Never. Erik and I wake up every day, roll over, say good morning, and wonder, "What is going to break today?" There are few things you can count on in this world, my friends, but I can promise you this: on a boat, there is always something advancing along the 'breaking' continuum. And usually more than one thing. Owning a boat is much like what I imagine being an assistant for a very demanding and unstable celebrity must be like. You fulfill strange and unreasonable requests at all hours of the day and night, working yourself to exhaustion trying to please someone who will never, ever be satisfied. But, sometimes, you get to do something incredibly cool and amazing as a result of working for this crazy person, and it all becomes worthwhile. So you stay, living for those moments. And the rest of the time you live head down in the bilge, dreaming.
In short, filling the hours is rarely an issue.
Fixing something? Nah, I just felt like climbing the mast. |
Rather than living in the future like that ("Great, Sherry; we'll see you for dinner at 8pm, seven weeks from Saturday,") we live almost solely in the present. When the water pump breaks, that becomes Erik's job for the morning. When we hear about a festival in town, that takes care of our afternoon. Friends from another boat just sailed into port? Invite them over for dinner.
Oh, sure, when it is time to see a dentist, we'll find one and make an appointment, but, for the most part, planning doesn't work very well. When we consider sailing on, we wait for the wind and weather to be right. Sometimes, we wait for weeks. That stopped stressing me out years ago. I now enjoy the peace of sipping my morning Darjeeling, and wondering what the day will hold. I enjoy being wrong about what the day will hold. Surprises are good things.
"Fine," you say. "Good for you and your zen-like state, Amy. But what do you guys do?"
Our main fixed task for the day is school. When breakfast is done, Erik heads off to fix whatever he is fixing that day, and the girls and I break out the school books. Except when we don't. If something great comes along first thing in the morning, we will delay (read: skip) school. Since we don't take weekends or summer holidays, it all works out in the end. But on a regular morning, we do some combination of math, history, reading, science, music, etc. until lunch.
Preparing to separate out pigments from plants we found in Tonga. |
How high can I get, do you think? |
But, surely, without the need to hover over the kids, that leaves Erik and me with oodles of leisure time? I chortle. Yes, of course we have down time. We lay down our tools when something good crops up, just like the kids do. Part of the fun of cruising is learning to be spontaneous and say 'yes'. But we also have the aforementioned fixing of things to accomplish. Also, people need to be fed, laundry washed, floors de-crumbed, dodgers repaired, books read to small people, articles written... it amounts to a busy day.
Father-son bonding via windlass repair. |
So, what do we do all day? We take care of our basic needs, and we have fun. No Blackberries required.
7 comments:
And that is one of the reasons I love to visit so often
Love Mom
Nicely put, but I especially liked the "assistant for a very demanding and unstable celebrity" analogy. Thank you. Michael
@Michael Robertson: It is the closest I have come to describing the relationship. I love Papillon, but I am under no illusions that we are in charge.
One of the most common things I hear about boats is: routine maintenance in exotic locations. We're looking forward to some of that ourselves :)
@Amber: Don't worry - you will definitely have that experience. Without fail.
Amy: I am jealous.
Oh, and best blog on the internet.
Mike
@Mike: It is a pretty great way to live. The kids and I have been home for a few weeks now, and I feel like I have been run over, we have so many appointments. It has been wonderful to see our friends and family again, but we need to get back to the boat for a rest.
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