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Tuesday, January 12, 2016

A Quotidian Custom



It seems to me that the word routine has been given a bad name perhaps because of its overuse. A less frequent but with a similar meaning is quotidian or every day.

It was perhaps around 17 years ago my friend Mark Budgen (who died in the waning months of 2015) told me that I could get a daily subscription to the New York Times.

Since then we have been getting the paper daily. It shows up at our doorstep around four in the morning but on Saturday nights, not later than nine in the evening the large Sunday edition crashed on that front door. The daily NY Times initiated a routine that became a never-to-be taken lightly pleasure. This is the pleasure of having breakfast in bed with my wife in which she gets to read the NY Times while I read the Vancouver Sun. We alternate then as we also alternate who prepares the breakfast and brings it up in our Filipino made wicker tray that we spotted in the little window on the Robson side of the long-gone Eaton’s.

Ten years ago we had bacon on Sundays. Now breakfast is the same every day except on insomnia mornings (many with this terrible slow move from the big old house to the newer small duplex). On those insomnia mornings I make myself a couple of soft-boiled eggs (3 minutes 45 seconds) and a large mug of very strong Yorkshire Gold loose tea. On some mornings I make my rosemary her favourite cream-of-wheat sweetened with brown sugar. She has her usual decaf, a glass of orange juice while I partake of the smooth and seasoned V-8. Since Venice Bakery disappeared I now get my bake-in-the-oven scissor rolls (no butter or jam on them) at Save-On. Rosemary opts for President's choice Buttermilk Waffles with Bonne Mamam Strawberry jam.When she makes the breakfast she does not use butter on her waffles. When I make it I do. In the picture you see the two little trays with the pills that people of our age seem to need in order to have quotidian life.

Even in times of stress we make sure one of our iPhones (my 3G or her 4) wakes us up with enough time for breakfast and the papers (and a bath) before we embark on whatever will be our less satisfying quotidian event of that day. 

Note that today we slept in and breakfast was ready at 10:19.