Sunday, December 30, 2007

Wanting What You've Got

100_0788

An hour north on I-77 I drove – for new scenery.

Lake Norman in Catawba County, North Carolina is the largest man-made lake in the Carolinas. It’s 34 miles long and 8 miles across at its widest point. Its surface area of 32,500 acres has 520 miles of shoreline, created from dams of the hydroelectric powered Catawba River. In the early 1960’s it took Duke Power two years to fill Lake Norman, covering homes, farms, and entire towns. I find that fascinating. Whenever I drive across the lake on the interstate, my mind wanders off to the history of the beautiful lake and I wonder what remains at the bottom… It’s the primary water source for the city of Charlotte and surrounding counties and seeing the effects of the drought causes more than mild concerns. As I write this, we are having real, soaking rain. We’ve had a dark, drenching, soaking week and I’m smiling about it!



100_0787

At Lake Norman State Park, I was dreaming of waterfowl and birds. Other than seeing a flock of American Robins and many Juncos, it was waterfowl-less and quiet.


100_0789

The trail I was planning to walk… Hmmm. I was beginning to feel way too uninvited. The weather turned on me also - to cold, wet, and dark.


100_0793

I had my favorite Christmas gift with me - Eagle Optics Ranger binoculars (awesome!). They’ve opened up a delicious, clear, and sharp focus on things I would otherwise miss.

As soon as I was back on the interstate the sun broke through the clouds. Julie’s recent post contains a great message that directly relates to how I was feeling on my way home. In Sheryl Crow’s “Soak Up the Sun”, these two lines having a lot of meaning.

It’s not having what you want,
It’s wanting what you’ve got.


Back at home, all I wanted is what I already had. Julie calls it a little secret to happiness. Yep.


100_0818

100_0826

Back at my favorite strip mall pond and spending a little time with my backyard birds.


100_0777
Carolina Wrens are trying to shack up in my garage.



100_0694
Pishing is productive after a little practice.



100_0699


100_0697

The chickadees, goldies and house finches appear within a minute.



100_0693
If you frighten a flock of hiding Mourning Doves, you have instant failure.


100_0573



100_0569
Cardinals won’t show. I wouldn’t call them skittish. Very reserved.


100_0659

This one is neither skittish nor reserved. It’s just a loud pain in the a-- that gets on my last nerve, enough to make me momentarily dream of throwing my camera against the fence. And I like wanting that little bird. Imagine that.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Christmas was JUST DUCKY

100_0759

Christmas Eve 2007

No matter how tired I might be, I stay awake very late at night on Christmas Eve and walk around the house. I take photos while everyone else is sound asleep. I’ve done this since Gina was born.


100_0764
Our memory tree stands in the dining room window at the front of the house. It’s loaded with ornaments we all cherish.


100_0768

Michael, Chloe, and Bella were already sleeping on this magical night and the quiet, music to my ears, began to make me yawn while I touched each ornament and remembered. The macaroni bell Gina made in the second grade is probably my favorite.

Our Christmas Eve at Gina and Billy’s house was sweet. Her ham was delicious and her house is decorated so nicely in a Christmas contemporary style. Michael began to seriously wheeze due to his cat allergy, tripped and fell onto his hands and knees right in the middle of a vicious dog fight between Mr. Biggins and Bam-Bam over a Santa plush toy and I’m happy to say that no one was hurt. We all collapsed in laughter afterwards, grateful that Michael was still able to walk and breathe… What a grand time we had!



100_0773
Thanks, Bam-Bam. He had a hankerin' for cardboard.

Christmas was wonderful. Too much food – and I’m still feeling the effects. Gina had the day off today so we met at the mall before 9am. Both of us ran out of steam by noon, looked at each other and said, “Let’s get the H out of here.”


100_0780
Billy, the former Marine, got a helicopter from Michael. What is it with boys and their toys? He had it hovering all around the foyer ceiling and I admit it was pretty cool!


100_0715
On Christmas Eve morning, the sun was rising beautifully in a clear blue sky and I found the Hooded Merganser again. She’s a social duck and shows her free spirit in punk rocker style.



100_0707
Showing off her pretty self.


100_0713
Beautiful.



100_0704
My eye caught another lifer on the far side of the pond. I so wanted to bust a move about it!


100_0724
A Ring-Necked Duck kept his distance and seemed somewhat demure. I can’t see the ring around his neck but the ring on his bill is obvious. Who named this bird?


100_0727
He didn’t follow the others. A very shy duck.


100_0739

A man and his twelve-year-old Schnauzer met me on my way to the car. With wide eyes, he told me about the beaver he has seen at the pond and described it as being the size of a fully-grown Labrador Retriever. Yeah, right! He was probably hitting the egg nog already. I'm glad he enjoys his pond view.

Friday, December 21, 2007

Peace at the Pond and my wish for you...



100_0598

I just had to go back for three consecutive days, leaving all of the holiday prep behind. Free time dictates, you know.



100_0608

The Great Blue Heron delights me.
Patient and vigilant with its powerful sight,
slow and deliberate walking motion beneath the calm waves…ahhh.
It found lunch and devoured it, hidden behind a tree.


100_0520

I coasted to park the car and turned off the ignition. To my left sat the Belted Kingfisher, perched in a tree about twenty feet away. Heart rate up. The windows were closed (damn!) and I powered the camera quickly to get a fine portrait of her, only to realize the lens cap was in the way and I cursed. She was gone.


100_0517

With a full and blurry zoom, I can see the gleam in her eye, at least.



100_0525
It was a surprise to see a lifer in the bottom of a photo I had downloaded two days prior. Not the usual Canadian Goose or Mallard… I had to go back!

The skies were dark and the winds were biting but I didn’t mind my numbing fingers or watery eyes. I waited for her.



100_0635
There she was, a female Hooded Merganser (Click to enlarge all photos). Much smaller and busier than the rest,



100_0629
she spent more of her time under water than above it.


100_0619
Could this be one of the many large Comets or Shubunkins I set free in this very same pond? I doubt it. If so, I consider them my gifts.



100_0620
Gaining control.


100_0621
‘Twas worth the struggle. Bravo.

100_0637
Rested and full.


I don’t know how long I was there, taking in the beauty of the pond and the life it sustains. There, I felt peace.


100_0504
It was my time to think. I wondered how many people stop to look or even notice this pond on their way in to the food store, the bank, the pizza joint, or the nail salon. They only need to glance to their right…


100_0540

For a few moments, I turned my focus behind me and saw the hustle and bustle. There were cars racing towards the strip mall and I saw the Mexican construction workers laughing on the jobsite. I heard the Latino music blaring from their trailer.



100_0543

Funny, I didn’t hear or notice any of that until I turned around to look behind me.


100_0582
At home, I faced another challenge - one that I welcome. You know – my desire for a portrait of a Tufted Titmouse that will make me proud. There’s still time…

Time and a disconnect from all the pressure. This is what I wish for you. In large or small doses – whatever you can manage during the holiday season, I wish you peace.


100_0645


Merry Christmas! With love.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

I and the Great Blue Heron: Stinkers.

100_0479

This is my first Blue Jay photo. I was wishing for a better one but a few irritating things got in the way. The mighty Blue Jay! A common bird, but never seen at my house.

The campus Dean and I hung six feeders on our small Wildlife Habitat yesterday. Water sources will come soon. Planting will be postponed until spring and that is if we have some measurable rainfall.


100_0457

When you see a woman standing motionless, looking upward in a treed area with a camera around her neck, what would you think is going on?

I realize it’s the season of happiness and good will but I don’t want to be bothered while I’m watching birds. There were six or seven Blue Jays, a few Chickadees and Titmice, Eastern Bluebirds, Dark-eyed Juncos, and a male Red-Bellied Woodpecker in the trees this morning. None of them had found the feeders yet.

Mr. Cheery Face waddles on by - an older gentleman who gives his time, free of charge, to tutor students in language and math. Bless his heart.

“What are ya doing?” he inquires.

For a moment, my eyes met his and I whispered, “Watching lots of birds”. I raised the camera to my face.

He’s hard of hearing and yells, “WHERE?”

I'm thinking: In the freaking trees! Just chill, moron, and scram! Stop moving and jumping around, too.

He inquires, “Are they exotic?” (Oh, my God.)

I'm thinking: Read my lips and Shut UP, will ya?

I didn’t get any action, except for the Blue Jay.

Outwardly, I was nice but impatient and nasty inside. A genuine Stinker, I was.

100_0455

This is exactly why we are moving the seating area to another location. She obviously didn’t realize cigarette smoking is not what birds need and she was screwing up my photo opportunities.

100_0471

What else could cause more commotion! Before noon I went inside, cleaned up my office, watered the lobby plants, and hit the road to enjoy Day One of my Christmas break.



100_0497

I had time to run errands and to make a few stops along the way. Belted Kingfishers are crazy. There is no effective way to sneak up on them. Believe me, I’ve tried. If you can't see the blue spot in the middle of this photo, click to enlarge. Enlarge the next one, too.



100_0498

Darting straight away, across the pond, tree to tree. I am a very skilled stalker and this bird is really on to me… Getting a good shot of a bird in flight is my goal but it’s very difficult with a slow focusing camera. I’ll be using this camera for a while, so I’ll adjust and practice.



100_0489

It’s been several months since I’ve seen a Great Blue Heron and a good look at the Stinker made my day. For those who don’t understand the nickname “Stinker”: A GBH made regular lunch hour visits at my house in Maryland and Delaware because of its insatiable appetite for goldfish and Koi. It loved them TO DEATH.



100_0491

Noticing me now,


100_0494
and getting annoyed and frightened…


100_0495
My time to honor and gaze at this majestic bird only lasted about two minutes. Dang! What a thrill.



100_0499
You can fly but you can’t hide from me, STINKER.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

It's beginning to feel a lot like Christmas.

100_0424
Toasty inside.

Been disconnected from the blogosphere since Friday morning and the internet connection and land line issues weren’t solved until today.

A Christmas dinner in uptown Charlotte last night leaves me a tad under the weather today as the entrĂ©e wasn’t served until very late in the evening. It was a luxurious party that ended too late for this early-to-bed girl. Dancing? No. What kind of party is one without music and dancing?


100_0415
There was a finch convention at my house before the rains came on Saturday. The entire variety panicked throughout the day.


100_0416
We received an inch of rain.
Please pardon my strange fascination with raindrops on windows…


100_0422

100_0425

The clouds cleared this morning and gave way to sunshine.
The winds are damaging as I write this.

Two Boston Terriers need action.
I blew noises into the cardboard wrapping paper tube.
Boston ears perked.
Slid their favorite biscuit inside and clogged the two ends with wrapping tissue.
Rattled the tube.


100_0429
Ooops. Forgot to switch camera to the “action” mode. Bella took the lead and ate the biscuit in about seven seconds.


100_0436
Chloe gave her a good contest, but…


100_0441
Sometimes I hate my sister. After all of that, I didn’t get the prize.



100_0442

Make me feel better and put a bit of deli cheese in my chewie, will you please?

Monday and Tuesday will be my last two days of work before my FOURTEEN CONSECUTIVE DAYS OFF during the college break. Until that time, when I hope to have something "post worthy" to offer, my blogging will be quiet.

The giddy anticipation I feel about time off to rest often, watch the birds in daylight, clean the house a lot, and to do whatever I want is almost too much to comprehend. In a weird way, I really don’t want those days to begin as I am enjoying looking forward to them very much right now and knowing those days will fly by like a late morning dream.

I’m already worried about making the most of my days off and being productive.
Dammit.
The worrying needs to stop.

Thursday, December 13, 2007

A Day Off to Shop and Feel the Rain

100_0376

What a surprise! The fish are hungry and the water lilies couldn’t resist rising above the surface to soak up the warm, summer breeze.

A day off from work is what I needed and I took it. I don't do holiday shopping on the weekends. My tradition is to hit the malls early in the morning on a weekday and knock out my shopping in a few hours. Pre-planning and organization is the key. Finished. Done. Shopping is much easier for me now, compared to the years when I had a long list of gifts to find for teachers, bus drivers, coaches, Gina’s little friends and teammates, and babysitters. The nieces and nephews are grown now and I visited the toy store today for only one eight-year old nephew. I was amazed during every aisle I visited. Man, the toys are so sophisticated today. It made me smile to see some classic toys - a Magic 8-Ball, Etch-a-Sketch, and Dot-to-Dot workbooks. Slinkies (the metal ones)! Candy Land! Mouse Trap! Connect Four! I bought him books. He'll love them.

What’s a shopping trip without a little gift for me? I always treat myself while Christmas shopping and it’s usually a gift related to pricey skin care or cosmetics. Pamper, pamper, pamper. Oh, what a day!


The summer breezes didn’t stop me from decorating the pond yesterday (in shorts and tee-shirt)...



100_0337

I have always loved multi-colored lights and decorated with them for a few decades. Several years ago, it became more fashionable to use white lights, so I, a non-conformist at heart, grudgingly went along with the trend and still decorate with white lights. They are boring! My colorful pond lights delight me and they twinkle, very slowly.


100_0097

Chloe & Bella are decorated in their Christmas outfits, begging for a taste at the dinner table. It’s the only time I can get a photo of them together, holding a SIT.

We are completely decorated now.


100_0326

When I came home from my successful and glorious shopping trip, the feeders were silent. Not a bird in sight. The sun was breaking through dense clouds rolling in from the north. Ah-ha! Cooper never misses a visit.

Only two birds had the nerves to take advantage of free roaming at the feeders, but both of them eluded me.




100_0080

Sounding its alarm makes the rest take cover. Even ravaging Starlings and Mockingbirds scatter. Chickadee-dee-dee is always unafraid, willing to take seeds alone, and my God, I love this little bird.


100_0321

And then there is the little squawking brat. I’ll get a grand photo of a Tufted Titmouse one of these days… (click to enlarge - you might see it).

I enjoy watching the birds at work, doing what they do, rather than seeing them hanging from a feeder.

That being said,

100_0398

She flew in quietly while I was photographing the water lily. Ahhhh…. Shhhhh! I fumbled the camera and lost my footing on the pond rocks. Woodpeckers get me all excited, every time.


100_0408

After all was done – spending a little time with the birds and filling their feeders, decorating and cleaning the pond, I felt the strong and quick-moving winds bring a chill with it and I found a jacket. The clouds brought rain

100_0406

for ten minutes. I let the rain drip from my eyeglasses for such a brief time...

Monday, December 10, 2007

Dandelions in December

100_0286

The children are working up a sweat in bare feet, playing at the park. They're happier than dogs at Petsmart, but do they wish for a snow day? I do. It shouldn’t be this way. Those children should be wearing warm jackets with an optional hood attached. This is not the Deep South. We should be enjoying hot soup and a fireplace blazing in the evening.

100_0242

A small black snake moved into the garage yesterday – after a cold week, the suddenly rising temps forced it to look for cooler and moist living quarters. An angry and threatening snake it was, but Michael relocated it up the hill into the rocky culvert where it will no doubt make its way back down the hill for a drink and better living quarters. Michael needed a little time to recover after the capture and release!


100_0278

The summer breezes are still with me. A wasp tickled my wrist and flies made their way inside the house. The summer we had and the heat has been hauntingly endless! The freezing nights left the house cold enough to wear sweaters and jackets indoors but we needed to shed them outdoors. That’s the way it will be for many days ahead. I keep reminding myself that we are not living through an ice storm, hence I should not complain...but



100_0280

I walked the campus today and wish I could describe the dryness with my photos and somehow make those who don’t notice, hear the sound of lifeless, dry earth under their feet. It’s never been so dry and unseasonably warm here or anywhere I’ve lived. How does 80 F degrees sound during the holiday season? Not good for me!



100_0291

Construction workers live and breathe dirt and dust, month after month. After a mile walk, I felt the grit on my skin. I heard only two Chickadees. The blasted drought is sucking the life away…

Three voice mail messages on my cell phone were waiting for me when I returned from my walk. An elderly lady inquired about her husband’s health records being transferred and left a very detailed and anxious message three times, five minutes apart. As a favor to her, I returned her calls, wanting to let her know she did not reach the doctor’s office but reached me, instead. I was certain I dialed correctly and her distinctive voice shot back at me loudly and clearly, screaming accusations of harassment, and swearing that she didn’t use the phone at all during the day. Sure, I was angry and shocked, but I couldn’t help but feel much sympathy for her…she needed a hug. I wiped the grit from my face and returned to working on budgets while counting the minutes until quitting time.



100_0224

At home, I rushed outside while the shadows were beginning to hide a few gifts of life in the yard. These views save my sanity on days like this.

100_0228


100_0255




100_0166




100_0298


The suet cakes are beginning to melt. We might need air conditioning tonight.

Sigh…

Saturday, December 08, 2007

Dogs, Wrens, Worms, Hawks, whatever

It seems like it's been weeks since I posted but it’s only been a few days. Being distracted and busy isn’t very conducive to writing something sensible but I’m going to try to compose something almost coherent. Or maybe I won't try at all. This post is all over the place and is the reason for it's lazy title.



100_0176

Bam-Bam sees a yellow tennis ball in Gramma’s toy chest.


Get ready…get set…GO, BAM!

100_0178

“Duh, Gramma. Where did it go? Where did it go?"



100_0210
The loudest voice in the choir.

Maybe because of this?


100_0205
The dogs and I ran her out of the area and it's good she scampered since I was very ready to pick up sticks. (I adore cats but not ones that roam freely and terrorize birds.)

A sweet Carolina Wren was trapped inside my sunroom this afternoon - maybe an hour or just a few minutes. The screen door was open about two feet and this unlucky little bird found itself feeling hard walls and windows against its body, frantically trying to escape…


100_0212



100_0213

I slowly stepped into the sunroom and talked to it softly while I opened the screens wide. Then I stood back and took two quick photos. This was not the time for a photo shoot. Wren was not like the Mockingbird I held in my hands and set free last spring. I knew I couldn’t have caught this live wire in my hands, as I wished.


100_0215

Doors and screens wide open, I stepped inside the kitchen and closed the door. Within seconds, it was free!



100_0069
Delicious mealworms arrived from Susan at Lake Life. Not squeamish about much, I didn’t waste time opening the box but when I took the cloth pouch out of the box and heard 1,000 bionic worms creepily crawling in and out of the paper inside, the hair on the back of my neck raised. I peeked inside the pouch to see them moving so fast and freaked out! While I chilled them outside in the garage frig, a few very reliable friends gave me tips on keeping mealworms.

I bought them for the Bluebirds who visited the yard last week. Of course, I haven’t seen them since!


100_0073

Yummm. An hour after I took this photo, strong winds arrived and blew them a mile away from the little dish that held them.


100_0160
That was good enough reason to visit Wild Birds Unlimited. I love the ease of mounting this new feeder on the pole. It easily slides on in two seconds.

And here’s another reason I’m glad I went to WBU. My friendly salesmen led me around the corner to see a lifer.


100_0119

Northern Harrier was irritated with me. It sits on the same peak for hours, watching a grassy marsh below. The clouds were thick but at least I got one decent shot out of ten.

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Coffee and Pockets

Not my usual post loaded with photos. I didn't intend to tell a long story...it just kept going.


July 27, 2005 was the last time I drank coffee from my own kitchen. One or two small cups each morning was all it took to ignite a fire under my butt to move! move! move! early in the morn. After thirty-two years of relying on the powers of caffeine, I gave up the habit abruptly but it was not my choice.

On the evening of July 26, 2005, I tumbled down the back deck steps while letting Bella outside to pee. I held her on lead to protect her from nasty dogs next door. When I tumbled, my sandals flew off, and I thought I heard a muffled crack somewhere near my foot but put it right out of my mind. I remember that fall vividly, like a bad dream, and thinking, “Oh crap. I broke my foot. HA! Can’t be real. I’m moving three states away soon.”

Our house was sold a few weeks prior, I had packed only two bedrooms even though we scheduled movers and packers, and Michael was already working and living out of a suitcase in North Carolina. I was alone in Delaware. Past bedtime and late in the evening, I hobbled back into the house leaving my sandals where they landed on the patio, took two Advil, went to bed, and hoped for the best the next day.

Drank a few ounces of coffee the next morning. It gave me the strength to crawl up the stairs that led into the walk-in attic to find a pair of crutches that were probably bought from Read’s Drug Store back in 1968 when I fractured the same ankle. The hardware that held the wooden sticks together was loose, the rubbery armpit and hand pads were dry-rotted, but I needed them to haul myself to the Envoy for a trip to the emergency room. On the way, I called the office to tell Barbara I’d be in later, after a quick X-ray. I refused to believe my problem was more than a minor sprain but realized my left foot sort of swayed back and forth, hanging on to a few threads of something.

“Mary, my goodness. You broke your ankle in two places!” I heard the doctor say…and some talk about the surgeon coming by to discuss surgery. I sort of listened to his long-winded explanation, describing the pins and screws he would use in surgery seven hours later, but I heard, loud and clear, “…after two weeks in a hard cast, we’ll replace it with a mobile one.” It was selective hearing on my part, and I believed I’d be in a walking cast or boot soon. After all, I had lots to do since we were moving in twenty-eight days! For the next several hours, I sat in the hospital bed alone and feeling frightened as I had not had surgery since my tonsillectomy at age four.

The kind nurses brought me dinner and a pair of brand new crutches after a two-hour surgery. Barbara picked up my prescriptions and my neighbors drove me and my Envoy home that night. I was such a happy soul that evening, giddy and laughing as I crawled up the garage steps leading into the laundry room to kiss and hug my little black and white girlfriends and chatted with friends for a while. I had enough drugs in me that I promised Barbara I’d be back to work in three days. Yeah, right. I'm sure they rolled their eyes at me when I wasn’t looking.

The next morning, Michael flew in to stay for a few days and learned to use a washing machine for the first time in his life and other major appliances, but has since forgotten… A man with limited time to get through the daily nitty-gritty chores of cleaning, cooking, selling furniture, and moving, he was overwhelmed. I asked for a glass of ice water because carrying a glass of water, or anything for that matter, was impossible for me. Yes, I knew he was busy and as stressed as I, but his comment to me was, “You know, Mare, you can use one crutch and carry things – I’ve seen people use one crutch.”

My reply, “In a CIRCUS? I need you to show me how it’s done. I felt like hurling a crutch his way like a spear. Go out and buy me an apron with pockets and bottled water.” And he did. It was hot in late July and he brought home a heavy canvass apron large enough to fit a six foot tall chef with a sixty inch waste. I needed pockets to carry things and not an apron that would trip me up and send me flying. He tried his best to help.

Gina drove north from Wilmington, NC the day after. She stayed with me for two straight weeks, not making coffee, and catered to my whims. We played card games until we lost consciousness and I learned to like MTV as she learned to like Good Morning America. We both tried to make life fun while I sat on the sofa most of the time, elevating my foot, watching TV and the golfers tee off through the window, watching life go on outside of my miserable room, feeling sorry for myself, and hearing news from our pitiful real estate agent that our buyers’ sale of their house fell through… and the words, “…we can list your house again”, and I cried. That lousy real estate agent fumbled the ball too many times and I wanted to reach through the phone and strangle him. I was hopelessly losing control of my life.


(We didn’t list the house again but we were forced to settle on our home in Delaware electronically, two weeks after we settled on our home in North Carolina. How nice.)

The day before Gina left to get back to work in Wilmington, I crutched into the bathroom, slipped my cast into the plastic bag, sat on my new shower seat Michael bought for me, and emerged from the bathroom in full make-up, hair blown dry to perfection, eager to see the surgeon after two weeks of wishing…waiting for my “walking, mobile cast”. I had, by then, mastered crutches but avoided stairs completely.

If you want a tighter stomach, more upper body strength and a six-pack, use crutches for a few weeks.

The surgeon sawed through the hard cast, removed twenty-eight staples, and Gina nearly fainted. The X-ray looked good. Did I get a walking cast? Of course, I didn't. “Four more weeks on crutches with this removable air cast”, he prescribed. “You need a full six weeks of healing to avoid permanent disability.” If he wasn’t so good looking, I would have slapped him. “But doctor, I’m moving in less than two weeks, blah blah blah…” I knew what the prognosis would be, but…I needed to hear some good news for a change, dammit!

Poor Gina watched me weep on the way home and watched me sob on the phone with co-worker Mary Lou and my dear friend Ruth, my cubicle neighbor, as I asked her to pack up my cube and bring it to me…and she did, taking great care with my photo frames and everything else I cherished in my “cubicle, sweet cubicle”.

Within two days, Michael returned to North Carolina, as did Gina. I was home alone for four days before he would fly back to Delaware to get ready for moving day. During those endless four days, I was grateful for friends who visited and my neighbors who came in several times a day to let Chloe and Bella outside, on lead, for safety from the dogs next door. I had not seen my pond fish in over three weeks and no one filled the bird feeder. Incredible.

No one brought me coffee, but by then, I didn’t miss it.

Dry cereal for breakfast and a juice box. You carry everything in your pockets. A small bottle of window cleaner fit nicely and a roll of paper towels was snug against my belly behind elastic waste shorts.

Making a hot dog for dinner while on crutches is a major task:

Allow yourself thirty minutes from start to finish.

Crutch to the frig. Throw a hot dog, a bottle of mustard, and rolls across the kitchen to land on the counter near the microwave.

Crutch to the pantry. Fly a paper plate as you would a Frisbee to the same area.

You throw things to save time because your good foot and leg ache from bearing the weight when you are using it for too long.

By the time your hot dog is piping hot you need to sit down at the kitchen table for about two minutes to rest your good leg and observe the toes on your bad leg swell to the size of boiled eggs.

Wrap the warm hot dog in a paper towel or foil and put it in your pocket. Place a bottle of water in your other pocket.

Crutch to the sofa and fall into it. Channel to world news and reach for the hot dog in your pocket to find that your pants had twisted and you sat on it.

Eat your cold, bent hot dog anyway.

Ignore the begging Boston Terrier faces because you worked too hard to share a small, lousy meal.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


What does all of this have to do with coffee?

I brewed a pot of coffee this morning because Michael and I thought about an occasional pot lately. The aroma brought back memories of the last time I used my coffee mug, over two years ago. I overslept a bit, and was running late.

A few ounces of caffeine made a huge difference. Without really trying, I shaved fifteen minutes off my getting-ready-for-work time. My eyes were wide open.

After I was dressed and literally running out the door, something didn’t feel right. My elastic waist pants felt tight around my buttocks, loose and puffy on my stomach, and I fleetingly wondered how my weight shifted from front to back overnight.

Entering my office, I wanted to put keys in my pocket but my hands kept slipping by, to find my pockets reversed and my pants on backwards.
Life is a riot.

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Am I a Grinch?



101_0051

A few ornaments on my Delaware and North Carolina Tree.


I didn’t want to do it.

I didn’t feel like it.

I, who gets all googly-eyed over sparkle, lights, and Christmas, have been feeling like the Grinch.

It’s my favorite season but I dreaded the work this weekend. The ladder was out and the main tree stood tall, waiting for me.

Sometimes, it’s just too much.

It’s the first weekend in December and that’s when I decorate. It’s a tradition I keep, all on one specific weekend. I used to finish all of the decorating in one weekend.

I’m not finished!

When will I shop? When will I by two gifts I need before Thursday? When will I get my hair cut before Michael’s company party?



101_0032
It was sunny and warm outdoors to wear shorts and flip-flops. Not quite right for decorating, according to me. Michael takes care of outdoor lights these days, thank goodness, because there’s a lot of work for me to do indoors. I refuse to think I’m getting too old to whip everything into shape in one weekend like I used to.

Maybe I need a cold blast of Canadian air to propel me into fast action.

I recall a few warm Decembers in Maryland. Most of them were below freezing. I’d rather decorate wearing hats and gloves.


101_0027

The roads were crowded with those hauling cut trees on the roof of their cars. It was a decorating weekend.

I played Christmas music on the Bose. I needed it. It helps to get me into the spirit!




101_0060

This is an ornament on my Maryland tree (click to enlarge).


When I was a young child, my Mom hung glass balls in the picture window of our modest row home in Baltimore City. She hung them with white sewing thread, held up by thumb tacks at the top of the window frame. Below the balls, a candelabra illuminated them at night. They were so beautiful to me. Today I hung one of those balls and noticed a thread that had turned yellow. I held that ball in my hand and remembered how little we owned. We didn't know we didn't have much. We only knew how happy we were. Rich in love and spirit.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


101_0021


101_0002

I tried pishing today and it worked to entice a Song Sparrow and a Chickadee. Check out Monarch’s video – it’s excellent! I learned that I will never pish with dogs again. Chloe and Bella were escorted inside the house after they both freaked out!



101_0067




101_0040

The skies clouded this evening and chilled the air. There’s a “chance” of rain.

Now it feels like Christmas.