Hurricane preparedness

From the time we were flooded by Harvey, downgraded from hurricane to tropical storm, but still deadly and destructive for Houston in 2017, we began making conscious choices about how to lessen the impact on our home should we flood again. The floors that were the least affected were tiled, so our contractor tiled the entire house. The office floor was raised, and the floor-to-ceiling windows were replaced by dry wall, regular windows, and raised electrical outlets (all permitted and inspected by the city of Houston!). The furniture we bought to replace our destroyed furnishings tends to have metal legs and be raised higher off the floor. There is no longer anything stored under our beds. All but two of the closets either have items raised off the floor or protected in plastic bins. Things on lower bookshelves are either binned or easy to move up.

This week, I tackled one of the remaining closets. It’s in the smaller guest room–the one that provided my writing sanctuary since April of 2020. What it contained included paper records, equipment, and items relating to a business I maintained from 1997 to around 2007. I always dislike saying I’m a licensed massage therapist, because it seems to invite ignorant remarks that are without any humor or value to someone who knows that massage is a healthcare profession. Licensing requires training, state testing, and yearly continuing education courses. This year, CE included a mandatory course in human trafficking. Sometimes a massage therapist is the first safe contact for someone being exploited in this way and can provide confidential listening or contact information for agencies that may help a victim.

Those jokes aren’t so funny in light of that, are they?

Though I stay active as a LMT, and I have practiced in the distant past, the main reason I became certified (in the old days), licensed (current day), is because in the state of Texas, to do the work I really wanted to do, including aromatherapy, hydrotherapy, or spa therapy, massage school was a required first step. My massage table and chair were destroyed in the flood. I only used the chair when I did corporate massages, and since I don’t massage anymore, I didn’t replace it. However, I replaced the massage table. I’d intended to begin accepting clients again for the particular modality I invented that includes aromatherapy, crystal and stone therapy, and Reiki (I’m certified in second degree). When I was laid off, I would finally have had the time to do that, but we were in a pandemic, so that clearly wasn’t going to happen.

While the day may come when I would do the work for friends, and while I’ll always renew my license, I doubt this will ever be a business venture for me again. With that in mind, I purged my records of about ten inches of paperwork and reorganized the closet to be more flood-proof.

It was bittersweet looking through my old client files (if you were a client, know your file will be professionally shredded while Tom watches that process). I was reminded of many wonderful and strange times, of people who’ve come and gone. One of the first people I ever did energy work on was a friend who died of AIDS. That led me to teachers and practitioners even before I went to massage school. I had hoped to work with others impacted by HIV/AIDS, and there were a few.

I also found the records of work I did on my mother, and an oil I’d blended for her that Lindsey massaged into her feet while Mother was in hospice only a few days before her death.

Those kinds of comfort through touch also show why the “jokes” aren’t funny.

The sun tea light candle burner above is one of the items I found among the boxes in the closet. I’ll probably share other things on here with maybe some stories that won’t violate anyone’s privacy and will protect their identity.

Those were years of many things learned and explored, and I’m glad for all of them.

Tiny Tuesday!


Lately, because I’ve been messing around with my dolls, I’ve felt a compulsion to sew. I don’t think I’d realized how many of my sewing supplies were lost in the Harvey flood, including several bins of wet fabric, and hundreds of beads and tiny doll-scale buttons in containers full of water. It was all too overwhelming to think about cleaning and sanitizing when there were so many higher-priority tasks during that time. I was also working sixty-plus-hour weeks. So I let that swamp-water-logged shit go.

I’ve slowly begun replacing a few supplies when the mood strikes and the prices are good. These include packages of buttons and bundles of fabric amounts in small-scale prints.

I won’t sew right now. I’m determined to finish the third book in the Neverending Saga before mid-June. Has anyone noticed how months have raced by this year as compared to last year?

My characters and my words and my dolls and my sewing notions are good company for these rainy days we’re having while Tom is busy at work in the home office and the dogs are busy worshipping Tom while he works in the home office. =)

Hope you’re finding good things in which to lose yourself–or at least some good trouble.

A really happy day

Today is our late friend Steve R’s birthday. The last birthday we celebrated with him and other friends was in 1992. Every year since, I’ve made him a cake (or sometimes, Lynne made him a cake), and we always invited friends or coworkers to share it with us in memory of Steve.

Usually it’s a Winnie the Pooh-themed cake, and this year, it was again. Also this year, after thirteen months, because we are all fully vaccinated and past our two-week waiting period, we have a friend staying here to celebrate with us. It seems right that Lynne is the first friend back at Houndstooth Hall, because she was the last to stay with us here before we began to isolate at home.

Steve would have been delighted, and any step toward whatever is the new normal is a welcome one.

Happy anniversary of your birth, Steve, and welcome back to your room, Lynne and Minute!

Happy Earth Day!


I love globes and dolls, but fortunately I have only a few globes of varying sizes.

I know plastic is harmful to our planet, but though I buy a lot of dolls, I also provide a new home for other people’s dolls. One time a couple of my friends even rescued a doll from a trash can and brought him to me. He’d been somewhat mutilated for a Christmas fashion, but did I reject him? NEVER. I cleaned him up and he has a happy home with me still.

This globe was a gift from Lynne many years ago. The doll is one of my character dolls. The dress was made by me in 2010. And the lantana she is posed in front of was frozen down to sad little sticks, but now Mother Nature has stepped in and is bringing it back to beautiful bright green and yellow life.

Nature will do so much to heal the planet if we will only stop hurting it.

Tiny Tuesday!

We lost a LOT of botanicals during the big freeze, including many potted plants more than twenty-five years old. I have a hard enough time growing things, without this insane climate chipping away at our efforts.

I already showed you that we’d cleaned out Aaron’s garden, and we–meaning mostly Tom–have been trying to take care of the various beds around the house to clean them up and prune things until we have the time and inclination to find more plants for our pots.

In case you don’t remember, this is the book that kicked off Tiny Tuesdays however long ago that was.

And I spotted this page in it.

While I don’t have an actual flower garden, I have been casting a critical eye on one of the beds next to our house where heavenly bamboo grows. It’s not actual bamboo, but the nandina shrub, and people just call it heavenly bamboo. (Not so heavenly if you’re a human, cat, dog, or bird who ingests the toxic berries. Or maybe a little TOO CLOSE to heavenly. Hmmm.)

So I started cleaning it out and pruning, and when things got beyond my reach, Tom did his part to finish. I didn’t take before photos of how overgrown these were, or how the bed was covered with last year’s leaves. But once it was pruned and cleaned out, we moved a couple of the ferns that survived the freeze to join the nandina.


The larger bush had actually been covering most of that window and is now cut down to merely brush the sill.


Another angle. Maybe we’ll put some potted flowers in there, too, later. We’ll see what can take the sun there.

On the other side of the house are the little trellises where my ruellia vines grow. They were a HUGE mess after the freeze, as well as because of other invasive vines that were choking them out. Once again, I failed to take a before picture, but thanks to Tom, they are much tidier now, although the trellises themselves may not last another couple of seasons. The vines will be safe; we can always get new trellises. I hope they bloom again this year, but they may need more recovery time. The flowers are favorites of bees and hummingbirds.


Our fence, on the right, looked just like the one on the left only three years ago when it replaced the old fence after the Harvey flood. Our neighbor replaced hers in the last few months. The sun and climate are so brutal here.

Here are some of the leaves and cuttings that Tom and I cleared out, in the only lawn bags approved by the city of Houston. If you put the wrong bags on the curb, they won’t pick them up and will slap stickers on them to let you know you need the environmentally friendly bags. This means everyone driving or walking by KNOWS YOUR SHAME.

Stay tuned as we continue to reclaim our yard and flowerbeds and replenish our pots.

Busy doin’ nothin’

What I’ve been doing hasn’t actually been nothing, but that title goes with the song I’m posting at the end. Over Friday and Saturday, I did yard work on the bed of shrubbery next to our driveway and cleaned up some more of winter’s gift of leaves and spring’s gift of other tree stuff from our front walkways.

I’ve also continued the purging and reorganizing of several bins and files. I created these two large piles of paper to go to a shredding company next week.

As for the Neverending Saga, I MAY have finally figured out an angle for the chapter I’m writing. Too soon to say, because I’ve already made several false starts that ended up deleted. Hopefully tomorrow, I’ll get on paper what I mentally wrote while I was coloring today. I finished this mandala that my mother-in-law drew as a birthday gift for me. It’s brighter than the photo makes it look, but too much flash washed it out.

Inspired by bossa nova, Brian Wilson’s song was on the Beach Boys’ 1968 album Friends. About the minutiae of a day in the life, I once decided “Busy Doin’ Nothin'” was the forerunner to Suzanne Vega’s song “Tom’s Diner” from 1987, and that song’s parody, “Jeannie’s Diner” by Mark Jonathan Davis in 1990. You can find both of those latter songs on YouTube (along with the Beach Boys, below).