Blustery Rain. Blistering Sun. Snowy showers.
Nora walked her pup.
Four or five times daily I'd pass her in the neighborhood. Our neighborhood.
Each pass, I'd wave. Nora would smile and wave back.
For years.
Occasionally - rarely - I'd not be hurrying to a
lesson, game or event. I'd spot Nora -
with her silver hair and arduous gait - gripping her pup's leash as she walked
around the block. I'd slow down, lower the
squeaky car window, and call out a greeting as our dogs barked at each other.
How
are you? Such a gorgeous day! Will it ever start/stop snowing?
Nora would nod. Smile her sweet smile and walk on.
You now know as much about Nora as I did, dear
Reader.
I cannot remember the sound of her voice.
I cannot remember the name of her dog. Because I probably never asked the name of her
dog.
Sad truth be told, I only learned that Nora was
terminally ill a day or two before she died.
Never made it to the hospital to say goodbye.
REWIND to July: I am driving past Nora's empty house
when I discover a tall, slender woman standing in the driveway, unsuccessfully coaxing
a giant canine out of her car.
Think Barbra Stanwyck in skinny jeans and a tee, sunlight glowing all over her gorgeous gray
hair.
I step out of my car and Giant Canine no longer
needs coaxing. He leaps from car seat, over
lawn and onto lap, before I can utter 'hello'.
Barbra Stanwyck rushes
over to pull Kujo (I mean Lito - I did ask his name) off me.
Fully slobbered but unharmed, I reach for the lady's outstretched hand, feeling
suddenly transported to L.A. Boulder. Sedona.
This woman is cool. Bohemian awesome.
"Hey. I'm
Carol," she says. "Winnie's cousin from Taos. I'm here for a while
to go through the house."
Taos. Makes
perfect sense.
But Winnie? Who's Winnie?
Turns out Winnie is Nora, dear Reader, as she was endearingly
known to family and friends. I never
knew Winnie, because it wasn't until ten months after she
died - childless and alone - that I finally met Nora.
REWIND to August: I am stepping over boxes, tools,
shovels and ladders in Nora's garage; en route to the dining room where I plan
to help Carol pack up the stuff of her cousin's life.
I have never been in this house and feel like an
intruder as I walk from kitchen to living room. Tiles are scratched. Furniture
is pilled. Oriental rugs are faded. Tables and shelves are laden with dusty china
figurines, tea cups and silver.
I scarcely see these things.
I see books. New books. Old Books. Really Old Books.
Stacked on rugs, shelves, tables.
I see walls adorned with faded murals. Dozens of framed
paintings and prints resting on couch cushions, rocking chairs and ottomans.
I see a ukulele. A guitar. Tambourines and maracas. Stacks of sheet
music and original scores that slip from carpet to floorboards.
And a grand piano
baking in frosted streaks of sunshine that pour from two windowed walls behind
it.
Nora was a musician.
A reader.
A collector.
For hours, as I listen to Carol's remarkable memories and turn the pages of old books and music, I am utterly overwhelmed at the very
idea of Nora.
How is it possible that I passed my neighbor for
nine years, offering a pleasantry here and there, while utterly unaware
of the incredible richness - and solitude - of her life.
Indulge me for a moment, dear Reader. I'd like you to meet Nora as I met Nora.
Her library:
Her love of music and all things French:
Her love of Christmas and the Von Trapps! (This is a critical detail, dear Reader, as I
am rather fond of Christmas and the Von Trapps. All Great Rulers are.)
FACT: Just around the corner, in a silent, dusty
house where my neighbor lived a lifetime, I learned a few lessons of a
lifetime.
Lesson
1: Neighbors who are simply neighborly may be missing
out, majorly.
Say that six
times fast.
FACT: Nora
had memories to share, stories to tell. I
could have asked. I could have listened. I could have noticed more than her kind smile, silver hair and arduous gait. I could have briefly paused my life, and learned
more about the life of my neighbor.
Loaned her my children. For a week.
Shoulda, woulda, coulda.
Shoulda, woulda, coulda.
It's possible that if I'd taken the time to engage
Nora, she may not have wanted to be engaged. It's also possible that I might have
come to know Nora as Winnie - a bright, interesting, talented woman, who was
passionate about literature, music, art, travel.
And what else?
My chance to know Nora has passed. But I'm grateful that I caught a glimpse of
her in the stories Carol shared; in the furniture,
artwork, and trinkets she loved.
Nora's spirit will live on in our neighborhood - in
my home, in fact - whenever I read one
of the books she collected or press the old keys of the sun-stained piano she
played for decades.
At Nora's estate sale, I purchased that
relationship.
How I wish I had cultivated it years before. In Person. Instead.
QUING Hereby Decrees: Neighbors who are simply neighborly may be missing out, majorly.
Stay tuned for Lesson 2....
RIP Nora.
Once again, awesome. Your the best...Suzanne
ReplyDeleteMmm beautiful.
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