Country Zest Holiday 2020 Edition

Page 58

Cup of COFFEE

Was I Thoreau walking around the pond? Far from it, but there were glimmers of spirituality and solace. I swear there were glimmers.

Dealing With a New Normal N

glimmers of spirituality and solace. I swear there were glimmers.

By Sean Clancy

ow is the winter of our discontent. Shakespeare’s line. book. Our reality.

Steinbeck’s

We’re in for a long, dire winter as the pandemic numbers rise, windows close, vaccines test and a country tries to heal itself from a viral and political divide. I’m not here to talk politics. We’ve done that enough already. It seems all conversations wind up mired in politics, one got so heated I stomped home from the neighbors’ house, so great was the divide. What a year. What a bust. In March when the pandemic hit, it was an interesting development, felt more like a disruption than a disaster. A change of pace, the sabbatical you always wanted. We read a few extra books, picking ones randomly off the shelf for fun. My son Miles and I played a full season of backyard baseball, all-time best teams matching up, Mickey Mantle against Mike Trout, Sandy Koufax versus Randy Johnson, The Babe squaring off with Yaz. We moved a pile of planks and beams that needed to be moved for a decade, filled the woodshed, cleaned the attic, donated clothes and toys to our local hospice. We weeded the garden, transplanted volunteer saplings, planted seeds to yield the earliest radishes and arugula in our 10 years here. I joined a Zoom call with a friend in New York and another in Turkey. I wrote, almost creatively, nearly for fun. We walked around the block as a family, not often, but more often than ever before. We turned dinners into destinations. Was I Thoreau walking around the pond? Far from it, but there were

58

Car rides have become glimmers. Just the 12-minute journey from home to Hill School has turned from a requirement to a respite. Wednesday, I arrive early but not as early as most, sliding into 33rd in the pickup line. There was a time when it would grate on me, now, I turn the key and roll down the windows. The American flag waves, whips northwest. The sun has sunk below the trees to my left, still shining across the grass field where we’ve seen kids race in circles over the years. It’s empty today. A woman walks a dog, a tan-colored mutt, joyous in the exercise. The spigot is on, but no water runs, a lone orange ornament on the sea of green. Most kids are at home, sequestered, navigating online school, the dearth of interaction, the death of the snow day. As Hill closed in the spring, we asked Miles what he missed, he said, “Just anybody under the age of 50.” Fortunately, we were back to school in September. It was like the first day of summer – for all of us. Cars begin to move, a white SUV replaces a black SUV, I turn the key and start the car, begin to creep, flipping the visor with our name tag. Parents and children pass us heading home as we wind our way to the front of the line. Teachers yell out names, like bingo numbers. Students banter and bounce in the art room, the doors wide open. Kids look for recognizable cars, some linger, loiter, others flit and flee, winter coats are dragged like streamers off the back bumper. For a moment, it’s a regular school day on a regular day. NPR announces New York is implementing new school closures because of the rising numbers. I take a deep breath…Ski Friday, the Talent Show, will we go back after Thanksgiving? Miles leaps into the back seat, throws his backpack on the floor and rips off his mask. I ask him about his day. Ran the mile in 8:05. Top four. Finished Walk Two Moons in English class. Top 20. For a moment, the winter of our discontent seems far, far away.

Go Green Middleburg | Holiday 2020


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

Cup of COFFEE

3min
page 58

How Sweet It Is at Sweet Bay Farm Sweet Bay Farm is 127 acres.

2min
pages 56-57

Where’s the Beef? Try Ovoka Farm

3min
page 54

Carry Me BACK A Country Ham and a Fancy Chandelier

2min
page 53

Nimbus Farm Alpacas Offers A Backdrop For Style

1min
page 52

Millwood Equestrian Back in the Saddle Again

2min
page 51

Riding To Preserve Priceless Open Space

2min
page 50

Schwartz Making Lots of Dough at Red Truck

3min
page 49

Color Long Branch an Artist’s Delight

3min
page 47

Say Cheese Please!

3min
page 46

A Gem of an Idea to Support Survivors

3min
page 45

ZEST

1min
page 40

Country Zest Holiday 2020 Edition

2min
page 39

Fauquier Habitat Keeps Building For Future

3min
page 38

For Lorraine Early, A Magic Carpet Rid

3min
pages 36-37

Exceptional Design for Luxury Living You Can Bet the Mortgage on Sabrina Sutton

3min
page 44

Mapping the Past While Preserving the Future

3min
page 35

PIEDMONTROOFING Standing Seam Metal

1min
page 34

Country MATTERS Saving the Countryside Is a Group Effort

3min
page 33

OATLANDS: House and Gardens

1min
pages 30-31

The Adams Family Is a Perfect Fit at Trinity

3min
page 28

Safety First at the Ashby Inn

2min
page 27

CZ Books Holiday 2020

1min
page 26

Food & WINE BOMBS AWAY & A HAPPY NEW YEAR

1min
page 25

BEAGLES

1min
page 24

Dr. MacMahon: Don’t Stop Gargling

1min
page 23

They Plant Trees to Help Protect the Planet

2min
page 22

Plant Trees, Plant Hope

3min
page 20

Kat Gemmer, Kat Gemmer HOW DOES YOUR GARDEN GROW

3min
page 19

Blessing of the Animals

1min
page 17

Preserving the Life and Times of Jack Dawson

2min
page 16

Little Girl Pals Now Doctors in the House

2min
page 15

Perspectives on Childhood, Education and Parenting

3min
page 14

A visit of presidential magnitude

3min
page 12

Fighting for Our Feathered Friends is ABC

3min
pages 10-11

THE EGG AND I

1min
pages 8-9

Another Christmas, Another Generation

2min
page 7

Quail & Hound Farms

2min
page 6

Signs of So Many GoodChristmas Times

3min
page 3
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.