It's Monday, end-of-the-holiday Monday, back-to-the-grind Monday. I will miss my slow mornings. I was not overjoyed to hear the alarm shrill at 5 a.m., though Charles was pleased about his suddenly very prompt breakfast. But I imagine I'll get back into the swing quickly enough.
Today I've got errands to run, emails to answer, probably some editing consultations to do, housework to deal with, next week's high school syllabus to hone . . . I'm sure I'm forgetting something, but it will no doubt conk me over the head at some point.
It's not like I haven't been working at all: I spent a good portion of the New Year's holiday immersed in poem projects, catching up on publicity chores, advising my kid about his grad-school application essays, and the like. Still, the days were a breath, and the upcoming months will be demanding.
Upstairs T is opening and closing his dresser drawers. Downstairs Chuck leans against my shoulder and chirps into my ear. The coffee table is piled with books. Clean counters gleam in the kitchen. Heat pulses through the registers. Wheels turn, slowly, then faster and faster, chugging us forward.
I considered making a New Year's list of things I dislike (Facebook memes that pretend to quote from sources but are really AI pap that reposters haven't fact-checked, famous athletes who are under felony investigation for beating up women but still get to play in games, men who call their wives mom, presidents who kidnap other presidents for fun), but the big stories are so bad, the small stories are grit in the eye, and what is my purpose on the planet anyway? Chuck says it's to sit quietly on the couch so he can cuddle, and maybe he's not wrong. I'll go out for my walk, slip and slide among the ice patches, watch flocks of sparrows twitter in the bare-boned hedges. I'll come home again. I'll put the kettle on the stove. I'll open a book. Who knows where righteousness arises? I am the last person who should preach.