I didn't realize that when I got into the car at around 2:30, that this
would seem cool.
When I left Atria at 5, the thermometer on the dashboard read this:
This is supposed to be the last of the 3-digit days here.
But I don't care. We'll be in Santa Barbara tomorrow night, where it is
reading 69 degrees right now! I'm going to crank up the air conditioner in the house
for Ashley and her dogs, who move in tomorrow, and then head off to blissful cold and fog.
I went to Atria to deliver my mother's clothes which I washed last
night, and to go with her to the Great American Songbook Sing-along which was happening in
the front lobby all afternoon. I didn't rush because it was going on for such a long
time and, to my surprise, when I arrived at the place she was already there. Yay!
She's figured out how to go to events by herself.
The lobby was all gussied up for 4th of July and there was a
professional piano player at the piano, so much better than dear Ida Sue, who used to be a
"real" piano player, but has been robbed of that talent by age (she's 95) and a
recent fall. She struggles at our weekly sing-alongs, but mostly does 1-finger
accompaniment.
There was a good crowd there, with chairs extending off to both the
right and left in the following picture.
My mother is sitting in the circle and chatted with the woman next to
her throughout the afternoon. I was tickled to see her getting along with someone so
well, until it was all over and I found out that the woman never knew which song they were
singing and was drivng my mother nuts asking her questions.
This patriotic lady, sitting to the right of the two ladies in the
rectangle in the previous picture, was really getting into it, singing with everything and
loving it all. I loved watching her.
But it was the two ladies in the rectangle who amused me throughout
most of the afternoon. The lady on the left would be somewhat less "with
it" than my mother. At some point, a man came over and handed her a song sheet,
since he noticed that she didn't have one (none of the women in that row did). She
held on to it, but never looked at it, never turned a page, and never sang. After a
couple of songs, the lady next to her tried to grab it away from her, indicating that she
would like to sing the songs and would like to see the words. The lady on the left
hissed that she wanted to sing too (though she never did and never even looked at the
words) and punched the lady on the right in the arm. The lady on the right pouted
throughout the rest of the songs and tried to sing what words she knew (I didn't have a
song sheet or would have given her mine). At the end of the music, she was hissing
and pointing and trembling with anger at the lady on the left .
I don't know how it all turned out, but it certainly did add an
interesting note to the afternoon!
Walt came and squirted some WD40 into my mother's squeaky chair, we
had vodka tonics to celebrate the 4th of July and then we came on home. Walt went
off to the festivities at Community Park to get his annual 4th of July hot dog.
1 comment:
I am melting at 85 degrees. I hate hot weather.
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