We wandered over to the dump/parking lot where lots of our friends were sorting the wood from the metal, and, again, I'm constantly impressed by how something as mundane and tedious as this can be made into something of a treasure hunt. We encountered a cousin of a cousin happily hauling away a fishing trap he recovered, and another friend testing out his new bow and arrows on an empty steel drum he set up a few meters away, while another proudly hoisted a broken ski he can repair while reading a destroyed art textbook, commenting on the passages, laughing. We left with a beautiful old print of a photo from the turn of the century of a wine harvest, and some muddy wooden wine crates Manuel is convinced are worth the effort to clean off. I obliged, but I'm leaving that fruitless effort in his hands. Regardless, I'm glad our new addition to the home got some "Oooooohs" and "Ahhhhhhs" from everybody here who needs a break, and a minute to forget about everything around us, and remember that even in the rubble, you can find something to treasure.
We have just returned from a trip to Asia and were in Bangkok last month when the flood waters were already breaching the sandbags at high tides, we saw some sad sights first hand. So although we have not experienced the Italian floods first hand our thoughts are still very much with you all.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much :)
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