In All Things Give Thanks

It is November, and I am thankful for all things in my life. I often take this month to to take a special accounting of all the blessings in my life, whether they be large and small, and I share them each day. However, this year my heart feels heavy. I still remind myself everyday, I am just finding it hard to share when so many are suffering.

My hope in the future is waning and it seems everyday there is more and more discourse, more incidents that indicate we as a society are in trouble. I cannot escape the sense of foreboding or shut out the noise, the hate, or the insanity that I am bombarded with everyday, as it seems it is now every moment of everyday.

Truly, lately, I feel as the old hymn says…”This world is not my home.” and daily I am telling myself that, ” I am just passing through.”

Today two posts from the past expressions of gratitude brought me some peace. They reminded me that even in all the chaos around me and in the world, there is still so much to be thankful for. I can still count my blessings and be thankful when others are struggling. I do so with a humble heart knowing that I have done nothing to deserve even one blessing or even my next breath.

The first post follows this simple instruction from Psalm 69 says, “…praise the name of God with Song”… meaning to worship. When I sing and praise God it lifts my spirit, it eases my deep sighs and fill my heart with gratitude.

I will praise the name of God with song, And exalt Him with thanksgiving.Psalm 69:30 NASB

“I have learned that in every circumstance that comes my way, I can choose to respond in one of two ways: I can whine or I can worship! And I can’t worship without giving thanks. It just isn’t possible. When we choose the pathway of worship and giving thanks, especially in the midst of difficult circumstances, there is a fragrance, a radiance, that issues forth out of our lives to bless the Lord and others.” ~Nancy Leigh DeMoss

The second post was more personal, of all the gifts I have received, my sons are among the greatest. They are unique and each one touches my heart in different way.

“Let us be grateful to the people who make us happy; they are the charming gardeners who make our souls blossom.” ~ Marcel Proust

This picture, taken in 1999, makes me smile each time I see it and I see it everyday. These three people are the ones that make me happy and bring joy to my heart. ❤️

It is November, a month for giving thanks. I thank God for everything because He has given me Everything.

Take Me to Paradise

If I could turn back time, travel back to any country and any era and come back completely safe where might I go?

I have given this a lot of thought over the past week and I have to say honestly that every place, every time, that I can think of has its horrors and inconveniences. Even if I could come back safe and unharmed, I don’t know that I would want to carry the burden of the things I might witness. My current lifetime has enough sorrows of its own.

I don’t want to see the horrors of wars, bloody wars, world wars. I don’t want to see slavery, or indentured servitude. People dying from diseases we have, for a time at least, conquered.

No matter how romantic Jane Austen made the 1800’s seem I think it was not so great for the masses. I am accustomed to modern conveniences, I like my hot showers and working plumbing. I don’t know that I would like to see sewage running in the street or cold baths in dirty water.

I can keep going back in time and I am sorry to be a pessimist but I just don’t see anything I want to witness, it was a hard life and hard times for the majority of the people in any age; hardline religious views, cruel and overbearing rulers, unsanitary conditions, food shortages, inadequate protection from the elements, lack of healthcare.

Now, possibly, if given the choice, I would like to see the future. I guess I’ve reached a certain age where I see changes that I think are taking society down a wrong path. I might find it reassuring to know that the choices the generation behind me are taking are ones leading down a road to peace, happiness and a better life for all. I might want to see how my children and grandchildren’s lives turned out. I would love to see them happy and know they enjoy the beauty around them, the blue sky, the wildflowers, the warm sun and cool breezes.

However, that is not the choice. So, if I could go back, take me to the Garden of Eden. Especially if it is on a beach, with coconuts, fruits and flowers and lush gardens, and make it near a warm place with gentle breezes — no winter, no snow please. Let it rain warm showers, followed by sunshine, so that I can nap under the shade of a large oak tree with the soft sounds of a waterfall in the background. Everyday would have glorious golden sunrises and fiery red sunsets, it would be a paradise. Finally and ideally, there would be no wild beasts to attack, but sadly as we all know there would still be serpents… I am not fond of snakes and we all know the one in the Garden of Eden is one that caused all the other stuff I don’t want to see since the beginning of time.

Not Eden but maybe close. Butchart Gardens, Victoria, BC, 2016

Tea Bee ~ March 15, 2023

Remembering Mother

I’ve been thinking all week about my Mother and also today on what would be her 90th birthday.

I reminisced about her last few weeks and the time Paulette and I spent with her.

Eight months before she passed away, she had an arterial blockage. At the time, I was gently encouraged to keep her comfortable and let her go peacefully but I could not face that.

Although her dementia took away a lot of her memories, she was still engaging and she could be so funny and brought joy to others. So I pushed for surgery, which was technically successful, it restored the blood flow but she never walked again. With Covid fears and restrictions still in full swing she declined rapidly.

Perhaps I shouldn’t have approved the surgery, before that she seemed to have lots to give in life. Either way, it was a no-win situation. Had I let her go then, I think I would have still gone through a period of guilt. I am sorry she had to suffer.

It comes down to the final verse in this Wm Randolph Hearst poem ~’The River’

“So don’t ask why –
We live or die,
Or whither, or when we go,
Or wonder about the mysteries
That only God may know”

I love this picture of my Mother. It was taken two months after the surgery. I had given her the pearls my auntie sent her and she let me braid her hair. We spent the afternoon singing hymns 💕 It was hard to leave that day, but it was a day I will always cherish.

Yesterday When I Was Young

When I was in my teens and twenties I honestly thought I would die young but since I will be 68 this year, my mind has changed and I don’t believe that any longer! That belief came from the fact that I experienced so much before I was even “of age” and I felt that because I was moving through life in the fast lane, I would reach my end sooner.

However, in all seriousness, another thing I have changed my mind about is whether or not – Life Is Fair – or that we can make it fair and equal for everyone. Not to say we should not help others, but overall we cannot not change what hardships, through fate, are going to enter someone’s life.

I wrote a blog about this a few years back, and it seems we can give people things that make life seem more equitable, but there are unexpected things in life that happen for which we have no control.

A person can do everything that’s righteous and upstanding, they can help others and yet life seems to hand them one cruel blow after another. Contrasting that, it seems there are those who are wicked and unjust who breeze through life, taking advantage of the poor and weak and they seem apparently blessed with good fortune.

We, as humans, can try to level the playing field but it is God who is in control of our lives and although we may not understand, we are instructed to not lean on our own understanding. (Proverbs 3:4-5) and reminded that our ways and thoughts are not His ways and thoughts. (Isaiah 55:9).

So more than having changed my mind about life and fairness, I am learning to accept that life is is good, no matter what the circumstances. Whatever hardships I face, are mine to face. In the same way others have their own hardships and lessons to face on their journey through life. May each of each find the courage to see us through.

https://emyloomwordswovenwithinmyheart.com/2021/04/24/fairness-in-life/

Writer or Reader

Strangely enough, although I love to write, I am not much of a reader. I can read articles and short stories easily enough and I am a good researcher, but reading a big book cover to cover… I find difficult.

When I try to read my mind gets lost in my own thoughts and wanderings. I find myself having to go back and reread pages, even chapters of the books. I have a hard time remembering characters and have to search back through the pages to find who they are and what they have done.

When I was nine, my Aunt Barbara gave me the book “Little Women.” It was a children’s book but possibly 100 pages. I started that book so many times and never finished. I would get lost in the illustrations of the beautiful March girls and I would trace over them and then color them myself.

I think I was an adult before I ever finished that book. I recently gave it to my cousin, Beth. I received it the year she was born and my Aunt Barbara had written a note inside to me and dated it, Christmas 1964. When I gave it to her it had been taped together and the deep marks where I had traced the pictures were still evident. It had traveled the world with me for 54 years.

In 2003, I saw an interview with Mitch Albom, author of “Tuesdays with Morrie,” about his latest book, “The Five People You Meet in Heaven.” It was 196 pages and I figured I could conquer that. In short, I loved this book.

It was about a man, Eddie, who had a series of tragedies in his life, from war to love loss and lived with a handicap. He was the maintenance man at an amusement park and felt he lived a mundane life and really had no purpose to his life.

Eddie dies suddenly in an accident and finds himself not in heaven, but in a place where his life is explained by five people he encountered in his lifetime. Each one relays their experience with him. Some stories bring sorrow and others moments of joy.

In the end, the stories explain his purpose in life and why he was here. The experience answered many of the unanswered questions we all have in life. In ways we do not even know, our lives impact others and we are all connected in ways we do not even understand.

I read this book several times. I bought copies of it and gave it to people. There was a time I would carry it on trips and read it on the plane…it was my travel book.

I have bought several books by Mitch Albom that followed, but never connected as I did with this one. The latest one was “The Stranger in the Lifeboat,” and I still need to read again. Even after giving it to my friend, Sho, to read and having her explain the intricacies; I still do not fully grasp the players and the meaning in the end. Comprehension is not my strong point I guess.

I have read other books but I would say one a year at the max. Finally, it goes without saying I read from my Bible every day. It gives me hope and strength when I need guidance but there are many things there I cannot comprehend as well. I am praying for the day I meet up with the Lord in Heaven and he explains the meaning of it all.

The one on the left is a copy I bought off of eBay and gave to a friend with daughters, the right was mine from 1964. I recently gave it to my cousin as it was given to me by her mom the year she was born.

Trish B – April 10, 2023

Drama

So much drama! I read the news, I look around me and it seems the drama is never ending and I want it to stop. It is exasperating. Yet, I wonder if the generation before me felt the same? I definitely had some strange ideas and beliefs when I was young.

Not only did I have some strange ideas, I also did some foolish things. There are things I would really like to forget, but they serve a purpose to remind me about how far I’ve come and what I have learned along the way.

This morning, I came across this poem I wrote in 2016. After reading it, I have some hope that one day, just as I did, these drama creators will look back and realize it was only a lot of drama.

Perception © by Trish B.

Be Happy

Happy according to the Britannica Dictionary means “feeling pleasure and enjoyment because of your life, situation.” Focusing on the feeling pleasure and enjoyment because of my life, I find happiness in the simple things.

It makes me happy to see my three sons happy and successful. My heart leaps when they call or text just to say, “I love you mom.”

I enjoy sharing an evening with close friends. For many years we had an annual dinner with friends and associates from the tunneling industry. These evenings always brought joy to my heart. Chris and I were the youngsters of this group and we to took pleasure in hearing their tales of the past and soaking in the wisdom they shared on marriage, family and friendship.

Chris and I both find it makes our hearts happy when we are able to help others. Sometimes it doesn’t always work out, but as the work of Dr. Kent Keith said, “…in the final analysis it is between you and God; it was never between you and them anyway..” Who cannot be happy when you are pleasing God?

In the even simpler things in life I find joy: it makes me happy to look at the lawn and smell the freshly cut grass after it is mowed, to see a bee digging for pollen in a flower, to see the hummingbird come to my window, to hear a baby’s laugh, to watch puppies and kittens play and to view fabulous sunrises and sunsets, or see a rainbow stretch across the valley.

In all of these things I find joy and happiness.

The ringtone on my phone for many many years has been the melody to Bobby McFerrin’s “Don’t Worry Be Happy” and makes me happy every time I hear it.

Introverted

I would, without a doubt, classify myself as an introvert living with an extrovert. I know several of my friends are surprised to here me say this because when I am comfortable with a small groups of friends, I do not appear that way but put me in a room with a group of people I do not know and I struggle to not be a wall flower.

When I was younger one might say I was timid. I would not even to walk up to a cashier and pay for an item. I lacked confidence and always felt self-conscious. I was raised to be seen and not heard and I have carried that with me most of my life. As the old saying goes, “Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak up and remove all doubt.”

Chris on the other hand is all Mr. Personality. He can join in with any group of people and feel right at home and additionally he is engaging and enchanting. A few years ago he ran a half marathon to raise money for the Crohns and Colitis Foundation. He had been training for three months and got to know his team very well. I went with him to the event in NAPA. There was an evening gathering where the team met over drinks and shared their IBD stories. I was an observer, I never said anything except maybe privately to Chris. The next morning we went to breakfast with three others. I was talking with one of the ladies when another lady looked at me and said, “Oh she speaks.”

It really hurt my feelings and did nothing to encourage me to continue speaking, but I get it, people think we are anti-social or snobs, but it is not true. I read this once about introverts.
“They are not antisocial, they just listening and observing. They can’t stand small talk but can talk for hours about life. They would rather be a home with a close friend than in a big crowd of acquaintances. Please don’t scold or embarrass them in public. Respect the fact that they are reserved and if they do open themselves up to you, know that it means you are very special to them. “ Unknown

As well as being an introvert, I would say I’m an anti-confrontational person. However, there have been times that I have been forced out of my shell to speak out and speak up, mostly for an injustice. These events might leave some invigorated and feeling free. They leave me drained and sad.

Susan Cain, the author of “Quiet Power: The Secret Strengths of Introverts.”

“Introverts, in contrast, may have strong social skills and enjoy parties and business meetings, but after a while wish they were home in their pajamas. They prefer to devote their social energies to close friends, colleagues, and family. They listen more than they talk, think before they speak, and often feel as if they express themselves better in writing than in conversation. They tend to dislike conflict. Many have a horror of small talk, but enjoy deep discussions.”

This may explain why I share so much on my blog that I would never voice to others. I am happy being who I am.

Christmas Spirit

Most of this twenty-first century and the last few years of the twentieth, I wrote an annual Christmas poem. Some were better than others and some possibly down right corny however, it was part of a tradition that was expected on Christmas day.

For 33 years, minus the past two when ‘the virus’ interrupted many traditions, we have celebrated Christmas with our British friends, Tony and Jen. Jen always made the traditional Christmas meal with all the British favorites turkey, fresh-made rolls, roasted potatoes, bread sauce, Christmas plum pudding which was doused in brandy and set ablaze.

One year, Jen wrote ditty and by coincidence I did too; they were just short little poems about the Christmas season. So for the next few years it was a challenge to produce a new one. Year after year the poems became longer and more elaborate. After a few years Jen bowed out, saying she would leave the tradition to me. So I continued.

Every year a poem would start brewing in my heart somewhere around Thanksgiving. I would start gathering thoughts in my mind and occasionally write down snippets, but the actual assembly of those thoughts came together on Christmas Eve when my poems were actually written. I would be in a rush to finish them; they were often typed and printed just minutes before we had to leave.

The first ‘virus year’ even though we did not gather to celebrate, I still wrote a poem. Last year I had nothing to give and this year it appears the prose in my heart have gone cold once again.

Twenty twenty-two was a tough year for many close to me. Tough is really an understatement for the tragedies they have endured. So with that in mind, I am sharing my poem from 2013 (a tough year for me) and hope that whatever is going on in your life, you can look around you and still find the joy and blessings this season brings.

Christmas Spirit

Another year is at it’s end,
For Christmas time is here again.

Can’t grasp that Christmas spirit thing;
Jolly men, sparkling lights, carols and bells that ring.

No can’t grasp it, but what appears as this year slowly ends…
Is a greater appreciation for loved ones and friends.

They are life and joy, they are the gifts with no costs;
Yet remembering with sadness those that we lost.

Some far too soon approached heaven’s gate;
Others are treasures, as heaven can wait.

And if one Christmas Day, so far off, or very near,
We gather to celebrate, and one of us is not here;

Remember the joy that was shared each year, by each one,
And know that our Christmas’s were about loved ones and fun.

Remember the warmth, the love and the laughter,
Because after all, that’s what we were after.

Christmas Spirit where are you this year?
You’re in my heart and with memories I hold dear
❤️

© Trish B 2013

Four Husbands No Fathers

I wrote a verse in 2014 on Father’s Day, called “Fatherless,” because my biological father was out of my life before I had any memories of him. My mother was married three more times each time bringing a new father figure. Last month I found out the last one had died and left me contemplating the roll of each.

My biological father was a tormented soul. He served in the Navy in WWII and I am told he was never the same when he returned. His torment drove him alcohol which became a demon to him. He would drink, become abusive, and then take his rage out on my mother. I heard once, overheard, that her final straw was when he held a gun to my head and dared her to scream. {{Deep breath}} yeah, that was hard to hear. Thankfully, she dug down deep, and even though she was a young 25 year old with small children she left him.

I have no memory before that and he never visited us but when I was 27, I went back to Virginia to visit my Auntie, his sister. He was in the VA hospital suffering ill health from years of alcohol abuse. With my Auntie by my side, I went to see him there. I have to say, I only went out of curiosity. He appeared to be an old man with many regrets. He told a couple of innocent stories about memories he had when I was young. That was it, maybe less than an hour. Strangely enough, I don’t remember how our visit ended. Did I extend an obligatory hug? I don’t know but I doubt it, I was very protective back then.

When my mother left my bio-father, we lived in Texas. She was supporting three small children on her own and working at the Walgreen’s lunch counter in downtown Houston. It was there she met a young East Texas bull rider six years her junior. He was tall and handsome with red hair. They married in 1959; I was three and half years old.

He was not an educated man, but a hard working good ol’ country boy. He did construction work, dug ditches and worked hard to support us. He became my daddy. He held me, brushed my hair and provided lots of love and affection which was tempered by the fact he was a old-school disciplinarian – spare the rod, spoil the child. Any act of disobedience was met with a “whipping” often with a belt. I went to school many times with welt marks across my legs. Today such actions would send child protective services to the home but back then that was the way it was.

When I was fourteen, he left my mother for another woman and just like that he was gone out of my life. I saw him a few times over the years. In the last twenty or so years he would call me on my birthday. I think he remember it because it was two days before his.

As quickly as the tall red-head left, on the rebound, my mother within six months jumped to another marriage. This man was eight years my mother’s senior. He was rough, from North Carolina and he had been in jail, supposedly for check fraud. I don’t know what his intentions were with my mother, but he was wholly inappropriate with me. He was not a father but an abuser. He moved my mother from Texas to Florida where his son lived. I married early and was removed from the situation. After only 3 years my mother left him and moved back to Texas.

Back in Texas, my mother connected with my father-in-law (correct, my husband’s father) and they married. I had always had a strained relationship with him. He was also southern Texas old-school with a bit of the alcohol demon mixed in as well. He could be sweet and caring, or sarcastic and abusive… the more alcohol the more abusive. My kids loved him and his grumpy, cantankerous ways. He was the kind of grumpy old grandpa that young boys find fascinating; they laughed and wondered over his antics.

However, I never understood why my mother tolerated this behavior, but I think she felt she could show him some sort of acceptance and love he lacked in his life. I don’t even want to get into how many run-ins I had with him. He could be inappropriate too, with other women including me. He never became physically abusive like the prior one, mostly inappropriate suggestive speech. Some of it was done in a joking good-old-boy way often in front of my mother.

To say our relationship was contentious was an understatement. I hated the way he treated my mother but my mother would defend him. Once at Father’s Day I made a comment to my mother that I didn’t have to worry about that holiday and she became upset and offended. I told her I did not consider him my father. She harshly reminded me of that statement for many years and would tell me that he really loved me… well, he had a strange way of showing it.

Now they are all gone.

A few years ago I found out that the abusive husband from North Carolina had died in 1980, just seven years after my mother left Florida. I feel nothing. He was dead to me the moment she left him. That marriage was a mistake in every way, and he was certainly not any sort of father figure.

My biological father died in 1986 just three days after his 60th birthday. He died of lung cancer in that same VA hospital I visited him in just a few years earlier. My mother called to tell me he had died. My reaction was unexpected. I cried and cried and I could not understand why. I had not known him at all except through hearing about him and I only had one memory of him. It was perplexing. After a while I became to understand that I was mourning the loss of what could have been, what might have been, but was never to be.

The last one, (my ex-father-in-law) stayed married to my mom for thirty-four years. He was stubborn, cantankerous and abusive until the end. I was there when he passed in 2009, as was my husband, my step sister, my ex-husband (now step-brother) and his wife. It was a hard watching my mom go through this loss. I did what I could to honor her wishes and help her through this period. I bought yellow roses for his casket but I did not shed a tear.

The most touching thing that stays with me about the day he died was that as one-by-one we slowly left the room, my ex-husband stayed behind with his father. As I looked down the hallway, I saw my current husband waiting as if standing guard outside the room while my ex said his goodbyes. When my ex left the room, my husband reached out and embraced him. It was surreal watching the two men in my life, one grieving a loss and the other comforting him.

Finally, I learned last month that the man who had been my father through my childhood years had died. I had heard from him like I said off and on through the years but much more in the last 3 or 4 years. Several times when I would go to Texas to see my mom, I would try to work in a visit. However, Texas is a big place and there was never enough time.

The past year after my mom passed away he began calling me more often. Even though he was a strict hard disciplinarian , I certainly had an affection for him. He filled a void in little girls life, but it was not going to take up where we left off fifty-three years ago. When he left my mother, he abandoned me. The last year he was in a nursing home and began calling me at work, and after the calls got more and more frequent I blocked his number from my work phone.

Early this year he called me one night at 11 pm, I was already asleep and did not answer. He left a very strange message that seemed like he was confused and thought he had called someone else. After a few days I tried to call him back and got no answer. When our birthdays rolled around in September, I called his cellphone, it was disconnected. I called the nursing home and they would not tell me anything. I looked for obituaries, nothing.

Finally, I found a phone number for his younger brother. I called and left a message within the hour he called me back. He told me his brother had passed away March 30 which was only few weeks after the strange late night call.

His brother didn’t really remember me; he was nineteen years younger than his brother and three years younger than me. I thanked him for calling me back and told him that I would be forever grateful to his brother for the role he played in my life. He was harsh at times. He was barely 19 when he married my mother. A woman 6 years older with 3 children. Grateful, but no tears, no grief. Strange really. It has been on my mind the past few weeks as I tried to sort out these feelings. Why did I not have any emotional reaction to his death?

Now they are all gone. Did they shape who I am? I think it comes back to my verse so many years ago, I was – Fatherless. That is truly how I see it.

Fatherless

Celebrate your Fathers today,
Know that you are blessed
To have had a loving guiding protector,
That allowed your soul to rest.

To a girl without a Father,
Life lessons were hard learned.
Looking to fill that empty space
In a heart that always yearned.

Substitutes stepped in at times
With promises to love and protect,
But they always went their own way
and left a heart with reject.

I envied and I longed
For a Father to hold in times of need,
Offering comfort With his strong arms ~
In every word and deed.

Now I know, I always had a Father dear.
Present at every trial and turn, sending down his love;
Each time life’s journey overwhelmed,
He was watching from above.

Father’s Day, yet I have none on earth to call my own,
But in heaven I have a wondrous One.
And I will see my Abba’s face,
When my days on earth are done.

© Trish B. 2014

Link to 2014: https://emyloomwordswovenwithinmyheart.com/2014/06/15/fatherless/

Field of Free Foxglove

I came home Thursday evening and as it had not rained in the past three hours and no rain was expected for another three, I took the opportunity to mow the grass. The next rain break could be more than a week away and the grass would be two feet tall by then.

As I cruise around my 3.5 acres of lawn (moss and grass) I am in awe that almost the entire yard is flanked by fields of digitalis purperea commonly known as foxglove. It is not native to the Pacific Northwest; originally from Europe and Turkey it grows well with our cool temperatures and rain.

Digitalis purpurea is poisonous to both wildlife and humans but it is the source of the medication digitalis that is prescribed by doctors to strengthen the heart and regulate its beat.

I have over the years encouraged the spread of these tall beauties but never really managed more than a few patches scattered around the yard. Until this year, when several large fields appeared all around the edge of the forest. As I mowed, I stopped to admire them and took several photographs but none really captured their awesome beauty. After years of hoping for such a full display, seeing them brought joy to my mowing task.

I find mowing therapeutic, it doesn’t take a lot of thought and it is satisfying to watch the wild overgrown sections turn into an organized evenly trimmed lawn. Often when I mow, I use the time to sort out my thoughts and try to put to rest things that are troubling my heart. This week there was a lot on my heart. My ‘Old Friend’ who I wrote about a few weeks back, had lost her son in a tragic way just two days prior.

The pain and heartbreak is overwhelming. We can’t understand why but I want to see these beautiful large fields of foxglove as a sign that God cares for our hearts even in the most difficult times. I want to believe that even though our hearts are weak and broken right now, these free fields of foxgloves standing tall are a sign that even though it may take time, our hearts will be strong and the irregular beat that this sorrow, pain and grief has caused, will in time, return to a normal beat. It may never fully heal, the scar will remain, but we will go on and find beauty in life again.

Mother’s Day

Sunday is Mother’s Day, nearly a year since my mother passed and a final of firsts for me, my first Mother’s Day without my mother and the final event of the past year of marking each first without her.

Last Mother’s Day, I flew to Texas to see my mom and I realized it would be our last together. Since her surgery the prior October, her health had dramatically declined. Over the years I tried to travel to see her on Mother’s Day and her birthday.   They were special occasions for her, ones that if missed, she would feel slighted and perhaps unloved.

Those set apart occasions that the greeting card and florist benefit from are not so important to me.   I appreciate the love and attention I receive year-round, sometimes it is just a simple text to say “Hi” or “I am thinking of you.”  Expressions that are sent without any expectation because of designated day are cherished in my heart.

Understand, my mother got many many expressions of my love throughout the year but those days were especially important to her, perhaps an old traditional way of thinking that this was a day set aside for Mothers, and because of that, she expected recognition and honor and I honored her.

In 2001, my mother came to visit me at Mother’s Day. We attended a Ladies Luncheon to honor mothers. The women in the group each wrote a short portrayal of their mother and shared it. Here is what I wrote May 12, 2001.

My mother was named Helen Patricia but she prefers to be called Patsy.
  One thing I admire about my mother is that she is able to get up in front of people and speak.  Something I didn’t inherit from her.  However,  I really wanted to share something about her today.  She lives in Texas; she writes poetry;  she teaches and speaks to Women’s Groups at other Churches; she has been involved in the leadership of Girl Scouts. 
  I grew up in a home with a believing, prayerful, faithful mother in the South at a time when prejudices and hatred surrounded us.  But I grew up knowing no prejudice.  My mother loved people; all people, she taught and had respect for everyone and she would do all she could to help others.
  For several years my mother was a single mom with three young children and although we did not have a lot, my mother always had something to share with others who had less.  Whether it was a place to stay; a few dollars; a meal or just watching someone’s children so they could work.  She always shared whatever she had with a grateful heart.
  My mother has also always had a love for elderly ladies.  Today she teaches the senior ladies’ Sunday school class at her church and she has for the past twenty years.  So many times people are too busy for the elderly, but my mother loves each one of her ladies as if they were her own mother or grandmother.  She takes the time to be with them, look after them, minister to them.  She would tell you that she has learned so much from these ladies and receives immeasurable blessings from knowing them. 
  Over the years my mother has seen most all of her class go home to be with the Lord.  At one time she had twenty ladies in her class now she has only four.  The oldest is Mae; she is 104.  Mae never had any children.  Every week, my mother goes to her house, washes her dishes, answers her mail, brings her lunch and sits and eats lunch with her.
  When I go to visit my mother, I go around and visit with her ladies too.  They tell me how sweet my mother is and I’d have to agree.

Now, Mother’s Day is a day with no plane trips, no cards, no flowers, no brunch but years’ worth of Mother’s Day memories. I pray where ever her spirit is today she knows that I tried to show her that I loved her. After this “final first” celebration without my mother, I wonder if I will begin to let go and not remind myself on each special day that she is gone or how many months have passed since she left? Will special occasions just be that or will they always be one without my mother?

Happy Mother’s Day, Mother.  I did all I could to show my love, I hope you felt it.

Girl Scout Cookie Time

My local Girl Scout, Katie, sent an e-mail back in January to pre-order Girl Scout cookies and I ordered 20 boxes. My favorite, Thin Mints. They only come around once a year and they freeze well, so I order many boxes and make them last as long as I can.

I was a Girl Scout and a Brownie before that. My mother was the leader of our troop and long after I was grown and gone my mother was still actively involved in Girl Scouts. In 1994 she won a Woman of Distinction award from the former Girl Scout Bluebonnet Council now Girl Scouts of Central Texas. She had a passion to guide young girls and love old ladies.

I remember selling cookies, all the girls received a cardboard box full of an assortment of cookies. Our mission was to sell the entire the box. It was a challenge especially when all you had left were the less popular variety. Completing the mission involved lugging that box (heavy box) around the neighborhood and knocking on doors to peddle cookies. Strange as it seems now, but people actually let their young daughters with a carton full of cookies go around knocking on stranger’s doors. I did not get driven around the neighborhood and we didn’t setup tables outside of grocery stores. It was all footwork and our unique marketing/selling skills of which, I had none.

This year I noticed that the cookie boxes have this acronym for G.I.R.L. (go-getter/innovator/risk taker/leader). When I first read that I thought, “Wait a minute now! Risk-taker?” I have written just recently about my aversion to taking risks and I am wondering just how much risk do we want to encourage girls to take? Recently, Ancestry DNA sent me an analysis that suggested that according to my DNA, I am an introverted person. No secret there. Other than here, I am certainly not what one would call outgoing. Could I be any those things in the current G.I.R.L. acronym?

Honestly, by today’s standards it would be very risky for a 9 or 10-year-old little girl to walk the streets carrying a heavy box of cookies, then walk up to strange houses and knock on the door. I did it and am still here to tell about it. There was this one old house we would pass on the school bus route, it had a long over grown drive way and a creaky metal gate. The older kids would always tease and say that an old woman lived there and the house was haunted. I went by that house on my cookie rounds and I stood a long time at the gate peering down the dark driveway but there was no way I was going to take the risk of making that long walk to knock on the door.

Yes, selling cookies today seems much safer and it guarantees I will get my freezer stocked for the coming year. You see, I live down a long over grown driveway with a creaky metal gate, maybe the kids on the school bus tell stories about the old lady that lives there and I would miss out on those wonderful chocolatey Thin Mints.

When my Girl Scout Katie dropped off the heavy load with 20 boxes of cookies, which by the way she had to lug up a flight of stairs to my office, she tells me that there is going to be a local Girl Scout birthday celebration on March 12th. The 110th anniversary of Girl Scouts formed March 12, 1912. Her dad says they have lots of memorabilia to display. I tell him I still have my Girl Scout uniform, 55 years old now. He asks me if they can borrow it and include it in the display. I am honored. So here it is looking better for the years than I am, and a very serious looking, 12-year-old self, with it on.

Happy Birthday Girl Scouts of America. May you continue to guide and mold young girls into go-getters, innovators, risk takers and leaders long into the future.

Girl Scout Promise and Laws in the mid 60’s

Girl Scout Promise
On my honor, I will try:
To do my duty to God and my country,
To help other people at all times,
To obey the Girl Scout Laws.

  1. A Girl Scout’s Honor Is to be Trusted
  2. A Girl Scout Is Loyal
  3. A Girl Scout’s Duty Is to be Useful and to Help Others
  4. A Girl Scout is a Friend to All, and a Sister to every other Girl Scout
  5. A Girl Scout Is Courteous
  6. A Girl Scout Is a Friend to Animals
  7. A Girl Scout Obeys Orders
  8. A Girl Scout is Cheerful
  9. A Girl Scout is Thrifty
  10. A Girl Scout is Clean in Thought, Word and Deed.

Eight Years

Not yet a decade but it seems like an eternity ago. I was struggling with things beyond my control. I had a crippling fear in my heart and I felt this overbearing sense of doom. Gripping fear, fear of loss, fear of what the future might hold. No way out. In all these these things I felt helpless and alone.

Now eight years later, I read my words from back then and see that even though I thought this was the depth of my worries, things did get worse and today the events remain unchanged. My husband and I have not conquered these thoughts but we have relinquished control, because the truth is in the bigger things of life, the things of life and death, we have no control. We can only have faith.

“He holds the life of every creature in his hand. He controls the breath of every human being.” Job 12:10 NIRV

March 1, 2014 6:08PM

You know those thoughts that linger around your mind, ones that speak truths to you that you do not want to acknowledge, not even to your closest friends or spouse?

They capture a fear within. A fear that if they materialize into words you will forever regret giving them voice.

You rebuke them in your prayers, turning them over to God but they still whisper.

Then it happens. A quiet moment with your partner, your soul mate, the conversation opens to a crossroad with those thoughts.  One of you brushes the edge and the other realizes those thoughts are not only troubling you.

For the briefest second you look at each other as if you have each bared your soul and realize the reality those thoughts could become.  You look at the stark truth together and take a deep breath.

It is done. They are acknowledged to one another, you are not alone with them. You realize you share something very deep.  A message to your soul.

It is a relief. A moment that you realize how closely bonded you really are. You wonder if those thoughts are preparing you for some future time.

The thoughts still linger.  However, you won’t speak of it again.  Only once.

Once was enough to see into each others heart and know your deepest hidden unspoken thoughts are journeying together.

Twenty-Two Years

Strange how that number is repeating in my mind these last few days. It is wrapped around three events from the past week and the meaning of each has very different perspectives and impacts.

First off and most tragic, two NYC police officers were murdered when they responded to a domestic violence call. The youngest was only 22 years old, he was a newly-wed, married just 4 months to his childhood sweetheart. Detective Rivera was called to do a difficult job, a job not many understand or appreciate for the real challenges and dangers they face.

At his funeral his wife said, “The system continues to fail us. We are not safe anymore, not even the members of the service, I know you were tired of these laws, especially the ones from the new DA.”

These men and women face risk every day and these risks are compounded by the leadership and justice departments in many cities that in an attempt to feed the maddening crowd are becoming appeasers. They are appeasing the crowd by implementing no cash bail policies, minimum sentences, no arrests for crimes under certain values all of which has led to releasing offenders repeatedly back to the street. The criminals are emboldened, they are brazen in committing crimes because they know the consequences have fallen to an acceptable level and like most criminals, they are going to take advantage of an opportunity to game the system. The leadership, the district attorneys, and the judges know, or should know, the hazards the police face and what they personally lay on the line each day but they do not seem to care. They don’t seemed to care about what it is costing them or what it is costing departments in loss; loss of morale as well as life.

According to the National Fraternal Order of Police, “…as of midnight on 31 January, there have been 30 officers shot in the line of duty so far in 2022 (+67% from 2021 YTD). Of those officers shot, 5 of them were killed by gunfire.” When is it enough? A young man, only 22, lost his life.

Just like NYC, the leadership in many areas have put the morale and well-being of its officers second to the movement to remake the justice system. Officers are leaving, especially those who have seen all the horrors one too many times. It is society’s loss.

Secondly, as I have written about before, I am the mother of a Law Enforcement Officer. He has 22 years of service between two different departments and last week he left law enforcement. Between his service in law enforcement and the time he served in the Army he has devoted over half his life to public service.

Over his 22 year career, he has received numerous life saving awards, been part of major efforts to get drugs off the street, located underage children, stood against the riotous crowds during the BLM protests, and everyday he walked out of his front door, as every officer does, knowing that even if he did everything right that day it could be his last.

On the first day of 2022, by noon, he had already been to three deaths due to drug overdoses. How long can one see those horrors day in and day out and push it aside? At some point your health, your happiness, and your life become more important especially when you hear the leadership, your leadership, are not concerned about officer morale. There comes a time when you want to live the life you have left in peace, no conflict, no senseless deaths, no critiquing your every move and hating you for the job you do.

Best wishes to my hero, my son, as he begins this new chapter in his life. I pray the remainder of his life is filled with love, in a peaceful place, with someone he loves and maybe a donkey.

Finally, the last event is about Tom Brady who is retiring from football after 22 years. Yesterday and today all I have heard about is –The G.O.A.T. Yes, he is a talented athlete, his career has latest longer than most athletes in the field, he lead his teams to seven Super Bowl victories. He’s had an amazing life, full of accolades and stadiums full of cheering fans, but is he a hero?

Police officers have been heroes to many – they may not hear it about it in this life but know there are many, many people out there that remember them in their hearts. These are people they have helped, comforted and rescued, to the officer they may have melded into one person, but the people they helped remember them on the day that was their lowest; they remember that officer in front of them that helped them get through it. It is a tragic fact that many true heroes get no acknowledgement until they are gone.

In the few short weeks of this year 2022, I will remember these heroes.
~ Officer II Fernando Arroyos, 27, Los Angeles PD, killed 1/10/22
~ Detective Jason Rivera, 22, New York PD, killed 1/21/22
~ Corporal Charles Galloway, 48, Harris County Constable, killed 1/23/22
~ Detective Wilbert Mora, 27, New York City PD, killed 1/25/22
~ Campus Safety Officer JJ Jefferson, 48, Bridgewater College PD, VA, killed 2/1/22
~ Officer John Painter, 55, Bridgewater College PD, VA, killed 2/1/22

Ten Days in PJ’s

Happy New Year!

Heading back to work tomorrow after 10 glorious days off. Ten peaceful, stress-free days in my PJ’s.

I did not really plan to stay in my PJ’s for ten days but on Christmas day the snow started falling and by the next evening there was a foot of snow covering the ground. Son and daughter-in-law cancelled visit due to dangerous road conditions. So hubby smoked a turkey and we, for the first time in 40 years, had dinner alone and with me in my PJ’s.

On Monday, I was scheduled to return to work, but the snow was still falling and the boss (hubby) said not to bother coming in. I am feeling like a lazy sloth so I made a coffee, had a little breakfast, and in my PJ’s watched Netflix on the Behemoth from my bed aka my nest.

Just for the sake if not having to repeat myself here, I did shower and put on fresh PJ’s daily. I mean really, I am being lazy but I’m not a pig. To top off the day I ate leftover creamed spinach and dressing for dinner, also from my nest.

The next day I gathered all that work I had brought home on the 23rd spread it out all over my nest, propped my laptop on the pillow and finished the invoicing as I continued to binged watch movies. All that work tired me out so I then took a 2 hour nap. However, “note to self” working in one’s PJ’s is much less stressful.

Wednesday, still in my PJ’s, I run down to the front porch and take pictures of the snow. Back upstairs, I look out the window and see the elk herd. They look baffled by all the cold white stuff on the ground. They are hungry. They settled for plants, like the bamboo, that are normally on their “do not eat” list.

Thursday, I got a call that my mom’s favorite brother-in-law had gained his wings. Uncle Johnny, the last of his generation. Now with his lovely wife who went before him two years ago, my mom and his brother. Sad ending to the year but he was no longer happy here. I took a deep breath and shed some tears. I certainly am not getting out of my PJ’s today.

Friday, the last day of 2021. Still over a foot of snow and the temperature is in the low 20’s so it is not going away anytime soon. I did manage to do more than lay around and watch Netflix. I was expecting guests on New Year’s Day so I got up and cleared the dining room, put on a festive table cloth that has amber beads around the edge and vacuumed. I organized the meal ingredients ready for preparation tomorrow.

I am still worried about the roads as the snow had started up again. I make a mental note to let my friends know if they are worried about weather, I would understand if they canceled. No sooner does that thought cross my mind than I get an email from friends that they are not well and thought it better to cancel and not share germs.

So hey, time to relax. I start reflecting on a post from New Year’s in 2012, those thoughts end up as the last blog post in 2021. Hubby and I manage to stay up until midnight and cheer in the new year — with a little 7 up and Chambord. The fireworks start and we call it a night.

Along with the very hungry elk, here in the Pacific Northwest we have Anna hummingbirds that live here year round. We put out feeders even in winter, with the below freezing temperatures we bring them in at night put them back out early in the morning. Well, too much Chambord maybe because we forgot to bring them in last night and found this big frozen icicle in the morning. The hummers were not amused, I hear their chit-chit-chit from the nearby trees as I retrieve the frozen mess.

I prepared the traditional black-eye peas for lunch with a side of prime rib and potatoes. No guests, but hubby and I enjoy New Year’s feast together, again alone, for the first time in 40 years. The first time in my PJ’s as well. Good thing too because after that meal the food coma set in and I was forced to take a long winter’s nap.

If you have made it this far, I commend you. It is a long boring story but really, what did you expect from a title that states someone spent 10 days in their PJ’s?

I refuse to feel guilty. I needed this time to reset, 2021 was a tough year. I lost six friends this year and my mom but on the happier side I also became a great-grandmother. I managed, by the grace of God, to stay healthy even though I traveled quite a bit. I still have work, a home, food, transportation, family, and a drawer full of PJ’s. I am blessed.

December Down

Portions of this may sound like a bit of a rant but bear with me as I reflect on the past month — its joys and frustrations.

December, the last month of the year. Work is winding down but keeping track of the past year and all the accounting that goes with year end, is just gearing up. Looking around at the piles of filing and stacks of unrecorded transactions, I try to assess how much I can get done before my December schedule takes hold.

Ahh yes, this place I call home is a beautiful place but for all its beauty it has its downfalls. Home is located at the foot of the Cascade range in direct line with the opening of the Snoqualmie Pass, when the weather comes and the wind blows … the power goes out. I really don’t like the wind, I don’t mind breezes but the wind, with fearsome 50-70 mile an hour gusts, is terrifying. This year “the weather” really started at Thanksgiving and it came with great force. Fortunately or unfortunately, however you may look at it, the wind is usually the most fierce at night.

Fortunate, because you can’t see the 150 foot trees bowing against the force of the wind doing pirouettes in the sky. Unfortunate, because the big branches break off the trees, hit the house and leave me to wonder what is next as I lie in the dark and listen to the carnage. Then it happens, the power flickers once and comes back on, the adjustable bed deflates. I re-adjust the bed, the power flickers again and comes back on. Then it is off for the count, the power company estimates 8 hours. At dawn it is all over and a peek outside reveals what it looks like a war zone. Although, having never seen a war zone, it is really unfitting to use that comparison. Really I know how blessed I am to live in a land where war is not an evil we have at a our doorsteps.

No power, no catching up work today.

Continue December, granddaughter arrives for 4 day visit with sweet little great-granddaughter, Lily. Nine months old she is delighted as we the tour of the Lights of Christmas at Warm Beach (although not warm). I enjoyed the sweet cuddles, listening to her jabbering about everything that catches her eyes and staring at this new life that is a small part of me, the wonder of it all and the realization that I am now, however impossible it seems, the older generation.

I would have like to jump right back into work but was delayed by yet another storm and power outage. Well, life and plans go on. Next stop Hawaii, and sunshine.

Hawaii, lush green landscapes, beaches, the rhythmic white cap waves methodically rolling to shore and the roaring sound as they crash against the rocks. This particular place we stay is a waterfront condo and from the balcony, I look down and see turtles swimming among the rocks. I find the sound of the surf so calming and relaxing that I am up every morning at four to listen to peaceful swooshing of the waves washing to and fro. A few days in, the local reports are that there is a storm rolling in. After seeing their storm, I find I like Hawaii storms better than Washington storms.

The pièce de résistance of the Hawaii trip was the reunion I had with my lifelong friend. This reunion was neither planned nor orchestrated but a serendipitous event that reassured me that there are powers in control that love me and take joy in making me happy. No amount of planning could have created a better scenario. See my post “Old Friends.”.

Good things only last so long. We return home to Washington to freshly fallen snow. I spend three quick days at the office where a large amount of time is spent opening a mountain of mail, paying bills and payroll —- still no progress on those previously noted tasks and I still have not completed this month’s invoicing.

Not to be defeated yet, I package up all the files and my laptop and head home for Christmas break thinking I will get it done over the long weekend. I started off with very good intentions but the cold and continuing rain dampen my enthusiasm. Oh, I forgot to mention amid the storms and wind, it had been raining constantly since the end of October.

Christmas day came without much fanfare. The “virus,” with variants old and new, has kept caution at a never-ending level. Plus an overnight snow and freezing temperatures made the roads hazardous. Dear hubby smoked a turkey on his Traeger and we had a feast fit for an entire royal court, not just the King. It was, the first time in forty years, Chris and I had Christmas dinner just the two of us, alone.

Six days left until the end if the year and the Christmas snow just kept falling. Over the next 36 hours it fell until more than a foot of snow was on the ground. Amazon cancelled my Fresh grocery delivery (no way they’re gonna navigate these treacherous roads for my $75 worth of groceries). Not a problem as we have enough leftovers to last for many days.

Monday, December 27, not going into the office, I finally organize myself enough in my big nest to complete the first draft of the invoices with only short breaks to go out and take pictures of the snow. So beautiful and peaceful. Peaceful in a different way than the waves. Looking out over the pure white blanket of snow on the ground and the thick layers hanging in the trees coating each branch it seems all should be right in the world… no disease, no war, no sorrow.

More snow Tuesday morning and more expected Wednesday the 29th. Right, now I’m thinking what’s the bother of going in on Thursday because Friday the 31st is the final holiday of the season.

So there you have it, December Down. The year is quickly approaching its end and all those work things I had planned for December can now wait. They will still be here in 2022.

Finally, as I look out and admire the new snow on top of the old snow… as if it perfectly arranged by fate, the power flicks off again.

The End

I’ve written nothing for weeks, it seems the only thing on my mind is our eventual end in this world. Death.

I feel like I shouldn’t write about it anymore but it has consumed my thoughts. I want to move on but after I lost my mom, my BFF lost hers only a few weeks later. Then two other friends followed the same sad path. We are all moving from one plane to another. Being daughters and caretakers to wondering what do we do now after we finish sorting through our mother’s belongings and closing down their lives.

What is the meaning of life if it just comes to an end and we are reduced to a few boxes of our treasures and we are remembered only by a few close loved ones?

Recently an older couple that owned the townhouse next to one we owned in Seattle, downsized and moved. Before they moved the husband asked if he could use our trash and recycling to dispose of some extra things. Of course I told him it would be OK. The next week I went to put some things in trash and inside the trashcan he had tossed a cat litter box and some folders in the bottom. I picked up one of the folders and it was his diploma from the University of Pennsylvania. The others similar diplomas representing accomplishments in his life. It really made me sad … is this what it comes down to – all that you worked for, all your goals in life are tossed out in the trash with a dirty old cat litter box? I wanted to rescue them for him, I wanted to preserve what he had worked for, his life’s achievements. It seemed so final, so futile. What is left, what is the purpose of it all?

As I think about all these things, I realize summer has past and winter is fast approaching. I look forward with dread, I dread winter… I dread the wind, the rain, the cold, the dead plants in the garden and the mess in my yard. My mood is already deep in winter. Can I just wake up tomorrow in Spring?

I know the answer. I must go through this winter, the one in my heart and the one outside. I am calling out to God, please Lord rescue me. Pull me through this season a of life and carry me to the end.

Friends to the End

The anniversary of my birth is fast approaching and I got an early birthday card from Uncle Sam. A Medicare card with my name on it. Le sigh

This revelation that I am getting older has me sorting and purging through things I have kept for years; things kept for good reason and no good reason at all.

Through this sort I took a second and third look at a very old friend. He has been a permanent fixture in my sewing room the past couple of decades although I cannot remember a time he wasn’t with me.

I’ve long forgotten his childhood name, but he’s traveled with me as I moved around the US… Texas, Florida, Alaska, Colorado and with me still in the PNW.

He has been a silent witness through my childhood, love, marriage, motherhood, all of it the good and bad.

At most times I have taken him for granted and never give him a serious look. He is showing his age, he’s been through the wringer a few times. He lost an ear that I was going to sew back on one day but by time I got around to getting it done, the ear couldn’t be found. He’s been restuffed, stitched up, his fur can’t quite lose it’s dirty shadow and his seams are coming apart. All these things are beautiful to me.

So as I approach this milestone birthday and I take a good look at this old friend. I decide he’s staying until the end and after all we’ve been through together, just like me, he’s still smiling.

America’s Brotherhood

Today is day number 183 of the year with 183 days left; half way through this year 2020. I want to believe that everyday for the rest of the year will not be tragedy among tragedy but I do not have any real hope we will make it through the coming weekend without the world falling into an abyss.

It is as if we are in an altered universe. For the past few years there has been a pot of continuously simmering hot water. With Covid19, the noodles (us) were thrown in the pot and now the foam is bubbling over the top. The noodles in the pot are done but the heat will not turn down until we break apart.

Independence Day weekend is upon us, I will be praying for the first responders more fervently than ever as I fear many people will use the holiday to create further mayhem and destruction.

We are standing on the dividing line. It’s time for the rest of us to stop being noodles, remove the pot from the fire before it is too late, stand up and show our brotherhood and outshine the hate.

“ America, America God shed his grace on thee;
And crown thy good with brotherhood,
From sea to shining sea”

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