I have a problem with bookstores. Whenever I go inside one I’m compelled to touch the books. Although I have collected hard covers for ages, I now find myself partial to paperbacks. Not just any paperback, though. I’m not interested in the throw-back versions, compact and fat, like a 3X5 photograph with a glossy cover and maybe the smooth edges of the book dipped in a bright colored ink. I prefer the sleek paperbacks of today, more like a slim 5X7 with a sultry matte cover that’s silky to the fingertips. Uneven pages that take on the look of handmade paper around their rough-cut edges are all the better. So it should be no surprise that I regularly leave with a purchase to add to the growing stacks scattered throughout my home. If only I had time to read them all. Writers are supposed to read, aren’t they?
So on this Easter afternoon I find myself in the bookstore, having made it up to the coffee shop in the loft with only one detour, to handle “The Dinner” as I read the back-cover epitome. It might seem strange to be here on Easter, but my kids are with their dad, and I’ve decided this day should be what I want it to be, eggs, bunnies and ham notwithstanding.
It hasn’t always been this way for me. Holidays were rough for many years immediately following the end of my marriage. These occasions steeped in family traditions and expectations, I felt like a fish out of water being, at times, a family of one. I think lots of single women feel like this, maybe men too. When you are alone and longing for the love that only that special someone can provide, holidays are a brutal reminder that you haven’t yet succeeded in your quest, and maybe, just maybe, you won’t. Who wants to celebrate that?
I have a different perspective now. Some might say I’m giving up on love and my new view is more about steeling myself against that statistically insignificant probability that Mr. Right might not exist for me. There may be a sliver of truth to that. But really, it’s about learning how to make every day my own. I believe that my time between now and the man of my dreams should mean something. It can’t be this holding pattern where I live in limbo, my nose pressed up against the glass of other people’s lives waiting to pair up again so the business of living can continue right where it left off. I’m on a new path now, and it’s so much more enjoyable than my old path because it’s more about me and less about falling in line with tradition, doing what I think others expect of me.
In the language of the holidays, this translates into seeking out the people I want to be with on these days. For Thanksgiving I indulged myself with a long weekend soaking up the hospitality of my cousin and her family. We took walks, watched movies, ate amazing home-cooked feasts, and conversed about life. She even found me a Turkey Trot and gave tacit permission to run it without my hosts! At Christmas, instead of worrying about where I would eat a big meal or who I would exchange gifts with, I spent time reconnecting with a few long lost friends, both distant and right around the corner. At gatherings I carved out time to talk one-on-one to the person at the event who I most wanted to be with.
And sometimes, the person I most want to be with is me. There is nothing shameful or regrettable in this truth. Sometimes we need to buck tradition to be who we really are. Today is a perfect example. The day is unfolding to my exact specifications. I started with a mud-filled 5-mile trail run, followed by a hot cup of coffee, a big breakfast and an afternoon of writing. I may or may not meet a friend in the city for dinner. My sketchbook arrived in the mail yesterday; I hear it beckoning me to begin filling the pages. My studio has been dark this month of March.
I’m not completely blind to this spring ritual; Easter baskets sit on the kitchen counter ready for the boys when they arrive home, packed with my trademark sunflower seeds, beef jerky and copies of the newest “Wreck this Journal” , a sketchbook that appeals to the recklessness of their age. This is how we make our lives our own.
On my way over to the bookstore, I couldn’t help but walk into my new favorite athletic wear boutique. The door was wide open; the white wicker basket full of colorful "Light as Air Hipsters", my own version of Easter candy. It seems I now have a lululemon problem.