20 September: Idling Thoughts on a Road Trip

19.09.23

08:10
The rain is a tantrum. It’s dashing itself against the window as if it were a ship on the rocks. He’s staring at it. It will pass, he says. You sound like Nostradamus, I tell him. Or Moses parting water.

08:15
He’s still standing at the window. Looking. Rain and sea. Wind in syllables. This weather is self-righteous. That sailboat will lose its mast, he says. No, not Moses, I’m thinking … definitely Nostradamus. Or Odin.

08:30
There are other sounds. Besides rain and breaking waves. The people upstairs walking around. Car tyres crunching on the gravel drive. I can hear my watch tick. And it’s not even close to my ear. How is that possible, I say.

09:06
He’s crunching his granola. I think noises are going to make me nuts today, I say.

09:08
There was a rock polishing machine in an Agate Beach shop that made noise that would silence saints. I bought an agate necklace there when I was 12. They had grey seals in an aquarium. They barked.

09:15
What time should we leave, I ask. We’re going on a tour of a Danish furniture factory that once produced a very famous handmade wooden chair – years ago. Ten o’clock, he says. He knows that I hate being late; I need to know stuff like that. He’s less troubled by time. He always arrives exactly on time. Maybe he’s Chronos.

09:29
The rain’s cleared the air. Look, I can see the bridge. How far away is that, I ask. He guesses at 25 kilometres. He’s totally metric. I’m half and half. I’m British. We still do miles. And recipes use teacups.

09:30
That’s 15 miles, I tell him. He’s standing at the window again. Looking at the bridge. How it stays up, I’ll never know, he says.

10:49
I thought you said the weather would improve, he says. No, you said that, I replied. The car just went into Wet Road mode.

11:00
Sunshine! Told you so, he says. I laugh because this is serious. He’s Nostradamus.

13:00
I love that smell, I tell him, wood dust, sawdust. Oak, cut, chiseled, following the grain like a crease across ones palm. The wood speaks to the carpenter. This wood will never know an ordinary life. It shall be artistry. It will carry a veil forever.

16:20
Rain still falls, the wind blowing leaves severed from its forest. Chaotic confetti. And I still smell wood dust.

19:00
And I still smell wood dust.


©Misky 2023.

14 responses to “20 September: Idling Thoughts on a Road Trip”

    1. Thank you. ❤️

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  1. My image of my grandad is of a guy surrounded by wood. But he was far from being a craftsman. He used to scavenge all the wood he possibly could, then cut it up for firewood. Their garage (a former stable) was often ankle-deep in sawdust. You’d smell that! It’d get up your nose!

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    1. It does! It does! Right up your nose. 😂 Good morning, B.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. I loved being there. The ending is me and my family. All have an association with wood and building things 🙂

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    1. Nice. Lovely to know, Brian.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Beautiful! I’m so glad you found each other.

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  4. We had rain like that on Monday; I was driving in it. Not fun.
    There are those smells .. coffee brewing, bread baking,
    fresh cut grass, laundry on the line, bacon.
    There was always sawdust on the floor of the butcher shop
    my mother went to; I wonder why that was.
    Happy Day, Misky!

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    1. I remember my grandfather Nico telling me that the sawdust on the floor was for easier cleaning after a day’s work; you see, butcher’s shops weren’t as clinical as they are nowadays… a bloody business, indeed.

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      1. Somehow I knew you’d know!

        Liked by 1 person

  5. I dare anyone who thinks this kind of diary is easy, to write one; and then infuse it with subtle poetic blood.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Thank you from the bottom of my ink well.

      Liked by 1 person

  6. Esther Bradley-deTally avatar
    Esther Bradley-deTally

    Subtly solid connection

    Liked by 1 person

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