Rebecca
and I both agree that one of the most delightful moments of the day is that
longed for one in which we finally slips between the sheets with our arduous diurnal travails
behind us. A bit of reading, a bit
of knitting, and then peaceful oblivion, snuggled next to the kitty and
pup. And the most delightful
moment of the week is when one slips between freshly laundered linens – as yet
unsullied by man (in this case, woman,) or beast. The anticipated ecstasy of this moment was something Rachael
could not (or would not) grasp.
She could not understand why I would be so irked when I changed all my
bed linen, went out – usually to choir practice, as Thursday is my bed changing
day and also choir practice evening – and then came home expecting this
wonderful “clean sheet moment,” only to find her hot sweaty little self in a
tangle of my sheets and blankets, my bed now a rumpled mess and absolutely not the crisp,
lovely arrangement I had left. At
first, she argued against the delight of clean sheets – why was I so finicky,
what was the big deal, and why should I feel that it was a treat just for me. Well, I countered, it was after all, my
bed. She had her own bed and I
never mussed it up. Then when she felt that these arguments were no longer viable, she feigned ignorance, claiming that she
could not possibly know when my sheets were clean, (and, once again, what was
the big deal anyway?) So I made a
little laminated sign that I put out on the bed every clean sheet day. She often missed this --- once her
contacts were out, she couldn’t see… etc, etc, etc. Aaaargh!
Her bed was very nice, and in the summer, much cooler than mine, but
mine seemed to have irresistible charms.
Once,
years ago, after a really, really horrible evening at work, I came home at
midnight, desperate for the solace of my bed. I flipped back the covers, only to find that Leslie, my
darling cairn terrier had crawled under the covers and thrown up potatoes on
the sheets. I got hysterical,
really hysterical. Rebecca, noble
girl that she is, got up, came in and totally changed the linen on my bed while
I sobbed in the corner. Finding
Rachael in my bed was no where near this.
In fact, I was often happy to find her there, just not on clean sheet
night.
Now that
she has moved into her own apartment, I miss her often and wish she were her
with her interesting prattle and good company. But on clean sheet night, I always give a little sigh of
relief that Rachael will not be in my bed when I get home, and Margaret is too
old to get up on it and mess it up until I assist her. There will be virginal sheets, clean and untainted by any
occupation but mine.
Aaaaaaaah!
3 comments:
How do you have the energy to write so often. I used to love clean sheet day when we had a clothesline outdoors. Then you could smell the fresh air. I still enjoy clean sheets but it just isn't the same.
I have used duvets for many many years but I remember the feel of clean, ironed sheets and blankets tucked tightly. Sliding into cool smooth sheets. The time that springs to mind str8 away was in a military hostel between flights when I was about 11.
I agree about the wonderful smell of sheets hung outdoors. There was nothing better.
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