I know…I sort of left you all hanging about the "Confluence." Did you think I forgot?
As you all may or may not know, last Friday, I awoke at the crack of dawn (or at least it seemed like it to my self-indulgent, self-employed self…) to make the two-hour drive to a place I’d never officially visited (though I’d blown through numerous times on my way to somewhere else) to meet a person I knew but had never actually met. Miss Robbie had flown north for a quick vacation in Seattle. So close, and yet, so far away… Since it would mean one of us wasting three and a half hours drive time, for her to come to me or me to go to her, we chose what we thought would be closest to the halfway point for both of us. Spang! Olympia, Washington it was!
The day started out iffy… I was determined to leave the house by 8 am. The alarm went off at 6:30, but I was already out of bed. Shower, dress, and do the general "zookeeper" routine. Breakfast? Nah…we are meeting at Starbuck’s, and going on to a Farmers’ Market. Plenty of sustenance to be had later.
Hmmmm! A little ahead of schedule. Okay…I have time to sit down and pay some bills and get some other "business" out of the way. Check the email and read a few journals… Ooops! May have spent a little TOO much time on that stuff. Shut down the computer…out in the car by 8:00. Damn! Forgot the directions. Back into the house, reboot the ‘puter, print out directions. Back in the car by 8:05. Atomic batteries to power, turbines to speed… Get to the end of the block (about 500 feet)…crap! Forgot the camera! Hang a quick u-ie, and back into the house again to retrieve said device. Finally on the road for real at 8:15. Okay…looking at likely tardiness. Not exactly a situation with which I am unfamiliar…
Halfway to my destination, it occurs to me that I should probably call Robbie and tell her that I am going to be late. At which time I also realize that her cel number is securely saved on my hard drive…and I have forgotten to print it out, write it down, or make it in any way available to myself as I am cruising up the interstate. Duh!
I begin stressing out at about milepost 39. (Rendezvous point is at Exit 105.) ‘Round about milepost 95, Robbie calls me. "Ummm…I’m not sure exactly where I am, but I think I’m going to be late…" Saved! Now, I have Robbie’s number in my phone’s memory. AND I wasn’t the first one to have to make the "I’m-gonna-be-late" call. On top of THAT, between Washington’s 70 mph speed limit, and the total absence of traffic, it looks like I might actually end up being on time. Life is good!
With the help of those great "Mapquest" directions, I pull up in front of the rendezvous point with time to spare (maybe one or two minutes.) Hmmm…on-street parking. I find a parking place about a half-block down from the appointed Starbuck’s, and attempt to parallel park. Now, in my defense, I am driving my husband’s car, which he insisted I take, because it gets twice the gas mileage of any other vehicle we own. However, I don’t drive it often…in fact, do not LIKE to drive it, because it is a five-speed….which, at my age, and having driven cars with automatic transmissions for 95% of the thirty-plus years I’ve been driving, is a challenge for which I have little patience at this point… I proceed to make a TOTAL ass of myself trying to parallel park this car...forward, reverse, forward, reverse…twist the wheel 180 degrees this way and then 180 degrees the other… and still end up four feet from the curb. After an eternity of this (probably about a minute and a half) I abandon the spot in favor of one a half-block down that I can pull into without the whole parallel parking challenge. What fun would life be without the stupid, memorable, FUNNY things we do when we think we are being all efficient and serious?
Fifteen minutes, one latte and a marionberry muffin later, Robbie and I finally connect. And what can I say about the experience? That I was a little nervous, but felt like I was meeting someone I already knew? Her appearance did not shock or surprise me. She looked very close to what I had imagined. Aided somewhat, I suppose, by pictures she had posted in her journal…but not completely. She just looked like…Robbie.
We walked, we talked, we partook a little of the gastronomic offerings of the Olympia Farmers’ market. We explored the Olympia waterfront, which I had not even known existed. We had fun doing pictures and acting like tourists. We thoroughly enjoyed the little Fourth of July Dixieland Jazz entertainment they offered at the market, and the food, and the jewelry and crafts. We talked our way to the top of a little observation tower on the waterfront, and back to a coffee shop across the street from the market, where we spotted Clyde and his owner, all set to ferry us around the waterfront district.
Four hours. Four hours is just about what we had. It didn’t seem like enough. I SO wanted to stay longer, to talk more, to explore our similarities and our differences. Young urban professional meets middle-aged hippie small business owner. L.A. urbanite meets Pacific Northwest refugee. Apartment dweller meets suburban gardener extra-ordinaire. Our differences dissolved in our similarities. Writers. Journallers. Women who feel deeply, and who share those feelings in the nurturing, challenging environment of on-line journals.
I am privileged to know Robbie. Even more blessed to have met her face-to-face. Still, I wish we had had more time…
I hate to admit, after almost two years of online journaling, I have yet to meet anyone! How lucky you two are. Some where in the back of my brain I think that this whole experience is like a dream....and I am maybe a little hesitant to meet face to face anyone and shatter that dream. The more I read of the people actually connecting, the more I realize I am so wrong! Two of my favorites meeting in person. How cool.
It's is so great that you two finally got a chance to meet. And it looks like you really had a terrific time. As we aging hippies like to say (ok, maybe just me) ~ Right on! :)
wow. what a great entry about a great experience. i envy both of you, you both are women i would love to meet in person, spend hours walking and talking with and getting to know better. isn't life a long strange trip? yeah, it is. maybe someday i even will meet you. maybe even both of you. you just never know.
I like to see a man proud of the place in which he lives. I like to see a man live so that his place will be proud of him. --Abraham Lincoln
Where I'm From
I am from station wagons, from kool-aid and turf-builder.
I am from the three bedroom, one bath ticky-tacky box
with the swath of weedy lawn; from lightning bugs,
June bugs, and mosquitoes the size of small birds.
From nights near as hot as the days,
spread-eagled on sticky sheets
crickets creaking, horns honking,
trains rumbling and whistling in the distance…
I am from snow to the eaves, jewel-studded ice storms
and green-black thunderstorms with sideways rain.
I am from bright red tulips, honeysuckle berries,
and worms on the driveway after a cloudburst;
from daisies, tiny wild strawberries, “Queen Anne’s Lace”
and crashing the kite into power lines.
I am from “Look what followed me home from school”
and never having too many animals. From Taffy and Rusty
and Sunny, the yellow headed parakeet, who could say
“Happy Birthday” but only when he thought
no one was listening…
I am from the women who shuttle the carpool,
punch the clock, scrub the toilet,
then climb into the bottle, the herb
or the fantasy to quiet the noise in their heads
and the men they choose to rescue
or who choose to rescue them.
From “When you meet the right one, you’ll just know”
and “Your dad was a virgin when we were married…”
I am from the dutiful eldest daughter who paired off
home made and pro-created at the appointed time,
and the other four who didn’t.
I am from the tearful Catholic and the stoic agnostic;
the rope stretched taut between belief and unbelief,
pulled one direction, then the other…
the eternal tug of war never won.
I’m from pioneers of urban exile; before the country clubs and the soccer and the Rolls Royces.
I’m from the first McDonald’s and the last Tastee Freez.
I am from the great moldering box in the upstairs closet;
roaring twenties sepias stacked on
shiny square instamatic shots, discoloring with age.
I am from the five stair-steps, the Christmas trees, the campfires,
and the blurred mountains captured from a moving car.
I am from the unlikely union of a country boy and a city girl,
brought together by Hitler and Hirohito;
and the neighborhood of compromise
that kept them both sane…almost.
On Where We're Destined to Go...
As for life, I'm humbled, I'm without words sufficient to say
how it has been hard as flint, and soft as a spring pond,both of these and over and over,
and long pale afternoons besides, and so many mysteries beautiful as eggs in a nest, still unhatched though warm and watched over by something I have never seen -a tree angel, perhaps,or a ghost of holiness.
Every day I walk out into the world to be dazzled, then to be reflective. It suffices, it is all comfort - along with human love,
dog love, water love, little-serpent love,sunburst love, or love for that smallest of birds flying among the scarlet flowers.
There is hardly time to think about
stopping, and lying down at last to the long afterlife, to the tenderness yet to come, when time will brim over the singular pond, and become forever,
and we will pretend to melt away into the leaves.
As for death, I can't wait to be the hummingbird, can you?
Mary Oliver
"Sometimes I go around feeling sorry for myself; and all the while I am being carried by the wind across the sky." --Chippewa saying.
Oh, how absolutely wonderful. I am so freaking jealous I can't stand it.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great time you two had!
ReplyDeleteThat Robbie is everywhere!
You two both look Great!
V
ahhhh, sweeet!
ReplyDeletethat sounds like a lot fun, and filled with so much
fun stuff to do. LOVE the pictures.
you got four hours...I'm so jealous! :D
What a GREAT day! And you both look terrific, and like you're having so much fun!
ReplyDeleteYou had a wonderful time and that is a GOOD thing. You'll treasure the memories.
ReplyDeleteJackie.
I hate to admit, after almost two years of online journaling, I have yet to meet anyone! How lucky you two are. Some where in the back of my brain I think that this whole experience is like a dream....and I am maybe a little hesitant to meet face to face anyone and shatter that dream. The more I read of the people actually connecting, the more I realize I am so wrong! Two of my favorites meeting in person. How cool.
ReplyDeleteIt looks and sounds like the two of you had a great time. What fun!
ReplyDeleteYay, Lisa and Robbie!
ReplyDeleteIt's is so great that you two finally got a chance to meet. And it looks like you really had a terrific time. As we aging hippies like to say (ok, maybe just me) ~ Right on! :)
Sounds like a GREAT day! I bet y'all didn't even talk politics once....LOL
ReplyDeletewow. what a great entry about a great experience. i envy both of you, you both are women i would love to meet in person, spend hours walking and talking with and getting to know better. isn't life a long strange trip? yeah, it is. maybe someday i even will meet you. maybe even both of you. you just never know.
ReplyDeleteHere's were I express joy and envy all in one breath....
ReplyDeleteIt looks as if you two had the best time and I agree that four hours wouldn't be enough time. Too lovely!
xxoo
Sounds like a great time! I am looking forward to the day when we can have more than 4 hours or so together! Lisa
ReplyDeleteOkay...you steal my picture, you tell the entire story...what's left for me to write about? ::::stomping feet:::: ;-p
ReplyDeleteIt was short but sweet just like a good desert that leaves you wanting for more. We'll just have to do it again, my friend. :-) ---Robbie
Perhaps only a woman can capture an infant's touch on canvas, but only a man can parallel park.
ReplyDelete