Tuesday, September 2, 2025

A Bee Indoors


Yes, I know -- another bee on another purple flower. I'm not winning points for originality here! But what's unusual about this bee and flower is that they're inside the house. That purple heart plant grows by the back door, and the other day the bee leisurely flew inside to check out the blossoms.


The bee seemed to struggle a bit with the long, floppy stamens of the flower, holding on to them like a drowning man holds on to a life preserver. But I imagine the flower might have enjoyed it, if a flower is capable of enjoyment. Whatever chemicals and hormones run in its vessels might have sped up a bit, in reaction to finally being touched by a pollinator!

Or not. Who knows.

Once finished with its exploring, the bee bounced futilely off the glass windows for a few minutes before I helped it back outside. When it went back to its hive covered with this exotic tropical pollen, did the other bees say, "Where have you been?!"

Yesterday was wildly busy once again. I covered new books, shelved three or four cartloads of returns -- they're still pouring in -- and we had sixth graders coming in for library orientation. The librarian had them rotate among various "stations" where they learn about the library and how it's organized, and at one of them, they were supposed to write on a poster the place where they most like to read. Most of them said things like "on the couch" or "in my room," but one kid wrote, "on a boat in Croatia." Very specific.

It began raining (yay!) as I walked home from work, so I got a little wet and rode a bus part of the way. I picked up my new glasses at the optician. I'm still not thrilled with them. They're much better than the varifocals, but they still seem a bit over-magnified. I find that I constantly use the top part of the lens and never the bottom, which is supposed to be for close-up reading, and they seem a bit blurry toward the edges. I'm going to wear them a few more days and try to get used to them, but honestly, I wish I'd never started all this and just had my old reading glasses back. (I do have an older pair of readers, and they're much easier to wear!)

20 comments:

  1. I like the idea of the bee carrying exotic pollen!
    I've heard some people love varifocals or bi-focals and others hate them. Maybe you will get used to them - or not.

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  2. To get used to varifocals you need to stop using you previous glasses, good luck . Pam

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  3. getting specs just right is tricky. I have found that my ordinary glasses plus skinny readers works well. Nothing fancy.
    Your purple bee flower looks like tomorrow land!

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  4. Varifocals take a week or so to get used to. I resisted them for years, but love them and will never go back now.

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  5. Having never had to wear spectacles, problems with lenses are mysterious to me. A whole new world of irritation. I hope the bee said, "Thank you mate!" when you let it out.

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    1. Clearly you used your time productively as a young man, and so don't have eyesight issues in your older age. I use two pair of glasses, so you can guess I did not use my time so productively.

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    2. I wonder what you were doing as a young man to damage your eyesight Andrew? Stamp collecting?

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  6. Raises hand: "I have a question sir. How do you cover the books and what do you use?" Pictures would be helpful. I covered my street directory with clear plastic contact paper and it was lovely for a day, then it began to wrinkle with air bubbles and just got worse so I peeled it all off again.

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  7. Reading on a boat in Croatia appeals to me, sans bees.

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  8. Oh, what a very lucky boy... reading on a boat in Croatia. I have to make do with my little reading nook by the window.

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  9. I wonder if you will have an influx of bees, since bees inform each other of pollen sources.

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  10. What a shame about the glasses. I would be stewing that that bee will be telling all her friends about your pollinator. Had I seen the bee, I would have immediately left the room and yelled, Jerry!

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  11. I always imagine you're covering books with brown paper from supermarket bags as my son did in years gone by! But I think you're a bit more upmarket.

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  12. If you haven't already read it, I highly recommend "The Light Eaters" by Zoe Schlanger. It is a book dedicated to the latest research showing that plants can talk, feel and perhaps "hear" in their own way. I was blown away when I heard her interviewed and then read the book. I now look at plants with a new appreciation of what they might be sensing about me.

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  13. I'd like to read on a boat in Croatia too!

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  14. I, too, would like to read on a boat in Croatia! I'm struggling a bit with my new specs because I don't think they're strong enough. Better than my old ones though so I'll just put up with it until next year.

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  15. I can imagine the bee trying to lead her hivemates back to the purple heart only to encounter the glass door. The last time I went for a follow up after the cataract surgery she gave me a new prescription for glasses but told me I might just get readers and if I did to get 200+. So that's what I did.

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  16. I lost my comment. Damn it! It was about my progressive lens, they really only have a circle of magnifying in the centre of the bottom of the lens, it's not all the way across the lens, not sure why.
    I wonder what kind of bee dance the bee did when she went back to the hive, and if the other bees believed her.

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