So the first Sunday in Colorado was going to be a rather long day. I had a 50th High School reunion at a local small town restaurant (there were only 21? in my graduating class and only 7 showed!). It was an emotion-filled thing with many having passed recently including one of the men helping to organize the event. We all are talkers and I did not get to any really in depth conversations with anyone as we sat around a rather large square table with our spouses and significant others. No one has changed in personality or interests though.
The horse girl is now a horse lady and she forgave my best friend and I for TP-ing her house every Halloween. It was a big old mansion at the end of Main and we just could not resist. She is about four feet five with a lovely long gray braid down her back and drives a BIG truck. My two best girlfriends sat on either side, and as is true with best friends, we found plenty to talk about and started right where we had last left off. The star quarterback and main basketball player who went to STATE our senior year had shrunk! He was small in build and shorter than I. What happened??? My old boyfriend was in the process of his second divorce due to having an affair with the pretty blonde lady that he brought to the luncheon. He is fairly wealthy owning lots of land in the area and seemed to have no problem leaving his house on the lake in a nearby town to his former wife who sadly was fighting cancer. Whatever did I see in him? The class Valedictorian was still somewhat of a snob, but had spread in size and looked less like a book worm and more like the life coach she had become with her PHD in psychology. Two of the spouses (men) sat like cigar store Indians, but were not bored, just quiet. My husband talked almost the entire luncheon with my ex-boyfriend...wish I would have been a fly on the wall there. Below is the class with partners, only 12, and faces blurred to protect the innocent, although I am guessing that none of us were innocent anymore.
Then later that afternoon my family had a get-together BBQ in a nearby town with even MORE food. Hubby had his birthday that day and I was helping carry out a HEAVY strawberry/chocolate/poke(?) cake in a glass casserole when I missed the 1-inch step down on the patio and went down like a drawbridge just missing the metal table where everyone was sitting. I landed on two knees and one elbow with the cake in my arms. I managed to save the cake! I had whipped-cream on my nose as I struggled up after someone took the cake and no one DARED take a photo. Actually they were in shock when I stood up and you could have heard a pin drop. My knee and elbow bruises were ugly...but no broken bones, even though I have osteoporosis. I sat with ice on the knee for a while and broke out in a sweat due to the shock, but managed to maintain my cool.
As luck would have it, all the bruises were superficial and I was able to do all the walking and hiking the next two weeks in Colorado, Wyoming and Montana although the knee bruise got much uglier! Oh yes, I did say I saved the cake...didn't I? (Post Script...my dress pants tore in my fall and luck had it that this happened AFTER the reunion so I did not wear torn pants!)
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
Saturday, August 16, 2014
Assess the Situation
She is back. She is thinner! She is older. She is much more meditative after spending time with old high school friends and family that she sees once every few years. She is more mellow after spending two weeks touring the Wild West and Big Sky Country with a nine-year-old. She has tales to be digested before being shared and she has to work on a "tag" from Colleen of Loose Leaf Notes. But right now she is heading out to a small, local, French restaurant with her hubby to honor our 44th anniversary! She has missed the blogging and the bloggers and will return to full force soon. (For some early photos go here.)
Thursday, July 31, 2014
Back and Forth and Up and Down.
Packing for a trip this evening but saw this on the news and was sure that I was losing my mind.
"Hours before Congress broke for the August recess, House Republicans claimed that the President could use executive action to fix the border situation with unaccompanied children fleeing violence in the Central American countries of Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala. In a press statement released Thursday, House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) and other House Republican leaders indicated that President Obama could address the crisis “without the need for congressional action,” a statement tinged with some irony given that just the day before, House Republicans had slammed the President with a lawsuit claiming executive overreach" This lawsuit is the GOP suing the President for using executive action to delay the implementation of a part of Obamacare...the very bill they tried to repeal dozens and dozens and dozens of times.
The House can find no middle ground on an immigration bill which their members claimed three years ago would be done by now. They do not agree with the Senate version. Now they want the President to use Executive action to solve the issue so they can take off on five weeks away from the job with perhaps less guilt for their inaction.
At least I may be away from the news for some time and that may prevent me from pulling out my hair until I am bald.
"Hours before Congress broke for the August recess, House Republicans claimed that the President could use executive action to fix the border situation with unaccompanied children fleeing violence in the Central American countries of Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala. In a press statement released Thursday, House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) and other House Republican leaders indicated that President Obama could address the crisis “without the need for congressional action,” a statement tinged with some irony given that just the day before, House Republicans had slammed the President with a lawsuit claiming executive overreach" This lawsuit is the GOP suing the President for using executive action to delay the implementation of a part of Obamacare...the very bill they tried to repeal dozens and dozens and dozens of times.
The House can find no middle ground on an immigration bill which their members claimed three years ago would be done by now. They do not agree with the Senate version. Now they want the President to use Executive action to solve the issue so they can take off on five weeks away from the job with perhaps less guilt for their inaction.
At least I may be away from the news for some time and that may prevent me from pulling out my hair until I am bald.
Monday, July 28, 2014
Beefcake? and Perhaps a Little Cheesecake?
One reader asked if I was writing a romance novel based on the subject of my last post. No, I am not a big reader or writer of that genre, although I must admit as a much younger woman I consumed my share of bodice rippers with lantern-jawed mysterious men. Fellow blogger, Rain Trueax, is the romance writer that got me thinking about abs because she has written a number of books that require covers with abs. We talked about cover designs for such books as she does her own. She has a passion for our country's early history and the wild west and the cultures of that time. She does extensive research to make her characters come to life so that the story she weaves is more than just romance, and her women are as strong as her men. If you want to know more about her writing and her books you can go here.
Anyway (please read this in an Ellen DeGeneres voice), I had an opportunity to explore more Beefcake the other day. I went to an event with my children and grandchildren. This is an event that I would never have gone to on my own, and unless you are a former marine or married to one, I doubt very much you would have ever gone to one of these either. (By the way it costs $25 a head just to be an observer, so I probably will not go to one of these again!) Oorah!!
There was lots of dust and mud and sweat and blood. You may not know, but it seems that the term cheesecake actually may have originated in Britain way back in the 1660's! Sexy (and promiscuous) women were referred to as cheesecakes and tarts. The few women in the last of my photos in this post are NOT cheesecake and certainly more beefcake. The theory on the word beefcake is that movie cameramen were the first to use the term in the late 1940s and early 1950s when they discovered that women liked to look at well-honed men and actors started taking off their shirts and smiling in that certain way.
These guys above are serious because they clearly are willing to get dirty. We all know how bad dirt is.
This beefcake (with hench woman and child in tow) is not too proud to wear his glasses when the challenge is done.
(No comment on the dude immediately above!)
Get down there and eat that dirt!
NO, the woman in the foreground is not dead or tired, she is actually rolling all the way across to each log.
They were moving very slowly by this time as the ropes were super slippery from all the mud.
As they walked up to the last few challenges they all looked like the walking dead to me!
BUT before they could shower and reveal all those six-packs they still had this last challenge to leap over! "Oorah!!"
I know, you are disappointed that these are not as sexy as you had hoped. Maybe you can go on over to Mage's ComicCon photos as she always manages to catch a sexy type or two and the costumes she photographs are far more intriguing.
Oh ... one last photo to let you know why in the heck I was there. It was to support my granddaughter and grandson. She doesn't usually run in purple net skirt, but Dad was too late on arrival to get her changed!
Anyway (please read this in an Ellen DeGeneres voice), I had an opportunity to explore more Beefcake the other day. I went to an event with my children and grandchildren. This is an event that I would never have gone to on my own, and unless you are a former marine or married to one, I doubt very much you would have ever gone to one of these either. (By the way it costs $25 a head just to be an observer, so I probably will not go to one of these again!) Oorah!!
There was lots of dust and mud and sweat and blood. You may not know, but it seems that the term cheesecake actually may have originated in Britain way back in the 1660's! Sexy (and promiscuous) women were referred to as cheesecakes and tarts. The few women in the last of my photos in this post are NOT cheesecake and certainly more beefcake. The theory on the word beefcake is that movie cameramen were the first to use the term in the late 1940s and early 1950s when they discovered that women liked to look at well-honed men and actors started taking off their shirts and smiling in that certain way.
These guys above are serious because they clearly are willing to get dirty. We all know how bad dirt is.
This beefcake (with hench woman and child in tow) is not too proud to wear his glasses when the challenge is done.
(No comment on the dude immediately above!)
Get down there and eat that dirt!
NO, the woman in the foreground is not dead or tired, she is actually rolling all the way across to each log.
They were moving very slowly by this time as the ropes were super slippery from all the mud.
As they walked up to the last few challenges they all looked like the walking dead to me!
BUT before they could shower and reveal all those six-packs they still had this last challenge to leap over! "Oorah!!"
I know, you are disappointed that these are not as sexy as you had hoped. Maybe you can go on over to Mage's ComicCon photos as she always manages to catch a sexy type or two and the costumes she photographs are far more intriguing.
Oh ... one last photo to let you know why in the heck I was there. It was to support my granddaughter and grandson. She doesn't usually run in purple net skirt, but Dad was too late on arrival to get her changed!
Friday, July 25, 2014
The Cover Up
Winding down the end of the week with the little granddaughter. It is Friday morning and she had doughnuts for breakfast and is now watching TV...those things that we are supposed to avoid doing with kids. But I need a slow morning and thus I have her plugged into the mind-less-tube. We spent time at the pool the other day and I took the photo below.
This photo is just for one of my blog readers...Rain Treaux. We were having a discussion on abs, hot men, book covers, etc. Do I have you curious? Oh well, too busy to elaborate. Just enjoy, unless you are a guy. See you in a few days!
This photo is just for one of my blog readers...Rain Treaux. We were having a discussion on abs, hot men, book covers, etc. Do I have you curious? Oh well, too busy to elaborate. Just enjoy, unless you are a guy. See you in a few days!
Saturday, July 19, 2014
Busier Than Any Old Cliche You Want to Choose
The world is too much with us this week and in the coming weeks. Hoping to find time to post and read blogs, but as most bloggers know, the world waits for no blogging man (or woman).
Yesterday was filled with about five hours of doctor's appointments, blood tests, waiting to fill prescriptions, and cancellation of our attendance at a philanthropic reception last night. Hubby was in so much pain (neck and then an elbow---see prior post) that we pushed into seeing his primary physician late yesterday morning. Without going into all the details, let us just say we continued this journey most of the afternoon. He is on three more prescriptions and we are waiting for side-effects. One side-effect was that he slept all the rest of the day into late dinner after we got home. He is no longer in pain and trying to slow down. (We have not checked crab traps in three days !) Health issues never fall at a convenient time, and this summer is already very full for us. But, we did squeeze in an MRI at the end of the week. We have to get to the healing issues because....
Today I have to get another reservation confirmed for a trip to Ireland in early September (going with my son, wife and in-laws after our cancellation of our trip to Turkey with the other set of in-laws due to all the war issues raging everywhere.) Today I have to plan for a children's class on soil. Today I have to grocery shop and plan menus for the week. Today I have to vacuum. It is crazy, please try to keep up.
Granddaughter gets picked up on Sunday, tomorrow, for a week with us. We are making felt fairies, cooking stuff, having a chocolate tasting, swimming and dragging her to the garden class I am teaching with other children on Monday. I am tired already, but loving the opportunity.
Then the week after next week is a break before hubby and I are off to Colorado and Wyoming for two weeks with the 9-year-old grandson to explore geology and nature and sleep in the bowels of a volcano. He will visit great uncles and aunts and I will attend a high school class reunion as well --- of about 10 of us really old people who are in good enough health to show up! I am not looking forward to the emotional roller coaster of that luncheon, but I must go.
Then it is back home and another week to recover before we get the littlest grandson (four-years-old) for his week of being indulged by grandparents.
Summer will be over in the blink of an eye and then just one week to get ready and pack for our Ireland trip. Son's in-laws are making most of the plans, but, thus far, we have only the Dublin arrival, two days in Ballingcollig, a rental car and two days in Dublin before heading home. We have the whole middle of the week to fill and I wish they would get on it!
Yes, I am tired, you are tired, we are all tired...but we are keeping one foot in front of the other because the alternative is not something I want to dwell on.
Yesterday was filled with about five hours of doctor's appointments, blood tests, waiting to fill prescriptions, and cancellation of our attendance at a philanthropic reception last night. Hubby was in so much pain (neck and then an elbow---see prior post) that we pushed into seeing his primary physician late yesterday morning. Without going into all the details, let us just say we continued this journey most of the afternoon. He is on three more prescriptions and we are waiting for side-effects. One side-effect was that he slept all the rest of the day into late dinner after we got home. He is no longer in pain and trying to slow down. (We have not checked crab traps in three days !) Health issues never fall at a convenient time, and this summer is already very full for us. But, we did squeeze in an MRI at the end of the week. We have to get to the healing issues because....
Today I have to get another reservation confirmed for a trip to Ireland in early September (going with my son, wife and in-laws after our cancellation of our trip to Turkey with the other set of in-laws due to all the war issues raging everywhere.) Today I have to plan for a children's class on soil. Today I have to grocery shop and plan menus for the week. Today I have to vacuum. It is crazy, please try to keep up.
Granddaughter gets picked up on Sunday, tomorrow, for a week with us. We are making felt fairies, cooking stuff, having a chocolate tasting, swimming and dragging her to the garden class I am teaching with other children on Monday. I am tired already, but loving the opportunity.
Then the week after next week is a break before hubby and I are off to Colorado and Wyoming for two weeks with the 9-year-old grandson to explore geology and nature and sleep in the bowels of a volcano. He will visit great uncles and aunts and I will attend a high school class reunion as well --- of about 10 of us really old people who are in good enough health to show up! I am not looking forward to the emotional roller coaster of that luncheon, but I must go.
Then it is back home and another week to recover before we get the littlest grandson (four-years-old) for his week of being indulged by grandparents.
Summer will be over in the blink of an eye and then just one week to get ready and pack for our Ireland trip. Son's in-laws are making most of the plans, but, thus far, we have only the Dublin arrival, two days in Ballingcollig, a rental car and two days in Dublin before heading home. We have the whole middle of the week to fill and I wish they would get on it!
Yes, I am tired, you are tired, we are all tired...but we are keeping one foot in front of the other because the alternative is not something I want to dwell on.
Tuesday, July 15, 2014
Waiting
You don't want to be there, even if it is for something simple, like making sure you are A-OK. But I was there for someone else. I was there for hubby who had fallen off of a ladder...not far...just five feet. He landed on his butt, but since he is missing the back side of 5 neck vertebrae from a serious operation years ago and the little bit of whip lash from the fall left him a bit stunned, even he agreed with his doctor that time in the emergency room of the hospital was a trade off well spent. So we were waiting to be called. We were number 3711, they no longer use last names.
The waiting room is designed really well, since you can hear the nurse at the front hall as if she had a microphone and she is just calling in a medium voice. When she leaves it is pretty quiet except for the whispers of the half dozen people waiting.
The man in the wheel chair with the oxygen tank and beard and long white hair looked at me suspiciously when I sat down across from him. His son said something to him, but he was hard of hearing and missed it.
The two others were women, one in the early stage of pregnancy and in a bit of pain and just finished being put on IVs and the other woman closer to my age in a wheel chair and nursing a banged up leg, surrounded by her entire family that must have been at the Sunday BBQ at her house from the way they were dressed and acting like this was a continuation of the afternoon party. They cleaned out the snack machine, checked their phones and spent the rest of the time telling jokes. One son looked a little like a younger version of Willie Nelson with a navy handkerchief over his head and a wiry beard.
In about 30 minutes hubby was called. He was called ahead of the man in the wheel chair. I went outside to the garden and took some photos.
Flowers and flowing water surrounded me and were certainly there to relieve stress. I was not stressed as hubby was in just a little pain and had been taken for triage, but I knew this might have eased some minds on other days.
I had my point and shoot camera and caught this lovely butterfly, a common buckeye on the black-eyed susan.
It was hot and humid, so I returned to the air-conditioned waiting room after about ten minutes.
The man in the wheel chair had moved to a chair but was at his last bit of patience and stood to tell his son he was going home.
"I have been waiting two #$$9ing hours and I am %^&-da*?%$ sick and tired of this!"
I agreed with him as they had taken hubby before him. Son tried to calm him but they were almost shouting since he was so hard of hearing. Within a few seconds a tiny ball of energy weighing no more than 90 pounds herself with the sweetest smile and little notepad came in front of them and began asking questions. He was not in the mood for her charm, but she finally got him calmed down while she left to see where he was in the grand scheme of things. In about 5 minutes she returned. took his arm and they walked through the automatic doors into the triage area.
I continued to wait. I read my Kindle, slept some and even watched some obnoxious ESPN channel where a loud-mouth was telling us how much he knew about some player and how everyone else was stupid and so wrong.
After two and half hours hubby was released with drugs, feeling no pain and getting good news about his neck.
Unfortunately we were hungry and made the mistake of stopping for a light dinner and ended up driving home in the worst electrical storm I had ever seen...we were following the front south and right under all the lightning. Hubby was on Oxycontin and very casual about the 4 and 5 lightning strikes every few minutes. I was trying to see the car ahead of me. (We were slow enough at one time that I grabbed the camera and shot through the windshield.)
We got home to find absolutely NO RAIN in our yard. It had stopped just a few hundred feet before our neighborhood. What a bummer. No glorious sunset either just the last of the clouds above the trees.
But I am not complaining one twit as this was a very nice visit to an emergency room and it could have been so much worse. Do not even get me started about hubby on a ladder without me!!!
The waiting room is designed really well, since you can hear the nurse at the front hall as if she had a microphone and she is just calling in a medium voice. When she leaves it is pretty quiet except for the whispers of the half dozen people waiting.
The man in the wheel chair with the oxygen tank and beard and long white hair looked at me suspiciously when I sat down across from him. His son said something to him, but he was hard of hearing and missed it.
The two others were women, one in the early stage of pregnancy and in a bit of pain and just finished being put on IVs and the other woman closer to my age in a wheel chair and nursing a banged up leg, surrounded by her entire family that must have been at the Sunday BBQ at her house from the way they were dressed and acting like this was a continuation of the afternoon party. They cleaned out the snack machine, checked their phones and spent the rest of the time telling jokes. One son looked a little like a younger version of Willie Nelson with a navy handkerchief over his head and a wiry beard.
In about 30 minutes hubby was called. He was called ahead of the man in the wheel chair. I went outside to the garden and took some photos.
Flowers and flowing water surrounded me and were certainly there to relieve stress. I was not stressed as hubby was in just a little pain and had been taken for triage, but I knew this might have eased some minds on other days.
I had my point and shoot camera and caught this lovely butterfly, a common buckeye on the black-eyed susan.
It was hot and humid, so I returned to the air-conditioned waiting room after about ten minutes.
The man in the wheel chair had moved to a chair but was at his last bit of patience and stood to tell his son he was going home.
"I have been waiting two #$$9ing hours and I am %^&-da*?%$ sick and tired of this!"
I agreed with him as they had taken hubby before him. Son tried to calm him but they were almost shouting since he was so hard of hearing. Within a few seconds a tiny ball of energy weighing no more than 90 pounds herself with the sweetest smile and little notepad came in front of them and began asking questions. He was not in the mood for her charm, but she finally got him calmed down while she left to see where he was in the grand scheme of things. In about 5 minutes she returned. took his arm and they walked through the automatic doors into the triage area.
I continued to wait. I read my Kindle, slept some and even watched some obnoxious ESPN channel where a loud-mouth was telling us how much he knew about some player and how everyone else was stupid and so wrong.
After two and half hours hubby was released with drugs, feeling no pain and getting good news about his neck.
Unfortunately we were hungry and made the mistake of stopping for a light dinner and ended up driving home in the worst electrical storm I had ever seen...we were following the front south and right under all the lightning. Hubby was on Oxycontin and very casual about the 4 and 5 lightning strikes every few minutes. I was trying to see the car ahead of me. (We were slow enough at one time that I grabbed the camera and shot through the windshield.)
We got home to find absolutely NO RAIN in our yard. It had stopped just a few hundred feet before our neighborhood. What a bummer. No glorious sunset either just the last of the clouds above the trees.
But I am not complaining one twit as this was a very nice visit to an emergency room and it could have been so much worse. Do not even get me started about hubby on a ladder without me!!!
Saturday, July 12, 2014
100 Years From Now
100 years from now,
Who will remember my name?
Who will protect my treasures?
Who will call forth the memories?
The world I know may be lost by then
Into nuclear winter or endless hot summer.
The few natives will have retreated
Into the bowels of the earth
For rough shelter and safety.
The earth may have slid in upon itself
Becoming an abstract Dali-esc spheroid of clay
Robotic machines may be keeping the peace
Comedy becoming a lost art
with only an abundance of fearful snickers
and outright chuckles rarer than hen's teeth.
Music a distant memory
A long ago dream of another land
Propaganda in song more of a Greek chorus
Days hard and empty
Nights cold and unnerving
Who will remember the unscripted laughter of a child?
Who will protect the benign lover?
Who will call forth their own courage,
100 years from now?
Wednesday, July 09, 2014
An Awe Fillled Moment
Another unusually hot day causing me to spend less time outside under the baking sunshine and more time on the computer. Hubby returns from running some errands and there is excitement in his voice.
"Tabor, come outside, I want to show you something."
"What?" I sigh.
"A baby fawn...on the outside of the fence."
"What?!"
He sets down a package and continues, "I got out of the car and heard this bleating sound. I thought it was some strange new bird and so went toward it and there on the outside of the deer fence was this fawn calling out."
Tabor
Well, damn it, I will just walk outside around the fence! It is about a half block long so it took me some time to get through the driveway gate and make my way around through brambles and poison ivy and prickly holly to the edge of the ferns where hubby said he had last seen the fawn.
We gently looked everywhere and were just about to give up when hubby stepped back to turn around and head back to the house and at his heels there looking up at him was the tiniest little fawn I had ever seen bleating so sadly. We must have stood there in shock and awe for some time before we decided that the fawn must have lost its mother to come up to us. We easily lifted it into our arms, took it into the house and tried to give it some water, which it lapped very hesitantly. We took it outside to the fenced garden, afraid our air-conditioning might be too much of a shock for such a little thing, and then came back inside and called DNR for help.
They referred us to a local rehabilitation house (a home) run by a retired vet, I think, hubby had done all the talking on the phone.
We wrapped the fawn in a towel and I placed it on my lap in the car and hubby started the GPS and proceeded to the house on the other side of the county. A young teenage girl, who worked for the vet, brought us inside. The animal house itself was a disaster. It smelled like a zoo, there was junk every where, floors needed washing, rugs needed vacuuming. The vet, who had been showering, greeted us in a bathrobe and was also surprised at how tiny this fawn was. Born maybe just days ago! Even he had to take a photo!
He weighed it, felt its stomach, and looked at its eyes and declared it very healthy and recommended we return it to the woods. He said there was food still in the stomach. We were glad he said this, because I do know sometimes mothers leave their young for some time, and did not want to keep it or leave it with him in that disaster of a home.
We took the little beastie home, washed it down with a damp clean cloth to remove any of our smell and returned it to the woods. It stood there looking longingly at us as we placed it on shaky little spindle legs and did not move. I pushed its behind gently and it finally walked into the deep ferns and amazingly disappeared almost instantly. We have not seen or heard from it since, so I am hoping is well! That is, until that little creature becomes a yearling and starts eating our shrubbery next year!!
Sunday, July 06, 2014
The Females Who Saved Me From Myself
I have cried and sighed with Anne of Green Gables.
I have loved and wondered with Anne Frank.
I have lamented Scarlett O'Hara's self-centered ego but applauded her stamina and wished I had her waist.
I admired Nancy Drew and her fearless independence and money.
I learned determination and stubborn argumentative ways from Jo March.
I wanted Karen Blixen's sense of adventure.
I helped Charlotte weave her web and fell in love with Wilber.
I wanted Rima's ethereal presence in her Green Mansions.
I wanted Elspeth Huxley's childhood and powers of observation.
I am sure there are more as this was a stream of consciousness post, but these were ones I read when I was younger (Teens and Twenties) that influenced me the most.
Who are some female characters, fiction or non-fiction, in the land of books that influenced you in as a teen or young adult?
I have loved and wondered with Anne Frank.
I have lamented Scarlett O'Hara's self-centered ego but applauded her stamina and wished I had her waist.
I admired Nancy Drew and her fearless independence and money.
I learned determination and stubborn argumentative ways from Jo March.
I wanted Karen Blixen's sense of adventure.
I helped Charlotte weave her web and fell in love with Wilber.
I wanted Rima's ethereal presence in her Green Mansions.
I wanted Elspeth Huxley's childhood and powers of observation.
I am sure there are more as this was a stream of consciousness post, but these were ones I read when I was younger (Teens and Twenties) that influenced me the most.
Who are some female characters, fiction or non-fiction, in the land of books that influenced you in as a teen or young adult?
Saturday, July 05, 2014
King Arthur, Spoiled Brat
Arthur came rushing up like a banshee getting angrier and angrier with its temper tantrum until it hit the shore and colder waters. It was almost as if it had been punched in the nose as it slowed and moved back out to sea. It completely avoided my little pocket of land on the Eastern shore. A cool weather front met Arthur's challenge and we now have spring weather for a few days. Sweater weather...almost.
On the down side we got only a tenth of an inch of rain and winds too strong to go out in a boat. We headed down to the local town for an old-fashioned fireworks show being surprised that parking was not full and there were still many places to set up chairs on the church lawn. We had not seen the fireworks from the land side and asked a dear old lady (younger than me probably) sitting on a folding chair about the best vantage points. She explained the fireworks had been postponed and she was just waiting for her family who had decided to walk around town before sunset.
A number of years ago a restaurant fire on this island coupled with heavy winds almost burned down the entire town as firefighters worked desperately to bring it under control. The tally was only two buildings lost and some smoke damage. With the wind causing unpredictable drifts that evening, fireworks had to be exploded another day.
I am no longer a child and was happy just to get out for a bit and then back home.
Tuesday, July 01, 2014
Re-entry
I, like many of my readers, do not like programmed vacations filled with artificial entertainment. I did like the Williamsburg visit. They had a game for young historians called RevQuest where they use clues, decoder charts and talks with staff in costume throughout the historic town. The children and young adults pretend they are spies for America working with the French during the revolution. They meet in secret places and wear a scarf so staff know they are spies. They have to text messages from cell phones to get confirmation when they think they have solved a part of the puzzle. I do not think this part of history gets enough promotion. Oldest grandson, who loves puzzles, did very well.
Re-entry after our week away was a slow process as I caught an intestinal and other illness (probably from sharing water bottle with granddaughter or visiting two 'amusement parks') and had to schedule an appointment for antibiotics yesterday. I actually enjoyed sitting around and reading and going through the mail and sitting close to the bathroom and not seeing the problems in the yard yesterday.
Gardeners are the type of people who would rather stay home during the growing season than go off and explore some other parts of the world. It was daughter who chose this time of year and because we want very much to be with them, we agreed. We came back to a lot (A LOT) of rabbit devastation. Almost every one of my sunflowers, some over 6 feet tall, brought down by little teeth. We were not there to spray with a noxious minty smell every few days and they discovered that sunflowers and parsley were not mint but a delicious breakfast and dinner! They also dug under the fence of our vegetable garden and we have had a real set back with almost everything planted except the tomatoes, of course. Fortunately gardeners have a strong heart.
On the plus side, the five bluebirds have hatched and are being fed by mom and dad throughout the day. Feeding five!! That keeps you busy.
I did take a short time to visit the used book store in the store area of Williamsburg and purchased a collection of poems by Pablo Neruda, motivated by my recent read of "Paula" by Isabelle Allende, and a memoir written by Katheryn Hepburn on the making of "African Queen" which is one of my FAVORITE movies.
Today we begin to move deck and patio chairs and small items to prepare for the tropical storm that is heading up our way. I have many photos to process. Actually I took less than 500 for the whole week, so I am getting more precise in what I want to take. I have a house to clean. We are picking quarts of red raspberries which are not being totally removed by birds and squirrels. I have to make an apple raspberry pie and hubby is putting up pints of raspberry jam. I have to do all this before we may lose electricity in the next day or two!!
Re-entry after our week away was a slow process as I caught an intestinal and other illness (probably from sharing water bottle with granddaughter or visiting two 'amusement parks') and had to schedule an appointment for antibiotics yesterday. I actually enjoyed sitting around and reading and going through the mail and sitting close to the bathroom and not seeing the problems in the yard yesterday.
Gardeners are the type of people who would rather stay home during the growing season than go off and explore some other parts of the world. It was daughter who chose this time of year and because we want very much to be with them, we agreed. We came back to a lot (A LOT) of rabbit devastation. Almost every one of my sunflowers, some over 6 feet tall, brought down by little teeth. We were not there to spray with a noxious minty smell every few days and they discovered that sunflowers and parsley were not mint but a delicious breakfast and dinner! They also dug under the fence of our vegetable garden and we have had a real set back with almost everything planted except the tomatoes, of course. Fortunately gardeners have a strong heart.
On the plus side, the five bluebirds have hatched and are being fed by mom and dad throughout the day. Feeding five!! That keeps you busy.
I did take a short time to visit the used book store in the store area of Williamsburg and purchased a collection of poems by Pablo Neruda, motivated by my recent read of "Paula" by Isabelle Allende, and a memoir written by Katheryn Hepburn on the making of "African Queen" which is one of my FAVORITE movies.
Today we begin to move deck and patio chairs and small items to prepare for the tropical storm that is heading up our way. I have many photos to process. Actually I took less than 500 for the whole week, so I am getting more precise in what I want to take. I have a house to clean. We are picking quarts of red raspberries which are not being totally removed by birds and squirrels. I have to make an apple raspberry pie and hubby is putting up pints of raspberry jam. I have to do all this before we may lose electricity in the next day or two!!
Sunday, June 29, 2014
A Summary
Did you ever stop and look at yourself in the moment and think ... "I never thought I would be this cliche." ? Perhaps most of us like to think we are unique and a multi-prismed person of fascinating interests and activities. We are thus different from the masses. Yet, I must admit that I am not.
I am one side of a set of grandparents that own a time share that is movable. I am one of a set that vacations with grandchildren in all the traditional places such as beaches, cottages by lakes, amusement parks, major historical monuments. I am one of a set that loads a car to the brim and overflowing with bicycles, towels, coolers, snacks, games, drinks and DVDs. One of those people I used to observe never thinking I was anywhere like that. (Just look at that knobby-kneed grandma attempting to fit one more cooler into the back of that van! Look at that balding man trying to get his bike lock around both old bikes!)
I have a son-in-law and daughter who manage to program every single hour of every single day on a family vacation. We can go to a place that my husband and I went to years ago and see far more of it than I ever knew was there! Of course, much of it is geared for a younger audience and that is why we bypassed it.
Son-in-law is adamant that every single thrill ride MUST be experienced. He does push to include the kids, but since they are young he cannot get them on EVERY ride. He is into mathematical data and knows which one has the most turns or goes the highest or has the biggest drop and maintains a memory list of those he has experienced as closely as a birder keeps his life list. As he described a ride I would be terrified.
Of course time must be left to stand in lines (they were very short this year) for rides that barely move but make the small kids think they are running the show.
And grandparents forced time to be left for the animal shows, the stage shows and the diving shows. With the price of tickets we felt these shows were really high end and professional.
No, it isn't Broadway...it IS an amusement park.
Daughter wants to hit the TravelAdvisor's top rated restaurants and we include as many as we can within limited budgets and small children's tastes. Both parents set aside an evening to hit the outlets. Son-in-law got several free vouchers for the golf course so he worked that into the very end of the day and skipped a few dinners with us.
Hubby really wants to be anywhere on the water, but when he cannot do that he is happy with a history lesson or two or just spending 20 minutes talking to the stranger next in line. His neck surgery means he can no longer go on crazy rides, but his ego is small and he will ride the smallest of rides with grandson.
We did sleep in every morning until about 8:00 and then were out of the unit by 9:30 and not home again until after 7:00. I was amazed and glad that the little ones had no melt-downs and were able to keep up with their parents. It was a very telling time when the oldest boy, nine, did say on the last day he was looking forward to getting home as he was getting tired of going to "fun places." When I commented that they were so upper middle class, I did get a surprised look from Dad.
Never knew I would be one of those folks who go on master vacations. I used to be the weekend camper. Times change.
Saturday, June 28, 2014
Winding Down
Our week's vacation with three little ones and their parents located near an amusement park, a water park, and four historical parks is winding down this morning. Got up early and packed food and clothes.
Hubby is cooking banana pancakes, two little ones are already eating them and the third is playing his recorder...three songs he knows well...over and over and over.
There are swim goggles, board games and DVDs scattered in various corners throughout this two bedroom time share.
Parents are busy in their bedroom sorting clothing and charger cords and packing bags.
I have got the two kids set up to eat and am now quickly blogging while waiting for the dryer to buzz, but now I have to go and check on little ones eating once again.
On the way out we will hit Williamsburg village one last time. I hope to check out the used book store there which is one of my favorite places to browse. Us old people like old books!
Check in later.
Hubby is cooking banana pancakes, two little ones are already eating them and the third is playing his recorder...three songs he knows well...over and over and over.
There are swim goggles, board games and DVDs scattered in various corners throughout this two bedroom time share.
Parents are busy in their bedroom sorting clothing and charger cords and packing bags.
I have got the two kids set up to eat and am now quickly blogging while waiting for the dryer to buzz, but now I have to go and check on little ones eating once again.
On the way out we will hit Williamsburg village one last time. I hope to check out the used book store there which is one of my favorite places to browse. Us old people like old books!
Check in later.
Tuesday, June 24, 2014
Drowning in activities
Sunrise to sunset working on a schedule. Spending time with schedule junkies, amusement park junkies, restaurant junkies, swimming pool junkies and one history junkie.
No time to blog, but maybe tonight will read some other blogs!
No time to blog, but maybe tonight will read some other blogs!
Friday, June 20, 2014
Give It Your Best Shot and Then Get a Beer
Good, better, best,
Never let it rest,
Until the good is better,
And the better is best.
Or....if it is not your life at stake,
You can accept the reality that you are not perfect.
You can accept the reality that you are somewhere in the middle.
You can accept the reality that you have lots of company.
You can accept the reality that while we honor and love the best in us and others, we feel most comfortable with someone who gave it their best shot and then can laugh about it when they missed the target.
Or, perhaps accept it was the wrong target after all?
Never let it rest,
Until the good is better,
And the better is best.
Or....if it is not your life at stake,
You can accept the reality that you are not perfect.
You can accept the reality that you are somewhere in the middle.
You can accept the reality that you have lots of company.
You can accept the reality that while we honor and love the best in us and others, we feel most comfortable with someone who gave it their best shot and then can laugh about it when they missed the target.
Or, perhaps accept it was the wrong target after all?
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
Just Naysaying
I am tired of the naysayers. Those who are the first to tell us why we cannot do something to fix something to test new waters. Those who are the first to state how and why it will not work before giving it a real chance. Those who offer no alternative but more of the same.
We cannot make school lunches healthier with more fruits and vegetables because the kids won't eat them and the school districts cannot afford the expense. (Yet we seem to be able to afford the health consequences of obesity in our population years down the road.)
We cannot restrict the air pollution with newer laws because it will cost jobs and raise the cost of heating fuel. Yet we can afford to listen to children have asthma attacks every evening and afford to give them more medicine, and perhaps watch them die an early death.
We cannot expect cities to survive on solar panels as they are too expensive. Some costs are projected at $30,000 per house! Yet we can afford the endless resources needed to inject precious fresh water and chemicals into the ground and bring up finite fossil fuels, a process that also results in the release of carcinogenic chemicals into the air into nearby neighborhoods. (I will also mention the idiot Congressional Representative who claimed we would diminish the winds on this earth by using wind power and thus make the earth warmer. Please do not re-elect him.)
We cannot enforce laws that make men behave like civilized human beings, and if they do not, take away their guns, but we can expect women to carry their car keys as weapons on the way to parking lots, and know that the laws cannot assure them they will not be attacked by a male they know. And we will make sure women are questioned on where they were, why they were there, why that time of day or night, what they were drinking, and how they were dressed during the attack.
We cannot expect students to be given reasonable loans for their college education because it would hurt the economy to socialize such a program and help future citizens get advanced education, but we can expect that large corporations get very reasonable loan rates on their HUGE federal loans after they destroyed the economy and created massive job loss.
We cannot socialize medicine, because although it works quite well in many, many other countries, in our country it will put the decisions of living or dying in the hands of state and federal bureaucrats and not the profit motivated insurance companies where it now lies, and of course, it will cost just too much.
I am happy to see that other countries such as Australia, Denmark, and the Scandinavian countries are moving forward on both social and economic fronts and proving us wrong. Years from now they will be the standard for an advanced society and we will be the joke if we do not change our ways and put all of our people before the shameful profits of the oligarchy.
But then again we can just stimulate our economy by getting involved in another 1,000 year war as one Senator is promoting.
We cannot make school lunches healthier with more fruits and vegetables because the kids won't eat them and the school districts cannot afford the expense. (Yet we seem to be able to afford the health consequences of obesity in our population years down the road.)
We cannot restrict the air pollution with newer laws because it will cost jobs and raise the cost of heating fuel. Yet we can afford to listen to children have asthma attacks every evening and afford to give them more medicine, and perhaps watch them die an early death.
We cannot expect cities to survive on solar panels as they are too expensive. Some costs are projected at $30,000 per house! Yet we can afford the endless resources needed to inject precious fresh water and chemicals into the ground and bring up finite fossil fuels, a process that also results in the release of carcinogenic chemicals into the air into nearby neighborhoods. (I will also mention the idiot Congressional Representative who claimed we would diminish the winds on this earth by using wind power and thus make the earth warmer. Please do not re-elect him.)
We cannot enforce laws that make men behave like civilized human beings, and if they do not, take away their guns, but we can expect women to carry their car keys as weapons on the way to parking lots, and know that the laws cannot assure them they will not be attacked by a male they know. And we will make sure women are questioned on where they were, why they were there, why that time of day or night, what they were drinking, and how they were dressed during the attack.
We cannot expect students to be given reasonable loans for their college education because it would hurt the economy to socialize such a program and help future citizens get advanced education, but we can expect that large corporations get very reasonable loan rates on their HUGE federal loans after they destroyed the economy and created massive job loss.
We cannot socialize medicine, because although it works quite well in many, many other countries, in our country it will put the decisions of living or dying in the hands of state and federal bureaucrats and not the profit motivated insurance companies where it now lies, and of course, it will cost just too much.
I am happy to see that other countries such as Australia, Denmark, and the Scandinavian countries are moving forward on both social and economic fronts and proving us wrong. Years from now they will be the standard for an advanced society and we will be the joke if we do not change our ways and put all of our people before the shameful profits of the oligarchy.
But then again we can just stimulate our economy by getting involved in another 1,000 year war as one Senator is promoting.
Saturday, June 14, 2014
Traveling with Tabor, Norman Rockwell Style
I was going to avoid posting travel photos, because I do tend to feel a little like Betty White who when discovering that people posted their travel photos on Facebook explained that during her younger years "Seeing pictures of people's vacations was considered a punishment." Some of you remember those slide shows at neighbor's houses?
Well, it appears some of you are masochists and wanted a more visual version of my recent trip with family. Because I want you to think we are just a really happy, wholesome, all American family I have filtered out all the bad stuff on the photos. ;-) The filters are from some free software I downloaded off the Internet (Xero) and other filters from software I own.
We did not walk into the campground, as someone asked. With all the stuff we brought in the back of three cars, that would have been a real effort. We drove right up to the front doors of the three cabins (one off to the right in the photo below.)
We did take one small hike down the hill to the Blackwater Falls.
We did take one ride up to the top of one mountain on a ski lift and found it was the best place to have a picnic. What a view!!
We did check out the yellow of buttercups and we did blow dandelion heads all over the place. (Isn't this just so Norman Rockwell?)
The only source of water was from the well and the kids made a game of it! What was wrong with those pioneer children who considered it a chore?
We sat around a campfire and played songs...so romantic.
We took a small hike to the nearby fire lookout. Some of us ran and some of us sauntered toward our view from the tops of spruce trees. One side was hidden in clouds and the other side gave us the view we were looking for.
While I told you we got lost...it was in pastoral fields of spring green!!
There, have I painted this trip as a perfect experience?
Well, it appears some of you are masochists and wanted a more visual version of my recent trip with family. Because I want you to think we are just a really happy, wholesome, all American family I have filtered out all the bad stuff on the photos. ;-) The filters are from some free software I downloaded off the Internet (Xero) and other filters from software I own.
We did not walk into the campground, as someone asked. With all the stuff we brought in the back of three cars, that would have been a real effort. We drove right up to the front doors of the three cabins (one off to the right in the photo below.)
We did take one small hike down the hill to the Blackwater Falls.
We did take one ride up to the top of one mountain on a ski lift and found it was the best place to have a picnic. What a view!!
We did check out the yellow of buttercups and we did blow dandelion heads all over the place. (Isn't this just so Norman Rockwell?)
The only source of water was from the well and the kids made a game of it! What was wrong with those pioneer children who considered it a chore?
We sat around a campfire and played songs...so romantic.
We took a small hike to the nearby fire lookout. Some of us ran and some of us sauntered toward our view from the tops of spruce trees. One side was hidden in clouds and the other side gave us the view we were looking for.
While I told you we got lost...it was in pastoral fields of spring green!!
There, have I painted this trip as a perfect experience?
Thursday, June 12, 2014
Long Weekend
Last weekend we celebrated Father's Day, yes, early. My daughter had planned a long weekend away in a (another) state campground at some rustic cabins knowing that my husband loved being in the outdoors hiking all day and then sitting around a campfire as the sun set and dinner was cooked over an open fire. My daughter, who has a very demanding job as a director of some such or other and is the mother of three all under nine, planned all the activities, made the reservations, planned the menus, and packed all the food, and packed all the stuff needed for her three children as well. This cannot be my gene pool, but perhaps I can ride the thrilling tail of this rocket. My son and his wife also joined us.
We always have S'mores (graham crackers, campfire toasted marshmallows and chocolate sections all put together like a sandwich) for dessert in the summer if there is a fire. But this time daughter saw one of those new Pinterest ideas and also packed some sugar cones, miniature marshmallows, chocolate chips and sliced strawberries and whole bananas to slice. When the oldest grandson saw all this chocolate and sweet stuff he said gleefully, "Wow. This isn't going to be a very healthy camping trip!" We filled the cones with the above, wrapped them in heavy duty foil and then placed them on the very warm coals at the end of our meal of foil dinners (meat, veggies, etc.) to heat up for a few minutes before dessert. They were delicious and cool enough to be handheld!
I could post a bunch of photos to prove all the fun we had on trails, on rocky outlooks, at the top of spruce forests and at one huge waterfall, but instead I will tell you that we went to the mountains of West Virginia and got lost several times on winding dusty roads with no signs before we found our cabins tucked away in some lone valley. When we reached the campground we struggled for some time before we got the lock combination on the road gate to work so that we could get in. Hubby forgot the fire starters, but being a former Eagle Scout he managed to get enough twigs, with grandchildren help, to start a great campground fire. Son, daughter-in-law, and granddaughter were the only ones who could carry a tune while son played his guitar, but it still made for a lovely accompaniment to our evening fire sitting. And one little mouse managed to eat through the plastic cooking oil container during the night which kept me a bit awake in my sleeping bag in the dark and otherwise silent cabin. We still managed to end up smiling all the way there and back.
Some of the pretty photos of the great outdoors will go on my other blog.
We always have S'mores (graham crackers, campfire toasted marshmallows and chocolate sections all put together like a sandwich) for dessert in the summer if there is a fire. But this time daughter saw one of those new Pinterest ideas and also packed some sugar cones, miniature marshmallows, chocolate chips and sliced strawberries and whole bananas to slice. When the oldest grandson saw all this chocolate and sweet stuff he said gleefully, "Wow. This isn't going to be a very healthy camping trip!" We filled the cones with the above, wrapped them in heavy duty foil and then placed them on the very warm coals at the end of our meal of foil dinners (meat, veggies, etc.) to heat up for a few minutes before dessert. They were delicious and cool enough to be handheld!
I could post a bunch of photos to prove all the fun we had on trails, on rocky outlooks, at the top of spruce forests and at one huge waterfall, but instead I will tell you that we went to the mountains of West Virginia and got lost several times on winding dusty roads with no signs before we found our cabins tucked away in some lone valley. When we reached the campground we struggled for some time before we got the lock combination on the road gate to work so that we could get in. Hubby forgot the fire starters, but being a former Eagle Scout he managed to get enough twigs, with grandchildren help, to start a great campground fire. Son, daughter-in-law, and granddaughter were the only ones who could carry a tune while son played his guitar, but it still made for a lovely accompaniment to our evening fire sitting. And one little mouse managed to eat through the plastic cooking oil container during the night which kept me a bit awake in my sleeping bag in the dark and otherwise silent cabin. We still managed to end up smiling all the way there and back.
Some of the pretty photos of the great outdoors will go on my other blog.
Wednesday, June 11, 2014
See Ya.
Not blogging since I was away for the long weekend because I had a bunch of laundry to do, a bunch of email to delete, a bunch of bills to pay and then all got interrupted by this after the morning storm.
The big culprit, the 30 foot pine tree, had been leaning for a year after the last storm and so when he finally gave his last sigh this morning he brought down a locust, a dogwood and a maple in front of him!! At least he left my bay shrub and the little landscape bed safe.
We are busy cutting wood, and hauling branches. See you later.
The big culprit, the 30 foot pine tree, had been leaning for a year after the last storm and so when he finally gave his last sigh this morning he brought down a locust, a dogwood and a maple in front of him!! At least he left my bay shrub and the little landscape bed safe.
We are busy cutting wood, and hauling branches. See you later.
Friday, June 06, 2014
Getting More Zen
More on the theme of my prior posts, living and dying.
I had a big crush on a certain guy in my younger years and this conversation written by his daughter when she questioned him about death and heaven and ever seeing her grandparents...his parents... again reflects his character and soul and is probably why I felt so inspired when watching his show:
"“You are alive right this second. That is an amazing thing,” they told me. When you consider the nearly infinite number of forks in the road that lead to any single person being born, they said, you must be grateful that you’re you at this very second. Think of the enormous number of potential alternate universes where, for example, your great-great-grandparents never meet and you never come to be. Moreover, you have the pleasure of living on a planet where you have evolved to breathe the air, drink the water, and love the warmth of the closest star. You’re connected to the generations through DNA — and, even farther back, to the universe, because every cell in your body was cooked in the hearts of stars. We are star stuff, my dad famously said, and he made me feel that way."
The man, of course, was Carl Sagan, a magical, happy, elf of a man who loved his universe. The newer version of a Cosmos explorer, Neil deGrasse Tyson, is more of a teddy bear type who can scare you ever so slightly with his passion for knowledge. Yet, I feel safe with him as a guide through this universe, as well.
Thus, when thinking about death, I think about Carl Sagan and I get more Zen about life.
I had a big crush on a certain guy in my younger years and this conversation written by his daughter when she questioned him about death and heaven and ever seeing her grandparents...his parents... again reflects his character and soul and is probably why I felt so inspired when watching his show:
"“You are alive right this second. That is an amazing thing,” they told me. When you consider the nearly infinite number of forks in the road that lead to any single person being born, they said, you must be grateful that you’re you at this very second. Think of the enormous number of potential alternate universes where, for example, your great-great-grandparents never meet and you never come to be. Moreover, you have the pleasure of living on a planet where you have evolved to breathe the air, drink the water, and love the warmth of the closest star. You’re connected to the generations through DNA — and, even farther back, to the universe, because every cell in your body was cooked in the hearts of stars. We are star stuff, my dad famously said, and he made me feel that way."
The man, of course, was Carl Sagan, a magical, happy, elf of a man who loved his universe. The newer version of a Cosmos explorer, Neil deGrasse Tyson, is more of a teddy bear type who can scare you ever so slightly with his passion for knowledge. Yet, I feel safe with him as a guide through this universe, as well.
Thus, when thinking about death, I think about Carl Sagan and I get more Zen about life.
Wednesday, June 04, 2014
Tick-Tock---How Do You Measure Time?
Two months ago one of our volunteers started giving so much of her time to the various group's projects. When I asked about it to a friend, I was told that her husband had died recently without any warning.
My neighbor emailed me last month that the bearded man that jogs down our road every evening from another neighborhood had died of a heart attack.
My dear husband had his fishing trip cancelled two weeks ago because his fishing buddy had a "little" heart attack and is now awaiting surgery on that.
My neighbor on the right side needs to have back surgery to alleviate some serious pain, but he has to have surgery on an embolism near his heart first.
I missed the busy sound of the neighbor on my left side this week and find from a phone call from his wife that he had a "hard" pearl shaped blockage in an artery and had to have bypass surgery. He is still in a lot of pain.
I used to joke with my husband that if he kept going down to check on his trees in the ravine he needed to let me know because he could pass out and I would never know where he was. This is no longer a joke. I admit that I think about how I would deal with life if he passed on before me. I envision we have decades ahead of us, but no one really knows how much time they have, do they? I wonder if I would have the strength I see in the women around me and the bloggers in front of me.
(About fifteen years ago I told my son at dinner that I hated when the phone rang because I was afraid that one of my parents had passed on. He looked at me with that insightful realization we all get at sometime in our lives. Both parents have since passed on, but I still hate the sound of the phone ringing in the early evening or at night. )
Sunday, June 01, 2014
The Greatest Generation
She is small and wrinkled like a blonde raisen, with dark button eyes intense in their observation of those heads close to hers. There is a small permanent smile on the 87-year-old face. And she has shrunk again this year becoming more like a house mouse.
I move gently around her, afraid I might break that fragile frame with a bump. She moves with less care and faster than one expects through the crowd of our peers. She earned her first college degree the year I was born which intimidates me in no small way. What magic I wish I had to have seen the fire in those intense eyes when she was 20.
She also brings something tremendously delicious to each meeting. Something that tastes as if it came from an award winning European bakery. Something with chocolate and buttercream and that has more calories than she carries in that tiny body, and yet, she dares to call herself a nutritionist!
She approaches me with a miniscule frown between her brows and takes a deep breath before she thrusts the paper beneath my nose and begins her questions and critical comments and barely waits for my response to each. Then without pause she turns toward her next victim and throws a smile over her shoulder as she comments, "Well, just so you understand for next time!" and she shuffles on. I would lose in a debate with her hands down.
She has three beautiful daughters who are leaders in their own great generations and all stand a head above her as if they were well-selected hybrids of her gene pool. Had she been born in Germany during the great war, her gene pool would have been ended on her way to synagogue. None of us would have felt her ripples on the water of the community she graces.
Last week she won a prestigious award for the giving of her time. Her mother and grandmother lived to 103, so she is not done yet!
I move gently around her, afraid I might break that fragile frame with a bump. She moves with less care and faster than one expects through the crowd of our peers. She earned her first college degree the year I was born which intimidates me in no small way. What magic I wish I had to have seen the fire in those intense eyes when she was 20.
She also brings something tremendously delicious to each meeting. Something that tastes as if it came from an award winning European bakery. Something with chocolate and buttercream and that has more calories than she carries in that tiny body, and yet, she dares to call herself a nutritionist!
She approaches me with a miniscule frown between her brows and takes a deep breath before she thrusts the paper beneath my nose and begins her questions and critical comments and barely waits for my response to each. Then without pause she turns toward her next victim and throws a smile over her shoulder as she comments, "Well, just so you understand for next time!" and she shuffles on. I would lose in a debate with her hands down.
She has three beautiful daughters who are leaders in their own great generations and all stand a head above her as if they were well-selected hybrids of her gene pool. Had she been born in Germany during the great war, her gene pool would have been ended on her way to synagogue. None of us would have felt her ripples on the water of the community she graces.
Last week she won a prestigious award for the giving of her time. Her mother and grandmother lived to 103, so she is not done yet!
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
That Is Not Fair
There were interesting comments on my prior post. I just wanted to clarify that I was not against the Afghan immigrants moving here, working here, and going to school here, and of course, spending money here! I am assuming that those who waited on me were citizens of the United States although still having close ties to their homeland. That freedom is what makes this country great. Yes, we have those Americans who are prejudiced against these folks and that really came to the foreground after 9/11. But we also have laws that protect them against most of that.
I just keep trying to get my mind around helping a country that has a large wealthy class while our middle class is shrinking.
I just had problems with the dichotomy of having so many of our college graduates not finding jobs and carrying college loans with a Congress that does not seem to care to support our own college students while voting for a war.
I have problems with our soldiers families living on food stamps after protecting Afghans from an invasion in their country with a U.S. Congress that has vetoed several veteran's support bills this past year that may have also avoided this health care issue.
I guess I also was having trouble with life not being fair. But then...when has it ever been?
I just keep trying to get my mind around helping a country that has a large wealthy class while our middle class is shrinking.
I just had problems with the dichotomy of having so many of our college graduates not finding jobs and carrying college loans with a Congress that does not seem to care to support our own college students while voting for a war.
I have problems with our soldiers families living on food stamps after protecting Afghans from an invasion in their country with a U.S. Congress that has vetoed several veteran's support bills this past year that may have also avoided this health care issue.
I guess I also was having trouble with life not being fair. But then...when has it ever been?
Friday, May 23, 2014
City Conversations
I was at a LARGE eyeglasses shop trying to select new frames for my new prescription. I update my glasses about once every 5 or 6 years because insurance covers such a small part and I tend to like only those designer frames. I think eyeglass frames are the biggest rip-offs on the face of the planet and if I had decided to be a designer, that is the direction I would have headed.
But this is not about my going slowly blind and broke. This is about the people one meets on that journey.
On my drive to the large shopping center with the large eyeglass store (I spend way to much time the country and am impressed by size) I noticed an unusual number of women wearing headdress in hijabs walking along the roadways and in the housing areas as I approached the mall. These were the traditional dark lengthy coverings with neutral head covers...not the exotic mysterious clothing where only netted space for eyes is allowed. They were all ages, some alone and some in groups. It reminded me years ago when shopping this same mall I rarely heard English spoken in the stores. I rarely heard any accent I recognized spoken although all the shoppers were at that time all in western dress.
Now I see many Middle Eastern people in western and traditional dress wandering the mall. The eyeglass store employed ONLY Mid-Eastern people, all dark skinned, dark haired, dramatic looking people speaking with Mid-Eastern accents.
When I had selected my expensive eye wear and handed the tray to one of the clerks, she bubbled brightly helping me choose among the selection as hubby has not a clue. As we measured my eyes, talked about the gazillion choices in lens types she was most friendly before turning me over to a young man for the sale. He and I discussed discounts, insurance, and warrenty and as we waited for the computer to change screens, I said something about data and expressed that probably the NSA was inputting my eye prescription to their database and that was the slow-down.
The young man with a mustache and wearing glasses looked away from the computer screen and smiled and said (he had little or no accent) that he was sure the NSA was tracking him and his computer and phone calls.
I asked if he thought that was because he was from the Mid-East. He responded that "No." he had been born in Connecticut, but his mother was from Afghanistan and currently worked as a contractor for the US Army and was in Afghanistan translating. We talked briefly about the book "A Thousand Splendid Suns" by Khaled Hosseini and "In My Father's Country" by Saima Wahab, the latter a true story about a woman who was doing what his mother was doing. Like US Southern writers, Middle-Eastern writers have their unique style which means they tend to have a rich way of describing things and a great complexity in their characters.
The flamboyant, dramatic looking woman returned at the end of the sale to measure me for sunglass frames which were next on my way into debt. Since we had been chatting so comfortably about love and marriage and having children...something us old folks can get young folks to do...I asked why there were so many people from Afghanistan in this area. She responded that the Afghan government paid for them to go to school here, paid for their airfare, their schooling, their living expense and their health care! She could not explain why this area was the one selected, but we were close to DC so that might have something to do with it. Clearly they brought their large families along.
I could not help but feel chagrined that we send our young men and women to live in tents, eat canned or dried food, and risk their lives every day, so that these very wealthy citizens of another country can come here.
It did not ease the sour feeling in my gut when upon leaving I passed a beautiful young woman in a flowing pastel silk hijab sitting on a bench in the mall center using her cell phone which was attached to a huge jewel-encrusted chain around her neck looking like someone who belonged on Rodeo Drive in California...or more likely in a nightclub in the Mid-East.
But this is not about my going slowly blind and broke. This is about the people one meets on that journey.
On my drive to the large shopping center with the large eyeglass store (I spend way to much time the country and am impressed by size) I noticed an unusual number of women wearing headdress in hijabs walking along the roadways and in the housing areas as I approached the mall. These were the traditional dark lengthy coverings with neutral head covers...not the exotic mysterious clothing where only netted space for eyes is allowed. They were all ages, some alone and some in groups. It reminded me years ago when shopping this same mall I rarely heard English spoken in the stores. I rarely heard any accent I recognized spoken although all the shoppers were at that time all in western dress.
Now I see many Middle Eastern people in western and traditional dress wandering the mall. The eyeglass store employed ONLY Mid-Eastern people, all dark skinned, dark haired, dramatic looking people speaking with Mid-Eastern accents.
When I had selected my expensive eye wear and handed the tray to one of the clerks, she bubbled brightly helping me choose among the selection as hubby has not a clue. As we measured my eyes, talked about the gazillion choices in lens types she was most friendly before turning me over to a young man for the sale. He and I discussed discounts, insurance, and warrenty and as we waited for the computer to change screens, I said something about data and expressed that probably the NSA was inputting my eye prescription to their database and that was the slow-down.
The young man with a mustache and wearing glasses looked away from the computer screen and smiled and said (he had little or no accent) that he was sure the NSA was tracking him and his computer and phone calls.
I asked if he thought that was because he was from the Mid-East. He responded that "No." he had been born in Connecticut, but his mother was from Afghanistan and currently worked as a contractor for the US Army and was in Afghanistan translating. We talked briefly about the book "A Thousand Splendid Suns" by Khaled Hosseini and "In My Father's Country" by Saima Wahab, the latter a true story about a woman who was doing what his mother was doing. Like US Southern writers, Middle-Eastern writers have their unique style which means they tend to have a rich way of describing things and a great complexity in their characters.
The flamboyant, dramatic looking woman returned at the end of the sale to measure me for sunglass frames which were next on my way into debt. Since we had been chatting so comfortably about love and marriage and having children...something us old folks can get young folks to do...I asked why there were so many people from Afghanistan in this area. She responded that the Afghan government paid for them to go to school here, paid for their airfare, their schooling, their living expense and their health care! She could not explain why this area was the one selected, but we were close to DC so that might have something to do with it. Clearly they brought their large families along.
I could not help but feel chagrined that we send our young men and women to live in tents, eat canned or dried food, and risk their lives every day, so that these very wealthy citizens of another country can come here.
It did not ease the sour feeling in my gut when upon leaving I passed a beautiful young woman in a flowing pastel silk hijab sitting on a bench in the mall center using her cell phone which was attached to a huge jewel-encrusted chain around her neck looking like someone who belonged on Rodeo Drive in California...or more likely in a nightclub in the Mid-East.
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