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Village Squire, 1980-08, Page 31ONE DAY AT A TIME Editor's Note: Jim Hagarty is a 29 year old staff reporter with The Beacon Herald in Stratford. He is the former editor of The Mitchell Advocate and wrote a weekly column In that newspaper for the past three years. Responses to his column are welcomed and can be forwarded to The Village Squire or to Mr. Hagarty, Box 456, Mitchell. I am an afternoon nap addict. I write about it in the hope that others similarly afflicted with afternoon slumber - itis (now recognized as an incurable disease) may find in these words some reason for optimism. For we are a lonely lot, besieged on all sides by well-meaning but hopelessly unknowing friends and employers who find in our penchant for mid-day snoozes something really offensive. I say it's time we threw off the shackle of public disapproval and put the criticisms of the rabble behind us. If, midway through reading this, you feel like tumbling off, be my guest. In fact, I think I'll lie down for half an hour myself and finish this article later. There! Now where was I? Ah yes. Slumberitis. Makes me tired just to think about it. Anyway, it all began with me way back when I was less than one day old. Seems I just couldn't be my usual relaxed and quiet self (for I was an ideal child) unless I nodded off for two or three undisturbed afternoon hours. That pattern has continued to this very day, reinforced in my subconscious mind by my early years on the farm. At a tender age I studiously observed that all farm animals include an afternoon sleep in their itineraries of things to be accomplished during a day. Show me a cow that's missed her 3 p.m. slumber under the shade tree in the pasture field and I'll show you a cow that'll deliver you a hardened hoof in the shins after supper for your efforts to milk her. Find me a barn cat that gets up at 7 in the morning, chases mice until noon, grabs a quick lunch and then heads back to the granary for five more hours of rodent - baiting before calling it quits for the day and you can have my Montreal Canadiens hockey sweater. All farm cats sleep in the afternoon as do all dogs who are especially dependent on their naps which they love to take best of all under the cool shade of verandas or, failing that, under tractors or trucks. Farmers, too, imitate their flocks, herds and pets and regularly stretch out on the couch in the kitchen, winter and summer, for a sleep after lunch. They're not stupid. How do you suppose most of them find the energy to cram two days' work into one? Had I stayed on the farm, chances are I might never have had to encounter the misunderstanding of town and city folk in this matter of afternoon napping. But alas! Recent years have been filled with rude awakenings. Such as the time in Grade 11 when 1 dozed off during Latin class and was left snoring at my desk long after the class had ended and all my fellow students had evacuated the room. In an incensed mixture of the Latin and English languages my normally calm teacher begged me to awaken. In later years, when I became a teacher myself, it quickly became my practice to render myself quite horizontal on the staff room chesterfield during lunch break. That habit really ingratiated me with my fellow teachers who were thereby assigned to sitting stiffly in hard -backed chairs for the duration of their brief break. Later still, the Mitchell Advocate's receptionist was given the uninviting task of deflecting customers away in the afternoons with the stock (and usually unbelieved) phrase, "the editor's not in." She'd have better said, "the editor's not in this world at the moment" for 1 was usually lounging comfortably at the back of the office, feet perched on my typewriter, eyes resting. All this brings me to the latest manifest- ation of my illness. Today, I was graciously given the afternoon off. l raced home from Stratford and was half -undressed by the time I reached my front door. By the time 1 reached my bedroom I wore little else but a smile and dove, with a flourish of ceremony, onto the bed. That was at 2 p.m. An hour later, a small tornado swept through Mitchell, tearing up trees, down- ing hydro wires and plunging the whole town into darkness. Through all this fury, I, the on -the -spot eye -witness reporter, was rendered inoperative by heavy slum- ber. 1 bet my boss wants to see me tomorrow. I just hope he schedules our meeting for the morning. xr * fr 17 WATER ST. ST. MARYS, ONT. restaurant and tavern FULLY LICENSED • Just a 10 minute drive west on Hwy. 7 from Stratford, located in the picturesque stone town of St Marys • The dining room boasts of its pleasant atmosphere & unique setting in the former stone -hewn Post Office Located directly across from the old Opera House & Just down the street from the largest outdoor swimming pool in South -Western Ontario. • Our specialties include a Smorgasbord, Canadian & Italian food, Charcoal Steaks, Seafoods. • Catering to all at reasonable prices we have food to suit every appetite, priced to suit every pocket -book. • All major credit cards accepted • Closea Monday. Open from Tuesday to Sunday • For further information call (519) 284-3424 VILLAGE SQUIRE/AUGUST 1908 PG. 29