Despite expectations, yesterday turned out to be decently productive. I shipped an editing project, filled out a grant report, read my Donne homework, arduously drafted some job paperwork. None of this was exactly enjoyable, but all of it needed to be done, and I was glad to cross it off the list.
Today I'll undertake a small editing job, clean the upstairs rooms, and maybe let myself mess around with a poem draft. My notebook is packed with Thursday blurts that I haven't yet transcribed, and I'd like to dig into them for an hour or two. I've got green beans to freeze, I should force myself to go grocery shopping . . . but what gets done is what will get done.
Most of my family labor these days is spent propping up my sister, and at least there I feel useful. We text or talk multiple times a day, and I try to counsel and console. It's hard work, and I am ragged. But outside, the sunflowers are blooming. Inside, the kitchen counters are clean and white. Jane Eyre is a surprising comfort: that dogged little governess, always seesawing between restraint and explosion.
And so August draws to a close, and the books pile up around me like medicine bottles. Take one spoonful of Charlotte Bronte three times a day, or until you are ferocious.
It's funny you should mention Jane Eyre and the comfort it brings; there's this really good article on NPR, "This 'Jane Eyre' enthusiast invites you to treat your favorite books as sacred text," that speaks to that point. (link below)
ReplyDeleteI agree that there are texts that provide pure balm-- not wisdom, exactly, but a steadying influence on our hearts and minds. I don't have any adult-level books that come to mind, but for me, The Wind in the Willows and The Secret Garden fill that niche well.
I hope your day is calm, and you find both comfort and inspiration.
NPR: https://www.npr.org/2023/08/27/1195954927/this-jane-eyre-enthusiast-invites-you-to-treat-your-favorite-books-as-sacred-tex