We spent a blissful and relaxing day at The Bach today, with Josh's parents  John and Sharon and his mum's best friend Jo(who is a small gnome of a lady with  a huge smile, crinkly eyes and a heart of gold).
     Maddy was so ecstatic  about going that she even decided that 'Puppy' could stay at home with the  kitten for the day: her most loved creature, Puppy is a smelly, worn, once-white  now very grey soft toy, who should be incinerated for hygiene reasons, but who  even Josh and I are very attached to now. He has an inscrutable solemn face,  with black eyes once smooth and glossy but now hazy and misted over with  cataracts. His nose is small and perfectly placed at the bottom of his face,  just above his simple line mouth, and his ears droop somewhat mournfully,  framing his muzzle. His neck will be the first part of his body to go, thin and  threadbare from being grasped gently and held lovingly over the past four  years.    
(Because of the way my mind works - naturally and continuously  preparing for doom and woeful tidings of loved ones - it has occurred to me many  times that if something should ever happen to Maddy, Puppy would be that  'security blanket' for me, you would probably see glimpses of him in my handbag  or at night you might find me holding onto him for dear life... )    
So our  darling Puppy stayed at home to keep the new kitten Margot company, and Maddy  screeched his goodbyes to us on his behalf as we trooped out of the house. For  her own company she clutched two small plastic sharks in her fist - their names  are, rather obviously, Little Maddy and Little Sierra(my niece). Lewis is more  easily placated when it comes to 'special things': he is only now starting to  get attached to his toy, which we gave him for Christmas, and he is only  seemingly attached to it because we faithfully place them in the cot together  for every nap time and night. He(as-yet nameless toy) is far and away the most  good-looking, creatively designed and aesthetically pleasing of Lewis' toys, so  we are trying to encourage a bond to form... So Lewis left the house with his  dummy firmly in place after hastily scurrying into his room to get it upon  imminent news of departure, ready to throw himself at the world with both hands  stretched out for the opportunities(crumbs, morsels, possibly a whole biscuit, a  leaf, branch or small fascinating rock)that would most certainly come.    
Josh and I were the most loaded down with belongings, from towels and togs  to cameras, a milk bottle, a horror novel that I am currently devouring, to more  mundane items.... And at the last minute I changed my mind about which  sunglasses I needed, and threw in my new pink floral scarf, which is light and  lovely and looks like sorbet - in my mind envisioning a world where I would  actually feel enough self-confidence to wind it madly around my head like a  bohemian beauty.      
The kids were angelic as we drove 'onwards and  upwards' to the Whangaparaoa(yes it has that many 'A's in it!!) Peninsula, one  of the last remaining outposts of Northern Auckland's 'holiday home' history.  Amongst the new and vile creations of 'beige' or 'donkey' stucco are old baches  of weatherboard in fading cheery colours of baby blue or yellow, nestled into  easy-care gardens of cheap, garish blooms and shrubs. The main road crawls along  the ridge of the peninsula, feeding into small winding lanes that creep  carefully down to the beaches and bays on the left, or towards the mangroves  that fill the inlet. Occasional outcrops of shops occur, with tattoo and beauty  parlours alongside ancient dairies, their eye-like windows long since covered in  layer upon layer of magazine covers and TipTop ads.  
The road to Arkles Bay  stretches up and over the ridge before winding carefully down to the flat of the  beach road. This is the haven of people who lovingly tended their baches and  holiday homes seasonally for years while their families were at home, and have  now relinquished busy working lives for the slow, somewhat endless span of  retirement, falling back and retreating to their summer holds to prune their  colourless roses and have meetings about what kind of letterbox to erect.     
'Our' bach is one of the newer creations, about 6 years old now, slowly and  lovingly built up from scratch by Josh's dad in his spare time. It perches  against the backdrop of Arkles somewhat precariously, on a steep section that  provides stunning views of the world(the very small world). Slightly in front  and to one side, a giant pohutakawa tre stands with amazing twisted branches,  the kind of tree that as a child I liked to imagine housing not only small  dwellings but whole villages of small creatures, the broad beams lit up by  hundreds of tiny twinkling lights... reality is so dull in comparison!
       The inside of the house is spare and clean, but with Sharon's aesthetic touch  clearly seen in the white-washed table and chairs, blue and white gingham  trimmings, a large blackboard sign on the wall, wicker baskets piled up in the  corners - the nautical theme is subtle and charming. Being the lover of colour  that I am, I would probably tire quickly of it, but I still wish that I could  'steal the look' to bring that refreshed, healthy sea-and-fresh-air into our  house.... 
We proceeded to spend the rest of the day in that heady rhythm of  nothingness: reading our books while Lewis napped, congregating at the table  outside to make sandwiches, making endless cups of tea which we ate with moist  slabs of leftover christmas cake … Finally someone managed to take charge  and everyone was dressed in their version of swimwear, and duly coated with  milky sunscreen. The 7 of us – it didn’t feel like that many because we were  quiet and relaxed, only the children breaking our trance-like state with shrieks  of laughter and babbling stories – swam and swam and swam, until Maddy and Lewis  started to shiver and the sun started to look overwhelmed with dreary clouds.      
Then we trooped back up the hill again, Lewis wet curls and pink nose and  lips, Maddy clutching her towel around her and her two sharks, and peeled off  wet cold togs. Sharon ran warm water in the white butchers sink – which was  installed because it had always been her dream to have one, especially for the  purpose of bathing baby descendants, but which had claimed the life of many a  crockery piece in the process – and we deposited Lewis into marinate. So for  half an hour Josh grilled sausages outside, I read my book in peace and Lewis  and Maddy took turns squatting in the sink, pouring tumblers of warm soapy water  over their soft white tummies, while Sharon chopped veggies and watched closely. 
And then dinner: savoury sausages with corn-on-the-cob, fresh salad and hot  chips wrapped in paper. Every single one of us wolfed our rations down and had  seconds, even Maddy finishing a whole sausage and plate of chips, each piece  carefully marked with a dot of bright tomato sauce. And after dinner, the kids  almost took themselves to bed, happily settling down to Josh’s lovely voice  singing My God is So Big, and we adults spent the evening reading – again – and  playing Balderdash over more cups of tea and christmas cake. 
Finally it became chilly, and John won the game – whatever his various  strengths, he is not a gracious winner – and we packed our bags, scooped the  children out of bed and set off home. The stars obligingly twinkled, and Josh  and I sang softly – so cheesy but it does spontaneously happen sometimes – as we  drove back down the silent and deserted motorway, and quickly, very quickly it  seemed, I was standing at the top of the shell stairs at our home holding Maddy,  as we gazed delightedly up at the night sky. Both of the angels went off to bed  again without a sound, and Josh and I crashed into our silent and brooding,  horribly messy lounge, and here we are still.  
And again I am left with that feeling of having glimpsed life as it could be,  as it should be even, and not knowing how to translate it into reality at home.  Is it possible? I’m not sure. I know we have far too many belongings, and far  too little good storage, but these are not excuses that bear up under scrutiny.  The search for domestic bliss continues…
 
 
1 comment:
Love this post, Rachel! Makes me miss New Zealand and your lovely family but reminds me that things are just the same here. Life as it could be...the search for domestic bliss...beautiful!
xoxo Kristin
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