Jury Duty

telling time

There was a sign that read “NO LIQUIDS!” I looked at my purple water bottle. It is well used, but I would hate to lose it. When I reached the metal detector, the police officer standing there looked at my water bottle too, and asked, “Why are you here?”

“Jury Duty,” I replied.

“Great! You can keep your water bottle then!” he said as he showed me where to go for the day.

I headed up the escalator, not sure what was going to happen. This was the first time I’d actually gone to jury duty; the first time I was called I was a nursing Emmy, and so was excused. I figured I was due, but I was also hoping I wouldn’t get picked to serve on a jury. I didn’t want to miss my daughters’ last swimming lesson the next day…not so much because I wouldn’t see them swim, although they are getting to be like little fishes. No, it was more like I was addicted to sitting by the pool with my Nook, able to read without watching said little fishes. Without their swimming teachers in attendance, they are constantly begging “Watch me, Mom! Watch me! WATCH ME!”

I checked into the jury assembly room, and sat down, prepared to wait it out with my Nook and VBS lesson planning. As people kept sauntering in well past 9:00, I realized I hadn’t needed to make that panic-stricken phone call to my sister-in-law, asking her to come a couple minutes earlier to watch the girls so I wouldn’t be late.

It wasn’t long before we were asked to move closer to the TV screen so we could watch a video. As Lester Holt was explaining court room procedure, I began to think that maybe I did want to be called into the courtroom. It would be an interesting experience, and better than just sitting around waiting. Looking out the glass door at people rushing around reminded me of my favorite show, The Good Wife which takes place in the same county I was serving. Would a real courtroom be at all similar to the TV show? I doubted it!

We waited. The room, filled with strangers, was absolutely quiet. No one turned on the TV. No one chatted; there was no small talk. We all sat in our own little bubbles, doing our own things. A room full of anonymous people.

It must be part of our nature to start to assign characteristics to strangers. We know nothing about them but what we observe in a forced situation. I avoided looking at the staring man with nothing to do. When laptop and tablet man with a tie got up to make a phone call, I’m sure I was not the only one who looked up at the sudden talking. After our lunch break, I made sure to sit far away from perpetual sighing lady.

After a long day of waiting under headache-inducing fluorescent lighting, no one was needed in the courtroom. We collected our checks and filed out of the room. We all completed our duty for at least a year.

And I would get to go see Lily and Emmy swim the next day.

Have you ever served on jury duty? Were you called into the courtroom?

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Reclaiming My Patio {Spin Cycle}

My patio was lost under willow leaves and sticks, pots and potting soil, and a big green bushy bush. I have a vision of me, sitting outside on my patio with my cup of coffee and reading the paper, just like I’m on vacation only I’m not; I’m at home. With my patio under this mess, however, this vision would never actually become a reality.

(Picture extremely messy patio here…I always forget to take “before” photos!)

I started off by clearing the table of all the gardening implements I dragged out in the spring, and hosing the layer of soil off. I washed it with some natural soap, and hosed it again. Clean and sparkly! I opened the umbrella and swept out some old wasps’ nests that were only half-way built. Those dang wasps keep coming back when the umbrella is closed, so yesterday I sprayed the umbrella with a little wasp killer. I hope that keeps them away!

On another day (this was not a one day project) I put on my leather work gloves and got out the edger. I cut and tore off sod from around the edges of the concrete. Argh! (That’s supposed to be a manly Tool TimeĀ  grunt but it reads more like a pirate growl.)

A neat edge…I am woman, hear me roar!

The next day, I swept off all the old leaves and dirt from under the table. There actually was a patio under all that debris!

Ahhh!

The chairs that belong with the table are grouped under the willow tree from our 4th of July party. We never actually sit at the table very much. My next project is to tackle that huge green bush on the right and trim it down. I’m waiting to borrow my brother-in-law’s electric trimmer–I do not want to tackle it with our hand trimmer. I’m lazy that way. On the left of the patio is our vegetable container garden. I’m hoping we get to the tomatoes before the chipmunks do!

My lost patio, found again!

I have yet to sit outside with my cup of coffee, however. Too hot. In fact, it has been so hot (over 100 degrees) that we used our patio table for another project. We melted crayons.

Melting crayons in a muffin tin

Yes, it is THAT hot. (Thanks to OneMommy for the idea!) I may have ruined my muffin tin for making muffins, however. But don’t our new crayons look pretty? (Those are the bottoms of the crayons…the tops look rather melty and dull. The heart shaped crayon in one Emmy made at preschool.)

Lily and Emmy’s new crayons!

Spin Cycle at Second Blooming

Written as part of Gretchen’s Spin Cycle prompt, “Lost and Found”.

What summer project have you been working on?

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