Our story tonight is called The Porch Steps, and it’s a story about tending to a satisfying chore on a cool day. It’s also about acorns falling on the sidewalk, the scent of a wood fire on a cool night, a daydream about the wind, and stepping back to take in a job well done.
We give to a different charity each week, and this week we are giving to the Sierra Club. They work to explore, enjoy, and protect the wild places of the earth.
https://www.sierraclub.org/
Welcome to bedtime Stories for everyone, in which nothing much happens, you feel good, and then you fall asleep. I'm Catherine Nikolay. I read and write all the stories you'll hear on Nothing much happens with audio engineering by Bob Witttersheim. We give to a different charity each week, and this week we are giving to the Sierra Club. Their work is to explore, enjoy, and protect the wild places of the Earth. There's a link to them in our show notes. Just to make sure your cup continues to run, it's over with cozy Stories. We'll be adding a second episode here each week. We are on season twelve. Now. Bet even if you've been listening for years, you've missed a lot. You were asleep and that is good. So we'll be bringing back old episodes for a fresh replay each Thursday, starting this week with one of my favorites, Rosemary for Remembrance. I remember telling Bob after I wrote that story that I felt like, as I had written a whole episode about Gords, I had mastered the craft of writing about very little. It's a lovely autumn story with a bit of poetry woven in. Learn more about everything we do at nothing much happens dot com. Now. Falling asleep becomes so much easier when you have a place to rest, and if that place can be comforting and enjoyable, well, good sleep hygiene is easy. So that's what I have for you. A place to put your restless mind where it will be engaged instead of wandering, and you will sleep. I'll tell our bedtime story twice, and I'll go a little slower the second time through. If you wake later in the night, turn the story right back on and you'll be asleep again within seconds. It's time snuggle down, my DearS, and put away anything you've been looking at or working on. Get as comfortable as you can. Let it sink in that the day is done. You are in bed, safe and with nothing to do but sleep. I'll be a sort of guardian, watching over and protecting you with my voice. Draw a deep breath in through your nose and sigh from your mouth again, all the way in, flush it out good. Our story tonight is called the Porch Steps, and it's a story about tending to a satisfying chore on a cool day. It's also about acorns scattered on the sidewalk. The scent of a wood fire on a cool night, a day dream about the wind, and stepping back to take in a job well done. The porch steps, the leaves were turning, but had not yet begun to fall. Well. There were a few gathered around the fence posts and scattered over the lawn. But when I looked up, I saw thousands upon thousands still waving in the branches above, and there were plenty of trees that were resolutely green, their time having not yet come. I like that when I look out on a line of trees and spot many that haven't begun to turn yet, it means there is still so much autumn beauty ahead. I even have my favorite spots, favorite trees that I go out of my way to visit every October. Their colors so spectacular that their locations are marked on the Treasure Map. In my mind, my own street was lovely bright red maples, ruddy brown oaks, and yellow sycamores and aspens. Across the street was a still green hickory tree with a Virginia creeper climbing its branches. The vine wove around the trunk and up and around the boughs, and its leaves were already deep red. Together they gave the effect of a tree whose hair color needed some touching up. A bushy green mop lined with ruby roots. I admired it from my front porch as I rolled up the sleeves of my flannel shirt. The day was cool an overcast, but with no rain, predicted a perfect day to take care of a chore I'd been meaning to get to for a while. Now. My front steps needed a fresh coat of paint, and in the cool autumn air without a hint of humidity, the paint would dry quickly and my pumpkins could be back in place before sundown. I started by sweeping my whole porch. I didn't want random bits of mulch on helicopter seeds blowing into my paint job, so I took my broom and started in the far corner. I swept under the porch swing, stopping to pick up the rug and shaking it out over the railing. I watched as a few twigs and blades of grass caught in the wind. They drifted, making the breeze suddenly visible, and I day dreamed for a moment about what it might look like if every flurry of air and zephyr were color, each a different color, if we could watch them swirl and blend and blow. I wondered what a blizzard might look like, if the bluster itself or deep blue or sparkling silver. I thought I might pick up my water colors later and try to bring it to life. I left the rug hanging and went back to sweeping. I worked up a pile, being sure to dig into the cracks between the floorboards and to skim the cobwebs from under the bottom railing. Then I swept the dust and debris down the steps themselves, and kept brushing away until the boards were bare and clean. I swept down the front walk, gathering a few leaves as I went, until I could push my little pile into the street. In this neighborhood, big trucks came by every couple of weeks and picked up leaves. My neighbor's young daughter was thrilled by the trucks, and she and her dad would stay and out in the yard, watching as the leaves were sucked up by a giant hose, the little girl shrieking and clapping. It was convenient and for her quite entertaining. But I had grown up in a farmhouse at the end of a gravel road, and missed the smell of burning leaves that had been raked into a ditch with the city pick up. It was better the leaves would be mulched, and in the spring anyone could go to the lot out by the train depot and take home some of the mulch. Still, I thought I might have a fire in the fireplace tonight with the good seasoned apple wood I had in the garage, and then come out here and sit on the porch and the cold night air and smell the mix of smoke and autumn spice. Back at the porch, I readied my paint brush, taking it out of its sleeve and fanning the bristles against my fingers. Why does that feel so good? I brushed it over my palm, feeling the flat, even tips of the lined up filaments, then tucked the brush into my back pocket and squatted down to open the paint can. When I was a kid and we were starting a new painting project, I always tagged along to the hardware store. I liked to watch the paint be made up. Now I think it's all done by a computer, but back then there was a system which, while it was likely less exact and the paint didn't always match perfectly, was much more interesting to watch. There were tall metal devices where the person behind the counter would line dials up to get the right amount of each pigment, and then press a lever to release it all into the can. On the surface of the paint, you'd just see a dot of blue or red or yellow floating in the thicker white, and think, well, that'll never be the color we picked. But after it had gone into the shaker and come out again, some would be spread out onto the sample card and show that, sure enough, the peachey pink was peachy pink. I smiled remembering those days as I wedged a paint can opener into the seam of the lid and pried it open. The porch was a deep, dark blue and the steps would match. The color reminded me of the sky just a gloaming, or a lake on a cloudy day. I found it a homey, welcoming color, and whenever I turned onto my street and spotted my porch framed with birch trees and hydranges, I always felt so happy to be home. I decided to paint from top to bottom. Thinking I could spend some time tidying up the garage while waiting for it to dry. I sat myself down on a lower step and dipped my brush in the deep navy paint. It was satisfying work to watch the color soak up into the wood, to spread it cleanly and evenly into place. Step by step, I worked my way down to the front walk, and when I finished, I balanced the brush across the mouth of the can and stepped back to take in my progress. The top step was already a bit lighter. The paint was drying quickly and would need a second coat till then I'd fiddle around in the garage and back gardens. Acorns were falling on the sidewalk, and my neighbor and his daughter were adding to the fairy garden around the roots of the cottonwood in their yard. At the corner, a cat was stretched out on a garden bench. And in downtown orange twinkle lights were being strung around the lampposts. Across the village, folks were welcoming the fall the porch steps. The leaves were turning but had not yet begun to fall well. There were a few gathered around the fence posts and scattered over the lawn. But when I looked up, I saw thousands upon thousands still waving in the branches above, and there were plenty of trees that were resolutely green, their time having not yet come. I like that when I look out on a line of trees and spot many that haven't begun to turn yet, it means there is still so much autumn beauty I had. I even have my favorite spots, favorite trees that I go out of my way to visit every October. Their colors so spectacular that their locations are marked on the treasure map in my mind. My own street was lovely bright red maples, ruddy brown oaks, and yellow sycamores and aspens. Across the street was a still green hickory tree with a Virginia creeper climbing its branches. The vine wove around the trunk and up and around boughs, and its leaves were already deep red. Together they gave the effect of a tree whose hair color needed some touching up, a bushy green mop line with ruby roots. I admired it from my front porch as I rolled up the sleeves of my flannel shirt. The day was cool an overcast, but with no rain, predicted a perfect day to take care of a chore I'd been meaning to get to for a while. Now, my front porch steps kneaded a fresh coat of paint, and in the cool autumn air without a hint of humidity, the paint would dry quickly and my pumpkins could be back in place before sundown. I started by sweeping my whole porch. I didn't want random bits of mulch and helicopter seeds blowing into my paint job, so I took my broom and started in the far corner. I swept under the porch swing, stopping to pick up the rug and shaking it out over the railing. I watched a few twigs and blades of grass be caught in the wind. They drifted, making the breeze suddenly visible and thy day dreamed for a moment about what it might look like if every flurry of air and zephyr were a color, each a different color, if we could watch them swirl and blend and blow. I wondered at what a blizzard might look like if the bluster itself were deep blue or sparkling silver. I thought I might pick up my water colors later and try to bring it to life. I left the rug hanging and went back to sweeping. I worked up a pile, being sure to dig into the cracks between the floorboards and to skim the cobwebs from under the bottom railing. Then I swept the dust and debris down the steps themselves, and kept brushing away until the boards were bare and clean. I swept down the front walk, gathering a few leaves as I went, until I could push my little pie into the street. In this neighborhood, big trucks came by every couple of weeks and picked up the leaves. My neighbor's daughter was thrilled by the trucks, and she and her dad would stand out in the yard watching as the leaves were sucked up by a giant hose, the little girl shrieking and clapping. I was convenient and for her quite entertaining. But I had grown up in a farmhouse at the end of a gravel road and misst the smell of burning leaves that had been raked into a ditch. With the city pick up, it was better the leaves would be mulched, and in the spring any one could go to the lot out by the train depot and take home some of the mulch. Still, I thought I might have a fire in the fireplace to night with the good seasoned apple wood I had in the garage, and then come out here and sit on the porch in the cold night air and smell the mix of smoke an autumn spice. Back at the porch steps, I readied my paint brush, taking it out of its sleeve and fanning the bristles against my fingers. Why does that feel so good? I brushed it over my palm, feeling the flat, even tips of the lined up filaments, then tucked the brush into my back pocket and squatted down to open the paint can. When I was a kid and we were starting a new painting project, I always tagged along to the hardware store. I liked to watch the paint be made up. Now I think it's all done by a computer, but back then there was a system which, while it was likely less exact and the paint didn't always match perfectly, was much more interesting to watch. There were tall metal devices where the person behind the counter would lined dials up to get the right amount of each pigment, and then press a lever to release it all into the can. On the surface of the paint, you'd just see a dot of blue or red or yellow floating in the thick white, and think that will never be the color we picked. But after it had gone into the shaker and come out again, some would be spread out onto the sample card and show that, sure enough, the peachy pink was peachy pink. I smiled remembering those days as I wedged a paint can opener into the seam of the lid and pried it open. The porch was a deep, dark blue, and the steps would match. The color reminded me of the sky just at gloaming, or a lake on a cloudy day. I found it a homey, welcoming color, and whenever I turned on to my street and spotted my porch framed with birch trees and hydrangees, I always felt so happy to be home. I decided to paint from top to bottom, thinking I could spend some time tidying up the garage while waiting for it to dry. I sat myself down on a lower step and dipped my brush in the deep navy paint. It was satisfying work to watch the color soak up into the wood, to spread it evenly and cleanly into place. Step by step, I worked my way down to the front walk, and when I finished, I balanced the brush across the mouth of the can and stepped back to take in my progress. The top step was already a bit lighter. The paint was drying quickly, and would knead a second coat till then I'd fiddle around in the garage and back garden. Acorns were falling on the sidewalk, and my neighbor and his daughter were adding to the fairy garden around the roots of the cottonwood in their yard. At the corner, a cat was stretched out on a garden bench. And in downtown orange twinkle lights were being strung around the lamp posts. Across the village. Folks were welcoming the fall. Sweet dreams.