Just a few catches

In the wee hours of Friday morning, when I was looking through my photo archives for a picture for Photo Friday, there was one photo I wished I could use. After my mother’s memorial service in August, we set up the tripod at the restaurant and took tons of family photos, because it’s so rare when my entire family is together, especially including Tom’s side of the family, too. Probably the only time that ever happened was our wedding.

Lynne pretty much took on camera duty, and I suggested a shot with the entire group of my Cochrane nieces, nephews, great-nieces, and great-nephews (only my great-nephew Steven couldn’t be there). Josh was holding his daughter, and when my nephew Aaron lifted up his second cousin, Lynne teasingly said, “Daniel, pick up your kid,” and Daniel did. The only thing is, Daniel’s son is fifteen and is as tall as he is, and everyone cracked up. It would have been a great photo for “Spontaneous,” but since Lynne was the one who took it, I couldn’t use it–though I can still share it.


On the left, my niece Gina and her daughter Morgan. Next to her, my nephew Josh holds his daughter, Amelia. In front of them is Josh’s stepdaughter, Cassidy. My niece Sarah is bending down to hold on to her daughter Rome, who’s standing next to Sarah’s son, Camden. Behind them are my nephew, Daniel, holding his son Dave, and on the end is my nephew Aaron holding Sarah’s younger son, Evan.


It took some work, but Josh finally coaxed a smile out of Amelia for the camera.

I had put my mother’s urn in a wooden box. We left the box open in my sister’s motel room so anyone could add anything they wanted to. Even with a bunch of little kids running around, not one of them ever took anything out. The day before, when I found a rock in my sister’s bed after the kids had been playing in it, Gina said, “Morgan! Empty your pockets.” Imagine the tiny pockets in a little girl’s shorts, but she must have taken two dozen rocks from her grandfather’s driveway out of those pockets. One of them went in this box. At one point, I was moving the blanket around and found a tiny ball placed lovingly in the folds of my mother’s favorite blanket that was cradling the urn. I don’t know what else the little ones put in there, but my nieces and Dalyn, Amelia’s mother, put in family photos. And if you look carefully, you may see the cigarette my sister added, because we’d never send Mother anywhere without an emergency smoke.

The thing about my family is that we always laugh a lot, even on the saddest of occasions. My parents both had a great sense of humor (although my father told the lamest jokes), and our family stories tend to focus on the funnier side of things. One of the images from that day that moves me most is Tom’s father holding an umbrella over Jeff against a light drizzle as he did the service. There were several times we were in tears, but when I look at this photo, all I can think about is how we giggled when someone said Josh looked like he’d stepped out of Men In Black.

As I think I mentioned before, Jeff suggested that if we wanted to, we could carry on an old symbolic custom of saying rest in peace by dropping a handful of dirt into the grave. My brother went to move the wheelbarrow closer, and he couldn’t budge it. Of course, he immediately got jeers from my sister and me about getting older. Fortunately, his son Daniel was able to do the job.

I’ve written on here before about my Uncle Gerald, who was the closest to my mother in age and her favorite brother (and the uncle who spoiled me, encouraged me to write, and gave me Dr. Neil, the teddy bear I still have, when I was in the hospital at age three). No matter where my family traveled, she and Gerald kept up a voluminous correspondence. My cousin Bruce has her letters to his father, and I have Gerald’s letters to her. This is Bruce.

At one point, I glanced into the grave and saw a penny on the wooden box. I wasn’t sure who’d dropped it in. Later, Bruce told me that whenever my mother and his father talked after a long time apart, Gerald began the conversation with, “A penny for your thoughts,” so Bruce was the source of the penny. I thought that was so sweet, but when I tried to tell my sister later, I ruined the story by bursting into tears.

As you may also recall, someone stole the flowers I left on my father’s grave a few days before the service. Tom’s parents gave us a beautiful spray of fall flowers, and in the middle of them was a rose. I always gave my mother roses, and I was determined that no one was going to steal this last rose from her.

This photo makes me laugh because my mother often complained that we ganged up on her. (Of course we did! It’s one of the rules in the children’s handbook!) If she could see this photo, she’d say, “There you are, throwing dirt on me and laughing about it.” But in fact, my sister was saying we’d be in trouble for getting dirty, and I was reminding her that Mother used to quote her own mother about kids: “Every child has to eat a peck of dirt.” We were also remembering a certain home movie, in which I’m placidly making mudpies on my grandfather’s porch, oblivious to the fact that my brother is coming along behind me with a shovel and destroying them one by one. And there he is, a shovel at hand.

I have no idea who was making Tom smile in this photo, but my mother would be saying, “You’re laughing because you’re never going to have to move my furniture again, aren’t you?”

The grrrls: Gina and Morgan, Debby and Amelia, me, Sarah and Rome,
and Amelia’s beautiful mother Dalyn with Cassidy.

Both my parents were the babies of their families (like me!), and my father was several years older than my mother. So his niece Elenore was the same age as my mother. Actually, my cousin said that my mother liked to point out that Elenore was older, but I think by only a couple of months. (You see where I get this “thirty-five” nonsense now, don’t you?) After my father died, my mother and Elenore became even better friends and traveling buddies, going on several trips together, including to the Bahamas and throughout the western U.S. They had a blast.

Those of you who have read A Coventry Christmas may remember the group of friends named Elenore, Dorothy, Lois, and Arliss. Elenore was named for my cousin, Dorothy was named for my mother, Lois was named for my mother’s best friend in Salt Lake City, and Arliss is my mother’s sister closest in age to her. My parents, with Arliss and her husband, used to travel around the U.S. in an RV after my father retired. Arliss is the only surviving girl of fourteen children, but she wasn’t able to come to the service because she’s in poor health. For the same reason, my mother’s only surviving brother, John, couldn’t be there.

In this photo, Elenore is in the front:

On the far right is my father’s niece, Rachel. She’s the person I idolized when I was a little girl, and I think I’ve written before that her husband, Charles, was the man I vowed I’d marry when I grew up. My sister says she was the one who’d planned to marry him. To keep us from arguing, Rachel graciously let Charles stand between Debby and me in this photo. Undoubtedly that’s the reason I have that stupid grin on my face.

I’m crazy-protective of my in-laws’ privacy, so I won’t be giving their names. But I love them so much, and having them there meant everything to me. One of Tom’s sisters brought tons of homebaked goodies to put in my sister’s room so everyone would have things to nibble on. Another of his sisters stood with an umbrella over me after almost everyone else had left the cemetery, while I watched the guy come to refill the grave and Tom’s brothers-in-law helped him take down the canopy. His other sister is always a person I enjoy talking to, and I adore all our nieces and nephews, one of whom is our godson. Tom’s oldest niece and my nephew Aaron, though they are old enough to hang with adults, took the initiative to sit at the kids’ table and kept them busy at the restaurant so the rest of us didn’t have to worry about them. Tom’s entire family has always been supportive of me in everything I do, including my writing, and they’ve understood why I haven’t been able to travel to see them the last few years. I’m so lucky to have married into this family.

The day after the service, my sister and I returned to the cemetery.


This time, the flowers were still there.

Thank you, Lindsey, for the camera, and Lynne, for using it so well.

LJ Runway Monday Challenge, Week 10

On Bravo’s Project Runway, contestants were asked to design an outfit transforming recent college graduates into career women. The designers had to please not only the young women who were their clients, but also the women’s mothers.

Heidi Gunn asked the Runway Monday designers to show the judges what our models would be doing if they weren’t models. When Summer was discovered by Mattel, she was a college student with a double major in broadcast journalism and political science. When I asked why she picked those fields, she said she’d always been inspired by Barbara Walters’ interviews with world leaders including U.S. presidents, Egypt’s President Anwar Sadat and Israel’s Prime Minister Menachem Begin, Russia’s Boris Yeltsin, China’s Jiang Zemin, the UK’s Margaret Thatcher, Cuba’s Fidel Castro, India’s Indira Gandhi, and King Hussein of Jordan.

As Summer said, “A good TV interviewer wears clothes that make her look professional and attractive, but her clothes shouldn’t draw attention away from the person she’s questioning. The interviewer isn’t the story.”

Summer on the job

Button Sunday

Last night I uploaded my Hurricane Ike photos to share with you, and I realized that almost all of them are of broken and felled trees. It’s not that I don’t care about the damage to structures; I do. I feel compassion for people who’ve lost their homes or are dealing with roofs, leaks, flooding, and broken masonry, fences, and hearts. But I think the truly dramatic photos that capture human suffering are taken by far better photographers and are available to anyone online and on television.

Also, I just love trees. I love their grandeur. I love thinking of how they’ve been around longer than us and will be standing when we’re gone. I love the music they make when the wind blows through them. The shade they provide us–and often their bounty of nuts and fruits. The home and playground they provide to wild things. Some of the best memories of my life are of playing under trees, climbing them, and walking through them in forests.

The day before Ike came, I took some photos outside. I stared up into my elm at all the nests, unsure if they were birds’ or squirrels’ nests. I watched the doves and jays and cardinals–the pigeons and grackles that other people dislike, but I rather admire–and all the little birds whose names I don’t know, and wondered how they would fare.

After Ike, with the elm split in two and many of its branches gone, the nests are gone, too. I haven’t awakened to the sound of the mourning doves for over a week now. Today a power company crew took our tree down. I know it had to go. It was broken, and sooner or later it would fall. We’ll plant again, of course, but I will miss my pretty elm, and I know the birds and squirrels will miss it, too.

As I told Tim a few days ago, he and James have taught me to make peace with pruning because it’s necessary for new growth, so I will think of Ike as Nature pruning herself. Still, I think the loss of old friends always deserves to be noticed.

the Ike photos

Your designers at work

As if giving our visiting fellow Runway Monday designer Mark G. Harris a hurricane wasn’t enough, Timothy and I also offered to take him to the fabric mecca of Houston: High Fashion downtown. After determining on Thursday that they were open for the first time since Ike blew through, your hardworking designers immediately siphoned gas from a neighbor’s vehicle jumped into the car for the adventure of shopping in a store that sustained hurricane damage. Water-saturated bolts of fabric were stacked throughout the sales floor waiting for the insurance adjuster, and men on ladders tore out pieces of the wet ceiling overhead, but we just shopped around the mess, doing our bit for the local economy. Although, um, when it comes to High Fashion, “economy” is not exactly the word of the day.


Why yes, that price does indicate that the fabric is $179 a yard.
Nothing’s too good for the Runway Monday viewers, right?

Want to see more? Then click here!

Not just another day

For some reason I haven’t figured out, I don’t feel like talking about Hurricane Ike yet. So even though I have many photos to share, I’ll put that on hold.

Today my father would have been ninety-four. His own father died when he was ninety-six. It’s not hard to imagine what our relationship would have been like if I’d had those additional decades with him. The older I got, the more I appreciated him. Both my parents warned me, when I was a surly young thing, that the day would come when I’d wish for time with them again. Fortunately, they did this with humor–they had once been children, too.

I’m lucky enough to have realized when my parents were alive that every parent and child are on a journey together. While no journey is without its pitfalls, every bump in the road or detour is not a disaster–just part of the trip.

In my study, there’s a picture frame with a photo of my father in it. Engraved into the wood is a poem by N.P. Randall, about whom I can find nothing on the Internet.

Every day of my life has been a gift from my father.
His lap had been a refuge from lightning and thunder.
His arms had sheltered me from teenage heartbreak.
His wisdom and understanding have sustained me as an adult.

Maybe this is a Hurricane Ike post after all.

LJ Runway Monday Challenge, Week 9

On Bravo’s previous Project Runway, former contestants were brought back to team up with the remaining designers. Each team had to create a look using one of their astrological signs.

Heidi Gunn asked the Runway Monday designers to use the astrological signs of their models. Born on August 5, Summer is a Leo. According to Astrology Online, Leos are ambitious, courageous, dominant, strong willed, positive, independent, and self-confident. They are the LIONS of the zodiac, and there is no such word as doubt in their vocabularies. They are born leaders, whether in support of, or in revolt against, the status quo.

Did I design correctly for my lion?

Materials: End of summer/into fall sunny orange satin, copper glitter, and coppery-brown trim
Inspiration: As if the Lion wasn’t enough inspiration, Summer has always reminded me of the original kitten with a whip, Ann-Margret. For this design, I decided to let couture meet Vegas.

Ruled by the sun, fiery Leo strides into any room with confidence and is unafraid to command attention.

This season, celebrities have been finding new ways to update jumpsuits, and Summer is no exception. Her orange satin jumpsuit is trimmed to mimic a lion. Although she has her own beautiful mane, I added a touch of lion mane around her throat and in her hair. A closer look:

Leos are known for loving drama and are willing to create a stir.

Your heart may break if a Leo puts you behind her, but at least the view will be good.

Leos could have been the reason the phrase “bold and beautiful” was created, because they are–from head to toe.

Kitten? Lion? Lion tamer? Leo is whoever she wants to be.

You can see Timothy’s design for Nikki here, and Mark G. Harris’s design for Figaro here. Tomorrow, you can read what the judges have to say about the designs in Heidi Gunn’s comments. Feel free to share your own thoughts about the designs in comments to any of those posts.

And if you’re interested in my previous designs:

Week 8: A Foreign Affair
Week 7: Drive It or Wear It
Week 6: It’s a Drag! I won!
Week 5: Lipstick Jungle
Week 4: Olympic Gold
Week 3: New Orleans Inspiration
Week 2: Going Green I won!
Week 1: Grocery Store

LJ Runway Monday Challenge, Week 8

On BravoTV’s “Project Runway”, the designers visited Diane Von Furstenberg’s showroom and were given the lookbook for her fall collection. The collection took as its inspiration the movie A Foreign Affair, starring Marlene Dietrich. Dietrich’s character is a chanteuse who may be a spy during World War II, and she travels from Berlin to Shanghai to New York. The designers were given access to Von Furstenberg’s fabrics and told to use them for a look that would fit the theme of the collection.

LJ Runway Monday producer Heidi Gunn tasked the Runway Monday designers with the same challenge–only without providing us access to Von Furstenberg’s fabrics.

My inspiration: Film noir, Marlene Dietrich, the 1940s, and Diane Von Furstenberg herself.
My materials: Linens in black and print, with a few accessorizing touches.

First, as my homage to film noir, I chose a color palette of mainly black and white. I wanted to create a look that was both intriguing and sexy. I began with a cape, an item of clothing that has been used throughout the history of film to convey danger, suspense, and secrets. Capes have always intrigued me, and I think every woman should own at least one cape during her life, whether she uses it for warmth, drama, or costume.

The cape and its hood are fully lined with a printed fabric, a nod to Von Furstenberg’s emphasis on prints throughout her career.

A closer look at the lining fabric shows an Asian-themed design, my nod to Dietrich’s character’s escape to Shanghai in the film A Foreign Affair.

Marlene Dietrich’s fashion choices tended to switch between the severe and the opulent. I enjoy the fashions of the 1940s, when women managed to overcome deprivation and rationing to make themselves glamorous even as they were coming into their own in roles formerly held by men, both at home and at the front. In a nod to Dietrich’s film chanteuse, I pictured my model slipping in from an assignation around the foggy docks, shedding her cape, and melting the hearts of an audience with a torch song.

My dress design updates Dietrich’s tailored look with fabric accessible to working women of any decade–linen. I also opted not to sew a back seam into the dress. It wraps around and is cinched and held in place by the belt using the same fabric as the cape’s lining in a new take on Diane Von Furstenberg’s iconic wraparound dress.

I love the way 1940s gowns often used an accessory on one or both shoulders for an added touch of glamor. In addition to the deep blue feathers in her hair and on her dress, I used the same complementary blue adornment that fastened the cape to brighten the shoulder of the dress.

And finally, I accessorized the shoes to match both the cape and the dress.

The total looks:



You can see Timothy J. Lambert’s design here, and Mark G. Harris’s design here. You can also check out Heidi Gunn’s LJ to read what the judges say throughout the day on Monday. You are welcome to add your comments there, here, or on Timothy’s and Mark’s posts.

If you’re interested in my previous designs:

Week 7: Drive It or Wear It
Week 6: It’s a Drag! I won!
Week 5: Lipstick Jungle
Week 4: Olympic Gold
Week 3: New Orleans Inspiration
Week 2: Going Green I won!
Week 1: Grocery Store

Friday in the park with Lindsey

It all began with a phone call from Lindsey. She has a photo gig on Saturday, and a new lens, so she wanted to get in a little shooting practice and wondered if I’d like to come along. After she arrived at The Compound and admired my Runway Monday design (weep, fellow contestants, because I’m kicking ass this week), we compared the sizes of our lenses (heh), then Lynne called. When we sought her advice on good places to shoot children (heh, again), she suggested Hermann Park. Leaving Tim with Sugar, the girls, and Rex, we headed for the park.

Lindsey’s always aware of my back, so we kept a nice gentle pace as we explored Hermann Park. I took around seventy photos. Here’s a small sampling:


A pro at work.


I fell in love with the shadows on this rock. Then Lindsey cracked me up by going all Karate Kid.


LOVED this child with the BEST laugh who was running between jets from a group of fountains.

This is when things got weird. Lindsey did a damsel in distress shot for me on the train tracks (the little train that takes people to the zoo and around the zoo grounds).


“Woe is me!” she cried.

I gave her a hand up, then I walked to the right of the tracks, and I think she took a couple of shots before she stepped to the left. She heard a loud popping noise, then she was down on the ground. I turned at the sound of her falling, and she said, “I think I broke my ankle.”

We were both pretty calm, trying to figure out what to do, because at that point, there was no way she could stand. Lindsey, like me, has a high pain threshold, so when she says she hurts, you know she HURTS. I glanced around to see if there was any possible source of help, and she suggested I go to the little station where they sell train tickets. I hurried there, all the time berating myself because any of Lindsey’s other friends would have been able to run, and with my bum back, I felt like I was moving in slow motion.

But that was NOTHING compared to the slow motion of the woman at the ticket office. There was a couple in front of me buying tickets, and I convinced myself to take a few deep breaths rather than scream at them all to HURRY UP DAMMIT A WOMAN IS DOWN, DOWN! After what was probably only seconds, they were out of my way, and this conversation ensued:

Me: My friend fell about twenty-five yards directly behind here. She can’t walk, and I need help.
Ticket Woman: (Blank look.)
Me: So is there an employee with a golf cart or something who can move her from where she’s lying to our car?
Ticket Woman: No golf carts, no.
Me: Okay, then what do we do? She needs to be helped from the park.
Ticket Woman: We need the park ranger.

Me: Ooookay, so–

Phone rings and TICKET WOMAN ANSWERS IT! And instead of killing her, I just sent death rays into her brain while THIS conversation took place:

Ticket Woman: Yes….yes, we are open…yes, we are still open…Yes. Every day…Yes. Every day until 6:30….Yes, until 6:30. SIX THIRTY. Today….Yes. On Sunday, yes. In winter? Yes…

At that point, I was about to go through the window and choke her. She looked at my expression and hung up the phone.

Me: So you’ll call the park ranger, please? NOW?

Ticket Woman: No, I can’t.

THIS IS WHY I DON’T CARRY CONCEALED.

Me: Listen. I’m going to get in my car and drive it over your grounds to pick up my friend. Do you understand that?

Ticket Woman: You can do that?

Me: I CAN do that. Do you understand that I’m GOING to do that?

Ticket Woman: Yes. You can do that.

(I think she’s a Ticket Bot, actually.)

While hurrying to Lindsey’s car, I scoped out the area. The sidewalk was wide enough for a car. I saw where the curb had been cut to be handicapped accessible. I was figuring out where Lindsey had fallen and how to get there in the car. I could do this!

I jumped in the car, waited for the slowest driver in America to get the hell out of my way, and drove up on the sidewalk, where a woman with a baby in a stroller was coming toward me. I lowered my window so I could call out an explanation to her so she wouldn’t think I was some sidewalk-jumping, mother-and-child-killing freak, but then I spotted Lindsey hobbling away from Ticket Woman (Oh, man, I can’t believe she had to deal with Ticket Woman). She got in the car, trying to decide whether to laugh at my Bo and Luke Duke cross-country drive or whimper from pain. She swore her ankle was better to me and to Rhonda when Rhonda called. Rhonda gave us strict orders to come directly to The Compound and ice the ankle while she picked up a few things for Lindsey’s comfort.

Okay, the drive through Starbucks wasn’t DIRECTLY to The Compound, but it was on the way and only delayed us three minutes or so. And no one should be denied Starbucks when she’s possibly broken her ankle, right? We phoned ahead for Tim to open The Compound gates. Got inside, got Lindsey settled on the couch with her leg elevated and ice on it while we waited for Rhonda, who’d be taking her to the emergency care center. Recounted the adventure for Tim, at which point I said, “I’m not a true photographer, or I’d have documented Lindsey’s painful ordeal instead of waddling for help.” And Tim pointed out, “You’re not a true LiveJournaler, either, or you’d have done a voice post from the scene.”

DAMN.

ETA: The ankle is not broken. =) I’ll let Lindsey pick up the story when she has time.