After a couple of weeks where the best things got was "bearable," and the worst was nearly …not,
I seem to have arrived in a better place. Actually, it's more like the
better place arrived on ME. I certainly haven't done anything special.
I just feel like the Universe has dumped a ladle of grace over my
head.
Sunday, we catered a 60th-anniversary party
at the restaurant. I had taken the reservation back in January, SO
against my will. The holidays were over, Valentine's Day was soon to be
a memory, and I had my mind on grabbing a scalpel and beginning to cut,
carefully, one by one, the physical and emotional ties binding me to
the café. Trying to get as much of that separation accomplished and
possibly even on the way to healing before the actual event. I did not
want that process interrupted by the care and attention it takes to pull
off one of these big parties.
But as much as I wanted to, I
could not manufacture a good reason to turn it down. It was nothing we
couldn't DO, and why not bank a few more dollars before the end? So we
took the gig, and I filed it into the back of my mind, determined not
to worry about it. Fat chance. Though Valentine's Day took Stress Out
Priority over it, I know the anxiety of this event has been simmering on
the front burner ever since the morning of February 15th.
Well, it's over now. And it was a great success. Mostly because the people were probably the nicest
group of folks I have ever met in my life. That in itself was a
bucketful of grace. I have so given up on the public. Daily, I am
smacked in the face with how selfish, demanding, high maintenance and
just plain rude the American consumer has become. To have the
restaurant full to bursting with people who were just NICE, was a
blessing, almost a cleansing. It literally drove away the dark cloud
that has hung over me and my restaurant for so long. I could not be
more grateful for that.
Monday afternoon, I stopped at the
café (it was supposed to be my R & R day after the big party) and
ended up having to work an hour to help them out of a jam. I took a
lady's food out to her and she said to me, "I have to tell you, you do
such a good job decorating this place. It just looks great…" What?
Someone was actually saying something nice to me? I couldn't really believe my ears. "Well, thank you!" I managed to sputter through my shock. But she went on:
"I'm so glad you guys are doing well. We really need a place like this around here…"
I
thanked her again, a thank-you tinged with the slightest mixture of
guilt and "too late!" The thought occurred to me that it would be very
nice indeed if I could feel like I was leaving the café somewhere near
the top of my game, rather than slinking away in disgrace with my tail
between my legs.
And then, yesterday, I had two squirrels in my back yard. And I went shopping
and found some cute clothes for the body I have now (losing those
lately-attained stress pounds can wait a few more months—until I'm
safely on the other side of this transition.)
All in all, a more than satisfactory first couple of days…of the rest of my life.
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