The Wanderlust Lady and the Door to Door Salesman - 1
By jeand
- 3140 reads
July 31, 2012
Where ever I go these days, I feel like people are staring at me.
Watching me. It makes me uncomfortable.
I'm a perfectly normal person - just asking to be left alone. I know
that some people think of me as an odd ball - because I don't conform
to how they think someone of my age and intelligence should be
acting. But I'm the only one who needs to know, and certainly the only
one with the right to care or not care about what I do and how I do it.
Sometimes when they're having a coffee morning I go into the
"Senior Citizens Hall". How stupid that sounds. How Americanized. It
used to be "The Old Folks Hall" and then it had an honesty about it.
Mostly the others ignore me when I'm there, so I get my cup of tea
with three spoons of sugar, and as many biscuits as I can take without
their noticing, and I go off into a corner to eat in peace. Sometimes, if
the weather is bad and I don't want to go out straight away afterwards,
I get out my book and have a read.
The library is my second home. I don't know what I'd do without it -
as it's open, and welcoming, and for the most part, completely
anonymous. Nobody says "How are you?" or "Wouldn't you like to
have a chat?" They just let you get on with choosing your books, and
checking them out with the new card system, where you needn't speak
to or even communicate with a single person if you don't want to. And
nobody minds if you take a book and sit in the corner and just read all
day long. I go through several books a week now. Of course that
depends on what the book is and how many pages it has. War and
Peace took me most of a week on its own. I like the classics. Most
modern books are quite trite - and I only read those when there's
nothing else to tempt me.
Some people look at me as if they pity me. They think I'm a bag -
lady - a homeless creature, probably mad, with nowhere to go, and no
one to talk to. I don't need or want their pity. I do have a home - a
perfectly good home - but I don't want to stay there all day. I need to
be outdoors, under the sky when it's fine - and even when it isn't, I
need to spend some time outdoors. I'm not destitute. I get my pension
like everyone else over 60 in this country. It serves me well. My home
is a one-bedroomed semi-detatched bungalow - but plenty big for me. I
only use it for sleeping and the odd meal. Mostly I'm out of doors, in
the great wide world - walking around and taking in the scenes.
How I hate it when some do-gooder approaches me to make a
contact. "Hello dearie. How are you today? I expect you’d like a nice
hot meal?" Perhaps she hasn't noticed but I'm not starving. I get plenty
to eat. I just ignore her and keep walking. "So rude," I hear her say
under her breath. Who is she to talk? She's the rude one - making
assumptions about me.
I could write a history about Marple. I watch every daffodil come
up and die each spring. I see the trees bud, and leaf and fall. I could tell
you the breed of every dog who walks regularly in the park, and how
pitiful are the owners who drag them along on a lead, or let them off
and then spend their time shouting for the dog to come back.
I like watching the children in the play area - not the ones with
pushy parents, but the ones who are gingerly going down the slide on
their own, and the look of fear replaced by joy as they make their way
down it. I wish I could go on the swings. Sometimes when there's no
one around, near the end of my day, I sneak in a quick one. My long
grey hair flies out behind me, and I remember the rule about pumping
with your legs.
I never had children, much less grandchildren - but I can remember
how it felt to be young and free. My parents didn't care how I spent my
free time when I was a child. They were at work all day, and when
school was over, I went to the park, or for a long walk, and just
enjoyed being on my own. I knew when 5 o'clock came, I'd have to
trudge home and conform to what my parents' ideas were of a perfect
child.
They didn't speak much to me, about school or anything else - but if
they felt I'd done something wrong, then I certainly knew about it. But
nobody ever asked me what I had for homework - or how things had
gone during the day. Nobody asked what I'd like for tea. I often
wondered if being the only child of elderly parents, that they had not
wanted me, and were only biding their time until I was old enough to
live on my own, and they no longer had to bother about me. I don't
know if they loved me - or whether I loved them. I don't worry about
such things. I just did what I needed to do, and tried to avoid getting
told off.
Books were my world back then too. I would go to my room as
soon as tea was over, do my homework and then take one of my books
and read for hours until it was time for sleep.
I must admit that sometimes I'm just a bit lonely. I know that if
something happened to me, nobody would know. Nobody would care.
I suppose if I'm honest, I have to admit that the world has not changed
one iota for me having been in it. I never married, have no children. No
siblings, not even any cousins that I know of. And I don't really have
any friends. Nobody to care if I live or die. Not that I'm depressed or
anything. I have no intention of making the world one person emptier.
What I sometimes think that my life needs is a little adventure.
Nothing big - just something that would make me interested in getting
up in the morning - and something to plan for when I lie in bed at
night.
Well, it's time to head home, so I'll have to postpone this adventure
plan of mine for another day. Maybe, just maybe, I could take in a
lodger. I'd have to give her the bedroom, but there is an attic which I could make into a bedroom for me. It'd have to be somebody that I liked - and who left me alone
most of the time. Maybe if it was somebody who was needful - I'd be
doing my bit of good before I leave this world. And at least it would be
somebody to call an ambulance if I collapse on the kitchen floor. I'll
spend sometime tomorrow going through the logistics of how it could
work before I do anything rash like advertising. But I feel good -
having made at least a start on my big adventure.
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Love the character, Jean.
Love the character, Jean. True about making assumptions. Really well written - look forward to the next.
- Log in to post comments
The title is great.
The title is great.
You give us a good idea of her life and leave us wanting more, and to join in her adventure.
Lindy
- Log in to post comments
This has a real flow to it,
This has a real flow to it, almost as if it could be verse. Her conversation and opening up of herself seem very natural, and lots to make one think. I wonder where this idea came from! Looking forward to the development of this story.
- Log in to post comments
I'm also looking forward to
I'm also looking forward to the next part - you're building up the character nicely. Did you mean to format this as a poem?
- Log in to post comments
Just loved this Jean!
Just loved this Jean!
- Log in to post comments
A great character, and a
A great character, and a great start. She really does jump off the page at you. I am looking forward to finding out how she gets on.
- Log in to post comments
Great beginning to a story
Great beginning to a story that represents many people out there in the big wide world. On to next part.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments