Calendar
Dec
30 2019
My
real estate agent
sent
me a calendar and card
in
an elegantly lettered envelope.
As
he has reliably done
for
the past 25 years
since
he sold me this house.
Apparently,
he is a patient man,
content
to enter
his
second quarter century
waiting
for me to move out.
And
old-school, as well;
a
paper calendar
postal
mail.
It's
a handy size
with
a magnet on the back.
So
I attach it to the fridge door
where
it best catches the eye,
confronting
me
with
the passage of time
whenever
I reach for a snack.
The
stock pictures
of
baby animals
and
natural vistas,
the
glossy pages
I
one-by-one tear off.
300
months, so far
and
counting.
A
long time
to
have remained fixed.
All
my things
in
their familiar places
if
a little worse for wear,
the
genteel shabbiness
of
a contented man
who
tends toward complacency.
And
the concrete foundation
that
has nicely settled in
to
this shallow sandy earth,
the
thin soil
where
little grows
but
black spruce flourishes.
How
persistent we are, how steadfast.
The
real estate agent
who
isn't “mine” at all.
I,
a model of stability
but
perhaps more stuck than stable.
And
those sparse and witchy trees
whose
tenacity and hardiness
I
can't help but admire.
Yes,
the house could use a coat of paint
the
roof a few new shingles.
As
I, too
have
gotten thinner on top.
While
what were saplings, once
now
crowd against the sun,
and
the older trees
rot
from inside out.
But
the same picture
of
a square-jawed young man
has
appeared on each calendar
year
after year;
frozen
on
a disposable document
that
is all about transience
and
keeping track.
The
inexorable passage of time,
only
he
has
somehow contrived to evade.
Actually,
it's a husband and wife team: Glen and Carmen Kannegiesser. As the
name suggests, he's of Finnish stock, and very much does have
the square-jawed handsomeness of his people. But the picture has
never changed; and even though it hardly feels it, it actually has
been 25 years since I last saw him: surely, the passage of time must
show in his face as much as it does in mine.
I
value loyalty, admire persistence, and commend entrepreneurialism.
And I am very much a creature of habit who resists change. So if I
ever were to move (however the prospect of moving offends my
essential nature!) I'd probably give him a call. Because there is
something reassuring about this calendar, reliably arriving each year
during the holiday season. In a world of vertiginous and alarming
change, a grounding ritual – even one so minor – is welcome.
It's
all about the appeal to me of stability: the ritual of the
calendar, the changeless picture. Along with the presumption of our
ongoing relationship as client and agent; caught just as it was, in
the amber of a quarter century.