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Wednesday, September 05, 2012
Something about ghosts in the fall
I am smarter in the early- to mid-fall, so I'm waiting for that to fully kick in. I read that scientists have found that if you want to be happy, have cool air blown up your nose. Happy. Warm air up your nose: Less happy.
Also, I'm writing a new book, and I won't mention ghosts in it once, even though I already did (oops).
My mom says, "What is it with you and ghosts?" And I say, "I don't know." Then I say something about the early twentieth century and free-floating anxiety. She seems to understand, or at least to understand that that's how my mind works. We are standing in a room in a Hampton Inn in North Carolina when this conversation happens. That's where the ghost might have been.
Later I agree to go with her to Hardee's so she can eat a biscuit and gravy and I can eat a biscuit with jam and an orange juice. I tell her that at my previous job, I kept doing things like filling in for tenure-track faculty who would go on mysterious medical leave without telling their independent study honors students what to do. I'm not sure anyone noticed the extra work I did, besides the students.
One time I put in a request with the department secretary to get a screen put on my office window. I told her that a squirrel kept looking at me from the ledge and threatening to steal the lunch out of my hands. The secretary laughed then in a way that made me feel both foolish and appreciated. That job came with a time limit, but I miss the students, many of them.
This all seems to have to do with whether I'm secretly appreciated or haunted or not. That's how I feel in the fall when cool air circulates through my nostrils and lungs and around my body. Secretly appreciated. Affably haunted.
Love.
ReplyDeleteI need some cool air blown up my nose, stat.
ReplyDelete