Wednesday, January 18, 2006

Boggle by candlelight

I woke today to a raging windstorm (and no, it wasn’t my husband bloviating). Thankfully I got in a good long shower, some yoga, my daily bowl of oatmeal and a few minutes on the heating pads to further loosen my stiff back before the power blew.

I just shrugged my mental shoulders and continued with my PT exercises.

Outages come more frequently around here and last longer than they used to - our little Mayberry has expanded in the last couple of years but the power company has yet to upgrade the infrastructure. A lot of people in the ‘hood are getting upset about this - but secretly, I like blackouts. (Of course I like them better in the summer, and I definitely like them better when I can call the automated outage line and they tell me when service will resume.)

No, really. Some people tell me the lack of infrastructure – the sighs and moans the house makes when the electrical appliances are humming - makes them nervous. It’s not simply that they miss their electrical conveniences; they just can’t stand all that quiet. Not me. While I like my microwave and computer as much as the next person, I can do with a bit of quiet every so often. And if you listen for a while, especially during summer outages when you can open the windows or sit outside, it’s really not that quiet around here. Even in the winter with the house shut up tight as a drum you can hear the birds tussling around the feeder, the whip of the wind through the bare branches, the whinnying of the horses in the next field. I can identify each neighbor by the sound of their cars, which kids should zip up their coats because their bus is coming up the hill. In summer, it’s the splash of a child cannonballing into a pool, the rustle of the leaves, the rush of the rain, the coyotes in the distance. OK, outages at night are initially inconvenient – all that hunting about for candles and flashlights and batteries, fretting if the basement will flood as we sleep. But reading a favorite book by candlelight? Getting together with neighbors for “blackout parties” where we bring whatever is in the fridge and throw it on the grill, crack open a few beers and tell outrageous stories from our youths? Actually talking to people instead of getting together to watch a game or a DVD? One blackout my husband’s cousin was visiting, and we lit all our candles and set up a Boggle game. (warning: never play Boggle with anyone who has high-functioning autism – they’ll kick your ass) Boggle by candlelight is awesome. And we were playing and talking and I was really enjoying just the sound of our voices and imagining how life would have been in the eighteenth century. Getting water from the pump, lighting the whale-oil lamps when the sun went down.

And then with a blink and a beep, the electricity went on. My husband and his cousin let out a mutual whoop of relief. They left skid marks as they dashed off to reset clocks, restart the video game they’d been playing when the lights blew.

I felt…disappointed. Abandoned. But, I thought, watching them settling back into the sofa with their remote controls and snacks, you can’t put this genie back into the bottle.

Perhaps we should initiate National Blackout Day. One day a year, cut your house off from the grid. Not just as an energy-conservation measure, or a protest against our dependency on foreign oil, but to remember our roots. To bring us back together. Let’s pick a not-too-hot summer day. One with a nice breeze and a awe-inspiring sunset. You bring the beer. I’ll bring the Boggle.

6 comments:

Doc Nebula said...

Christ! What are you, Amish or something? First Diet Pepsi, then yogurt, then I leave you alone for 20 years and you go Luddite on me? Somehow, this is MY fault.

Look -- I'm a child of technology and a citizen of civilization. Without power, I'm the first guy into the stewpot when the inevitable cannibal tribe comes calling. I can't live without my DVD player, my TV, my X-Box, my music, the INTERNET... good LORD, woman! Down in Florida, you lose power, you simply yearn for death! It's HORRIBLE!

Now, I suppose it would be okay if it were a reasonable temperature inside when the electricity decides to go on an extended coffee break, and you had interesting company lounging around to keep you stimulated. For much of my life, though, that hasn't been me; and when you're a hermit, you need your electronic amusements, else you quickly go stark staring bonkers.

I love electricity. I hate blackouts. You... you are some form of heretic, that's what you are. Why do penguins hate America? To be anti-power is to be objectively pro-terrorist! AUGH!

Laurie Boris said...

Uh...perhaps you may want to cut down on the coffee?

Just kidding.

And how could penguins hate America? They get all the fish and pop tarts they can scarf, they get a nationally syndiated comic strip, even not one but TWO movies about them this year...why, they're living off the blubber of the land!

Electricity is fine and dandy...just once and a while it's good not to have it so we can learn to appreciate it more..when you don't live in Florida.jeez.

Doc Nebula said...

I don't drink coffee. Or alcohol. Or use any kind of drugs. I'm just... like this.

I know, it's scary, but once upon a time, you used to understand that. ::grin::

I do agree that we appreciate things best when we are without them for a time, but I've been without elecricity quite enough in my life; my appreciation tanks are topped up.

And you can't play HeroClix by candelight because you can't tell the colors on the little dials. "Does she have Quake or Super Strength on this click?" "I don't know, let me pull up the WizKids website and check... oh, wait... ARGH!" It's a bummer.

Laurie Boris said...

Well, I wasn't sure...I thought you might have picked up a vice or two over twenty years...I don't even drink coffee any more...or Diet Pepsi.

Can't play Trivial Pursuit in the dark, either. Can't tell the damned pink from the orange.

Anonymous said...

I try to go camping at least one weekend a year. That's as close to my roots as I'd care to get.

I'd be the next guy in Highlander's last bath...

Laurie Boris said...

We used to camp for a week every summer when I was a kid. Maybe that's where I get it from. I'd try out for "Survivor" but I don't think I'd last through the opening credits.