It's 3 in the morning and I'm sitting in the comfortable chair in my living
room watching an oak log flame up through the glass door of the woodstove.
I don't sleep through the night any more, which is apparently a new twist
on the delights and fascinations of menopause. I wake up in pitch dark and
it takes a couple of hours for me to get to sleep again.
At the moment, this is wrecking my life, since I'm an early riser. You can't,
or I can't anyway, be up from 3 to 5 and then catch an hour's sleep and function
very well. What my body wants is to sleep from 5 to about 8 and then wake
up, but by that time I've missed watching light gild the trees in my yard
and also not taken a walk or talked to the friends I've trained over many
years to call me early in the morning. All day long I feel crabby and late
and think I'll never catch up to the rest of the world. Like other aspects
of menopause, I suppose I'll get used to this too, but I haven't yet.
3 a.m. is, on the other hand, the perfect time to restoke the fire. My house
is heated by wood, although I have an obnoxiously loud wall heater for back-up
if I go out of town or get the flu or something. I make a big fire before
I go to bed, which heats the house pretty well until 2 or 3. I've taught myself
to wake up for five minutes, throw another log on the coals, and fall back
to sleep immediately. The house then stays warm enough until morning, and
I stay asleep, or used to, my dreams turning toward tropical islands instead
of polar crossings.
But now I get up and sit in front of the stove wide awake, wondering what
an essentially city-raised person like me is doing heating her house with
wood, anyway? Don't some people have heat that comes up through vents in the
floor, very quietly? I think I read too much Laura Ingalls Wilder as a child
and developed romantic notions about physical work. It's surprising how fast
those disappear in middle age.
I do like the look of stacked wood, and I like to chop kindling with my small
axe, but not quite as much as I'm required to do it. I don't fell my own trees,
thank God. I buy two cords of stovewood every August from a Mexican guy named
Pete. But I do a lot of hauling in a red wheel barrow from the woodpile up
to my front door, and then I fill the wood box inside every day or so. I am
constantly emptying the ashes out of the stove into a bucket and thence to
my compost pile or driveway. It's steady, necessary work, which is good for
me I'm sure, even, or perhaps especially, when I don't want to do it
a regular and essential lesson in self-sufficiency and devotion.
I've always been a little mulish about practical things. Identified with the
grasshopper instead of the ants. Maybe using this woodstove is my better self's
method of reminding me to grow up. (Better late than never...) Jack Kornfield
titled one of his Zen books, After the Ecstasy, the
Laundry.
In my case it's After Insomnia, the Woodpile.