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David Long's avatar

I, too, was befriended by Roger Angell, from afar--thirty-some years ago he published one of my stories and changed my life. You, too, befriended me from afar--by reading a birthday wish for my first-born [now 48], by the shape of your storytelling, the precise wisdom of a man's glee at having made a direct hit on a squirrel's nether regions with hot sauce fired from a squirt gun a moment later realizing that his young daughter, a squirrel lover, was watching from the other window. And so many other fine things, including the locution, from today's writing: "an easygoing grumpiness . . . suitable for all occasions" . . . oh and for the riff on how one responds to "How are you?" In my version: I was taken to task for answering, "Fair to middlin'"--not sufficiently chipper according to the Californian who asked the question. I said, "Actually, I'm from New England. Fair to middlin' is pretty darn good, expressing an openness to upward movement while avoiding excessive chipperness and not unware of the other shoe's quantum state, dropping and not-dropping. Be well, old grump.

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Paul Dover's avatar

I have to admit that there's a certain solace in grumpiness and I think that it's in a father's Contract of Employment that he inflict it on his children who will roll their eyes and ignore it.

It's wonderful to read this happy note that you've shared with us. I agree with you when you express your feelings. I took my wife out to the shop this morning (we're newly retired, we can do it) and I've just returned with her from an afternoon stroll round the local streets. I've read, I've written short comments, I'm going to finish the chapter of the book I'm re-reading, catch up with my Bible reading and write a short commentary on Isaiah. I have a wonderful wife who I married just over thirty years ago, two children who I love and my daughter's boyfriend who I look on as almost another son. I eat well, I sleep well, I'm recovering from a time in hospital. I'm looking forward to a family holiday in Northern Ireland and a couple of nights ago I spoke to a friend who I hadn't spoken to for 25 years.

Though I don't deserve it, life is good and I thank God for it. The atheist can thank whatever he thinks most precious.

Gratitude is a very underrated part of life.

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