A Lesson On Lingering | Sixty And Me

a-lesson-on-lingering-|-sixty-and-me

Outside the generous window of this restored 1800s barn apartment, twilight had settled over the Trinity Mountains. A single soulangeana tree glowed pink against the fading sunset, while the white dogwood buds waited to open in the shadows of the tall pines.

Inside, the world was warm, luminous, and alive.

We had spent the evening gathered around an ample wooden table – a piece of history that likely held a century of family stories – the pasta maker turning steadily beneath our animated conversation, flour dusting our fingers as we rolled out and cut the sheets by hand. A birthday celebration. A joyous collision of laughter and steam rising from the pots.

Cleaning Up: More than a Chore

We had eaten well: ravioli with two fillings, a pork roast that had been tantalizing the air all afternoon, sourdough bread, and a green salad. When we had each finished our piece of layered lemon cake (homemade, as it happened), the birthday girl stood and announced she was doing the dishes. I felt a sudden, fierce protectiveness over the magic we had just made.

“No,” I said, my voice firmer than I intended. “Go. Enjoy the rest of your special day. I will take care of everything. I want to do this.”

She looked at me with that playful skepticism we reserve for those being too polite, tilting her head as if weighing whether I meant it. I did. The front door shut softly, and as they strolled homeward under a brilliant canopy of stars, the barn fell into sudden silence.

I stood before a small mountain of dishes, heavy pasta pots, tangled utensils, and wine glasses still holding their crimson rings, alongside small platters dotted with golden crumbs. And in that stillness, a memory I hadn’t thought about in a long while surfaced with the clarity of a mountain stream, carrying me back south to Ukiah.

I Thought of Leeya

Seven or eight years ago, Leeya was the heart of our women’s writing circle. We met at her home monthly to read aloud our poetry and memoirs; vulnerable, raw pieces of ourselves laid out like offerings. Afterward, we shared a light dinner, the room ringing with laughter that came easily after the evening’s intensity.

Every single time we rose to help, we fluttered around her, eager to spare her the labor.

“Leeya, sit,” we would insist. “You’ve hosted us all evening. You must be tired.”

But she would always wave us away with a serene, immovable finality, her eyes aglow with a personal secret.

“No,” she would say. “I love to do this. Truly.”

At the time, I didn’t understand. I assumed it was a hostess’s politeness, an obligation inherited from customs of another era. I couldn’t fathom how anyone could find love in the grease and the scrapings.

But standing there in the Trinities, my hands slipping into warm, soapy water, the realization arrived as unbidden as the scent of wildflowers on the edge of spring.

Cleaning the dishes was more than a chore.

For Leeya, it was the final stanza of the poem.

Creating Order and Remembering the Night

As I wiped flour from the table, I realized that although I was making order, I was also savoring. With every plate I dried, a fragment of the evening returned… the way the candlelight caught the birthday girl’s blue eyes, the particular cadence of a joke told over the rolling pin, the familiar sound of 70s’ LPs from the vintage stereo.

In the hush of the kitchen, the evening unfolded once more.

Every motion – washing, stacking, arranging – pulled echoes from our togetherness into the rhythm of the room. I thought of Leeya in her kitchen, lingering in memories of our literary evening, as she moved unhurriedly through her own.

Through the window left ajar, the forest’s edge breathed March in – wet earth and the faint, sweet promise of fruit trees about to bloom.

I looked at the table, now cleared and ready for tomorrow, and felt certain that all was well in the world.

The quiet ritual of the cleanup is a gift we give ourselves. It is the bridge between the communal fire and the solitary dream. Leeya knew that the work of the hands allows the heart to catch up.

And isn’t it something – how life plants its lessons in us years before we’re ready to receive them?

As I turned off the lights in the barn, I whispered a grateful thank you to her across the years.

I’d finally understood the holiness of the aftermath.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

Do you linger after gatherings to savor the evening? What does this reveal and how does it wrap up the day for you?

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