It's 7 a.m. as I sit down to write this Saturday morning, 32ºF (0ºC), and the sky is just lightening up. I'm drinking coffee in my new pink armchair, facing the window. On the radiator in front of me, Pearl Duquette is showing off her wool socks (knitted by Sarah W. in London a few years ago, and only worn in winter).
The girlettes' arrangement on their plank-cart reminded me of something... Some painting...
Got it! The Jolly Flatboatmen, by George Caleb Bingham.
This painting doesn't mean anything to me, it's just filed in my memory. Though looking at it now, isn't that man looking at us compelling? His long legs...
(Bingham lived in Missouri, where my mother was from. I was born in Columbia, MO, where my parents met at the university.)
Bingham's "Fur Traders Descending the Missouri" is a favorite of mine--partly because what looks like a cat in the boat is actually a baby bear. Here, at the Met.
Speaking of bears, BELOW: A donated Harlequin romance.
The bear! What is going on with that bear? Its arm...
I'm glad it's the weekend, to rest up. I'm acclimating to my physical job. I'm stronger, and generally I'm not sore the day after work anymore. But I overdid it at work yesterday, and today I got the aches. I'm quite happy for why, though!
What I'd done was, I'd stayed an extra coupla hours--volunteer--to clean up the Housewares workspace, below.
I climbed up on the shelves and got down on my knees to pull out fallen, misplaced, and hidden things.
This is it AFTER I organized:
I'd hesitated to tell management I was working late, off-the-clock,
because I think it's illegal to volunteer to do the
tasks for which you are normally paid.
However, my workplace follows
no such law.
Manageress said, "Good!"
Big Boss said,
"Feel free to stay till close!"
I did.
__________________
Here, below, is the sink and pricing station (around the corner from the grocery cart).
This area badly needs some beautifying.
I'd hung that blue-circle print on the wall years ago, to brighten it up, even though I didn't work there.
(My wall in my BOOK's work area was covered in pictures.)
I found another valuable item stashed away by the previous sorter, who'd been fired--a vintage, Mexican, wool blanket.
Not this one, below, but one like it.
This guy was such a jerk. Selling something like this for, say, fifty bucks, will make a big difference to our poor store. (The average price of housewares is probably $1.99.)
Volunteer Abby
and I are the main Housewares staff. We both sort donations (tossing maybe 25% as broken or rubbish), wash, and price them, and put
them in grocery carts.
Abby comes in 6 hours/week. She is super speedy, but says she isn't good at displays (I can see that), and she almost never puts things out on the sales floor.
I spend about a third of my time on the floor, organizing, culling, and displaying stuff--which I love.
Several volunteers help a few hours a week, putting things out for sale. They are mostly lovely people, and mostly bad at arranging things. Only one woman makes things look nicer.
Arranging things (at work) and making things look good makes me feel so very, very happy, I was curious about it. Last night I searched "dopamine of getting things done".
I like what The Guardian says--it's about the satisfaction of To-Do lists, but applies to what I am satisfied by, too. The wonderfulness of lists (sorting/arranging, in my case) is, they say, down to three reasons.
1. They dampen anxiety about the chaos of life.
Yes!
I love feeling that I've organized a bit of a disordered world. You can't beat entropy, but you can beat it back a little, and that's a rush.
2. They give us a structure, a plan to we can stick to.
For me, it's my workplace that provides structure--at home I don't feel that structure, even with to-do lists. So I appreciate that, and I also appreciate that it provides limits--I have to stop when the store closes at 5:30.
And,
3. They are proof of what we achieved that day (week, month).
Yes! Proof of life.
Like knitting, which I only did once--it's so pleasurable to see the material form:
I did that! Therefore, I exist.
_______________________
I texted Emster the mask of the god of chaos that I'd posted yesterday. Her reply is so purely her, I want to save it here.
I love a gild of a text [I don't think that's a typo] and also "git up on the tough ones".
_________________
After "The Magdalen Reading", this is another favorite painting--Botticelli's "St. Augustine in His Study" (c.1490).
I love it for the curtain!
Salmon pink and acid green! One of my most favorite color combos.
Also I like his tuft of hair in a pony tail, which reminds me of Cindy Lou Who.
Okay, it's almost 9 a.m. now. Time for breakfast.
An unexpected thing about not-eating added sugar is that I don't miss it, (amazingly!) but I miss 'knowing what to eat'.
Sugary food is the easiest, most available, and often cheapest option.
And I miss the role it played as an automatic time-filler. Got a little empty time? Facing that in-between time after work?
Easy! Hunt for a snack.
I've heard people who quit smoking talk about that---they don't know what to do with all the little spaces of time that smoking used to fill.
The loss of that constant friend makes me feel a little sad, a little beleaguered. Now I have to expend energy thinking of something to cook. I don't care much for cooking.
Feeding myself has gotten a little easier though, and a little more automatic, with a few fast-and-easy go-to's that I don't have to think about, like sliced apple & peanut butter; cheese and seed-and-nut crackers; tuna and noodles; a banana and walnuts, or yogurt…
ALL of these take more effort than eating directly out of a tub of ice-cream, but they are managable.
I'd say Manageability is key to making changes. If it's not manageable (whatever that is for you), you won't do it for long.
Git up on the tough ones... But manageably.
I love these Bingham paintings!(and the girlette's depiction of the Jolly Floatboatmen) Never heard of him before. I could've sworn that was a black cat on the boat, hmmm.
ReplyDeleteOMG, that romance cover. Is that a teddy bear, or is he happy to see her?
LOL, Abby—my question exactly! 🤣
Deletethat bear wants stroking. The man guy has mistaken girl friend's eye for an ear, I reckon. What a worthy book that is!!
ReplyDeleteAs long as your body hangs in there your organizing display skills are fabulous. Just don't blow your foot out ! Or your back!! BUT if you did do that I would high tail it over and be your nurse. I would.
Girlettes look like the season has changed for them- socks...must find the orphans their winter gear. It's getting crispy out there.
I love your mornings in the pink chair. Cosy1
Lol, naughty bear!!! Now I am deeply regretting that I put that book in recycling – – maybe it will still be there when I go back to work on Monday – – because I would love to be able to quote from it! Surely there are some choice lines in it.
DeleteHi dear, thank you for the offer of nursing assistance. God forbid I should need it but if I do I’m calling you up. You will know what to do from experience, even if you don’t need to actually appear on my door step. You have socks for the orphans from Sarah too, don’t you?
I thought I knew that painting from the St. Louis Art Museum, but no, the fiddler’s face is different. The one in St. Louis is Jolly Flatboatmen in Port. It’s HUGE. I have always thought that the fiddler in the St. Louis painting looks eerily like John Hartford.
ReplyDeleteDo you ever write out and check things that you’ve already done just for the satisfaction of checking them off?
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LOL, YES! That is so funny, Michael – – I absolutely have made retrospective to-do lists. Didn’t know that I wasn’t alone, but I’m not altogether surprised.
DeletePS. I’ve been wondering what places I would like to visit in the United States – – not keen on flying so thinking of places on train lines and so forth – – it would be very cool to go see Bingham’s paintings! I don’t think I talk about it much, but I do actually have a strong physical connection to Missouri – – from childhood visits.
DeleteOne more PS—I just checked and Amtrak runs from the Twin Cities to St. Louis, 14 hour trip, $200 round-trip – – doable!
DeleteLong ago the company I worked for expanded exponentially; built a new facility, hired a zillion new people. They built a sort of mezzanine in the factory to store parts. I commandeered one wall of it and we installed a half a zillion file cabinets up there and moved in all the old records. Every year we would lug up a year's worth of records, file them, dust and sweep and go make more records. But it was such a monumental job and my crew was so good at it, I would badger my boss until he came up and admired it. "I suppose I must," he would say. I wonder if he ever realized organization is the key to success. Until, of course, the competition buys your company.
ReplyDeleteZowee, all that filing paper—does it make you appreciate computers? Either way you do it, it’s best to do it.
DeleteOrganize!
Clearly it's more fun to be a boatman than a romance novel heart throb.
ReplyDeleteCeci
All that torment!
Delete