Decisions
I am all for self-improvement. For years I have read articles, watched
commercials and listened to ads that have brought ideas about a thousand and
one ways to look better, feel better, make more money, plant better gardens,
cook healthier meals and find better jobs.
There are self help groups and online sites that tell you how to
organize your life, raise your kids, make homemade wine, make your yard fit for
‘fancy smancy’ magazine covers, and tell you what type of music to play for
your plants.
There is
barely a need to form an opinion of your own, because you can find the answers
to everything on Wikipedia. Don’t worry
about paying attention on those nice weekend drives because there are Groovy
GPS Apps quite easily downloadable that tell you exactly where to turn and when to stop.
Today’s 4th graders need to know what the
eighth graders of ten years ago did. The
first graders need to do the work that 5th graders used to do. My dear Amelia will turn 7 this year. We are
looking at colleges to apply for this summer.
So if you are on of those folks all hip on
technology and all of the modern conveniences that make us more like druids and
less like real folks, good for
you! But to be perfectly honest I really
don’t need that stuff… At least not this fine morning in May.
You see, I am proudly yet quietly here in the
country I love to call home. My eyes,
ears, and nostrils are all on high alert. I am hunkered down on the bottom of
an open coulee next to a scraggly red oak. I’m at the junction of a sprouting
first crop alfalfa field, a dry run of sandstone and pea gravel, and a freshly
plowed 30 acres that will be chest high corn in 3 months. My mind is at the
junction of weighing the sanity of waking at 3:30 a.m. to hunt turkeys.
My neighbors for the last hour have been a bobtailed
boar coon, 17 red-bellied robins, 2 squawking sand hill cranes in the distance,
and three yearling whitetails, nosing into my decoys cautiously and proudly showing off
velvet racks. The busy morning is backlit by the sun, steadily but slowly
rising through a bank of Plum Creek
fog. Drumming grouse, cackling rooster
pheasants, and excited crows are providing the rhythm to thundering four-tom melody, which plays
out on the hardwood points above me.
After the dew burns off, shall I try to fill bread
bags full of morel mushrooms, or try to fill a creel with wild run brook
trout? When it is time to break for
lunch, shall I dive into a mushroom & swiss venison burger on the grill, or
sizzle up some not totally crisp bacon in a pan and place it with roasted
asparagus? Decisions, decisions, decisions…
Life is a string of them I tell ya. It is often hard to tell when we make the right ones. Lots of folks seem to point out when we choose the wrong ones. Are we keeping up with the Jones’? Do we post enough pictures of our kids and our DIY projects like our Facebook Friends do? Has the decision to put out 2 jake decoys and only one hen foiled my otherwise stellar set up?
Decisions…decisions…Wait! The time has come to set down my pen and
steady my 870 on my right knee. A full
strut gobbler is waddling in with a look of bad intentions on his mind. Now, 60 yards and closing, so you
will have to decide how this story ends.
-TGI
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