I am trying a new thing southerners do well, which is unlike my life up North. It’s called “relaxing.”
I sat in a hot tub today at the Y and had a conversation with a southern gentlemen, I would say, after which I felt like I drank a warm glass of bourbon.
It wasn’t the hot tub, because I have been in a hot tub regularly. He personified affection and duty- wrapped up in a pleasant smile. Like he was enjoying my rather nervous inquisition by comparison. He was like 80. I am looking forward to old age!
He was very obliging to answer my questions about pool laps and mileage for my ambitious Tuesday and Thursday quad- athlon idea: Elliptical machine, weights, swimming, and walking.
There’s lots of healthy people here doing miraculous feats of fitness. I am young at heart, I told the warm glass of bourbon in the hot tub, I mean the man. I got that going for me.
One young man I saw at the gym was carrying one kid on his shoulders, another gently nestled in his arm, two massive packs of family stuff on his back, equipment, mats, gym bags, etc. He was telling his wife a funny story while holding a door open for an old lady going into the YMCA.
His wife looked relaxed and happy. She was smelling flowers planted outside the door of the Y while I was entering. He looked happy, too.
I told the man in the hot tub perhaps precipitously, that I was from up north. So, I don’t always understand the warm, friendliness and habits of social etiquette southerners possess. Massachusetts particularly, the home of equality for women gone awry perhaps a tiny bit.
I worried he may think it necessary NOT to hold the door open for me, because I am perfectly capable of doing it myself. According to me being kinda of arrogant and full of myself.
Fortunately, there was no door. So, I escaped that awkward scenario. If there was a door, I’d be glad if he held it open for me. After all, I am doing a quad-lathon here!