Sunday, March 09, 2008

Shoes, Clocks and Potatoes

I remember walking home from the synagogue in early March several years ago with one of my sons. He was about 22 and had returned a couple of months early from his third year in yeshiva. Usually the kids stay until the summer, finish out the academic year.

I can remember it like it was yesterday. We noted the buds on the trees in the sunshine. He called them a remez, a hint to tchiyat hamaytim, the reincarnation of souls after death. Something from nothing.

Ya' gotta' love religion.

Anyway, we're nowhere near buds on the trees, I feel. But we HAVE to get away from all this depressing stuff, all this talk of death. Don't you agree? It's not good for us.

But how do you get away? In Chicago it's still very grey outdoors and I didn't even leave the house all day yesterday (so not me). The cold felt like an insult and the house wasn't even all that warm. Why would I step out to a place where for sure it wasn't warm?

So I stayed in under blankets and finished up some reading. FD buzzed in and out from shul, and the kids stopped over for some lunch, which is always happy. After dark, FD returned home to find me on my computer. "Getting some writing done?"

Nah, no energy. Lying around all day doesn't do it for me. Just reading right now.

We puttered a couple of hours, did some dishes, tranced out a bit, and our grandson gave us a call from California. He's three.

"Bubbie, when are you coming here? To my house. When are you coming here? I mean, to my house? When?"

Uh, no time soon, sweetheart. Let's SKYPE.

And in no time I had a live rendition of Itsy Bitsy Spider. I suggest this to most people who are still recovering from their SADS (seasonal affective disorder). Find a three-year old to sing you Itsy Bitsy Spider. And if he knows the you say potato, I say potahto, you say tomato, I say tomahto song, make him sing that, too. Teach it to him.

Then this morning, after a great hot shower, I snooped around my closet to find something happy to wear. I really felt like I needed a new pair of shoes. You know how that goes, right? The last new pair of shoes I bought were boots. And although ordinarily that might have done the trick (it IS still 30 degrees out there, maybe less, we're talking Fahrenheit), today the boots only made me feel worse.

They're SKI boots. You have to see what I mean. They fit on a wooden platform that attaches to my new used cross-country skis. Although they look and feel fantastic, my patients would look at me like I was out of my mind if I were to wear them to work.

So I settled on a uniform and breezed down to the kitchen and thankfully, FD had made a good pot of strong coffee (we go 50% decaf, we're old). I flipped on the TV to make sure I hadn't missed any more serious death and destruction while trying to get a good nights rest. Sundays are tough days at the office.

More student coeds murdered, two separate cases. Gorgeous girls. The killers are identified. Well. I guess that's good? Two young boys dead off the coast of Washington, one trying to save the other.

I flipped it OFF. What's a remote for?

Anyway, today is Spring Forward with the Clocks Day, and spring is a new lease on life. And speaking of clocks, I never did tell you about Switzerland. In Switzerland, I imagine that every clock known to man simply FLIES forward, that each tick and tock can't wait for events like DST (do they even have daylight saving time in Switzerland?). If so, it must be so exciting. All those clocks, jumping at the bit.

On your mark. Get set. Go!

Switzerland made me crazy is the truth. Everywhere I looked. Clocks. Large clocks. Small clocks. Medium clocks. But mostly LARGE clocks. Everywhere. All set exactly to the same time. I couldn't have missed my flight if I had a paper bag over my head.

But here in Chicago it's not that way, and confusion will totally reign, I'm sure, until everyone figures it out, Spring Forward, Fall Back. And I'll have to patiently go with the flow and tell folks this:
Actually? I can't reschedule you. There's no time this week.
You see, somewhere, somehow, I have to buy myself a pair of shoes.

copyright 2008 therapydoc

17 comments:

Motherwise said...

Ah, the feeling of new shoes. I have also gotten the same lift from a new watch. I figure the reason they do it for me is because my size never changes. I am looking out on the sun shining on a foot of new snow and trying to be happy that at least there is sun.

shrink on the couch said...

losing an hour's worth of precious sleep is enough to put anyone into a funk, let alone SAD sufferers. but I do like springing forward -- because its spring and its reknewal and summer is around the corner!

Sai Hijara - Ferraris said...

Which reminds me, I really NEED to find time to get myself that running shoes I've been talking/rambling about... ;)

Anonymous said...

you always have such compelling things to say and phrased so powerfully.

Carla

therapydoc said...

Carla, Thanks, but it's no big deal. Most of us get this way about shoes.

Crabby McSlacker said...

We're getting some serious spring weather in California--flowers and chirpy birds and balmy weather after a bunch of rain, and wow, what a mood elevator. (Or is it spelled elevater? I'm now picturing a literal mood elevator going straight up into the sky).

Anyway, it's might cheery here--hopefully you'll get your turn soon.

therapydoc said...

Chicagoans have to be insane to wait for weather to feel good. We have to use a good deal of imagination and bake a lot of cookies.

Anonymous said...

Paolo Nutini's song, New Shoes is guaranteed to make you smile, despite SAD, despite Chicago weather.

I promise! It's worth every one of the ninety-nine pennies iTunes charges! You can hear it for free on YouTube.

I don't know how to put a link in a comment so you'll have to google or cut and paste - but I guarantee your mood will be elevated, at least for a few minutes! :)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hmbUNF1Q4R8

therapydoc said...

Oh, when I heard that song for the first time I totally smiled. Thanks for the link!

Margo said...

All four of us overslept this morning, thanks to the time change, for the first time in, I don't know...five years? Your itsy bitsy spider was late for school.

Tonight the song continued: "You say lemonade, I say lemon juice," followed by a discussion of why it's called lemonADE in the first place when every other fruit gets a juice. Yes, I had answers, but I was tired.

Send me pics if you shoe-shop. Smooches.

therapydoc said...

Forget shoes. You know I need an oven, duofuel, preferably, double, self-cleaning.

But it's a good story. Coming soon.

Anonymous said...

I couldn't stand one more day of grey. I went to California.

Anonymous said...

Ah how I love the DS time change. Takes me about a week to recover and I'm RETIRED!!!!!

The Spring Forward affects me much much more than the fall back. I guess my bod likes "real time." I found myself getting up at 6:30AM this morning, which of course meant it was 5:30AM, no time for someone in my circumstances to be awakening. AND to make matters worse, I first looked at the clock at 5AM, which means it was really 4AM, made a trip to the bathroom, tried to fall back asleep and it never happened.

Am I complaining? Not really. But it helped me immensely when I was still working and made the connection between my tiredness as related to the time change.

By the way, you'd love it around here. Beloved husband not only collects clocks, he makes them! And several of them have Westminster Chimes in them! You should be here at noon . . . bong bong bong bong bong. . . you get the picture. Oh, how I do love that man!

therapydoc said...

But is he Swiss?

Kindyland said...

Hi, I found your blog this morning and spent an hour (or 5) reading through it. Very interesting stuff you have here. I'm a psych student at Argosy in Atlanta. :) Just wanted to say howdy.

Dr. Deb said...

Powerful post, TD. I so get you.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for sharing your wonderful experience. But most of us get this way about shoes.

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