I’m in hell.
I’m exhausted, and I have yet to complete a week packed morning to night with classes, meetings, and rehearsals. Add to that mounds of papers to grade, survey data to compile and evaluate, text adoptions to make, online course to complete and post, midterms to complete, promotions binder to complete—all within the next two weeks. How can I do this? Yet somehow I have to do it—all of it.
Let alone that I’m already ignoring SEVERAL pressing issues at home, from garden to lawn to trees to winterizing to cleaning to home repair to financial paperwork—not to mention relaxing or having fun. Sleep and eating habits aren’t good, I’m tense all the time, and the catherine saga (new readers—see old posts; old readers—updates coming eventually) continues on its ever complicated path. I even pushed a doctor’s appointment this month back to January—I just don’t want to deal with it until I have a little time. And let alone writing and reading projects.
So I had to force myself to go to Stoney Pond with Shanti. Not much of a run, really, just to let her get out.
“Hey! Sorry!” I hear. A black lab comes racing down the trail.
“We’re fine!” I call back. Everything canine looks like nothing more than play.
“Oh! Shanti, is it?” calls a man running around the trail’s bend.
“Yup!” Now I remember—Mike and his dog Jake. Shanti and I have come across them before.
I let Shanti loose to run, knowing they dogs will stay around us.
I don’t have time to talk—but I welcome it. We discuss dogs, past and present, hunters, campers, bicycling and dogs, cross-country skiing, deer, storms and trees, sticks and dogs, training—and more, until the darkening skies and threatening storms get us to pick up and move along, work awaiting. Our dogs, calm after a good, friendly workout, obey our quiet commands immediately and cheerfully, their romp just what they needed.
It’s what I needed as well. Time for a good night’s sleep, and early tomorrow, back to work.
Writer
2 comments:
Get the feeling you won't be getting air until late December? Me too.
Dogs: Natures way of saying take a break.
Wide sky and sticks puts things into perspective don't you find?
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