I woke at 3 PM after having a long night and longer morning with my only To Do items being “pick up bulk rares from Nick Coss” and “meet with Mike”.  There were a litany of lessor things to do but these were the ones that crossed over to “need”, the former task being necessary for camp and the latter for my probable sanity.

The drive to Nick’s was uneventful once I departed Feasterville as parades had inverted the standards of traffic with a thousand cars on every side street but with the Interstates and major road ways being largely clear.  I got to Nick’s a little after 4, we talked about cards, and birthdays, and Scouting and he agreed that he sometimes felt non-Scouts were morally handicapped.  I suppose this is arrogance but a less damning way of putting it is that Scouts seem to have a head start in terms of personal moral growth.  I talked about the difficulty of finding people willing to do work for something they claim to love and he talked about the quotidian squabbles over pseudo-justice in terms of things like splitting checks, getting people birthday gifts, knowing when to make a loan you’ll never get back, and the logistics of a backyard barbeque.

Mike said he’d be over around 6:30 and I met him at my house then.  I was in the kitchen making a raspberry ganache for truffles and we talked punctuated by bouts of silence as he thought and I stirred.  I felt the stirring added a kinetic quality to the silence but eventually my arm gave way and we moved outside to stare at a copse of pine trees as the sun set.  Again, we exchanged insecurities, semi-thoughts, and shoulder shrugs as islands within the quietude.  Later, I was still a spot peckish after eating a sandwich and we sat on my porch and ate strawberries.  It was now fully dark when the 4th of July fireworks started at the Dolphin Swim Club.  The show seemed nice but only a few crested the trees so there was little to actually look at.  Our chat had wound down, so, Mike and I sat there, listening to fireworks.

I wish all days were as productive.

I tried to extend my run of not talking and was able to go through Lowes, the post office, the library (real easy), and the UPS store without talking or really having to interact at all.  I went to Taco Bell in an attempt to break my silence but was able to order by pointing to the combos listed on the counter.  Even beverage selection was without issue as I just got an empty cup.  At this point, my length of silence seemed to be limited only by how long I wanted to go without talking to my dad.  I did well at first just shrugging and smiling.  I don’t know if he knew what I was doing but he issued a statement I couldn’t let slide: I think the glucosamine supplements are helping Max.  My response very much made up for my time of quiet.

Any vow can be broken to stop woo.

I decided to not talk while walking through OfficeMax.  I’m not sure why, but it seemed like a good idea.  Store attendants received a thumbs up in response to questions but simple left-right head not wasn’t sufficient to allay an inquisitive associate’s “can I help you with anything?”.  Turns out that blackjack hand motions of a hand going left-to-right worked.  I was almost proud of how far I’d gone until checkout and I had no simple response to “debit or credit” when presenting my credit card.  I first tried two fingers to represent the second option, then pointing at the card as the brand offers no debit option.  Eventually,  I dropped by head in shame, thinking I’d have to break my tiny vow of silence when the associate said “Don’t be embarrassed, everyone has to credit for small purchases every once in a while.”

She was very confused by the silent fist-pump that followed.