But that intense peachiness always means, tomorrow they will be rotting. So there is today to slice them into small white salad bowls for dinner, which I did, and cut them up for ice cream, which I didn't do. Nothing really changes from when you were a kid. It's like three months of a weekend, where Friday night (June) stretches out in front of you, and then it's Sunday night (mid August).
This summer, suddenly we have a puppy, and talk about fleeting. Entire days go by where I just maintain and make meals and supervise and exercise and read books out loud and, since the neighborhood pool is two doors down, swim and swim between breaks to run home and let Charlie out of his kennel. Then that night, I can remember nothing of the day. But R and the puppy are happy and healthy. I have made a sincere attempt at all the good advice from the Monks of New Skete and Kathy Santo and the Dog Whisperer. The wisest and funniest books when you read them at 12:30 at night when all the work is finally done, and you memorize what to do and can't wait to wake up and inflict all your wisdom on the dog.
Some of it actually sticks in your head and helps. He's a very good dog. We went for a walk with R and her cousins, and he behaved very well.
I love his face in this picture.