All at Sea
On March 8, 2005 | 8 Comments | Uncategorized |

Bliss! For just about two hours today, I was entirely alone. Well, alone in the sense that I wasn’t with anyone I knew. The children were occupied in various places with various forms of supervision, and I took myself to Border’s, equipped with three (3! I counted) of my favorite pens (because there is little worse, on an outing of this kind, than being without a suitable writing implement), a notebook, my laptop, and my text for class.

I read, I wrote, I shopped (!), I listened to my iPod Shuffle (the desk clerk asked me what it was, BETH, and I told him, and he said he’d never seen one before and that they get smaller and smaller, and I think that that makes the iPod Shuffle cool, because not everyone recognizes them, so they are not as ubiquitous as the plain iPod. How ’bout them apples?), and I was All By Myself.

Thank you very much.

It made me think of a song that I am listening to frequently these days (not yet on my Shuffle) from a new c.d. at our house. It’s jazz musician Jamie Cullum, his c.d. is called Twentysomething, and if you haven’t heard him, try to.

I’m all at sea
where no one can bother me
Forgot my roots
if only for a day
Just me and my thoughts
sailing far away

You don’t need it everyday
But sometimes don’t you just crave
To disappear inside your mind
You never know what you might find

Like a wandering that seeps into my soul
Please just leave me right here on my own
Later on you could spend some time with me
if you want to, all at sea

Addendum: I decided that I must mention that I did have company for a short time this afternoon, and this was from dear tworivers. Did you ever notice, tworivers, that when we bloggers mention you, your name is often prefaced by “dear”? Why would that be, one wonders?

Anyway, I was so glad to have the company of tworivers, albeit briefly. It was a pleasure, adding to the idyll of my afternoon.

Comments 8
Beth Posted March 8, 2005 at4:45 pm   Reply

I am pretty sure that he was flirting with you.

Beth Posted March 8, 2005 at4:47 pm   Reply

Or he was just bored and wanted to talk about something, anything, to break the slow pace of the day. Remember, I worked in two bookstores for a total of 9 years. There is a lot of lying about stuff so you can flirt or just lying for the heck of it. I of course never did this but I witnessed it a lot.

Richard Posted March 8, 2005 at5:31 pm   Reply

Hey, we did a presentation at the East Northport Rotary this Am and a fellow there mentioned that smaller Ipod which you have. I understand its only good for 100 songs 🙁

Your blog is fun! We will have to get that song to hear when we are ‘All at Sea’ for 13 days or so between Cape Town and Liberia in October, God Willing.

etc. whatever Posted March 10, 2005 at5:58 pm   Reply

testing, testing

Karen DiRuggiero Posted March 10, 2005 at9:28 pm   Reply

Unfortunately, having no such technological advances in my possession, I simply rely on the car stereo to drown out the din of my life. As a result, my 4 year old daughter can sing all the lyrics to “Our Lips Are Sealed” by the Go-Go’s, and my 6 year old son loves “Roxanne” by the Police. I guess pretty soon I’ll need to invest in the fancy private listening devices, or else explaining “the red light” or “selling your body to the night” might become an issue. And by the way, you were way off target in your discussion of not being cool.

Rebecca Posted March 11, 2005 at5:19 am   Reply

Beth,He was NOT flirting with me. And the iPod Shuffle is Cool. And you are just jealous.Dad,Yes, that song will be perfect for you. And– heavens!– 100 songs is a lot of songs. How many does the juke box carry??? And, by the way, it can hold 120 songs. So that’s better, yes? Love you!etc., whatever,1, 2, 3….Karen,I’m just happy to know that your children know these lyrics and not just the wheels on the bus…. I was so proud of myself when some young adults from our church had to borrow our mini-van and expected to find the wheels on the bus (or some other such stuff) in my c.d. player, and were really impressed when they found Cold Play instead. See Beth? Maybe I AM cool….Did I ever tell you that we actually (accidentally) walked William and Everett through the red light district in Amsterdam? Talk about some explaining….Thanks, EVERYONE, for commenting!

tworivers Posted March 12, 2005 at2:49 pm   Reply

Responding to Karen, and to dear Birches herself: my son (now 10) was a big fan of opera when he was 4. I actually wrote in our Christmas letter that year than his favorite operas were Candide, The Mikado, and Sweeny Todd. When he began to quote from Sweeny Todd I decided we’d better ‘lose’ that CD; it has not resurfaced since, but I think he’s about old enough to be counted on not to quote it in public …

Rebecca Posted March 16, 2005 at3:50 am   Reply

tworivers,I am not familiar with the lyrics to Sweeney Todd. May I borrow your c.d.? If you can recover it?

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