Button Sunday


February 26 is National Carpe Diem Day! How will you seize the day?

ETA: I seized the day to do a little writing and a lot of planning because I’m in a key chapter that’s a bit hard to write. Worked it in around some housework and outdoor time. When at the computer, here’s what I was listening to.


I hit the Madonna lode in the binder with Erotica; Like A Prayer; Something To Remember; Ray of Light; Music; and Hard Candy. Then I heard the Richard Marx CD Rush Street (I have others, but they aren’t stored in the binder) with one of my favorite songs by him, “Hazard.”

Saturday songs and scraps

I know you’ve wondered what I’ve been listening to the last few days while I wrote, so here you go. (I kid. But also, here you go.)


Lyle Lovett, 12th of June; Bob Lowery, Yellow Light; Sarah McLachlan: Afterglow; Touch; Fumbling Towards Ecstasy; Surfacing; Solace; Tara MacLean, Passenger; Christine McVie, In the Meantime.

I’ve cleaned out my phone again, and I’ll put these behind a cut because there are A LOT. If it doesn’t resonate, it’s probably not meant for you (not all of them are meant for me, but they made me think of situations in my past or in the lives of other people I know). There is no order here. Only a few are humorous–though we may not share the same humor.

Continue reading “Saturday songs and scraps”

THE February birthday

This was not by any stretch of the imagination a pretty cake (although the toy dragon on top is nice). Debby loves dragons, and it’s her birthday cake I baked. She also loves coconut and Mounds candy bars. Though I have a great recipe for a Mounds cake given to me by a woman I knew back in the 1970s, it looked complicated. So I grabbed a Mounds cake recipe off the Internet. As I told Lynne, everyone on my block now has Type 2 diabetes just from being in proximity to my house while I concocted the frosting. Sorry, neighbors.


Pretty or not, it’s always fun for Tim, Tom, and me to celebrate a birthday dinner and cake with Debby on her big day, and it’s always coconut-themed even though none of the rest of us are coconut fans. The only tradition we didn’t observe last night was reminiscing about the time Tim’s dog, in our absence, managed to eat part of her coconut cake (the day after the party, thankfully), and as Tom, Debby, and I later drove to visit my mother in her care home, Tim texted to say, “Rex’s ass just exploded.” A heartwarming birthday story for the books.


Debby did get a little puppy love last night from Eva and Anime. Who knows where Delta was (maybe keeping her eye on the cake in hope of reenacting the Rex incident; good thing that dragon was guarding it), while Jack, of course, was staying with Stewie at Aunt Debby’s so he couldn’t chew on Tim’s ankles.

Happy birthday, Debby!

…but I’m running behind

Trying to play catch-up, but it’s not working so well for me. I have been writing among all the other things, and over the last couple of days, here’s what I’ve heard or what I’m in the middle of.


1960s and ’70s heartthrob Mark Lindsay’s 2-CD set that along with extras, offers his three solo albums Arizona, Silver Bird, and You’ve Got A Friend; Linkin Park, Minutes to Midnight; Kenny Loggins, Nightwatch; and Little Feat, Waiting For Columbus.


Halfway into these three CDs (signed because I went to a benefit house concert where he played back in 2016): Hamilton Loomis, Ain’t Just Temporary; Give It Back; and Live In England.


I’m sure I had a good time, but I’m equally sure I was tired. =)

Tiny Tuesday!

As a child, my mother taught me, sometimes enlisting my siblings’ help, how to play Candyland and Old Maid. I didn’t play Go Fish or Crazy Eights, though I remember having cards for them. When I was a little older, my siblings taught me how to play Clue and Concentration, and sometimes one or both parents sat in with us. I’m sure I rarely, if ever, won. I had zero interest in Monopoly and never played it. Occasionally, we played Scrabble; a game played with voracious readers who have good vocabularies is an awesome thing, and that game has always been a favorite of mine to play one-on-one, which is why I still keep several different games going online with Tom and three friends.

My father taught me how to play my first “gown-up” card game, Rummy. He probably deliberately lost to me many times so the feeling of winning would keep me engaged. My sister later taught me how to play every version of Spades I’ve played, including going nil. Spades is one of the games I like best, but it also causes me stress when I have a partner depending on me. It’s a love/stress game.

As young adults, Debby and I learned Parcheesi and had the most competitive games of it imaginable with her first husband/children’s father and my boyfriend who became my first husband. Many years later, we played it with other people and the tameness of it made us bewildered by how those games in our memories were so fiercely played.

Some of my other games as an adult were Cribbage (my brother David taught me); Boggle, which I learned with Lynne and her sister Liz and won a lot, only to be consistently trounced by our friend Steve V many years later in games with him, James, and Tom at Toopee’s, a now-closed lesbian coffee place/restaurant we liked. I’m still not over the shock of my Boggle losses, and that was the mid-1990s.

Lynne and Liz also taught me Yahtzee, and no game-playing ever made me laugh so much, both with them and, later, with my sister, her friends Connie and Dottie, and Tom. We once taught Aaron to play Yahtzee when he was tired, almost falling asleep over the game. He persisted, but I suspect it was his version of Gitmo and he chose never to play it again–at least with us. May have had something to do with our Full Sheet Yahtzee, which involves playing five games at once.

In the early to late ’80s, it was all Trivial Pursuit all the time, and I kicked butt at the original and the Baby Boomer editions. I’m pretty sure if I played that now, I wouldn’t remember shit. =) If Bad Boyfriend No. TWO and I played as partners, we were unbeatable. Life Lesson: Knowing a crap-ton of trivial information does not ensure a successful relationship. But the game was fun.

Also in the late ’80s, Aunt Audrey taught us Progressive Rummy (I used some of that in Three Fortunes), and it may be this game that brings out the most intensely competitive part of my personality. Through the years, we have lured others into the game, and I’ve lost many times. Sometimes I’m even gracious about it, but I’m always out there lurking, waiting for a chance to avenge myself.

From the late ’80s into the ’90s, with Tom’s family, as with Lynne and Craig’s, I’ve laughed hard over Pictionary and Uno. (Uno has the tendency to turn into the remembered viciousness of Parcheesi, and that may be universal; I’ve read about many Uno matches on social media in which empires have fallen and families split up forever.) With Lynne and Craig’s whole crew, when we delayed Progressive Rummy so we could play other games with the kids in the afternoon and early evenings, we also played Scattergories, and when Jess was younger, a game called Guess Who?

With my undergraduate friends, we played a lot of Spoons (this game can get physical!) and Scrabble, and it was my college roommate Debbie who taught me the real point of this post, Backgammon. I loved Backgammon so much that I taught Lynne, and later Tim, to play. Backgammon is another one in which I’m highly competitive, but in this case, I’m not cutthroat. Tim became a far more ferociously skilled player than I am, and as he and Jim play with the same intensity, I happily sit back and watch their death-matches when Jim visits (not for nothing was it Jim who taught us a fun card game called Spite and Malice).

Tuesday, when I was writing, suddenly a little gift from my past appeared without any planning. And it looks like this, tucked into its 9.5×7-ish-inch case.

Under its fabric, the board is metal, and the game pieces are magnets because it’s a travel version of Backgammon. Nothing slides around, except the dice, which are meant to roll. It’s still owned by Lynne since late ’70s/early ’80s, and both of these photos are courtesy of her. You can’t imagine how many nights we sat on the floor in front of her fireplace back in Alabama, and played on this board. Later, after both of us were divorced and sharing a house, we played at the dining room table; at the pub we went to; and on breaks at the restaurant where we both worked, she as a cook and manager; me part-time as hostess/waitress. I also had a full-time teaching job and a teaching job at a business school two nights a week, where Lynne was a student; we were busy women, and Backgammon was a quiet way to relax.

Or it should have been. It’s a Pandora’s box of memories, one of them involving Bad Boyfriend No. ONE. He, too, worked at the restaurant, had another part-time job, and was a full-time college student. He, too, played Backgammon, and his was a game of strategy. Lynne has her own strategy, and he hated to lose to her because he said she played by LUCK and that was WRONG, and one night, he got so angry when he lost that he picked up the entire set and threw it out the front door. I don’t know if Lynne and I went out together and retrieved the pieces, or if I stayed inside, but I think Lynne and I both thought, He’s as overtired as we are. He’ll get over it. No big deal.

It was a big deal. A warning sign, one I didn’t recognize. I’d be sorry for that later, but I can’t change the past. Or… I can. Because when this specific Backgammon game unexpectedly slipped into my writing yesterday, it did so with sweetness. It’s a small, gentle way to take an awful piece of the past and turn it into a moment celebrating friendship and love. As hard as some experiences are, all those other times of my life with family and friends are really what matters on this side of my decades lived.

My characters are based on everyone and no one, and they are always my teachers.

Mood: Monday

A photo previously posted here was of a 2021 painting by Chris Rivers, Neptune.

What I listened to while I wrote Sunday. The great Annie Lennox with Diva; Medusa; and Bare. I hope to get a lot more writing done today if things go well.

Today is the new moon, a good time to set intentions. It sounds significant this month, so I’m including this link to Kevin at Body, Mind, and Soul if you’re interested in hearing more.

Button Sunday


It’s hard to find a good button for Led Zeppelin IV, which was the first full album I ever heard by the band.

What got me thinking about it was this video.

If you watch it, the expression on the dog’s face is probably akin to mine the night my first boyfriend/true love, he of the great fringed jacket and Easy Rider helmet,* lowered the needle onto the record so I could hear “Stairway to Heaven” in his room one night.

If you know, you know.

*Scroll down this post for My Own Great Motorcycle Adventure.

Sluggish Saturday

I’m saddened today by the news that President Jimmy Carter is beginning to receive Hospice care at home. I think he’s among the best, most compassionate of notable people during my lifetime. Stories about him and First Lady Rosalynn Carter, along with their actions through the years, helped me believe, as I said to Jim and Tim earlier, “His is the soul of a humble giant.” Also, I’m so grateful for Hospice workers and the care they provide to patients and their families.

It’s all made me quite contemplative today, just when I’d finished a moody section of the novel and was about to embark on a happier one. I guess it’s not sexy or hot or sellable in these times, but it’s been my effort to write characters who try to embody the best of us, even as I so often read and hear about the worst of us. I don’t believe people used to be better because times used to be better. Times have always been problematic, and I believe good people are still in the majority.

So I go forward to create and love and appreciate my playlist of blues, pop, rock, country, whatever shows up as I write. These are from yesterday and today.

Keb’ Mo’, Slow Down

Alicia Keys, Songs in A Minor; B.B. King, Blues on the Bayou; B.B. King, Original Greatest Hits (2-CD set); B.B. King, The Best of B.B. King
Carole King, Tapestry; Carole King, City Streets; Lenny Kravitz, Greatest Hits; Jonny Lang, Wander This World; John Lennon, Lennon Legend

Happy birthday, Yoko Ono, who turned ninety today.