By Dana Wall
My father-in-law’s hospital room at Little Company of Mary’s overlooks the staff parking lot. Ray spends hours in the vinyl chair we’ve angled toward this rectangle of outside world. This morning, as I arrive with coffee, I find him alert, more present than he’s been in days.
“You missed him,” Ray says, voice scratchy.
“Who?”
“The little businessman.” He points.
I follow his gaze to where the same attendant has worked the booth for fifteen years. At first, I see nothing unusual—just the man in his blue jacket, leaning against the booth in morning sun.
Then movement: a gray squirrel approaches with purposeful determination. The dance that follows seems choreographed by long practice. The squirrel pauses at a precise distance. The attendant reaches into his pocket without looking down. A peanut arcs through the air. The squirrel snatches it mid-bounce, retreats to crack it open, then scurries back for another negotiation.
“Third time this week,” Ray says. “Same time every morning.”
In the stark fluorescence of the hospital, where time is measured in medication schedules and vital checks, Ray has discovered this small clockwork miracle. His shoulders, tense from pain, relax slightly as he watches life’s ordinary persistence below.
“Some things,” he says, eyes never leaving the window, “you can count on.”
I sit beside him. Together, we wait for tomorrow’s performance, knowing that outside these walls, small certainties endure.
Dana Wall traded balance sheets for prose sheets after keeping Hollywood’s agents and lawyers in order. With a psychology degree for character building and an MBA/CPA for plotting with precision, she earned her MFA from Goddard College. Now writing full-time, her thirty published works mark milestones in her journey from numbers to words.
Image by Taryn Elliott courtesy of Pexels
I loved this essay. Beautiful, succinct, a real glimpse into life. Thank you.
Awesome essay. Such a small moment with such great significance. Yes, it is those small observations and connections that make us human,
Lovely. At first I thought oh dear another hospital piece, but then it swerved brilliantly into something joyous from the more than human world.
Beauty in not only this piece, but the bio!
“Some things,” he says, eyes never leaving the window, “you can count on.” It’s the unspoken that speaks the most in this essay. Beautifully shown.
Love the recognition of how important simplicity can be. Thank you.
“Life’s ordinary persistence…”
Beautiful, small moment of normal captured. Thank you.
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Beautifully concise with a message to take to heart–for all of us, young, old, half-sane, half-not. It doesn’t matter. The squirrel is ALIVE!! Which makes the watchers more real than not.
Thank you.l
“life’s ordinary persistence”
“small certainties endure”
Great phrases! Thanks.