
Why an Irish Inn Keeper and His Cat built an
Inn after Retirement.
Building an inn is what some of us do after retirement. When all
the books are read, and all the coffee is cold. When Monday's just
like Saturday, and you know, in your heart of hearts, you never
could have been a golfer, even if you had played all day, every
day.
Besides, somewhere in some third story attic of my mind, lingered
memories of warm fires and small country inns;...of red wine and
redder roses and mellow people, and quiet evenings by the fire.
Was it in Vermont?... Or maybe in the Black Forest or the Aulde
Sod of Ireland? Or, maybe just an old TV sitcom? But then, perhaps
it was, just in some dusty back room of my mind, some long forgotten
fragment of some distant memory.
But those inns were all such bastions of peace and solitude, such
wonderful places to spend a dark rainy afternoon, or even a bright
sunny one. And after a time, the dream became real, more real than
reality. As the dim edges of that illusion we all share began to
blur, as clearer and brighter images began to replace dim, dusty
memories, The Inn began to take on a life of it's own.
It was about warm fires and mellow wines: of country gardens and
gentle green lawns. It was a place to heal the mind... the body
and soul; where people came back again and again. A place with that
"coming home" feeling, where old friends met old friends,
and together they made new ones. Where new lovers got to know each
other and old ones found each other, all over again.
So fields became gardens and lawns were planted where berry vines
grew. The banker said "No". The attorney said, "You're
crazy" The accountant just watched and was very quiet. The
innkeeper just kept on dreaming. But then, a daughter said quietly,
"Dad, build it and they will come" and old friends offered
encouragement. A building grew out of the ground... then another...
A little bigger here... a little wider there. As it began to take
shape, friends brought plants for the garden and books for the library.
Strangers stopped to look.
Then people started to come. A few at first then more and more,
as bread was baked and grass was mowed and fires built. Lovers came,
and old friends returned. And new friends become old friends. And
the Inn Keeper got a little grayer, but felt younger all the time.
So, that's how the inn keeper and his cat, became innkeepers. A
dream that wouldn't sleep; a dream with-in a dream, and you are
part of it. After all, what's a dream without someone to share it.
So, even if you can't stay over, stop, as you pass by. The cookie
jar is full, the tea is hot and the milk is always cold. And with
the last guest already asleep... and this Old Inn Keeper needs to
go to bed.
Duane
Your Inn Keeper
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