Standing on books

Barbara Beckwith, age 87

Confined to my home after a hip operation, I dedicate myself to the physical therapist’s assignment: 45 minutes (twice a day) of exercises, mostly seated.

I eventually graduate to step-climbing exercises to prepare me for negotiating the stairs to my second-floor apartment. I don’t have the necessary gym equipment (blocks of different heights) so I shuffle around on my cane, looking for what might add up to the desired elevation (six-and-a-half inches) on which I can do this new routine.

Soon I’m huffing and puffing atop Webster’s Third International Dictionary (1966), the 3-volume tome that I abandoned long ago because of its arm-stressing weight and eye-stressing print, on top of which I’ve added my equally heavy World Atlas (1974).

Days later, when I advance to higher (eight-and-a-half-inch) step-ups to prepare for the basement (laundry room) stairs, I pile up more books: my 33-year-old Mayo Clinic Health Guide and my college yearbook (Class of ‘59)

Meanwhile, my physical therapist insists that to keep my “core” strong, I must stand at my computer. Fending off panic at this additional challenge, I prop up my laptop screen with a footstool plus my marked-up 600-page biographies of Richard Wright and Georgia O’Keefe, which I’m unlikely to re-read.

My eye-to-screen angle is properly aligned, but I type on a separate keyboard, so that too needs propping up. I create a base with 8 Steps to a Pain-free Back (the one never-injured part of my body), and Oggi in Italia (I won’t be traveling anytime soon). Atop those two, I reluctantly add my well-loved (its binding bolstered with duct-tape) New World Dictionary (1966).

My make-do computer station now works. I should be content, but I’m not: Yes, my equipment panic has subsided, yet I still feel uneasy. Something’s not right.

Dictionaries (like the ones I’m stepping on) have been my life-long passion. As a teenager, I read them for pleasure, relishing each new word discovery. I’d try them out on classmates and be miffed when they called me a show-off, since I thought everyone would share my love of words.

In other words, Webster and Roget are my friends. I trust them.

So I’ve slipped the two out from under my laptop, found equally-sized replacements, and returned my two companions to their place of honor – a shelf within my stand-up reach.

They deserve to be safe from the indignity of being used as infrastructure.

This entry was posted in 70candles, Adaptations and accommodations as we age, Aging, Attitudes about aging, Health, HUMOR, Our bodies, our health, Resilience and tagged , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

One Response to Standing on books

  1. Kay says:

    Dear Barbara:
    I so enjoyed reading this………….what a gem for my brain as I imagine you placing all these tomes atop one another so you can get physically strong!
    Also, as a former physical therapist I am impressed w/ your compliance & determination! You are an inspiration.
    Wishing you all the best………you definitely are on the right track & I imagine will be sailing up/down stairs of all heights soon.
    Good for you!

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