Wednesday, January 7, 2009

Bliss?

I miss shoveling. It is such a neighborly thing to do. In my old neighborhood, I would shovel my walk, then I would shovel my neighbor's because she was disabled, my other neighbor would bring over his snowblower and take care of the driveways and we all shared hot coffee and good conversation. Mind you, we would sometimes be out 3-4 times per storm to "keep up with it."

Now shoveling in my old town is a very serious matter. They print reminders of the rules for shoveling in the paper every year and most residents follow them. My fiancee and I were out for a walk last winter and noticed a particular system used by an elderly gentleman. He not only shoveled with precision, but actually pushed the snow back away from the edge of his sidewalk a good six inches-almost like firewall of sorts. My fiancee was rather impressed and also amused but how serious this guy was about shoveling...I found myself full of pride for my hometown. (And I reminded my fiancee that walking is sure a lot safer with shoveled walks).

I am now living in a subdivision outside of Chicago in an "exburb." Nobody shovels because they assume the snow will be gone in 48 hours. I cannot tell you how annoying it is to go for a walk. I am force to walk in the street-which if you know anything about inexperienced snow drivers-which is a dangerous path. I am praying for a heavy BIG snowstorm that would FORCE these people out of their cocoons.

It is such a reflection on the apathy of people these days. I mean, they move into a neighborhood and think that community will just happen, but they have no idea that it takes personal interaction to make a community have a soul.

How appealing is it to see this:

A driveway with only tire marks. An un-shoveled front walk and front porch and no sign of any activity between the drive and the front door. It says, "Leave me alone." "I do not welcome any visitors." "I don't care-it is somebody else's problem."

Basically they drive home, pull into the garage and then poof, they are "safe." They need not worry about anything else today. They are not meeting their neighbor halfway down the walk shoveling, finding out if Mr. Smith around the corner needs any help getting his driveway cleared or if he is even okay. Hell, they don't even know that Mr. Smith lives around the corner.

How do I live here?? I shovel like a crazy woman, go for lots of walks, say hello to everyone, wave as cars drive by, volunteer at the school, and keep on going.

I guess I am just homesick.

9 comments:

Scott J. said...

When I was a kid, and shoveling walks for money, I'd use the snowblower if it was really heavy. Good that kid that I was (koff!) I'd take it up the sidewalk on one side of the street and back down the other, so that there was at least a walking path for folks. Heck, I was going that way anyway, y'know?

There are a lot of walks here that receive minimal, if any, attention, these days. You can tell our parents aren't in charge of things anymore.

Amy said...

I think once you live in a suburb people think they do not have to live by rules.

We have the same problem here in our development. After last weekends ice storm only a handful of people put ice melt on the sidewalks. They thought "hell, the sun is out, it will melt" but did not consider the fact that it was only 20 degrees out.

It drives me crazy that no one shovels the sidewalks around here. They think they don't have to. I report them to the city, but who knows if they ever get fined.

Taking the dog for a walk is almost impossible right now unless you want to walk in the street.

So I am right with you on this one... it is pure laziness and rude.

Little Sister said...

AMEN, sister.

Have you seen the cool cleat things that you can stretch over your boot? they sell them at The Decorah Hatchery (and outfitters). I think that LL Bean may have them, too.

I amy have to invest in a pair.

michaelg said...

Most people move to the suburbs specifically so they don't have to get to know their neighbors. We were fortunate to move from great neighborhoods in the city to a great neighborhood in the burbs, but we got lucky.
Not shoveling is on par with raking your leaves into the street and hoping the street sweeper will get them or that they'll blow in to your neighbor's yard.

Amy said...

Oh my neighbors don't rake the leaves at all because they blow into my yard and get hung up in my landscaping and then I have to pull all the crap out in the spring. Just pisses me off...

Yaktrax... I have a pair, but they are not so great on just ice... they are great if there is snow cover over the ice... but just ice and you still have to be careful. I just bought my mom a new pair... got them off of Amazon.com - best price that I found even with shipping.

Mnmom said...

My comment didn't show up! Weird. I made a nice one. Really wise and wonderful, rather like me.

brenda k said...

Ruthie - take 'hometown' pride in that you are probably making a difference to someone there. We never really know if we are touching someone's life or making a difference at the time. I would bet, of all your neighbors, there is at least 1 person that has taken note of you and may be thinking, "Wow. Now this is new and different." Keep on doing what your doing, girl! Your efforts do not go unnoticed no matter how invisible you might feel! "Someone" is always watching.

Little Sister said...

Brenda:
Thanks for the kind words and it was just what I needed to hear...having a run of blue days...hope it subsides soon.

Cheesecake Maven said...

You are most welcome to come home and shovel my driveway any time you want to! I did the whole thing last week and am STILL sore from it. I think I'm literally about 4 inches too short to operate our snow blower. I ended up with the shovel to finish it off. At least this time I didn't try to do it high on cold meds!! Miss you guys!!!