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Friday, December 30, 2016

A chilly Friday in San Antonio

My physical therapist told me today about her travels to Italy and recommended a site called Best Italian Vacations.  That's what I want to do this year, return to Italy.  Anybody want to join me?

Then I went downtown to the Nix to redeem a GroupOn for microdermabrasion.  When I left, I realized I was close to El Mirador with their Friday special of potato enchiladas which I love.  So I went there for lunch.  Unfortunately, they have removed those scrumptious enchiladas from the menu. but after a seven-month remodel, the place is beautiful, stucco walls and wooden ceilings.


Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Minimalists

Just watched this documentary on Netflix--I recommend it if you're looking for inspiration to clean out your closets and pantries and storage rooms!

Too many things, too much stuff, they say, can actually diminish our happiness.  What's it all for?  How much do we really need?

I like pretty things and books, but I have everything I need and want.  I'm going to try not to buy one more thing until I actually need it.  Like butter.  I'm out of butter.

What if we stopped buying material gifts for each other and instead gave each other experiences?  Most of my friends and I long ago decided to stop buying presents, and it's simplified our lives.  We prefer a cup of soup, cornbread, a shared movie.

The Minimalists suggest sharing--not going out and buying a tool or any other item if you're just going to use it once.  Just as I was writing that, Angela called to see if she could borrow my blower to clean up her yard for her little boy!

If you want inspiration on decluttering, check out this website:

http://www.theminimalists.com


Angels in Plain Sight

Today, after I bottled kombucha, washed clothes and the car, Angela came to clean my house for the second time.  She came at noon, left at dark.

When I popped in to pay her, she was raking the leaves in my yard!  "I hope you don't mind," she said, "But I just love doing this.  And I LOVE your blower!"

Mind???  She's a strong and meticulous worker, better than most men.  My house sparkles and my yard is clean, all in one day.

I was ecstatic.  I had already raked up two puny bags yesterday and gave out of steam.  Now I have fifteen beautiful brown bags filled with pecan leaves!

"You're an angel!" I said--then thought, I bet with her name, she hears that all the time.

I'd already texted the yard man I used last spring and he hadn't gotten back to me, so voila! I now have a Go-To Person.  Everyone needs a go-to person, especially those of us who live alone and sometimes need little jobs done between big ones.

Angela brings her 20-year-old daughter, Samantha, and they are both excellent workers and such sweet people.  Samantha was able to raise the Murphy bed for me and found a ring I'd been looking for, under my bed.

She also has a 17-year-old daughter and a four-year-old son, the daughter keeping the baby while she works.  On Christmas Eve, her house on Cincinnati was broken into and all her Christmas presents stolen along with her television and the food in her freezer.  That same week, her 58-year-old father died.

"I'll just be glad when this year is over," she said, continuing to bag up leaves.

"But as for the presents?  The thief will be disappointed.  They were just things from the dollar store!"


Post-Christmas

Christmas day included patches of gladness and was capped off with seeing LION (excellent!) with Freda and sharing her Christmas dinner from Central Market.  Otherwise, I was out of sorts most of the day.

I prefer Halloween and Valentine's Day over the ones that have all these expectations attached.  Norman Rockwell and Hallmark pretty much set us all up for disappointment on the ways that certain big red-letter days are celebrated, and with whom.

Freda said, "Maybe those of you who grew up with Christmas have more to deal with because you're trying to replicate past Christmases."

Next year, I'm going to be proactive, maybe travel to some country where Christmas music is not piped into stores for two months and ornaments for sale in October.  I'll be happy to find a traveling companion, a friend who wants to run away, or Carlene, or maybe my new romantic companion, the one I think I'll make up ahead of time so I will recognize him when he appears out of the blue.  But I'm not holding my breath on that one!






2016 Roster

 “Like a bird on a wire / Like a drunk in a midnight choir / I have tried, in my way, to be free...."
                               Leonard Cohen "Bird on a Wire"

2016 has been the dying year of Leonard Cohen and John Glenn,  Patty Duke and Morley Safer, Pat Conroy and Elie Wiesel, Gwen Ifill and Harper Lee, Mohamed Ali and Merle Haggard,  and so many more.

Every year's end, the names of the famous are read--movie stars, makers of art, music and literature, and those who left marks of other kinds--all part of a graduation roster for those whose year it was to peel away from the tribe.

Many left behind literature and music--Elie Wiesel's "Night," Harper Lee's "To Kill A Mockingbird" and Pat Conroy's "Prince of Tides."   One stepped on the moon.  Morley and Gwen interviewed presidents and politicians.  Mohammed Ali was a prize fighter, Patty Duke a child movie star.  Here's to the graduates of the class of 2016--in their own words:

"It’s never an insult to be called what somebody thinks is a bad name. It just shows you how poor that person is, it doesn’t hurt you.”  Harper Lee: To Kill a Mockingbird

"Some people, you have to grit your teeth in order to stay in the same room as them, but you get on and ask the questions you assume most of the people watching want to ask. " Morley Safer

"I'm not interested in my legacy. I made up a word: 'live-acy.' I'm more interested in living."  John Glenn

"I'm a teacher and a writer; my life is words. When I see the denigration of language, it hurts me, and it's easy to denigrate a word by trivializing it."  Elie Wiesel

"It isn't the mountain ahead to climb that wears you out; it's the pebble in your shoe."  Mohammed Ali

"I don't really understand that process called reincarnation but if there is such a thing I'd like to come back as my daughter's dog."  Leonard Cohen















Saturday, December 24, 2016

My Favorite Text of the Season

From Daisy

I love you....my first and only Santa Claus!


San Diego Serenade by Tom Waits, 1974

Just discovered this song on Pandora today--love  it!  Having discovered him, I've just learned from Freda that PBS is broadcasting a concert of Waits, a classic from 1979, on December 29th!


I never saw the morning 'til I stayed up all night
I never saw the sunshine 'til you turned out the light
I never saw my hometown until I stayed away too long
I never heard the melody, until I needed a song.

I never saw the white line, 'til I was leaving you behind
I never knew I needed you 'til I was a caught up in a bind
I never spoke "I love you" 'til I cursed you in vain,
I never felt my heartstrings until I nearly went insane.

I never saw the east coast 'til I moved to the west
I never saw the moonlight until it shone off your breast
I never saw your heart 'til someone tried to steal it, tried to steal it away
I never saw your tears until they rolled down your face.




Some favorite Christmas stories

1.  A cat healer in the 'hood

Jan just came over for a visit and told me this story.  Kate, her daughter, woke up with a blinding migraine headache, just miserable.  Their cat sensed it, got on Kate's head and gave her a cat-treatment of acupuncture/acupressure.  (She's never done that before!) and Kate's head immediately got all better.

2. A box of clothes

One year, Gerlinde filled a big furniture box with the best and newest-looking children's clothes from all the thrift shops in town.  Just before Christmas she delivered it to a women's shelter for all the children living with their mothers there.  I just love this story and want to do a version of it for next year.

3. A bad story followed by a good one--also from Jan

A local shelter has a warehouse in which they store Christmas presents for the kids all year long.  Someone broke in and cleaned them out just five days from Christmas.  A wealthy woman who heard about it on the news delivered a van-load of presents and $135,000!

4. Veronica texted me this picture of Nathan saying, "He loves the books!"


5.  My cousin Sharon gave her mother Dot a box with the word JOY on it and this note:  "Thank you for teaching me how to open a box of joy."




Friday, December 23, 2016

Living Long, Living Strong

Just watched Tony Bennet's 90th birthday party online (NBC) and so enjoyed the music, including k.d. Lang, Bob Dylan, Diana Krall, Andrea Bocelli, Stevie Wonder, Billy Joel,  and others.  Who knew Kevin Spacey could sing?

The most inspiring part, to me, was watching the animated and kind face of Tony Bennet as he responded to other singers and hearing him sing "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" and three other songs.

We need more role models of people continuing to do the work they love into their nineties.

Esther Vexler, featured in Bonnie Lyons' and Deb Fields'  book, Wonderful Old Women, taught yoga into her nineties and died at 98, shortly after her husband died at 101.

Younger people doing what they love is remarkable, but people who don't stop at 90 are the real beacons to the rest of us.




Thursday, December 22, 2016

Three Terrific Things

Yesterday Carlene told me she was having vertigo.  But today--yay!--she went to the doctor and he gave her A plus on every single test, assuring her that "if she keeps walking, eating well, and sleeping well, " she'll live to be a hundred!

That made my day, of course!

Then I got another day-maker--pictures of my daughter, Day, and her two boys visiting Santa!

Jackson, Santa and Day

Marcus showing off his new haircut
Finally--

After returning the creepy pink troll to Build A Bear, I remembered I had a Group-On for a facial at the Tai Chi Chinese place on Huebner.  That and a bit of acupressure by a man with super strong hands made my face feel a lot newer than it looks.





72 Raisins?

Truth is slippery lately.  Facts can be made up, ignored, or exaggerated to support any point of view one already has.  We've all probably experienced the devastation of lies on a personal level, but now we have it on a grand scale like never before in my lifetime.

One particularly permicious form of lying is stereotyping, lumping all individuals in a box according to race, religion, sexual preference, gender, age, or nationality.

More than just sloppy language, stereotyping leads to disastrous actions against the people in the box.  It makes them angry, understandably, and too often those people strike back in violence.  It strips their rights and allows unthinkable laws to be passed that damage them.

In CNN's excellent program, "Why They Hate Us," I learned that many angry young men in Muslim countries who are perpetrating violence are not even particularly religious, but that they use isolated Koran verse to justify expressions of  the violence and hatred they already feel.  The president-elect has inflated the percentage of Muslims who are terrorists (it's actually less than 1%) to "about 28%."  When made-up statistics and percentages are shouted loudly enough and long enough, they pass for truth.

Stereotyping any group of people--Mexicans to Muslims, women to whites, gay to straight--is the most dangerous thing we can do.  Instead of calming the waters, it whips them into a furious storm.

Everybody knows that the Koran promises martyrs 72 virgins, right?   I've heard it so often I thought it was a basic tenet of Islam.

A reform Muslim educator, one of the spokespeople on the CNN special, says, "No, no, that is not in the Koran!  It's a mistranslation.  What the Koran actually says is that in the afterlife the martyrs will have a lush life including 72 raisins!"  Imagine the disappointment of those who go into the afterlife expecting a harem of virgins only to get ingredients for a fruit cake!




Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Cookie Party at Gerlinde's

My friend Gerlinde moved here from Germany in the early Sixties, just a few years ahead of me. Kate and Charlotte were practically neighbors back in the Sixties (same graduating class, different schools) but it took a long time for them to meet--when we were in a group together a couple of years ago.  We became something of a foursome when we all retired from that group, now calling ourselves "the drop-outs."

Gerlinde married Tim, a self-admittedly "imperfect" man we all think is quite wonderful, and they live in a beautiful artful house and travel all over the world.  We know Tim as a maker of excellent coffee (according to the coffee lovers) and a super host.

This afternoon was like an old-time Christmas party--with Gerlinde's yummy homemade cookies (five kinds) and Tim's fancy coffee that Kate and Charlotte rave about.

Among the pretty heirloom ornaments on their tree, they have a "fallen angel" that looks remarkably like Kate-with-wings doing a nosedive down the tree.  On the hearth is a handsome wooden Santa that looks like the Real McCoy, but it turns out he was formerly Chinese, his features and attire repainted by Gerlinde.

What a great way to spend a pre-Christmas afternoon--sharing books and magazines, cookies and conversation!



Kate, Charlotte, and Gerlinde


Santa Clause

The Santa Clause of Coffee, a.k.a. Tim



The Ups and Downs of Merry

I just woke up to the "morning after."  The presents are all open, the boxes and wrappings in recycling, one pink troll to exchange for something like a puppy or a cow or whatever strikes Elena's fancy.

Then I drove to my favorite coke spot, as always, and the sweet woman at the window gave me my usual larger-than-asked-for coke with a smile on her face, as always, called me "Mama" as always, wiped it clean on the outside, and we chatted about Christmas.  I asked her if she had finished her Christmas shopping for the boys and she said no, and I said well, you still have a few days left.  Without changing her expression, she said, "I'm working straight through til Christmas, I got two presents for each, that's all I can afford this year....But that's just the way it is."

Holidays evoke all kinds of merry and not-so-merry in the world.  I chided myself for feeling bit sad that mine is over when this young woman has two little boys who would only be getting two presents this year and whose mother was working hard for those, serving cokes and burgers and smiles to people who had plenty.

I'm going to buy them some books and deliver them in the morning.  

Nathan's first present were books--two novels and two books of science experiments.  "Are all my presents going to be books?" he asked, trying not to look too disappointed.

But this morning, Will wrote that he heard hysterical laughter and went in to see what was happening.  Nathan was reading one of the novels!

Little boys might not like books so much at first sight, but they are the gifts that keep on giving--we all know that.


Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Christmas at my house



The Bingo Winner



Veronica doing a cartwheel

Will doing a cartwheel

Elena doing a somersault



Elena had asked for a pink troll from Build a Bear--which she got, along with clothes.  She took one look at the troll and said, "I don't want it!"  But she loved the clothes and we're all set to return the troll to Build a Bear and exchange it for another pet of her choosing.

Nathan loved his Star Wars suitcase and books and took Elena aside to tell her she'd "hurt Yenna's feelings" and that she should want a troll!  But at four, almost five, you know what you want and what you don't want and a troll, it turns out, doesn't fit the bill this particular Christmas.

I had to admit, seeing it myself, that it did verge a bit on the creepy side.

What saved the day was a pegasus jewelry box--with which she was thrilled.

It's been a wonderful day!








NPR's Diane Rehm

I'm going to miss Diane on the Diane Rehm Show!  Someone will take her place after next week, but I'm sorry she's retiring so recently after Garrison Keillor did the same thing. I miss them both already.

Fortunately, Diane is doing a weekly podcast and her past shows will remain  online:

http://thedianerehmshow.org/shows/2016-12-20/faith-leaders-on-efforts-to-unite-a-divided-country

Since I don't send holiday cards....

I don't get very many, but I enjoy the ones I do get, and I'm going to try to remember to send some myself next year.

Yesterday I got one that moved me so much, and it came just when I needed to hear what Nellie had to say!  On the front there was an angel, and when I read her words I felt angel dust.  So I wrote her to thank her for it and tell her that it arrived on a day when I felt low, and this is what she wrote back:

I am so glad the angel has arrived! Hope you feel better today and can enjoy your family. Feel the love that surrounds you!

There's lots of it, and the other feels are just weather . Weather will pass.

Much love, Nellie


"The other feels are just weather!"  What a great line to save and re-read.  What an inspiration to send words of encouragement to our friends, even when we don't know how they might be feeling when they land in their mailbox.

Thanks to pharmaceuticals and a reminder to wear gloves from Carlene, I'm feeling better today, just have stiff white hands.  It will pass.  It's just weather.


Monday, December 19, 2016

800 Words

Remember Bridey Carter, those of you who watched all 8 seasons of McLeod's Daughters along with me a few years ago?

She showed up again in a series called 800 Words--also Australian--on Acorn TV (which you can subscribe to for all the good British series, FYI)

In this series, a man's wife dies and he takes his two teenaged children to live in New Zealand.  I've only watched a little, but it's a lighthearted show, and Bridie (Jan) is the man's editor.  He writes a column each week for the newspaper, and it has to be 800 words, not a word more or less.




A Day of Feeling Ninety

Maybe it's the cold weather that's the trigger, maybe something I ate--but today was my first really severe fibro day in a long time.  Everything from head to toe hurts, and it's hard to walk or cook or do anything.  Suddenly, I feel ninety--not Carlene's kind of ninety but the other kind. Fingers go stiff and white; opening jars, squeezing lotion, slicing onions, everything is difficult.

Tomorrow is my day for having Will, Bonnie, Elena and Nathan for our Christmas day, so I'm resorting to drugs--legal ones like ibuprofen, aspirin and traumadol--to feel perky, hope hope hope, tomorrow.

My little white Christmas tree is lit and packages are hidden all over the house and I'm going to pick up food at Big Bib's Barbecue instead of cooking--except for making apple dumplings for dessert.




Sunday, December 18, 2016

A cold Sunday

Made warmer by good friends, hot chili and tamales, and festivity's at Pam's house today.....



Cecelia in Pam's kitchen

Alison--who makes gorgeous hats and shawls
and scarves

Pam, our hostess, maker of the chili
to go with Cecelia's tamales

Pam's cute daughter, Claire


Kate and Loretta--a psychic
who said, "I just have to say this.  I'm not liking being so old!" 

Pam and Cecelia







Saturday, December 17, 2016

Texas Winter

It was 82 degrees today, but the wind is bringing in a cold front, cold enough to wear a coat.  That's Texas.

We tell each other that every year: "82 today, 28 tomorrow, that's Texas."  My neighbor Harvey and I told each other that today.  We're always surprised even though it happens every year.

Pam has planned a party for tomorrow--Cecelia, Kate, Alison, and Loretta--and I've just made some date bars, trying to duplicate the recipe that used to be Pillsbury date bars.  Cecelia is bringing tamales and Pam is making chili.

My kitchen smells like Christmas, dates and cloves and cinnamon.  The windows are frosting over.  It's officially going to be winter when I wake up.  Long time coming.


Lovebug, the Ballerina and Tapper

I had tears throughout the recital today at Raymond Russell Park--Silly Yenna!  It's just that it's so beautiful to watch these tiny people dancing, so wonderful to see Elena's self-confidence and natural rhythm--she gets it from her Mom and her Aunt Day.

And to have a daddy who takes an hour off his shift to bring flowers--she's a lucky girl.










Friday, December 16, 2016

Originality and joie de vivre

A sidelines NBA sportscaster (who also covered the Olympics and World Series),  known for his flamboyant and original attire, died of leukemia yesterday at the age of 65, said,

“I will never give up, and I will never give in. I will continue to keep fighting, sucking the marrow out of life, as life sucks the marrow out of me. I will live my life full of love and full of fun. It’s the only way I know how.”

and:

“I grew up in Batavia, Illinois, a small town out in the corn fields, west of Chicago. It was boring. For our senior picture, they said, ‘black or navy blazer.’ And I thought, Why do I want to look like everybody else? I was a big fan of The Monkees, and I had this electric blue nehru jacket, like one Micky would wear. So I wore that and showed up and they said, ‘We told you: a blue or black sportcoat.’ I argued that it was actually blue, created a little controversy. But, now, you look at the yearbook and everyone looks exactly the same. Except for me.”

and:

“If I’ve learned anything through all of this, it’s that each and every day is a canvas, waiting to be painted — an opportunity for love, for fun, for living, for learning.

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Language Quirks

How about this?  How about a year every decade to get to go back to college and study something new?  Free tuition after forty, leave from work if you're still working.  When I run for president, that's going to be my platform.

What I'd study would be linguistics and photography if this were my year.

Photography I've mostly learned by the seat of my pants, with help from Photography for Dummies, but I'd like to learn much more.

Linguistics has always fascinated me, yet I've never actually taken a course in it.   Today, driving home from physical therapy I was listening to NPR, as I always do in the car, and I heard a young teacher saying, "I see my students in Publix and I'm like HEY, Y'all! and they're like HEY Miss Porter!"

Lately, I've noticed that in people under fifty or so, LIKE has replaced SAID.  I'm curious about that.  I know it started back when my kids were younger but I'm not sure about its origin.

Maybe the teachers are picking it up from their high school students?

Maybe it's a way to switch to present tense and suggest that what was said in the past is being said in the present, or an approximation of actual words spoken?

I can imagine a sentence between girls reporting on an encounter with a boy: "I was like hey, I like you!"

"He was like, hey I like you too, but not like that."

On Facebook, we "like" our friends' posts.  Businesses ask us to "like us on Facebook."

But what do we do when someone posts something sad--like "My dog died"?

Do we "like" that the poor old cranky dog finally died?

Or do we "like"--as in "I read what you wrote"?

If you'd like to read a fascinating book about language, try James Pennebaker's book, The Secret Life of Pronouns.










Advice from a big brother

At the Witte yesterday, Elena pinched her finger a little bit on a door.  She usually shrugs off little injuries: "I'm okay!" but yesterday, she cried for about a half minute.

Nathan, her big brother, reached toward her and patted her back, and she leaned against his little tiny chest as if it were huge and they stood there hugging for a minute.

"Just breathe," he said.  He'd apparently heard someone telling someone that after an injury.

"Because," he added,"If you don't breathe, you will die."

Okay, then.  Everybody please keep breathing!

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

The Witte Museum

Today was a perfect day!  I picked up Nathan first, then Elena--and we went to the Witte to see the children's exhibit.



Me taking an infrared picture of myself


Nathan and Elena learning about the inside of the human body.
"Now I know what my insides look like," Elena said.




Elena in her new skirt from Joy,
along with a signed book she loves


The Artist at Work


Monday, December 12, 2016

An experiment

Sunday night, I watched CNN Heroes--a two-hour tribute to men and women doing extraordinary work in the world.  As I watched it, I realized I was feeling peaceful.  Having recently acquired the skill of recording programs, I saved it to watch again later.

By contrast, when I watch political news, I feel fearful and angry.  I don't want to bury my head in the sand, but I do want to keep my peace when the sand is swirling in storms of rants and tweet tantrums by a man who reminds me of a sixth grade schoolyard bully.

As I watched the close ups and videos of these generous people on CNN Heroes--helping cancer patients ride the currents in kayaks; providing medical care and education for impoverished children, helping disabled children surpass expectations, and more--I noticed that there was a sense of joy in the room.  Everyone was inspired by these people who were willing to extend themselves without personal compensation, sometimes to live in harsh environments and isolated places to teach, heal, and educate.

One fatherless man, for example. After getting in all kinds of trouble with no guidance from a father, he started a training program for other fatherless boys, now fathers, teaching them how to be men and fathers, "not to do to their kids what my father did to me."  One woman built a home for children whose parents were in prison.  Another helps young foster children who have aged out of the system create places to live, then helps them decorate so that they are like real homes, with beds and furniture and artwork on their walls.

Unlike watching politics, when everything contracts into a ball of fear, watching these people making grassroots changes is expansive.  So I'm going to do an experiment and watch more uplifting stories and less politics.

Richard Geer was one of the introducers on CNN Heroes.  He happens to be one of the most handsome and charismatic men on the big screen in my opinion, but maybe his face is a reflection of a good heart, like the woman he introduced.  Like the "heroes" recognized on CNN, he works to make the world better, not just America.  As my friend, the late-Gary Lane used to say, "It's a big world."  I wonder: What if we all saw the great big world through a lens of compassion--instead of watching endless news of a man who sees it through the lenses of money and power?








Sunday, December 11, 2016

Raise your hand if you know what this is...



Typing was the most practical class I ever took in high school--especially since I spend so much time on this quiet little Apple keyboard here.   But we learned on BLIND keyboards--not these fancy ones with letters printed right on the keys where you could see them!

Remember changing the ribbon when the letters got hard to read?

Remember pulling up a key when it got stuck?

Remember how the pages piled up in the trash or on the floor? when, writing term papers, you messed up and had to start all over, over and over?

And how you had to leave space for footnotes at the bottom of each page?

Remember trying to fix mistakes with messy White-Out?

Remember when everyone you knew could write and read in cursive?

Oh, those were the days, weren't they?

Pictures from Thursday Night's Reunion Party

Lea, in the Christmas sweater, is showing the group
her photograph in the book W.O.W.--

"Wonderful Old Women."

I know what you must be thinking: "She can't be Over 80!"
That's what everyone says about Glamorous Lea,
but she insists she is!

Here we have our youngest member, Melissa (40?)
Beside our eldest Lea....
Two Adorables! 

THE WHOLE BUNCH OF US,
even Janet's dog....

Two little Saturday sculptures

Will sent me a text yesterday with this question:  "Can you tell which sculpture belongs to which kid?"

That was easy!  Elena's is whimsical and colorful, every part of the panel covered.  Nathan's more orderly sculpture features clean lines and open spaces.



Elena's

Nathan's

The kindness of friends on a foggy Sunday

Yesterday's writing group was small and intimate, and we spent three hours doing close readings of each other's work.  It's an intense undertaking, but the results can be spectacular: sharing suggestions line by line, then going back to the drawing board and writing a second draft.  Afterwards, I felt exhausted but happy and met Pam at Earl's for chicken fried steak.

Even so, I woke up feeling sort of blue this foggy morning, so decided to drive over to VW to get Tiguan's new tag.  On the way, one of the decade-long members of the Saturday Topo Chicas Group, a dear friend, Victoria, called to talk about yesterday's writing.  She has a voice that's pure sunshine, and we talked as I drove.  When we moved to other subjects besides writing, I felt the tears coming, the ones I'd been holding back long enough to get everything on my list done for the holidays.  Crying is a good thing if you have a friend who doesn't mind!

When I drove into my driveway, there were two packages on the porch.  One was a  round mosaic mirror in reds and purples I'd bought in New York at a Fall Festival, and Mike had crated it so that it arrived without a crack.  The other was a box of books and souvenirs I'd left there--including a book by a Maine memoirist, a recipe book of Southern dishes Carlene had bought for me in Athens, a 2017 calendar from Linda as part of my birthday in Cape Cod.  Vermont, Cape Cod, and Virginia postcards, bumper stickers, and other souvenirs are now scattered on my kitchen table,  memories of my 68th birthday trip to New England.

As I was unwrapping memories and paper and glass, my sweet friend Gerlinde delivered just what I needed--a hot bowl of the most delicious homemade clam chowder.  What perfect timing!  (One of my postcards from Maine featured a clam chowder recipe, but now I don't have to do a thing but heat it up and enjoy it for my Texas Sunday dinner--which I just did and am doing with relish!)

I spent the afternoon in bed perusing my books and watching a movie, then Jan came over to deliver Christmas cookies made by Kate--who broke her foot falling on a slick spot on the floor last week.

Jan told me that this morning in her church, the music director did a program about black gospel music.  "Why do people of all cultures love black gospel music?" he asked.  "Because everyone is enslaved to something."

Later, just now, in the middle of enjoying the best clam chowder ever, Jan reappeared, this time with a plate of Egg Fu Yung and rice, which goes remarkably well with clams.

What great prosperity it is to have amazing friends on a day like today, on any day!












Friday, December 9, 2016

High School

We moved to Lawrenceville my junior year, and I didn't graduate with my class in Cochran, the class of 1966.

Yesterday I got a photo album from the 50-year-reuinion and I had to write Betty (who didn't attend either) and ask her, "Who are all these old people at our reunion?"  She'll know.

I recognized five people--all women.  The men were unrecognizable.  One woman was in a wheel chair, one man was on oxygen, but most of the people seemed to be having a good time dancing and laughing and posing for a group picture the way we did in high school.

There was a panel of memorials to the 17 people who had died since high school--including one couple who died in a plane crash in the 70s.  Their high school pictures were pasted on the board along with information about when they had died and where they were buried.

One was missing.  My first boyfriend in elementary school, a sweet boy named Jim McCoy, died in a car crash around our fortieth birthdays.  In a class of a hundred, it's hard to imagine that one death went unrecognized--but Betty just emailed me that he moved after I did and didn't graduate with the class.

We had a teacher/coach in eighth grade whom most of my classmates love.  I don't love him.  I remember how he gave Jim McCoy a present in front of our whole 8th grade class for being manager of the basketball team, how Jim took the wrapped present and went to the back of the class to open it, and how humiliated he was when he opened it.  It was a box of women's underwear.

Laughter filled the room and I met Jim's eyes and he looked devastated.  His face was deep red and tears were in his eyes.  Coach Niblett seemed to think it was hilarious, as did all the players on the team, but I'm sure Jim remembered that horrible day for the rest of his life.  Bullying is not a new thing.

For many people, high school was a rollicking good time and they still like to reconnect with their classmates every few years.  Probably in part because I was dating a college boy throughout high school, I don't have those same fond memories--except with Betty who can remember all the ups and downs and people in our classes from first grade onward!

High school is such a tiny slice of life, and ours was devoted to conformity and competition.  When you're in high school, that's your world, but when you move far away in time and geography, the opinions of those particular people matter less and less.  Long ago, Betty and I knew that and moved on....

Thursday, December 8, 2016

"Under Different Circumstances"

I'm generally not a watcher of war movies, but HBO's "Band of Brothers" is a compelling series.  It focuses on an actual company of Army paratroopers during World War II, the war of most of our parents' generation.

Each episode opens with interviews with actual survivors, then the rest is powerfully enacted by young actors.  It's the relationship among the "brothers" that matters in this series--as boys on both sides are just that: boys, following orders, often to their death.

During a cease fire, you can hear the German soldiers singing "Silent Night." In close ups of American soldiers, you feel their agony between battles.  As in all war, the players are real people with real families,  playing out what one soldier calls "a game" dictated by the higher ups.  Once in, war is their world, and they cannot afford the luxury of thinking and feeling what they felt in their former worlds.

In any hands-on and high-risk endeavor, a brotherhood of trust comes from risking their lives (or being willing to) for the sake of other people, often for the sake of injured comrades.  These men have only each other as they trudge through snow to kill other men, not unlike themselves except for national ideologies and language.

"You cannot qualify war in harsher terms than I will," wrote William Sherman--who made famous the phrase repeated in every war since: "War is hell."

"War is cruelty, and you cannot refine it; and those who brought war into our country deserve all the curses and maledictions a people can pour out. I know I had no hand in making this war, and I know I will make more sacrifices to-day than any of you to secure peace."

Whether or not war is the path to peace is too big a question for me to address, but what I do know--as a mother of a son, as a grandmother to three boys, is that war is a senseless waste of human beings.  On the news we hear numbers of "troops" killed (in Vietnam, in Afghanistan, in Iraq).  But we rarely see their faces or hear their names. These are real human beings loved by their parents, wives, children, and spouses.  We should see their faces and know their names. Maybe then, we'd find ways to do more to end wars, and not to assume that we--as a country--should spend even more of our national resources to prepare for them.

If the conversations from the top were not peppered with fear and words like "winning" and "defeat," maybe we'd be able to imagine a world in which war was not regarded as the inevitable path to solving every problem between countries.

As one of the veterans of these battles said, "We were all just doing our jobs--the Germans and us.  We were just kids really.  Under different situations, we might have been good friends."








Slowing it Down....

My father-in-law was a boy of the Depression who never got to finish school.  He made it to fourth grade, then went to work as so many children did in those days.  Yet he lived a healthy life until he died in his late-nineties.  My kids tell me that he turned a cartwheel for them in his nineties!

He was a lively and funny man, one of the best storytellers I've ever met. He often told stories of the Depression, and the years his father raised a houseful of kids by himself.  His mother and one of his sisters died in the flu epidemic, and he was left with the remaining twin of the sister who had died, another sister, and two brothers.  Women in the family offered to take one or two children, but he refused to have his children separated.  He could turn even sad stories into hilarious ones. 

When he told stories, he never rushed them.  He told them in such slow and minute detail that we were all captivated, even if we'd heard the same story many times before.  He told about how little Bernice and Myrtle stood on stools to make biscuits when they were too little to reach the counter, and he told about how he stood longingly as his dad hitched up a carriage to go to the store.  "I wanted to go but I stood there with a little stick in my mouth until he said, 'Oh come on, you can ride this time!'"

My father-in-law loved Christmas!  He made me a doll house one year, a tea cart another.  He was more excited than kids on Christmas morning because he had worked for weeks to get ready for that day.

In their house, there was no ripping into presents, no asking ahead for what the kids wanted.  He slowed it down, made it last for hours. 

He had written out little hints on strips of paper. "Go look under the dining chairs" or "It might be in the shop in the boat."  When you got your hint, you ran to find your present, everyone else waiting to see what you'd bring back.  Of course, you didn't open your present until you were back from the search!  After you'd opened it, there was an unspoken agreement that no one moved on to the next package until the gift had been talked about and you'd heard the entire history of the making of it--and until Granddaddy Mark had been thanked profusely.

I'm going to borrow a page from his playbook this year.  I'm not making things out of wood, but I'm going to make little hints and wait for Nathan and Elena (and even their parents) to find each present in a hiding place.  

Too often, after the weeks of choosing and wrapping and shopping, we tear into the gifts under the tree at lightning speed.  Each gift is a gesture of love from the giver and should be savored, bite by bite, like each dish of a delicious homemade meal, not gobbled up like fast-food burgers.  








Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Wednesday

After not sleeping much last night due to back spasms, I'm up and ready to take on the day--and a  woman whose name Kate gave me is going to clean my house while I'm away.

If you need your house cleaned for the holidays or on a regular basis, Kate and I highly recommend Angela for the job.   832 570 4574

Then I'm meeting a few friends to celebrate Miss Kate's birthday at Frederick's and get the rest of my packages in the mail to Georgia and Virginia.

I'm planning a game and present and dinner night at my house for Will, Bonnie and the kids--so exciting to see little ones' eyes all lit up for the holidays!


Tuesday, December 6, 2016

From Bali: A Cure for the Common Cold

https://writingforselfdiscovery.com/2016/12/06/too-much-wind-staying-healthy-in-paradise/

A crystal ball moment

Last summer, I found a bonanza of Christmas ornaments at a garage sale, all brand new.  When I gave them to Elena, she carefully wrapped each of them for each person in her family.  She spent about an hour wrapping and taping them in tissue paper.

For herself, she chose only one--a glass ball with an opening in it revealing two penguins.  "This is my most special thing!" she said.  "I will put it high on the tree so nobody can break it."

The next morning, she woke up and told me she'd had a dream that she had broken her "crystal."
"That made me so sad," she said.

When her parents came in, she was so excited for them to open her presents.  "They always love what I give them," she said looking at me as they unwrapped their ornaments.

"Now for mine!" she said, carefully pulling out her crystal ball ornament with the penguins inside.  In her excitement to show her parents the penguins, an unfortunate thing happened.  The ornament fell to the floor and shattered!

She looked stricken--either by the loss of her treasure or by the echo of her sad dream, but she didn't cry.  She watched as her mom swept up the shards of it and went on with her day.



Monday, December 5, 2016

Books

Tonight, Pam and I were talking about books we're choosing for our grandchildren.  "It's not Christmas without a book," she said.

So true!  And for Pam and most of the people I know, it's not a good day without a dip into or a swim in a book.

I love this quotation from Frederick Buechner, sent to me from Carlene:


Books are to read, but that is by no means the end of it.

The way they are bound, the paper they are printed on, the smell of them (especially if they are either very new or very old), the way the words are fitted to the page, the look of them in the bookcase — sometimes lined up straight as West Point cadets, sometimes leaning against each other for support or lying flat so you have to tip your head sideways to see them properly....Even though you suspect you will probably never get around to them, it is an honor just to have them on your shelves.

Something of what they contains gets into the air you breathe. They are like money in the bank, which is a comfort even though you never spend it. They are prepared to give you all they've got at a moment's notice, but are in no special hurry about it. In the meanwhile they are holding their tongues, even the most loquacious of them, even the most passionate.

They are giving you their eloquent and inexhaustible silence. They are giving you time to find your way to them. Maybe they are giving you time, with or without them, just to find your way.


Tabloid Democracy?

I heard this morning on NPR another story about one impact of fake news.  A man in D.C. walked into a pizzeria with a machine gun because he'd gone there to "investigate" some fake news story about Hillary Clinton running a prostitution ring out of there!

For the past year and a half, we've heard and read countless fake news stories.  According to the NPR report, social media have been deluged with fake news stories, which countless people have read and, apparently, believed.  These stories have been invented by fake news writers to disparage political candidates, but they've had a far-greater impact in making truth slippery.

One of the courses I taught at UTSA was a course in writing argument.  We taught students to consider and research the sources of information and to vet those sources by reading widely on their topics.  The most popular topic back then was abortion--which, after a few years, I refused to allow.  I had abortion fatigue.

We also taught them to consider their own biases.  If we are biased in a certain way, we're much more likely to agree with sources that agree with us.  That's called bias confirmation. To write a persuasive argument, we need to support our propositions with sufficient evidence from credible sources.

Today we are living in a time when truth doesn't seem to matter to many voters whose opinions are swayed by catchy slogans without support and by outright false "news" stories.   While the screaming headlines in grocery store tabloids are obviously false, the National Inquirer has a booming business of people willing to believe whatever they see in print.

What frightens me now is that we are letting down the gates and allowing anyone's trumped up stories pass for truth.  We need courses now in college for media literacy in which students are taught to recognize that "the media" is not one thing, but a conglomeration of things--and that some are outrageously sloppy with facts on the scale of tabloids.  


Pink Poppy Troll....

I hate to admit it, but I love Build-A-Bear--and am glad to have a little one again who likes it, too.  You pick the pet and buy accessories and outfits for it and a little backpack in which to carry your pet.

This year's new pet is a pink poppy troll--and that's what Elena wanted so that's what she's getting, along with two outfits and glasses and a baby troll to keep the generation going.

The big boys want money, and Nathan wants historical fiction, art supplies, and science experiments and, of course, Legos.  I decided to forego the Legos this year because everybody knows that's what he wants and he'll be deluged with them.

I go to North Star Mall about twice a year, so it was a festive morning there.  Teavana Tea is always one of my favorite stops--love that Youthberry Tea!

As much as we all complain about crowded Christmas shopping, I found my one day of it surprisingly enjoyable and festive.  

Sunday, December 4, 2016

W.O.W.

Bonnie Lyons just delivered my first two copies of W.O.W.  She and Deb Field did an amazing job with the interviews and I was honored to be able to photograph these women!

If you are interested, or know people who might be, the books are available through Amazon or directly (at a discounted price) from Bonnie Lyons.

It was so much fun to be a part of this project and meet the women between these purple covers, every one truly inspiring!



Bonnie's friend Margaret Pomeroy did the layout for publication and Bonnie wants to let people know that Margaret is available to do odd jobs, wood work, computer work and just about any other work you might need doing for $20 an hour.  She's expert at so many things and this is how she makes a living, so please call her if you need help with projects during the holidays or afterwards.

Bonnie Lyons:  210 822 5409

Margaret Pomeroy:210-776-7547.   grey.mare@yahoo.com.


Saturday, December 3, 2016

Rain rain rain!

It finally feels a tad like winter, at least sweater-weather winter. The happy deck was washed all night in a downpour, and the front patio is brown with pecan leaves, my one big tree almost bare.

My Sunday writing group meets later this morning, on Saturday for a change.

What a wonderful week it's been so far, wrapping presents to mail to Georgia and Virginia, getting excellent results from physical therapy and other body care, a dinner with friends, lunch yesterday with Kate at Bee's (yummy Mexican food) to celebrate Kate's birthday, and now--to top it all off--much needed rain.

Elena's dance recital was canceled due to the rain, so I'm hoping she's still coming over to spend the night while her parents go to a Christmas party.

And the book?  Bonnie and Deb have written that it's published--a book of interviews they did for which I did the photography--all about wonderful women over 80.  So I'm looking forward to getting my first look at it later today or tomorrow.





Thursday, December 1, 2016

Pixelated People

You may be a pixelated person if.... you ever ask yourself these questions:

Why did I stay in that marriage/job/whatever so long after it stopped being good?

Why do I obsess over things other people don't obsess over so much?

Why do I pick the people and places I pick, even when our closest friends don't get it?

Why do people often advise me to do what they do? *

(*Today Will told Elena, "I'd put that shirt inside the jeans if I were you," to which she said, "But you're not me.  I'm me and this is how I want it.")

I will mercifully restrain myself from making up any more questions because I don't have time at the moment, and anyway I made them up and they have as much scientific validity as a kitchen sponge, but let's start there.

On Tuesday, a friend suggested that we are all made up of parts as distinct as pixels in a digital photograph, and I've been thinking about it ever since.

We stay, obsess, and pick based on the strands in our DNA, our astrological charts, our past experiences, messages from childhood, and other pixel-makers.

According to the Myers Briggs taxonomy, you might be an INFP or an ESFJ or an ENTP, etc.  According to your astrological chart, you might be an Aries or Gemini....  Besides, you've inherited national, religious, and political leanings.  And you've had a childhood unique to you, not even the same as people who grew up in the same house or attended the same schools.

We spend  lifetimes trying to figure out the peculiar person who lives inside our skin. We already have plenty of lenses for describing and labeling our parts, but I'm thinking somebody should create a pixel-print-machine so that we can, on first meeting other people, show our pixel-prints and decide if we're enough of a match not to drive each other completely nuts.







Camp Verde

The first day of December has been beautiful!

Freda planned a road trip to Camp Verde, between Bandera and Kerrville--a place none of us but Joy had ever been before.  Bonnie and Freda and I drove there this morning and Joy met us for delicious lunch and exploring.

Freda, Bonnie and Joy