Ai-eeeee/I mean chi

One reason I like Wytheville Community Center’s facilities so much is the pool. Reasons, one might say, because they have four. The regular lane swimming pool and the kiddy area are interconnected by a three foot wader access. These are kept about 84 degrees–according to the facility. Those of us plunging in for semi-weekly aerobic classes beg to differ.

Then there is a small therapy pool, kept around 94 and big enough for 6 people to social distance. The hot tub (limit 3) is around 104. One sees the emerging pattern. It is a great delight to emerge from the big pool after class and sit a happy five minutes in the hot tub with two other women, discussing the events of the class or the week.

In addition to the classes throwing me into cold water twice weekly, I decided to try Ai Chi. Tai chi in the water, yep. Problem: it is popular. The WCC has people sign up for their classes on the third Wednesday monthly. Your attendance for years (perhaps decades) is not protection; everyone applies again on that Wednesday. It’s not unlike working for state or county government and being suddenly required to reapply for your 25+ year position.

They do that so young whippersnappers like me have a chance to get in. I took advantage in December and arose at 6:03 am to call the front desk and secure an Ai chi spot. Even as they sent the confirming email, I felt a great disturbance in the force, the voice of someone somewhere crying out at being shoved from the therapy pool.

The first week I showed up, so did she. It is standard practice for wait-listers to hang out and take the spots of no-shows for that session. If someone hasn’t called in but misses three times, you get their spot. (Not much consolation in a monthly regimen, but there it is.)

Let’s call her Lydia. I took her spot. She had plans. So did her friends, already waiting in the pool. Why did my mind flash an image of crocodile eyes just above water in a still river?

They were all older women, and as a true Appalachian I have been raised to respect my elders. I gave them each a friendly nod, recognizing most from the deep water aerobics class immediately before. (I dropped that morning class in favor of a far less crowded evening class that turned out to have much greater age diversity.)

“Welcome to Ai chi, newbies.” Only I was new. I took a position near the steps. Thin stretched smiles, and “well look who’s joining us, welcome aboard dear” comments, ensued. I could feel hostility entering my body and accelerating my heartbeat.

Stretches began to soft synthesizer music. I felt something brush my thigh. Lydia was moving in. She had taken the position immediately before me at the steps, a little close but I wasn’t in a position to argue. As the class progressed, she moved closer with every stretch, always with her back toward me, until by the time we were doing the free float, I was scrunched in a corner, no place for my feet to reach surface.

I did briefly consider one good mule kick to clear space, but she is older and would bruise easily. Please see: Appalachian values. Also, by then I had ascertained the relationship of Ai chi to the two things I sought: relaxation, and stimulation.

Relaxing, not so much, as I cowered against the wall while the rest of them stretched into warrior poses. Stimulating, yes; it felt like fighting for survival up in here. One of them turned, and her warrior palm extended into something resembling a blade as she aimed at me. She smiled…..

Last Wednesday was the signup for next month. I dropped Ai chi in favor of a nice safe Zumba class. Nobody puts Lydia in a corner.

Murder In….

Jack and I came out of our vaccinated cocoons at Christmas to do a few fun things. After visiting friends, we organized a journey on the Great Smoky Mountains Scenic Railroad, four hours round trip, private dining table, masks.

Milk: it does a body good

The night before, we stayed in a charming little motel of brand name out just between Bryson City and Cherokee. I got in a swim before the pool filled with small humans, so all was well. Jack and I spent a pleasant evening catching up on A French Village, which we’ve been enjoying through the holidays, and went to bed early.

Or tried to. The sounds of little humans and their celebrating families around us made clear we were in a family-friendly hotel. No worries, just use the earplugs and be happy for humanity.

The next morning I arose at my usual 6:30ish and went to the lobby for coffee. The desk was closed, something somewhat unusual in a motel; the signs plastered all over the plastic sneeze guard defending why it was closed and what guests could do about it were oddly charming.

A guy in a band shirt and a musician’s fedora–looking very much like a young John Hirt–emerged from the employee door in the small kitchen area. The coffee was ready, he said, but there were no cups.

He smiled apologetically. “I don’t know where nothing is. I’m just helping out until they can get somebody. Nobody can get anybody right now.”

I smiled apologetically back. “It must be hard these days. No worries; I think there were cups in our room.” On return I asked if he’d mind if I sat in the breakfast area and typed on my computer, if I’d be in his way. “Lord no, ma’am, let me put those chairs down for you. I’m just new, don’t know what to do.”

“You’re doing great and I’m sure the motel is glad to have you.”

I didn’t ask if he were happy that the motel gig was supplementing wherever he played acoustic guitar, and electric base.

Ten minutes later he had out the cereal, the bagels, and the jelly. He had unlocked the refrigerator that held yogurt and cream cheese (which had a note on it saying items inside were to be consumed only at breakfast). With a polite tip of his hat to me (an old-fashioned courtesy I found lovely beyond words) and what can only be described as a smile of relieved satisfaction on his face, he locked the staff door and headed off.

I surveyed the four jars of cereal, the coffee pots lined up in rows, and watched the first group of kids hit the breakfast area to discover what I’d been wondering about since he left.

There was no milk out.

The maids began arriving, all of them with beautiful west Jamaican accents. They may be a family unit; they are very kind women. Right after them came the next round of mom-and-kids. The first mom gave her kids toast and went back to their room. The second mom demanded the maids find milk for her children. The maids gave polite smiles and their English suddenly got very bad. When the Mother of Karens left in frustration, they turned and winked at me.

The third group went in search of someone. Young John of the Black Fedora was dealing with leaks in three places. “Milk” didn’t seem to register as quickly as “water.” When it finally did, you could see the look of disbelief on his face. He did not mumble “kids today”; he didn’t need to; his facial expression did it for him.

Apparently he hadn’t forgotten it. There wasn’t any. I have never seen a man deliver news so fast and vacate the premises. He is tall and has long legs. And he had “employees only” doors behind which he could retreat.

It’s a mad, mad, crazy world. I’m sitting in a motel lobby about to go on a pleasure excursion, watching parents cope with kids whose various responses to the Great Milk Crisis reflect a lot of different parenting styles. Some of them snuck quietly outside and got coolers which they trundled past envious others. Some of them shrugged and made toast. Two (parents) demanded to know why the motel didn’t have milk and how fast could they get it.

It feels like sitting in a microcosm of America. All hail the future, kids. Figure it out.