Oh Adley, you silly beast. What on earth made you think you could
make plans? Life happens: majestic, terrible and ecstatic, pushing far beyond
the cosy confines of plans.
My tiny plan was beautiful in its simplicity. Despite a lifetime
of experience informing me I should’ve known better, it also seemed eminently
achievable.
Yesterday I rushed around like a manic depressive on the upswing
(know thyself) trying to clear the decks, so that today I could have an entire
day at home, doing nothing but writing.
I did the laundry, went to the supermarket, cooked a huge lamb and
sweet potato stew that’d feed us for 2 days, made a fire and put down the first
draft of a feature I hadn’t expected to write at all.
Bloody lovely. One of the great things about working for myself at
home is that I can write at any time: on days off and while onions are sweating
in the pan.
At this stage my plan didn’t even feel like a plan. It was just
tomorrow. I was that confident.
Usually I get up at the same time as the Snapper, but last night I
told her I was going to lie in. She said she had a big day at work coming up,
so she’d be leaving early anyway. Sleep in my love. That’s what she said.
With my impending day tantalising me like a fat golden peach
ripening on the tree, I am sleeping deeply and dreaming of other worlds when I
hear a shout.
“Charlie! Charlie, my car’s dead.”
My ears and brain kick-start my voice. I seem to need to mumble
out loud to myself, in some slurry muddy treacle way, to prove that I'm awake
and therefore able of conscious thought.
“Wha-? Whassa the oh, ohhh, for Christ’s sake, I, ohhhhh, thusha
musha geddup.”
A quick glance at my clock and I realise there’s no time to look
under her car's bonnet, no time for jump leads. She has to leave now.
No tea no banana no time. I’m dressed and off we go.
Feeling simultaneously drunk and seasick, I point my car Bennett
down the bohreen. The Snapper suggests I might like to put on the headlights,
as it’s a bit of a dim morning. Of course she’s right, but I bark back that
it’s a little early for me to be taking instructions, in a voice that sounds
way too aggressive. She takes it on the chin because she feels guilty, but she
has no reason to be. It’s not her fault. Yeh, but still I drive another mile
before I flip the lights on.
After dropping her at the bottom of Quay Street at 8 o’clock, I
exploit Whispering Blue’s hospitality for an early morning cup of tea. My brain
is barely out of port, my sails are slack, but puffs and breezes of direction
and possibility are blowing in.
I’m in the city with my car, and her car is dead back home, 15
miles from Galway City, most probably in need of a new battery. If I drive back
home I can jump start her car, drive it to my mechanic in Galway, get a new
battery fitted and then wait for her to finish work.
But that’s my entire day gone. My whole lovely day, empty of
obligation and domestic dirge, full of work and opportunity.
No, I can't let all that go so easily. I hatch a plan. You’d think
I’d have copped on by now, but I’m just one of the universe’s compulsive
problem solvers.
Maybe just maybe I can convince my mechanic and his mate to come
out to my place, start her car and take it back with them. Then I can still have
the afternoon to work and - aha!
Aha indeed! This is the moment when my brain decides that I’d
actually had a plan all along, thereby offering me the chance of not achieving
it. Sorry to let you into my messy psyche, but we all suffer from our
own patterns, and one of mine is to find ways to feel I’ve failed to work
enough.
Anyway, yes, thankfully my mechanic shows sympathy for my plight.
We arrange to meet by the garage in the village at 1. Home in a sleepy blur,
unable to focus on work, I whip myself into a whirlwind of mindless domestic
activity, then jump in Bennett and drive up to the village to meet my mechanic
and his mate, who then follow me back to my house.
In two seconds the lads have her car running. Standing in front of
my mechanic’s car, I bow as Nureyev might at the Bolshoi, extravagantly
grateful to him and his mate who, having used their lunch hour to rescue me,
promptly disappear into the distance..
Standing on my front step, I call the Snapper at work. Doubtless
she’s worried about the car situation, and come on, let’s be honest: how often
in our safe modern lives do we have the chance to rescue the damsel; to ride in
on a white charger and kiss the sleeping Princess?
“Hey babe. It’s all sorted. I’m home and your car’s back in the
city. It’ll have a new battery ready for you to pick up after work. All done my
love. Sorted. I’m about to Ohhhh nooOOOOoooooo!”
“What’s the matter? Charlie, are you alright?”
“Ohhh, yeh, I’m alright. Just realised that my keyring’s gone back
into town in your car. I gave it to himself to start your car and never thought
when he drove off. Don't worry. I'll be fine. Bye.”
I’m locked out of Bennett, sitting smug, secure and silent, 4 feet
away.
I’m locked out of my house, which I’d hoped to be inside all day.
I can’t go in and I can’t go out.
The day’s gone loony and my plans are up the spout.
Do the hokey pokey as you live life, ‘cos that’s what it’s all
about.
2 comments:
Bet it all went downhill from there!
Well, no, it went wonderfully, because a certain columnist I'd read for years but never met before drove completely out of his way, giving me a lift all the way to my mechanic's in Salthill in his Merc.
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