The other two heiresses have taken to discussing my death as if it’s a known fact that I have one foot in the grave and the other on a patch of black ice, and as if there are ten years between me and the next youngest rather than two and a half. “When you die … ” they say, as casually as if they were saying, “When it gets to be a little warmer … ” I wonder if they know something I don’t, or if it’s just that the loss of both parents and two out of three uncles has obliterated any former merely theoretical understanding of death. I felt a mild paranoia when my sister casually pointed out that bare hardwood floors can lead to a fall. Do I look tippy?
It turned out that I did feel much better after the ubiquinol cleared out of my system, and it also turns out that the exercises my chiropractor recommended for the vestibular system are proving to be exceedingly effective. I now feel considerably less feeble than I did for a while there. I was having vertigo a lot over the past few months, and now I’m having almost none at all. The exercises require a piece of equipment like a spatula (a thing to look at) and take about five minutes, if that.
I did have one peculiar episode of vertigo, which usually happens when I’m standing up and particularly when I turn. It’s hard to say which direction is the problem because I turn counterclockwise to get something and then turn clockwise to return to my task.
On Monday of this week, I was sitting next to the very handsome roofer at the dining room table, not standing or moving, when all of a sudden a wave of something came over me, not exactly dizziness, but something like that, accompanied by brain fog. It was gone pretty much as soon as I noticed it.
There have been a lot of tears since telling my sister I have decided to sell the house, mostly grief about the loss of my mother and also about leaving my beloved life here. I don’t think that necessarily means it was the wrong decision. I had a long talk with my realtor yesterday. She was delighted to hear about the huge amount of progress we have made toward whatever we’re progressing toward, though she was a bit taken aback to hear that we don’t plan to fix the wet basement. After spending a fortune on the roof and the air conditioning, my sister and I thought it would be reasonable just to disclose that the basement gets wet when it’s wet outside.
The realtor and I agreed that we will do everything else and put the house on the market, or not, and if we do put it on the market and get feedback that the wet basement is scaring buyers off, we can always go ahead with fixing it then.
After I spoke with her, I began calling estate sale places and painters, and then it occurred to me that I could actually just entirely move out of here when I depart in two weeks, whereas I had planned to here a lot this spring and summer, but since the house would preferably be empty for any estate sale and since my realtor said I don’t actually have to be here for anything that happens after that, I could do that, though it would be pretty horrible at the very end, having to get 30 boxes of stuff to UPS along with my grandmother’s big chair, complicated by the fact that I have plans on all three of the days before my flight.
I also liked the idea of just never seeing the house empty and being already gone when my father’s daylilies bloom again, but I think it would probably be too much of an insane rush.
Roshi Joan Halifax: “The wise person slows the process down.”
My roofer, who I’m pretty much halfway in love with by now, came over yesterday to park a big trailer in the driveway. I took a couple of photos of him, which he immediately posed for, but they were kind of blurry, so I told him I had to take a few more, and he smiled winningly from the other side of the trailer. I said, “Look serious, like you’re going to do a good job on my roof,” and he immediately looked serious.
That’s another category where Michigan is hands-down superior to San Francisco: It is completely full of big, strong, handsome tattooed men who drive pickup trucks and can actually make things with their hands, whereas San Francisco is lately full of disturbingly slender men who look like they take extremely good care of themselves and like they never think about anything other than their own glowing, reedlike bodies. They are the opposite of attractive. They jog by on the sidewalk very clearly unaware that there are other human beings around as they try to remember if they took all 75 of their brain supplements before they left the house.
My roofer called early this morning to ask me to move the car out of the driveway. Soon a big truck full of Spanish-speaking workers arrived, plus a couple of individual cars containing the same, plus a giant truck with all the shingles on it, and then my roofer himself. A tremendous amount of racket ensued overhead, and debris began to rain down past the windows. One of the roofers is a woman, which was a pleasant surprise. The foreman of the actual workers said she works hard and gets paid more than a couple of the men.
For some reason, the flurry of roofing activity caused another huge wave of grief (on my part; not sure about the sorrows of the roofers), something about how my mother would have had a beautiful new roof but now she won’t, and how she would have loved the workers and loved the trucks and loved the noise and loved learning all about what roofers exactly do.
Normally I take pictures of everything, and this project is calling out to be documented, but I am sure the Spanish-speaking workers would not enjoy being photographed in the current climate—a lot of people have been taken by ICE in this area, including many people my roofer knows—so I’m not going to let my phone be seen in my hand. The roofer is sending a lot of photos (including one of himself on the roof, which he must have asked someone else to take, probably because he’s halfway in love with me; he looks very casual, but the fact that someone else had to take the photo gives it away) and we’re also going back and forth about the national situation. He pointed out yesterday when he brought the trailer that something we had lately been texting about as an outrageous and worrisome possibility came to pass one day later.
I just opened the window and was dazzled when a beautiful warm, fresh breeze blew in, along with the faint whiff of my roofer’s cigarette smoke—he arrived this morning with a cigarette with an inch of ash dangling out of his face—and the aftershave of one of the aforementioned very capable gentlemen.