Years ago, I undertook
an extended walk to the Pacific Ocean (on a Sunday when there was no public
transportation.) Having underestimated
the excursion’s difficulty (or overestimated my abilities), my agonizing return
journey acquired the qualities of a desperate trek through the Kalahari
Desert.
For those of us with a
rich and fertile imagination, a normal activity can become a torturous
adventure. As occurred again
recently.
Continuing to recover from my Legionnairial mishap, I am not
yet up to my traditional Thursday morning outing to the Groundwork coffee emporium. My ongoing recovery, however, allows me to extend
my rehabilitational activities.
Today, it was a half-hour walk on generally flat
terrain. (The return journey from Groundwork includes a substantially
steep hill. * (* The hill actually
extends in both directions, but the
return version is “up.”)
You might recall from an earlier blog post concerning my
Thursday Walk, wherein I found myself returning home holding an untouched cup
of Groundwork coffee, awakening me to
the fact that I did not really want
coffee but that, as a congenitally goal-directed individual, I somehow required
a specific purpose for my walk – other than just walking, even if that purpose was entirely contrived.
Lesson learned? As we
shall now see,
Not entirely.
I have determined the parameters of my alternative walk – departing
from my house, proceeding north on Fourth Street to Pico, west on Pico to Main
Street, south on Main Street to Ocean Park Boulevard, east on Ocean Park
Boulevard onto Fourth Street, and north on Fourth Street back to the house.
That was
interesting, wasn’t it?
I begin my walk. And,
the walk being an ambulatorial bookmark for my Thursday Groundwork walk, I immediately consider where I can stop off for
coffee.
(The “habitual” portion of my thinking process having
apparently learned nothing.)
Peet’s Coffee on
Main Street pops to mind. A good choice,
it appears. Located three quarters of the
way through my walk, I will probably be tiring by then – making it the perfect
resting spot to take a break for coffee.
(Even though – as previously demonstrated – my regular walks,
including this one, have nothing to do with coffee.)
Turning left onto Pico, my mind suddenly ignites with
excitement. I now realize that with a
mere two-and-a-half block extension to my walk (in both directions), I can make
it to Cora’s Coffee Shop. I like Cora’s
coffee better than Peet’s. So okay, I will go to Cora’s instead.
Continuing on, however, it occurs to me that, at my current
stage of rehabilitation, an addition to my walk would be inappropriately taxing;
I was not quite ready for that. I decide
then to eschew Cora’s, reminding
myself that Peet’s coffee is almost as
good.
(Simultaneously
reminding myself that I do not really want coffee.)
Proceeding now down Main Street, it abruptly occurs to me:
I can get coffee at the M
Street Kitchen!
And a gluten-free chocolate chip cookie as well!
Approaching M Street
Kitchen across the street, I spot a large delivery truck blocking the
entrance, so I am unable to determine if it’s open. I can feel an urgency in my body, my neck craning
desperately to see around the delivery truck.
I can also feel the disappointment.
M Street Kitchen is
fermee.
Oh, well. Peet’s is not far way. I can still get my coffee…
Wait! What about the Urth Café, coming up immediately on the
left?
(Man, there are a
lot of coffee places in my neighborhood!)
It is then that I take myself seriously in hand – necessary
because I am demonstrably out of control – and I angrily remind myself:
“You do not really. Want.
Coffee!”
The self-rebuke is effective. Walking past Urth Café, I feel dutifully chastened. So
dutifully chastened, in fact, that a block-and-a-half later…
I walk obliviously past Peet’s
Coffee!
I do not even notice it‘s there!
I am now virtually in the clear. (There is still the Novel Café in my path, but having passed four places where the
coffee is better, it is hardly a realistic consideration.)
Minutes later, I am ascending my front steps.
My excursion successfully completed.
And no coffee.
It was not easy.
And I am not talking about the excursion.
When you got home, did it seem like an empty trek since you went w/out your usual reward? Did you fix some coffee when you got home?
ReplyDeleteAs the AL playoffs begin today, just noticed an odd stat. The Jays scored 891 runs this season, 127 more than the #2 run-scoring team, the Yankees. When it came to scoring runs, no team came anywhere close to the Jays. And yet, in 1-run games, they lost almost twice as many as they won (15-28). Seems a bit odd, but one thing probably has nothing to with the other.
Came across another 'fun' video that someone posted on YouTube, a Blue Jays hype piece. Enjoy. Go Jays!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YxDdRz11aA&sc_ref=l.facebook.com
What a caffeine thrill seeker!
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