welcome mat. even when it’s borrowed…
by bam
dispatch from 02139 (in which dear old friend rolls beneath the transom, but before she does we whistle while we work, loving the art of red-carpeting for a friend…)
the coq au vin bubbled away. the flannel sheets, unfurled and tucked tightly onto bottom bunk (with nursing-school-acquired hospital corners as far as i could reach). even the bathroom mirror got spritzed with shiny polish.
i hummed the whole day long, from the moment i awoke (at 4 when the cat let out a yowl). till the last stalk of hyacinth was plucked into a vase, an olfactory and faux springtime attempt at masking the inconvenient truth that the kitty-litter bin has nowhere else to hide but alongside the claw-foot tub in the already itty-bitty bathroom, the one just inches away from the living-dining-conviving rooms.
a dear friend was flying into beantown, a friend from long ago and far away (we’ve been close as close since the day she wandered into the tribune newsroom back in 1985, and through the years we’ve weathered many of the bumps that life can bring).
all day long i savored the pure oxygen that is the art of putting out the welcome mat. even when it’s borrowed.
puttering for this particular friend is all the more delicious because a.) i ADORE her, but b.) she too loves the art of red-carpeting for a friend, or making like the keeper of a dreamy b & b, one who wholly grasps the concept that it’s the little details — a fresh pitcher of water by the bed, complete with lemony life rafts floating in the drink; a paperwhite bulb bundled in see-through wrap tied up with string and plunked atop a stack of fluffy towels, a token to take home; the red-wine clouds wafting from the oven — that whisper, “i love you, my friend, and i’ve taken every care to wrap you in the luxuries of deep, long friendship.”
if you’ve ever been taken care of in this particular way — and i hope and pray you have — you know the magic powers of this potion.
perhaps you too have been lulled into dreamy state as someone paved your way with the beautiful. as someone thought two steps ahead, and laid out a fluffy robe, filled a canister with bath salts and rubs. stocked the fridge with icy drinks, or left out a tub of cocoa, fat marshmallows and king leo peppermint sticks.
all in all, made you feel like the cherished guest they’d waited a lifetime to behold.
i’d long been an under-the-radar admirer of these domestic arts. didn’t want to let on (not too loudly, anyway) that i might secretly pine for martha stewart — her actual self, not merely her glossy pages — to be stationed at the back of my pantry. nor that i spent time dilly-dallying over fresh-picked bouquets or tucking lavender sachets between my linens.
but then, some years back, it was this particular friend — one of my most brilliant, certainly among the most widely and deeply read, harvard-educated and bayou-steeped, a newspaper scribe-turned-public radio news hound — who once confided that she was hankering to write a book on, not the influence of castro on miami’s cuban ex-pats and not the cajun roots of zydeco (which i might have guessed), but rather on hospitality, pure and, yes, holy.
it is, of the many nesty arts, one of the most exuberantly selfless.
it is about wrapping the ones you love in the comforts you might only dream about. maybe some of us tend to overthink it because we so deeply wish we were so wrapped. or, to be even more honest, because we wish we had the knack for being kinder and gentler to our very own selves. and so in doing for others we inhale, absorb, deep-breathe whatever afterglow seeps out.
i’ll not ever forget the long-ago weekend i spent tucked inside my radio friend’s coconut grove, florida, tile-roofed house. i can still hear the tumble of the tomato chunks as she poured that evening’s gazpacho from a chilled pitcher into wide-waisted goblets. can still feel the egyptian-thread pillowcases against my cheeks. still hear the jazzy soundtrack that played softly as we curled on the couch, catching up on whatever stories hadn’t fit in all the long-distance phone calls.
and so, two whole decades later, i still indulge in returning the indulgence whenever she comes to visit. and, even after all these years spent on far ends of the continent, she makes a point of doing so at least once every year, even re-routing her itinerary this week from LA (where she lives now) to DC’s inauguration with a stop in cambridge, so we could — together, on a chilly misty day — walk her old stomping ground.
and this time round, with my college-girl budget (meaning the few dollar bills that happened to be in my wallet), i got a bonus round of seeing what i could do without grabbing for the credit card. which somehow made it all the more delightful. the nice man at the flower stall in harvard square let me buy a single hyacinth stem, then threw in — for good measure — a clutch of laurel branches. i scrounged in the stairwell for the leftover bottle of bordeaux someone gave me for my birthday, and that — with a plop of chicken, carrots, potatoes, mushrooms — became my bubbling brew of coq au vin. clean sheets don’t cost a dime, nor do fluffy towels. nor bowls of oatmeal stirred and studded with cranberries and raisins. the fresh snow falling out the window came free too. and the long long hours of unbroken conversation. even the sumptuous global gala at the ambassador’s house, one filled with women peacebuilders from the world’s most war-torn countries (all in town for a one-week women’s peacekeeping colloquium, and with which a few scribes — including me — helped out), it all made for 36 hours of sacred time.
and 36 hours that will forever be tucked in our shared treasury of time magnificently spent.
although i’ll add to those heavenly hours the 12 that came in pre-amble, as i whistled while i worked. and, at every turn, thanked the angels for the gift of this most delicious company, a once-in-a-lifetime friend you forever love through and through and through….
what are some of the welcome tricks you tuck up your sleeve, for i happen to know there are a few masters at the art of hospitality who so benevolently pull up chairs? do tell. a girl can never ever have too many tricks in this divine department….
Ah the beauty of company and comfort and both start with “com”, that cute little prefix meaning with or also. They are words that belong together. The best tip I ever heard about providing for guests is to spend a night in your own guest space once awhile to see what else could provide some of those beautiful hospitable moments. I have always love that hospital is part of hospitality…which is why YOU are so good at it. Happy Comforting Company!
lamcal, I love the different word connections you pointed out! And bam, I’ll admit to a wee bit of jealousy. Wow. To be welcomed like that! So glad you had a wonderful time together. So special! And so important that you two make the time to stay connected. Two of my sisters are B&B proprietors, and they take lamcal’s advice and stay in each of their rooms during the unbusy season to see if they are comfortable. When they come to our house, chocolate on the pillow, a good reading light, and a place for their things in the bath; warm blankets, enough coffee, a pencil for the morning crossword, and Dairy Queen each afternoon and they’re happy. 🙂
sounds pretty darn heavenly to me. how come i am not surprised you have not one but TWO sisters who are b*b proprietors. i know there is one b&b wonder who sometimes pulls up a chair. we met when i stayed at her heavenly inn, the applesauce inn, http://applesauceinn.blogspot.com high up in michigan’s mitten, in bellaire, not far from traverse city, charlevoix, petoskey, lake michigan… she has the gift times a million….
this mom of a joyful and active toddler feels grateful at the moment to get clean sheets on the guest bed, but aspires to much more than this. As much as my love and I love to welcome people to our home and table, I think I can answer your question by telling you a little bit about the tricks of a dear friend of mine out in Seattle. When I visit her at least once a year, she always has candles lit for breakfast and a stack of articles, books and poems she has saved for me since our last visit. I don’t usually read these items until I’m back on the plane, but they keep us connected over the miles. It is almost like these words on crumpled pages, ripped out of magazines, are the glue that holds our hearts together until the next visit.
oh, now THAT is a heavenly ritual. in large measure because it involves the “pre-ambling,” the preparing, the gathering all year of articles “dog-eared” for a particular someone. and it involves the knowing that the every-year visit is to be counted on, is part of the rhythm of your friendship.
it reminds me of how, to this day, we still get fat envelope’s from blair’s mom and dad, articles cut, torn, pulled from the many newspapers they get each day, and up at the top of every torn sheaf of newsprint, one of our initials will be inked in, so we know just how to distribute the fat stack of must-read stories.
but i love that your friend weaves it right into the welcome mat. and, oh goodness, candles at breakfast are pure heaven….
Ah, so lovely – I forwarded this column to a very old, very dear friend who is coming to stay with my this weekend because she is ill…..Hugs to all of you, Laurie (:
A hyacinth bulb to bring home for her garden is a lovely gift! have no tips, but I do have a quote: “Something to bring back to show you have been there: a lock of God’s hair, stolen from him while he was asleep; a photograph of the garden of the spirit. As has been said, the point of travelling is not to arrive, but to return home laden with pollen you shall work up into the honey the mind feeds on.” R.S. Thomas, “Somewhere”
So here’s the story behind how I happen to have that quote. You wrote eloquently (as ever!) on the longing for home, and a reader contributed the Welsh concept of longing, citing Pamela Petro’s “Travels in an Old Tongue”. I thought I had seen it just the week before in one of the previously-read-bookshops near my son’s dormitory and mentioned it to him. He sought it online and it traveled as a belated Christmas present all the way across the ocean from the romantically-named Mulberry House, Woods Way, Goring By Sea, in West Sussex. Ms. Petro opens her memoir with the Welsh poet/priest’s words. Clearly you set here a round table, for things do seem to circle ’round.
oh my goodness! first, i LOVE the notion of “laden with pollen” to work up into “the honey the mind feeds on.” second, i LOVE the backstory nearly as much as i love the romantically named mulberry house……. i had looked up travels in an old tongue, too, when it was first brought to the table, but now i think i need to go track it down. even if it means a trip to woods way, goring by sea, in west sussex. i wish addresses in the states were half as romantic. bless you for all this abundant pollen…. other B.
Road trip! (with surely more pollen to bring back)