Yesterday,
I spent a gloriously exhausting day at a TEDx event, where I met with many
wonderfully new and exciting ideas and people.
One speech
brought together those two entities in the form of a single word: Paesano.
Paesano, as he told us, literally
translates to countrymen or villager, but the truest essence of what
it represents is friend.
Not the
“Like” me on Facebook fellow you see in a million posts and images that say:
“You should’ve been there!” or the “Liked” person whom you only speak to when
you run into her at the grocery store or your child’s school.
The paesano is the person who was actually
there, sitting beside you on the beach, at the bar, in the stadium, the funeral
home, or the Fun House at the fair.
The paesano is someone you can and will go
to when your child is affected by a lice outbreak in school and you have to
treat every square inch of your home to prevent further infestation.
The
paesano is someone you can and will
tell your greatest fears to, one with whom you’ll share your greatest hopes and
dreams, your unabashed silliness, and your least and most reverent thoughts.
Of the many
people I connected with at this event, one was a paesano of nearly two decades, and there seemed to be a spark with
four others, a glimmer that may or may not lead to that lifelong kinship.
But
no matter how those relationships develop or where they take us, one thing is
for certain: They were an integral part of the Moments that nourished my happy...
Here are
the other week’s highlights:
“I wasn’t
here when you got the news,” Warren said as he handed me these gifts, “but I
wanted you to know how happy I am for you that you’ve been accepted to speak
about your work."
He’s one of
my longest standing paesanos and
exudes other qualities that exist in those types of lifelong bonds, like a
willingness to learn and grow and adapt with our loved one when life shifts the
foundations upon which she have been living… 
Smiles
were delivered as another card in my mother’s fun and heartwarming Soon-to-be-50
series arrived in my mailbox...
And during the
mother-son bonding that occurred as Big Guy and I worked to create and build a
better habitat for his turtle, Squirtle...
This young
man has had a fascination with turtles for as long as I can remember, and
sister Beauty thought of him when she found this young creature, one that
wasn’t much bigger than a fifty-cent piece when she brought him home for her
baby brother.
I’ve always
hoped that my children would grow up to be paesanos,
that they’d count each other among their treasured friends to share life’s many
moments, be they good, bad, or indifferent…
Squirtle is
a simple demonstration of that type of bond…
And
speaking of Big Guy, I was honored and proud to sit in attendance as this young
man’s hard work and dedication to community, character, academics, and
leadership was rewarded by an induction into the National Honor Society.
I’ve tried
to refrain from posting pics of my children all these years, because I want to
respect their privacy, and yet, they are some of the most important people in
my life…
From here
forth, I’m going to trust that some day they will appreciate these living
journals, that hopefully these posts and messages may eventually serve them in
some small way, just as they’re serving me and you, my comrades in this online
community… 
I was also paesano to myself week, as well. You
see, other than laundry (we have to have clean underwear, now don’t we?) and
doing the dishes, we haven’t touched any other household chore in three weeks.
The grit I
kept picking up on my bare feet was really beginning to annoy me, as were the
two large bags of rotting apples, fruit that was fresh when Warren picked them
from our trees two weeks back so I could make homemade applesauce and pie
filling.
I was
beginning to do what so many of us do: pull out the hammer and berate myself
because I wasn’t keeping up with Emily
Post-style standards, and I was feeling like I was behind and would never
catch up.
When I
don’t let things like obligation get in my way, I love cooking and being in my
kitchen. It’s probably my favorite room of the house.
So,
rather than continue to feel all icky, I decided on Tuesday to take the time
to take care of those apples. I now have five quarts of applesauce and two
batches of apple pie filling in the freezer, deliciously warm Moments for a
future, cold winter’s day.
Keeping
that momentum, I asked Hubby if we could attack the housework after dinner and
concentrate on the things the House Helper did when she was here.
In less
than two hours, Warren and Big Guy and I managed to clean both bathrooms from
top to bottom, scour the kitchen, sweep and mop the floors, clean and dust all
tabletop surfaces, broom off the deck, and put away the baskets of laundry that
had taken up residence on the sofa.
Last but
not least of the moments that brought me joy these past seven days is this zany
Subway employee who dresses up like a sandwich and dances on the sidewalk to
support his job, both literally and figuratively, I’d presume…
I see him
at least once a week as I drive by the intersection, and his enthusiasm as he
bounces around always draws a smile…
What about
you? What Moment(s) nourished your happy this week?












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