Oliver and Sarah walked along the beachside park. The wind was crisp with the sun trying its best to warm them from behind the heavy overcast. They walked on the sandy grass beside the paved path to make room for all the joggers, strollers, and headphone-wearing rollerbladers that used it too. They each nursed their own vanilla ice cream cone while they walked.
“Happy birthday, again,” Sarah said.
“Thanks,” Oliver chuckled weakly.
“How’s it feel to be thirty-three?”
Oliver chewed the inside of his cheek a moment in thought before answering.
“Tiring,” he said.
“Yeah,” she conceded.
They kept walking after that, occupying themselves with peoplewatching as they went. There was someone in large, flappy pants juggling bowling pins with a hat full of tips nearby. They saw an old couple laughing together on a park bench, and looked on at what seemed to be a fiery teenage break-up out on nearer the shore. There was also an overturned tricycle with a young father inspecting his son’s scraped knee next to it.
“I’m not as patient as I used to be,” Oliver sighed. “And that’s kind of a bummer. It used to be easy, but now it takes effort.”
Sarah nodded sympathetically. “I get that,” she said.
“I’m an optimist at heart, but the more I see things not work out it gets harder and hard to be that way. It’s like being out in the cold with an old jacket on. It’s familiar, cozy, and warm enough to keep out most of the chill, but it’s gotten thin with time and has some parts along the seams. You can feel the cold on the other side of the fabric and bits of the breeze sneak through here and there, but the jacket’s there too, keeping the heat in. It almost becomes about which you focus on is which you feel more, the warmth of the jacket or the chill reaching through it, and you flicker back and forth in this limbo between comfort and discomfort, making it sort of both and not really either, all at once.” He took a big breath, then let out a somehow bigger sigh.
“But I like my jacket,” he said.
Sarah glanced between Oliver and her own shoes. “It’s a pretty good jacket,” she agree quietly.
END
