If I could save time in a bottle


Quietly happy together on December 25, 1983, with no idea I was about to undergo a big emotional shift three days later. We can’t save time in a bottle, but for the following years, the memory of this day kept me going when I stumbled, faltered, and failed; enabled me eventually to develop the judgment to make better choices; and built the fortitude that helped, still helps, me through many times since.

I think we can never know which days will be the ones that give us what we most need. Maybe they all do.

ETA, after consideration:


This release last month of the new Sail On Sailor 1972 was a nice, though admittedly painful, gift from the Beach Boys to everyone who misses Dennis, especially today.

Christmas gift from Tom this year.

Tiny Tuesday!

Back in April, I shared a photo of a KiNSMART 1971 model VW van I was in the process of painting. I think it may have been black when I bought it, and I was painting it turquoise, after a van in the Neverending Saga, after which I “hippied” it up as a nod to a conversation between two characters about what men do for love. This was how it looked when I finished painting it and added stickers from my various sticker collections.

I was happy with the results, especially that I could add some details specific to my character (references to baseball, Canada, and New York).

This year, in my Christmas stocking, Tom included the same model that the company itself had similarly embellished. I’d never seen it in the stores (these diecast models are sold at both CVS and Walgreens pharmacies), so I was surprised and delighted to receive it. I always like it when my model cars have “buddies.”

Button Sunday


Should have gotten a photo of Debby’s Christmas socks to go along with this button.

A few shots from a day filled with cooking and eating and opening presents and laughing and doing dishes, so many dishes.

Set a table for dining.

Set a table with food to fill our plates. This one has us all smiling, but I really love Anime down there hoping for some food to fall.

Menu: roast beef, ham, chicken wings, roast gravy and chicken gravy, mashed potatoes, green beans, black-eyed peas, corn, cornbread dressing, cranberry sauce, Tom’s homemade biscuits.

After eating, there was a frenzy of opening presents and everybody got good stuff, but I was too busy being greedy to take photos.


Dessert was a coconut cream pie from Debby, a German chocolate cake for Tom’s birthday, and assorted candy and cookies sent by friends.


Tom ready to blow out his candles and have birthday cake and open cards and presents.


A birthday gift from Debby was an artsy little doppelEva.

Retro


© ClassicStock/Masterfile

Today is Mathematics Day. As a student, sometimes I was good in math, sometimes not so good. It depended on the teacher. I was lucky enough to have a couple of excellent ones so I had two years, at least, of good math grades. But I wasn’t consistent.

I have a character who’s good at math. I enjoy writing her. One way she and I are alike is that a lot of my math was learned in the kitchen. I used that retro image above–some might say stereotypical–because my character’s a child in the Fifties. Whatever decade, I think any child, regardless of gender, liked being around on baking days. Nothing like licking batter from spatulas, beaters, and spoons; nobody knew sugar from salmonella or extract from E.coli in the old days.

Some of the best stories were to be heard in the kitchen, too, although I remember being sent on an occasional errand if there were things I wasn’t meant to hear. My character has a skill for quietly slipping under the table to eavesdrop in such situations.

I have lots of good memories of kitchens and everyone–female and male–who taught me things about cooking. It was a tasty way to learn about fractions. I really do use math every day in practical ways. Cooking’s only one of them.

Winter solstice

What did I do to mark the shortest day of the year?

I wrote a little and slept more than I meant to. Yesterday I got my Covid booster, and the only reaction I had was a sore arm. I also had a slight headache today, but I don’t think it was the vaccination. I think it’s our weird weather. We’re supposed to have a big plunge in temperature tomorrow (Thursday), and we’re hoping it won’t be as bad as the time in 2021 when we lost power and had a pipe burst and went without hot water for several days.

This month, a gift we bought ourselves is this pop-up greenhouse. We bought a lot of plants at the beginning of the summer even knowing we were headed into a drought. We felt like we’d have better luck with potted plants. We did get them through summer, and now we want to get them through any harsh days of winter. Tom moved the plants into their temporary home today. Tomorrow, he’ll add a heat source before the afternoon temp falls.

Tomorrow, we’ll also bring all the succulents from Aaron’s Garden inside to protect them from the freeze.

Meanwhile, Lindsey and Rhonda were here this past weekend, and Lindsey offered Tim a small greenhouse she had that would protect his plants during these wintry temperatures.

Today, I couldn’t help but think of another bitterly cold December night in Alabama many years ago. I rarely talk about my first husband/marriage, but not because it’s anything I’m ashamed of or because it was a terrible relationship. I was simply too young to get married when I did, and four years later, it was clear we wanted different futures. Any ending is painful, but I have nothing but good things to say about him. My family, young and old, loved him, and I loved his family.

I got out our wedding book today not so much because it’s the anniversary of our wedding day, but because I’ve been trying to remember the pattern of my “everyday” dishes from that time. No luck. I’d written down my china, crystal, and silver patterns, but not the one I was looking for. I sold the silver after the divorce, took the china and crystal because he didn’t want it (still have all that and often use it on holidays), and left those everyday dishes with him.

Lynne happened to call when I was trying to find the pattern online by its description. When I reminded her what it looked like, but I wasn’t sure if the similar pattern I found was mine, or if mine was an imitation, she asked, “Where did you register?” When I told her, she said, “If you registered there, you got the good stuff. Not a knockoff.” It’s nice to share a hometown with someone who can solve a mystery because she remembers businesses that may no longer even exist.


This is a picture of me with my bridesmaids, and here’s what’s cool to me about this photo. The matron of honor I was on the phone with today. My friend/college/graduate school roommate I was exchanging texts with today (she lives in another country; we have a long catch-up phone call planned for next week). Just a short walk away in Fairy Cottage, I visited my sister tonight. And the mother of my oldest nephew, I last texted with ten days ago. Only one of these women is someone I lost touch with–no reason at all except different lives going in different directions. A lot of years, a lot of living, a lot of losses and careers and events since this photo, and I still love them and am so grateful for the relationships that have endured and still hold an abundance of laughter, acceptance, support, and understanding.

My parents are deeply missed but are a part of every one of my days and a million memories.


Yesterday, my brother and I exchanged texts, and tonight when I was at Debby’s, the two of them were texting. We miss him. We hope the world will get a little saner so we can all be together again.

Considering just the history shown in these photos, I’ve been so blessed with family, including in-laws, nieces and nephews and grandnieces and grandnephews, and special friends I met through my siblings who stayed around through many changes, like Lisa and Geri, and the ones we miss, like Dottie and Connie.

I also exchanged emails with Pat today and I forgot to tell her that, as every Christmas, the hand towels she once embroidered for us are out in the guest bathroom.


Dachshunds on either side of a bell with holly. It’s like she knew many years later, I’d be living in a place we call Houndstooth Hall.

I have another friend from the old days who texted me earlier in the week. Even though she’s miserably sick with the flu, she wanted to tell me that a character on a show she’s watching reminds her of (young?) me. I hope she feels better soon.

Tonight, as the longest night of the year began, I improvised a new recipe for eggplant for Tom and me. I served it on the brightest, most mismatched dishes I could pull together, because I wanted the cheer of all that color.

Maybe cheer is the point of all these memories and expressions of gratitude. There have been times in my life when my losses were so great that I didn’t think I could keep breathing. I’ve done things I was deeply ashamed of, that filled me with such remorse that I felt unworthy of love and forgiveness. I’ve been so broke, and broken, that only the kindness of others helped me inch toward a better hour, a better day, any measurement of distance that might take me to a better place. I’ve lost friends in anger, in misunderstandings, in cruelties done to me. I’ve had to walk away from people I loved to save myself. And the worst–I’ve lost far too many people through the decades to death due to disease, accidents, and suicide.

There’s no perfect life. There’s no life without pain. But on one of the worst nights of my life, when I felt completely alone and worse, abandoned, I looked out at the dark night and thought, If I can just see the sun come up in the morning, I’ll be okay.

The sun did come up. Everything didn’t magically get better. All the problems and pain didn’t go away. But I’ve looked at every sunrise since as another chance to experience a range from barely hanging on to joyful.

I hope to appreciate another sunrise tomorrow, the first longer day after the solstice.

I hope that if these words ever find you in a bad moment, you, too, can draw strength from every good person, animal, memory, event, and natural beauty you’ve known and remind yourself the sun is still there and you will be okay.

Tiny Tuesday!

All right, the little tapestry case is still missing, but it occurred to me to check the toy box, and I found not one, but TWO tiny sock monkeys. The one on the left in swimming trunks I remember nothing about–where or from whom I got him–and the wee one on the right is the one I was looking for. He’s SAFE! (And not on Hunter Biden’s laptop after all.)

Mood: Monday

I previously posted a photo of by an untitled oil on canvas painting by Forrest Bess.

Posting this in the wee hours of the morning and then hoping I can sleep through the night and wake up feeling better. Our weather’s beginning to change, with a freeze expected later in the week, and I think my body’s struggling to adjust, so I’m feeling a little rundown.

Happy birthday to Mark in England! I know you enjoyed a celebration with friends earlier in the month and hope you have a good “second” birthday on your actual date.


This is also the birth date of our late nephew Aaron. I can’t believe it’s been ten years since he died. He’s so deeply missed and loved. This photo is from a spontaneous trip David, Geri, Aaron, Tom, Debby, and I made to Galveston during Mardi Gras in 2011. I don’t remember who shot the photo. It’s a day that I always think of with happiness.

Button Sunday

Picked these up the last time Tom and I were on a shopping expedition to Cactus Music. That day, we also went to Murder By The Book, where Brenda recommended a new-to-us author. I’m once again in a kind of reading dead zone, so Tom’s reading it first. So far, he likes it.

I don’t remember the author or the title, which reminds me of people who once came into the bookstore where I worked with info like, “I can’t remember who wrote it or what it’s titled, but the cover is red and I think it was on Oprah.” For that reason, corporate used to send us a list of authors who were doing the talk show circuit to promote their books.

When I once again share on here what I am or have been reading, I’ll let you know the author/title.

What are you reading?