Echoes in the Small Delights
by Fred Aiken
Describe one simple thing you do that brings joy to your life.
Daniel wakes up at 6:30 a.m. to the piercing screech of his alarm clock, an unpleasant cacophony that shatters the fragile boundary between sleep and wakefulness. He groans, slaps the snooze button, and buries his face in the pillow for a few stolen moments of respite. But the reprieve is brief, and he soon finds himself trudging through the well-worn steps of his morning routine: a lukewarm shower, a hastily gulped-down cup of coffee, and the mechanical process of dressing in his standard-issue office attire, the bane of his individuality.
The commute is a predictable gauntlet of frustration. The endless sea of brake lights, the symphony of car horns, the suffocating feeling of being trapped in a metal box while the world inches forward at a maddeningly slow pace. Daniel listens to a podcast, something about the decline of honeybee populations, or maybe it was about how fat everyone is getting, it hardly matters; his mind is only half-engaged, flitting between thoughts like a restless moth. The subject matter, ostensibly alarming, fails to penetrate the fog of his ennui.
Arriving at the office, he steps into the fluorescent-lit purgatory where he will spend the next eight hours. His cubicle is a microcosm of banality: beige walls, a cluttered desk, and the faint, persistent hum of the overhead lights that seem to drain the color from the world. He performs his tasks—emails, spreadsheets, meetings—with the detached precision of a well-oiled machine, his mind elsewhere, anywhere but here. The work itself is a nebulous fog of “god-knows-what,” a phrase that encapsulates the ambiguity and meaninglessness that has come to define his personal and professional life.
The end of the day brings no relief, only the anticipation of the return journey through the same congested arteries that brought him here. By the time he reaches his apartment, the last vestiges of daylight are fading, and a sense of weary resignation settles over him like a heavy cloak. He opens the freezer and extracts a plastic-wrapped tray, its corners tinged with the telltale white frost of neglect. The frozen entrée—once a meal of promise, now a symbol of his inability to find time for anything more—goes into the microwave with a mechanical beep.
As he waits for the food to thaw, Daniel’s gaze drifts to the calendar pinned to his wall. Each day marked off with an ‘X,’ a visual representation of time slipping away. A sudden thought strikes him, an impulse that cuts through the haze of routine. He grabs his phone and types a quick message, his fingers moving with uncharacteristic urgency. The response is almost immediate: “Be there in 15.”
Fifteen minutes later, Daniel finds himself at the local animal shelter, a modest building on the outskirts of town. The air here is different, imbued with the scent of hay and the earthy, unmistakable aroma of animals. It’s a sensory overload that contrasts sharply with the sterile environment of his office. Marcy, the shelter’s ever-cheerful volunteer coordinator, greets him with a wave.
“Hey, Daniel! We’ve got a new batch of puppies today,” she says, her enthusiasm palpable.
Daniel’s heart lifts, the weight of the day momentarily forgotten. He follows Marcy to the back, where a cacophony of barks and whimpers reaches a crescendo. The puppies are a chaotic, delightful mess, a tangle of fur and energy that brings a genuine smile to his face. One puppy in particular, a golden retriever with oversized paws and floppy ears, makes its way to him, its movements a charming blend of curiosity and clumsiness.
Kneeling down, Daniel extends a hand. The puppy sniffs, then latches onto his fingers with tiny, sharp teeth, gnawing with playful determination. The sensation is a strange mix of pain and pleasure, a reminder of life’s more visceral joys. Daniel laughs, a sound that feels foreign yet liberating, echoing through the room.
For the next hour, Daniel is lost in the simple, unadulterated joy of playing with the puppies. Their exuberance is infectious, each wagging tail and eager yip a small antidote to the monotony of his daily existence. The puppies, in their boundless enthusiasm, offer a glimpse into a world untainted by the cynicism and fatigue that have come to define his own.
As the evening sun casts long shadows, Daniel reluctantly says his goodbyes. “Same time tomorrow?” Marcy asks, her eyes twinkling.
“Definitely,” he replies, feeling a lightness in his step that has been absent for far too long.
The drive home is a blur, his mind replaying the evening’s moments like a cherished film. The frozen entrée, reheated and still slightly freezer-burned, doesn’t seem so bad now. He eats it slowly, savoring each bite with a newfound appreciation. It’s not the food itself, but the memory of the puppies that adds flavor, transforming a mundane meal into something more.