudy cool Saturday morning. I’ve been doing what I do the best, ruminating, accomplishing nothing. I seemed to have lost my words or else I’ve fallen out of love with them. How does one fall in love again? Life seems to have gone to hell in a handbasket. I am perhaps being overly dramatic and morose. So how does one get out of it? How can I fall in love with life and my words again?

I look out window at the grey drab January landscape. The only bright spot is the pink garage door. I am still surrounded by my paper clutter. At least I’ve taken care to comb and put up my hair. I drew in some eyebrows and put in some earrings. I’m not looking like hell. I’m wearing something bright, a blue mohair sweater knitted long ago. I feel a tug of desire to pick up my knitting needles again. They are sitting in a basket next to my chair. There’s also a pattern book of 6 patterns. The book cost $2.50 so you can guess how old it is.

My thoughts go round and round. I wonder what life is and how did I get here. It’s been a slippery slope since my mother passed. Her presence made me feel safe. There was order and purpose. She was our glue and our traffic director. Nobody seems to want the job she vacated. But one cannot just let everything fall apart. And so I try. Not doing great but at least I’ve picked up the reins. I couldn’t very well just say, ho hum and that was it. Well, I could but what would happen if we all did that?

So, I am trying again on the keyboard. I am trying to find the words to inspire and whisk me out of the hell handbasket. Something is better than nothing. Silence can be deadening as I well know. I might as well raise some hell. There’s still a few days left in January Ultimate Blog Challenge. I’ve made a beginning. There’s a bit of a middle. I need to finish what I’ve started. And that’s all there is to it.

3 thoughts on “Much About Nothing

  1. I really felt this – that gray January mood can make everything feel heavier than it should. But the way you noticed the pink garage door, fixed your hair, put on earrings, and grabbed that bright sweater tells me your spark isn’t gone… it’s just hiding under the clouds.

    Maybe the way back is exactly what you’re already doing: one small thing, then another, like picking up those knitting needles for ten minutes just to see what happens. And hey, you showed up and wrote today – that’s not “nothing,” that’s a real beginning.

    You go girl!

  2. Thank you for sharing your personal thoughts. It takes a lot of bravery to do so. You are not alone. I definitely see such resilience in your words. Your presence is impactful and your words have a lot of emotion and truth in them. Some say one day at a time. I say one inch at a time. It’s more manageable for me. 🙂

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