A while
after I went to bed one night, there was a minor jolt. It felt as if the
bed had been shaken. Freights rumbling past make vibrations that I can
feel through the floor or the walls, but I usually miss out on the power
going by in the night.
This
unexpected sensation was different. It reminded me of an incident several
years ago. I was at work, and other people in the department had already
gone home. Something happened that felt as though a person had come up
behind me and jerked my chair. I turned around, but no one else was in the
room or even in nearby areas. Outside it was sunny, with no hint of a
thunderstorm. After I left the building, I found out that people were
talking about an earth tremor, so I had an explanation for the experience.
What I felt
in bed impressed me as being more localized. Brought back to consciousness
by an unknown cause when I had almost drifted off for the night, I lay
there very still until I could think rationally. In the darkness, the
thought of devilish powers at work occurred to me, but I didn't want to
focus on that possibility. I decided something must have hit the mattress
and it was time to investigate.
I discovered
that my neglected bicycle, faithfully standing next to the wall for weeks
and months, had tipped over on the floor. I reached for the handlebars,
which had hit the bed, and set the bike upright again, wondering why it
had fallen at that particular time. I may have draped a pair of long,
heavy socks over the seat that evening, which isn't unusual, but I didn't
remember moving the bike at any recent time. Searching for a probable
culprit in the disturbance, I lifted the curtains to see if a train might
be disappearing in the distance, but it was too late to know.
I didn’t
find a clear answer to why the bicycle lost its balance on the kickstand
and interrupted my night's sleep. I simply concluded that the potential
was there and somehow the physics of the situation must have been right to
make it happen. Similarly, an icicle falls, a boulder tumbles down a slope, an
avalanche occurs.
Potentials
came to my attention again as I looked through a stack of old periodicals.
They had potential for recycling into more paper. Before I sent them on
their way, however, I clipped out potential entertainment for a relative.
A clue at the top of one puzzle said, "Potential raisin." I
liked that one. I knew the answer.
That
suggested a whole new spectrum of potentials. The kitchen cabinets, for
example, have potential meals. There are boxes of potential mashed
potatoes, potential pudding and potential hot chocolate.
The oven has
potential heat, and the faucets suggest potential water. Buds on the
potted bulbs conceal potential flowers, while the leaves have potential
for growth.
In the next
room, lamps offer potential light. The bookshelves are full of potential
recreation, inspiration and answers to questions besides those about
falling bicycles.
The
television is a potential source of information, entertainment and
potential regrets about time spent watching what's there.
Chairs
provide potential seating. Desks and tables are potential work areas,
except for being partly covered with potential or actual junk.
The
loveseat, with a folding mattress, doubles as a potential bed without the
potential for a bicycle problem. The swivel rocker is also potential
sleeping space, with or without unfolding it first.
The piano
has potential for music and noise, but most notably for storage space on
top, and the potential piling material is almost unlimited.
Moving
around the corner in the household tour, there's the telephone as a
potential contact with the outside world, a potential source of
conversation and a potential annoyance. The coat rack is almost hidden in
potential warmth for cold days. The bed offers potential rest until the
potential bump in the night.
But my favorite in the quick
list of household potentials is one of the first that came to mind. The
thought wasn't entirely original. I just had to rearrange someone else's
joke. Along the walls, especially in the upper regions where the empty
spaces intersect with the ceiling, there is great potential. It's like a
handyman seeing possibilities in a house that needs fixing up, except that
eight-legged creatures are the experts in this case. While computers make
themselves at home elsewhere, the corners in the bedroom are top-ranked as
potential web sites.