Tuesday, December 14, 2010

The Only Good Thing When It's Cold in Florida

I found the one good thing about cold temperatures in Florida today. 

 I walked out front to pick oranges from my Mother's tree and it was a little nippy, not for Iowa, but for Florida.


The oranges look good don't they so I picked about nine of them.


Brought them in and promptly cut them in half.

Then I brought out the juicer because I had to it was the appropriate thing to do.


It's fun to use and takes just a few minutes and reminds me of my Dad, it was his favorite.




 Nine oranges filled up the pitcher.






Doesn't it look yummy?


But the very best part was that because it was so cold in Florida last night the orange juice was fresh squeezed and perfectly chilled!  Daddy would have been so happy not about the cold, about the OJ.

Bottoms up everyone!


The end!

Monday, December 6, 2010

I Tried, but Had No Self Control

Yesterday I attended a function, a ballet of sorts.  When I arrived camera in hand expecting to experiment with movement and low light I was disappointed to find out no photos were allowed.

Now, I have been in this situation before and talked my way into taking photos without flash so it would not distract the performers.  This time, not so much.

I went to my seat high in the balcony ready to watch the beautiful display of physical feat and eye popping colorful costumes, keeping my camera to myself.

Sitting high above everything I had a difficult time seeing the pageantry on display.  Oh, I thought, I can use my camera as binoculars.  Great idea I thought to myself, so I did.

But then, then, well as hard as I tried, I just could not control myself.

Not when I saw this


or this


Oh my, how do they do this?


or this one



I've started I might as well continue...



or how about this one?  Poetry in motion...look at that movement how could I not?


Yes, I broke the rules.  Yes, I felt badly about it.  Yes, I love the photos.  Yes, I would tell kids not to follow my lead, to have more self control then I did...Yes to it all...So learn from my indiscretion, and enjoy the photos in the meantime.


Sunday, December 5, 2010

Longings

This morning as I drove to church with the sun brightly shining and a dusting of snow on the ground, my thoughts turned to a longing I have....

A longing to be near the water, the beach, the warmth the beauty.

 A longing to see God's majesty in nature, warm nature.  God's beauty is everywhere, even in the days in Iowa when the high is going to be seventeen degrees.  THE HIGH!
But for me, I long for this...how could I not?

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

How close is too close?

How close is too close?  This little fella doesn't seem to mind my desire to be close to it.  
 He seems content, curled up, front paw tucked into his fur.  Inquisitive look on his face.  I think he found me as interesting as I found him.  As I circle around the tree we both seem to be keeping our eyes on each other.

 I really like nature from a distance so being this close to a wild animal is a little scary I think being this close to a human might be scary for him too.
  But....I had to push the limits....
 And I did.  The cute little squirrel was no longer cute or seemed little it's cute little paw was no longer tucked into it's fur it's claws were out.  I had taken one step too close with the big, black, flashy item covering my face and he was over it.  He hissed and spat at me and I ran.  See the camera shake in the photo? 
 This big ferocious animal showed me and now I know how close is too close.  

Monday, November 29, 2010

Missed the Cardinal but Found the Rainbow

Today was  a very cloudy rainy day in Eastern Iowa and with this weather it seems to excite the birds in my neighborhood somehow. Excited birds bring out my shutterbug as most things do, so that is not much of a big deal.  However, out of the corner of my eye I could see the elusive cardinal I have been trying to get a good clean crisp photo of.  Seems the cardinal is camera shy and every time I focus in, it disappears.  Not easily daunted today I went outside in the cold mist, barefooted, bath robe on, camera in hand.  I am searching and searching for the cardinal that keeps moving around, not staying still long enough for me to capture a good photo.  Don't get me wrong, I have tons of blurry photos of cardinals and photos with a teeny tiny cardinal, or red leaf, can't tell the difference in the photo.  That has been my luck with cardinals.  I can capture red robins, red headed wood peckers, song birds, even a red tailed hawk but not the cardinal.      Determined as ever to get "that one shot" I almost missed the most beautiful sight of the morning.  As I turned to check one more time for the cardinal in the evergreen tree something caught the  corner of my eye.  A beautiful, glorious, rainbow.  I immediately thought, wow this is a forest for the trees thing, then of course I took the photos.
Isn't that just the way we live life, or I do, so focused on the immediate need or wants and not looking for the other blessings that are out there?  Had this not caught my eye as I was headed in, I would have missed a beautiful sight a sight that touched my heart. A significant sight for me and probably others.   I don't often see rainbows, not like when I was a child, so am I too focused on the cardinals in my life to notice or are they more rare?  It has given me much to ponder on this rainy Iowa day.  And I hope and pray that I will look for the rainbow on the next rainy day and let what may catch the corner of my eye after I see the wonder of it all.
Song of Solomon 2:15
Catch for us the foxes, the little foxes that ruin the vineyards, our vineyards that are in bloom.


Monday, June 14, 2010

Fifty Eight Years of Love

My parents were married for 58 years when my Father passed away.  As any marriage there were many ups and downs.  I often times wondered how they lasted?  Why they lasted?  How do you go through what they went through and stay together?  I also thought about the good times, the times they sat at the piano, my Dad slapping the keys and my Mom singing off key reminding me of the scene from "All In the Family" my Mom being Edith Bunker.  All the great trips we had.  The Holidays, the four wheelers, the boat trips, or even Dad just telling Mom almost every meal she cooked, "this is the best dinner you've ever made, Wanda."  And he really did mean it.
What I witnessed between my Mom and Dad when he was in Hospice, rocked my world, and changed my view on love, what it means, what it is, and what makes it last.  It was so amazing I sat down and wrote my thoughts in a poem like writting.

 April 22, 2005

Fifty Eight Years of Love 

Hands cradled his face
warm tender kisses
eyes forced open 
 at 
the sound of her voice
 her touch
her kiss 
I love you's exchanged until the last hour 
when the Lord came
 quietly 
peacefully
gently 
to 
call him home ... 
waiting until she 
left the room because he 
could not bare 
to leave 
her voice, her touch, her kiss 


My Thoughts after my Daddy Passed written April 22, 2005


As the family sat around talking small talk, I could not focus on anything, except that My Dad was lying somewhere in a place between life and death, in the same room in which we sat. 

If the chair next to his bed was not taken I took it, at times being asked to give it to someone else, at times asking if someone else wanted to take my place. 

I sang to him the songs I only sing, in the car, alone ... knowing in my heart that one day these songs of old ... songs of a previous generation ... would be sung for my Father ... never thinking or dreaming it would be as he lay waiting for the Lord to come and take him home. 

I sang quietly to him, as if we were the only two in the room, trying to keep my voice steady, not crying. He didn't like it when I cried. He wanted me to be strong. 

At times, I knew someone was singing with me,  "Jesus, Jesus, Jesus, there's just something about that name" ... never knowing who, never looking anywhere but at my Daddy. Holding gently his hand, as occasionally he would mouth the words with me, never opening his eyes ... 

Feeling with such great love and emotion that my Dad was going to a better place, but the place he was leaving from, would be worse for me without him. 

Thinking a great void would open up in my heart and swallow me whole. 

His words echoed in my mind, that he was ready to go, he had lived his life, he had finished the race and he was ready for his crown of righteousness. He explained to me long ago, that I was being selfish because I did not want him ever to die. He, as always, was right. I do not regret my selfishness in this area. But I did have to tell him, and this time I could not help myself from crying, that he was right, I am selfish, but that I would let him go, whenever he was ready. 

More singing, "Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound" everyone singing now. Gathered around him, singing old hymns ... His mouth was moving, as if he were singing with us, rejoicing in the Lord, occasionally a sound, right on queue would be uttered from his mouth ... a deep throaty sound ... but purposeful and not an involuntary response. A real response from the one who was loved most by all the people in the room, to the one he loved most, the Lord. 

Singing, singing, singing, "When we all get to heaven ... ", "The King is Coming", "Beulah Land", "This is the Day the Lord hath Made" ... praying, reading the Word of God to him. 

Leaving the room to let him rest quietly for a few minutes. 

Only to return, finding that he had left the room quietly himself ... 



Dad and His Boys

Saturday, June 12, 2010

Woman's Best Friend

As I lay in bed last night my thoughts turned to those whom I have loved much and who have gone before me.


When this happens I get this ache deep inside me that cannot be expressed in words. It just aches.


I hid my face in the book I was attempting to read and started weeping softly.


As I was weeping my boxer, Sugar Baby, crept closer to me.  And snout to face, she reached over and gently licked the tears streaming from my cheek. Looking at me with those big soulful eyes she has full of concern for her person.


When I put down the book and turned off the light she snuggled in close  and stayed there for most of the night.  Returning to her usual place at the foot of the bed, when she knew I was going to be okay.


Even writting this now I am tearing up at the tenderness and the intuititiveness of my pup and how thankful I am to have her.








This is why she is called Woman's best friend.

Monday, May 31, 2010

The Cleaning Gene that Escapes Me

I would love to be one of those people who has an art for cleaning or is even good at cleaning. What you say? There is an art involved, or a talent? Well I say yes to both, and sadly I do not not have either.

I have witnessed with my own eyes people that are blessed with these abilities. Really I have.

First let me say, I am the youngest of seven children. Because of this my Mother had help. And by help I mean someone came in and cleaned and ironed everything (sheets, pillowcases, hankies), and cooked dinner for us.

I literally thought either beds made themselves or there was a bed making fairy that came while I was away at school. Each and everyday I would get up, not make my bed, not see anyone make my bed, but come home to a nicely made bed and clean room.

The other phenomenon that happened at our house was when the "help" was the eldest sister (on the weekends), she would send us all outside and lock the doors until she was finished. When she let us back in she would tie us up in the basement until Mom and Dad returned (okay I embellished that part, but if she would have thought of it back then she would have).

Fast forward one hundred years, give or take fifty, and here I am still not blessed with the cleaning gene. Please trust me when I say I have tried. I have read books, like "The Queen of Clean, "The Queen of Laundry", blogs by fly lady or something named close to that who suggests at least keeping your sink clean so that when you are overwhelmed you can go and look at it and feel a sense of satisfaction. 


Uhmm, that did not work for me either.

She also has a fifteen minute a day program. Tackle a stack of anything for fifteen minutes each day. I thought this was an excellent idea until I started it. 


As I found a paper in the stack that needed to be filed in another room and I took it to said room and filed it, then found something in said room that belonged in another room,  I took it to that room then started working on the stack in that room, well you get the picture. Most of my fifteen minutes was taken up walking from room to room with one paper removed from each stack and redeposited elsewhere. 


I think this idea does not work for those of us with a touch of ADD.

Then I read the most horrific of all books. I can't remember the name or the author and I don't want to. I trembled with inadequacy for weeks after reading it. Her idea of doing laundry is for it to be washed, dried, folded, ironed, and put away. All at once. Soup to nuts.

As a single mom, working full time, with a son involved in every sport in season and every ministry at church, my idea of finished laundry is washed, in the dryer, and when I needed something out of it I hit the dewrinkle button let it run a few minutes and we were good to go.

She also suggested having a folder filled with lists of things to do. And when and if you sat down in the evening without darning, hemming, needlepoint, or crafting you should cross off and add to your lists. 


When I finished reading this book my dog hated it as much as I did, so he ate it. And I am not embellishing this one. I read it in one day, got up to leave the room for a minute, came back and it was demolished. 


I loved that dog he "got" me.

I will confess that not many in my immediate family have this cleaning gene, mainly for the same reason I do not, we had "help". However, most of them were smart enough to marry the gene in. 


I have many sister in laws with this gene. But there is one in particular who stands heads above anyone's sisters in laws. She is the Mother of All there is Clean, she is the Clean Queen, she should have a crown and a sash and a sceptre and a chair like Queen Mother of England has.

She will walk into a room grab a chair, a cloth, and fifteen minutes later it looks like you have a brand spanking new ceiling fan. She then goes on with her day like nothing taxing transpired.

When I clean a ceiling fan, I get a ladder, the most expensive, toxic cleaner for ceiling fans available, gloves, a mask and I go to town. When I am finished, I have hit my head on the blades several times, have more grime and dirt on me than the cloth, smell like toxic cleaning solution, am sweat drenched and my fan looks like it has not been touched, except for the blood from where it wounded my head. 


Then I take a nap.

Once, my Mother and I were at this sister in laws house and she was cleaning for her own enjoyment. I watched with excitement thinking I might learn a cleaning secret from her or even get one by osmosis. 


She gets out her Swiffer, no pad, no Swiffer "juice" as we call it in my house, just the body of the thing. She attaches a cloth to the bottom and squirts some Soft Scrub on the floor and swipes it a few times. Her floors glistened like that gum commercial about cleaning up a filthy mouth. 


You know the one at the end where the girl smiles and the bling blinds you?

I think to myself, at last, I know a trick! I promptly come back to my home state, undress my Swiffer, attach a cloth, use the Soft Scrub I bought just for this occasion and went to town. 


As I streaked about the Soft Scrub on my tile and created more of a mess than I had, I laid down on the ground, had a tantrum, thought about saying some cuss words, then arose and admitted defeat. I redressed my Swiffer, moved the dirt around, and called it a day.

Once again, I can not even compete with this one on the cleaning gene.

However, there is one gene I have that she does not. I can tan.

I can get a good tan. So here she is with pretty much milquetoast skin (think of the pretty, pretty Princess Snow White), few wrinkles and no age spots.

With my tan I have all of those, however when I smile my tan makes my teeth look like the girl in the gum commercial, so at least I have something that shines!







Sunday, May 30, 2010

Events that change a person






Recently, I lie awake, tucked into my comfy bed, as the thought of remarkable event in my life was looping through my mind, irritatingly looping and looping, keeping me from sleep.
The very first time I can remember being irreparably changed in the deepest recesses of my soul, happened in college. This was the hour that I found my voice and how loud and often that voice is used to accomplish productive results.
A friend, my best friend, was missing. Not just missing, missing for an entire night. Back in those days this was not the event it is today. In fact the campus police decided without justification that she must have run off to have an abortion. Happens all the time, they said.
Remember, this was my best friend. I knew stuff about her that no one else knew, as she did about me. This would be a huge event, discussion, round table meeting of the besties on what to do and how to handle this development. It would never include disappearing without one of us going with her or knowing about it.
We banded together and posted her photo in every dorm and Fraternity (there were no Sorority houses on our campus) with a plea to contact one of us if she was sighted. We established command central, a friends duplex, we went on the offensive and by that, I mean aggressively went on the offensive. These actions all expressed our collective voice on the matter very loudly.
Quickly this was discouraged and the posters taken down. We were informed that we were creating alarm on campus. Did not want to alarm the campus did we, because tsk tsk, surely she was off doing something she did not want us to know. It was an attempt to silence our voice.
We found her car but not her. We reported all the details to the campus police. They seemingly wrote all the information down and displayed adequate concern.
Later, after I had called the city police and the National Guard (I was serious about this, I tell you), we returned to the campus police. Imagine how disappointed we were when we found no written record was available from our previous visit. Seems they just wanted us to feel like they heard us.
Calls were made to anyone that might have a clue to where she could be. We combed the parking lot where her car was found, for anything, a piece of hair, jewelry, something from her purse. A friend even pried open her car trunk to make sure she was not in there.
Calls were made to her parents and my Mom went to be with them to tell them the news. They had many questions and were in total disbelief and confusion on whom to believe the campus police or the friends that knew their daughter for years and years and had very close relationships with her.
The friend's voices won out, the parents made the police take a real report, the flyer's went back up, the campus was alerted.
Finally after eighteen hours my friend was returned, harmed, irreparably damaged, frightened, forever changed, but alive. She was alive. Many of our worst thoughts and fears had happened, but the worst of all was not. She was alive.
And we were happy and hoped that these events started a change on how college campuses everywhere handled missing students.  Maybe our voices would be acknowledged now.
When she was found, she wanted her friends, a cigarette, and a coke. All the things at the time the Diva's did together. It was her comfort, her security blanket, the return to her normalcy that helped get her through.
We never talk about it anymore, but we all know, we all remember, and we were all changed in ways that can never be expressed. And like a whisper in the night, the terror momentarily will haunt me, but quickly passes, and even more quickly as the years pass. And then I wonder how loud and frequent her whisper is and how long it lasts for her.

There is joy in knowing the Amber Alert system is in place, and police take reports seriously, and every time I see a missing person information scroll across the screen I first get a shiver of fear, but know that times have changed for the better when it comes to missing persons, and I thank God for that and I thank God my friend, who is still my friend, and is alive.