Where, oh
where has the summer gone? I know, I say it every year, but the summer of 2013
has flown by. It's dark before 8:30 p.m., school has finished its second week,
and Christmas decorations are sneaking into my favorite stores, knocking the
school supplies right off the shelves. And now the Kroc Center spraypark is
closing down for the season, and the lovely Madelyn Simone and I have only been
there three times this summer - I'm definitely bummed out by that.
Even though
there are still twenty-one days until the official end of summer (as the
Autumnal Equinox is September 22), for all intents and purposes, summer is
done, kaput, over. We know that because the Ashland Arrows have already completed
game one in their gridiron season. The scent of fall is in the air, and I'm not
too happy about that.
I do like
the idea of the changing seasons. I don't want to live in Florida where it
wants to be summer every day, but I wouldn't mind tucking a few extra days into
the end of July - a 37-day month has a nice ring to it. "Thirty-seven days
hath July . . ."
I'm not
alone in my lament as the days of summer wane. William Shakespeare said it
quite nicely: "Summer's lease hath all too short a date.” Somehow, time
seems to speed up in the summertime, especially when we're on vacation. We got
to our beach house (well, it was really a house on a neighborhood street in a
beach town) on a Saturday, and by Monday, I was ticking off the days on the
calendar in my mind, willing them to slow down so I could savor the rhythms of
the ocean waves and the sounds of family laughter.
Jim Croce recorded his hit, "Time in a
Bottle," in 1972, and his words keep echoing in my head as I write. I remember
them from my high school days, when they didn't quite make sense to me, for at
that time I couldn't wait for the next bend in the road, for college, for
adventure, for life to happen. Croce sang, "There never seems to be enough
time to do the things you want to do once you find them." Jim and his wife
Ingrid were anticipating the birth of their son when he wrote those words of
longing, and they turned out to be prescient words, as Jim died in a plane
crash a week before his son's second birthday, just as he was about to reject
the fleeting fame of concert tours to return home to his family.
Like Croce, I
too want to put time in a bottle. I want time to stand still. I can hardly
remember the feel of the newborn Madelyn Simone in my arms, and the tug of my
infant sons on my heart is only a wisp of memory. I want to freeze the gifts of
today in time - the glitter of the fireflies at dusk, the fresh-from-the-garden
tomatoes on the table, and yes, the warmth of the sun - and can't forget a
granddaughter's sloppy kiss.
Delightfully written! That's the sad thing about time--if it did stand still, then so would we! Nothing accomplished, nothing gained. I love Jim Croce's music too--especially "Time in a Bottle."
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