Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Are you my Neighbor?

Not a very pretty picture, but the house next to mine.
It has sat empty for 2 years as it has been in foreclosure.
Oh how I wish there were a neighbor there.
A neighbor would bring "soul" back into this house.

Seeing this empty house has given me thought as to who is my neighbor.
Is a neighbor only someone that lives next door?
Is my neighbor someone I meet face to face at the market?
Is my neighbor someone that touches my heart from around the world?
Is my neighbor the ones that suffer with ill will in their countries?

Looking in the dictionary it says that my neighbor is someone close to me.
I hold those in my heart that are suffering, is that close enough to qualify as my neighbor?
Who are your neighbors?
As Mr. Rogers use to sing, Won't you be my neighbor?

8 comments:

Rosemary said...

Although we are separated by many miles, I'd be happy to be your neighbor! The gorgeous Victorian house next to Susanna's has sat dormant for years, in foreclosure also. Fortunately, it just sold, and a photography studio is going reside there. Happy to see the home come back to life!

Angela McRae said...

Excellent food for thought! My neighborhood has an empty house like this too that's been lonely for far too long, and I look forward to the day a new family moves in.

Adrienne said...

This must be the house that I peeked into the back yard when we had tea in your greenhouse. I would love to be your neighbor right next door - but I am definitely already your neighbor. I like it that way!
~Adrienne~

Jeanie said...

Oh, I hope some nice blog reader looking to end up in Portland sees this post and becomes your neighbor!

somepinkflowers said...

{{ if it were me
moving
in

you would know
by
the
TONS
of somepinkflowers
that
would B delivered First!

i'm just saying ...}}

Traveling Bells said...

Howdy, neighbor! Hope you get GOOD folks moving in...soon...

Mary said...

Sadly, my elderly neighbor on one side is now in an assisted living facility - it's doubtful she'll return. I've been to visit her but she's very difficult now after a stroke and I feel uncomfortable, as if I'm intruding. I was her only visitor at her home (which reeked of cigarettes, but I could grin and bear it for short visits!), other than her local nephews (3) who will inherit her property. I used to take her split pea soup, poppyseed muffins, homegrown tomatoes, and little meals from my kitchen - she in turn sent me tins of gourmet cookies at the holidays and on my birthday! We weren't true friends in the sense of doing things together - although I did invite her over for tea once and she seemed to enjoy it. However, I always considered her a true neighbor - she would watch our house when we were away - she gave me her key and I went and picked her up when she fell a couple of times. We enjoyed watching the feral kittens and fox kits in our back gardens - I collected her mail when she couldn't get down the drive. We just did neighborly things.

On the other side I have a Grandma, her single 30- something daughter and her 6 y.o. granddaughter. Originally from NJ they are amazing women who have never met a stranger. I have grown to really care about them as they struggle from week to week to make ends meet. They are renting and we dread they will eventually have to move if the owner decides to sell. They love Bob who lectures them on life, the safety of having good tires, and lends them our garden tools. He takes the child on 'nature walks' through our garden - he who doesn't know an orchid from a weed - then he tells her to 'go ask Miss Mary, she knows all the names". He gave them front row theatre tickets to see Cinderella at Christmas, and we go to the elementary school to watch her 1st grade concerts - the same ones we enjoyed when our own granddaughter was at the same school. What do they do for us you may ask. They keep us young, they make us laugh, and sometimes cry a wee bit because we worry so much about them. They take down and bring up our trash cans, they cook Bob meals when I'm away traveling. We share a bottle of wine in gazebo on a warm evening - they invite us over on holidays when our own kids are too busy! Deep down we feel they would do anything within their limited power to help us if we needed it.

These are my neighbors - and I guess I could write a book about them but I'm stopping here!!!!!! To me, true neighbors are right next door and hopefully we all do the best we can to be good ones, with or without fences!

Love and hugs Marilyn - bet you would make an awesome neighbor!

Mary X

GardenOfDaisies said...

I'd love to move back to OR and be your neighbor!! Hopefully it will find a new owner soon! The world seems to be shrinking as technology advances. "Over there" doesn't seem so far anymore.