Cinco de Mayo

Perusing the various social aspects of my phone as I get in my final required steps before I am allowed to go to bed for the night, I have noticed a sense of slight oddness…, but I have been unable to identify what is odd, nor really be sure that something is, indeed, odd… I’m just tired, and under the after-effects of a large margarita (from six hours ago, mind you) and lots of tamales and tacos to fill my belly and tire me out.

I had consciously decided to gorge on them in celebration of Cinco de Mayo – truly more of a Texas day of celebration of Mexican culture than a Mexican celebration of boosted morale in the midst of a takeover by France… – and to be delighted with the whole experience… and I have been – today has been great.

But, sitting here on my bed, there is something tickling at the back of my tired mind and body…

I wiggle and trench my shoulders a bit, and it suddenly hits me, as I declare happily, “Thatโ€™s whatโ€™s weird! I donโ€™t have a shirt on!โ€

As usual when I am really tired, I messed up the order of things in getting ready for bed, and forgot the one that involves putting on a shirt. ๐Ÿ˜‚

So, I popped over to clothes, selected a soft t-shirt, and pulled it on happily.

Aaahhh… that feels good… satisfying.

At last, the oddness is gone, and I feel whole in my bedtime preparations. ๐Ÿ˜‚

Silly, silly… ๐Ÿ˜‚

Post-a-day 2020

Cinco de Mayo

How did you celebrate Cinco de Mayo?  We played Spanish word games, made Mexican paper flowers, dressed up in kimonos with Mexican flag (colored) hair ribbons, and played around at Mt. Fuji and some crazy public baths (red wine, sake, green tea, coffee, and collagen and gold flakes) an active volcano area of Japan.  Ridiculously wonderful.
Post-a-day 2017