Wednesday, December 21, 2011

My Amusing Spouse, Part 1

Introducing a new mini-series, "My Amusing Spouse." There's just too much material to ignore.


I came home to a fun surprise today. Here was how it unfolded...

Honey, I'm home! Whoa, look at all the presents under our Christmas tree!


Are these all for ME!?!
Wait a second, something looks fishy here...


This present is just wrapped loosely with tissue paper, and a gift bag is just taped to the front of it. That's odd. Oh well, I guess the bag was too small but it still looks kinda nice and decorative this way.

This present successfully made it into the gift bag... but what else is going on here? Oh, he used a Christmas-y hand-towel to cover the contents. I suppose that's quite creative.


At least he properly wrapped these other gifts...


What the...?!


Me: "Honey, why did you only wrap the front and top of the boxes?"

He: "I wanted to save wrapping paper in case I get you more presents."


I'm not gonna argue with that logic.


Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Neighbors

In a small town, everyone knows eachother. They know your family through generations - from grandparents to grandkids if you've been around that long, which many have. They know your house, your job, your boat (and who had all of these before you). And it seems in part that your status about town depends not on your job, income, or education, but rather on how many years you've been a part of the community.

Though we've been here nearly a year, we are still early in transition from newcomers to resident "sourdoughs," yet to last our first full winter. We are easily recognized as newcomers - as new faces, by default, must be. This aspect of small-town life startled me at first. When we first stepped off the ferry and wandered into town on that cold, clear, February morning, we were greeted by strangers as if we were long expected. "Welcome to Petersburg! You must be the new Forest Service couple." For months after our June wedding, I'd often hear, "Congratulations on your marriage," from someone I'd never met. Of course, our marriage was announced in the local paper with a captioned photo, so anyone who didn't yet know us by name does by now. It is odd to be recognized and known by everyone, while I slowly accumulate bits and pieces of who is who about town.

Getting around can be quite confusing as a newcomer, as so much daily conversation is based on local reference. Houses are always referred to in terms of occupants, never by address. When asking for directions be prepared for: "Go out the road just past Erickson's..." or "Across from Severson's..." Our own house is still referred to as the Baldwin's, even though they moved away years ago - they were not even the most recent tenants; they were the best known in the community, and it stuck. We hope to earn our own identity as the O'Leary's in the neighborhood someday.


 
Slowly but surely I am getting to know my neighbors. Teaching at the middle and high schools has helped me learn the names of most children, and working at the bookstore has helped me link them to parents and grandparents. I'm beginning to grasp the generational underpinnings that support this town. Once I learn someone's name I see them everywhere- literally, multiple times a day. Yesterday morning, I sold books and gifts to a wonderful family I've come to know through school. Later that afternoon, I strolled down main street with my Christmas bags, and in passing met the same three youngsters travelling the opposite direction. "Hello, Mrs. O'Leary" they voiced in passing. "Hello, Murphs!" I spouted, letting out an uncontrollable giggle. Twenty minutes later we met again in the grocery store. "Small town," we agreed.

The simplicity of life here encourages resourcefulness in earning a living. Many people work multiple part-time jobs around town and and creatively discover untapped markets. Your morning coffee barista may answer your call for a taxi later that afternoon, then pour your beer at day's end. A character who goes by "Doc," and handsomely pulls off a handlebar moustache, may issue your license plate at the DMV, answer your call to the police station, and sell his freshly homemade salsa at the grocery store. We are all intertwined daily and well appreciative of eachother.

I dearly love how customers come into the bookstore and greet eachother by name as they shop. They chat as if they're resuming a conversation from earlier that day. And they probably are.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Her Secret

I'm often asked how I like living on this fog-shrouded island, amidst the cold sea and ice, after growing up in the dry, heat-stricken desert of the southwest. I smile and reflect, "I must love it because of where I'm from."

Locals and visitors agree summers here are magnificent; yet this could be said of many places. Alaska holds a secret, revealed only to those who stay after the summer frivolity has waned - her true majesty is in the heart of winter. The best descriptor I can manage is dramatic. In all of 360-degrees, I'm awed by the atmosphere and sensations of this winterland.


The striking beauty of the pointed granite peaks jutting into our horizon is multiplied when shrouded in snow; towering cliffs of glistening white plunge into the sea. During our scant six hours of daylight, the sun barely peers over these peaks, creating the wondrous illusion that from early morning, the day progresses directly to evening, thereby wholly skipping the usual noon-time ennui of the lower latitudes. The penetrating rays of a summer sun have softened now to a more affectionate, diffusive candlelight glow. The air is crisp, and the colder the better; if it warms above freezing, fog and rain settle in, unsure of what to do next.

My senses are heightened and delighted - the sparkle of snowflakes and icicles, the crunch of snow beneath boots, the warmth of a pocket, the scent of woodsmoke, the splash of seabirds, dazzling northern lights.

The hustle and bustle of the endless days of fishing season are gone; God makes winter days short, for recuperation of body and soul. I bundle in thick socks and a blanket, steaming mug of coffee in hand, and delight in the magic.

Though apparently, my windowsill plants feel quite differently.