Saturday, February 23, 2013

The Haphazard Domestic Goddess


                                    Synchronicity

                        One little step lightly
                        Synchronized with the universe
                        In the unexpected movement.
                        A piece of the puzzle fits perfectly -
                        One musical note matched one step.
                        There is something new in my world
                        And suddenly I knew I had been waiting
                        For exactly that moment all day.
                        Through me there resonates
                        An awareness of delight
                        That was worth the wait,
                        Worth the wondering
                        And the wandering.


To the Finish 

       My main focus was bookkeeping this week - catching up on some procrastination of duty, getting organized for taxes.  How did I do? These pictures represent some of my breaks in concentration.  There were more of them than there should be, of course, but I did a quite a little better on my cooking this week, medium well on my workouts, and there were the usual pleasant distractions - lunch with friends at noon on Thursday and a couple of unplanned projects.  The laundry suffered a little neglect.  Two loads are clean but not folded. My husband is missing his handkerchiefs, so will have to buy more if the hunt reveals nothing hidden in the back or bottom of the drawer.  And I don't know quite how to rate my bookkeeping.  Kind of like a roller coaster, maybe.  There were some times when I did well and made a lot of progress, but other moments when there were just too many things competing for space in my brain, so for two days I got nothing done to count as progress in that department.

     
     As my gaze lingered long on the scattered beauty of the softy colored but jumbled contents of my armoire after a restorative nap, I wondered if the mixture would be captured well in a photograph.  It wouldn't hurt me to organize it a bit, but soft clothing doesn't lend itself to neat stacks.  I have a variety of containers, including some rectangular lined baskets in three sizes.  The smallest is haphazardly stacked upon the largest with a stocking hanging not very elegantly over the side, and a pair of light blue plastic boxes have a few bright pops of color peeping over the top.  If everything matched it might have a more orderly look, but when I surveyed the overall effect, it was kind of pleasing so I decided to leave it that way for now. Anyway, maybe it was just the soft light that gave it a nice effect despite that one very black stocking.  I should just shut the doors on the whole mess. Taxes are hanging over my head and no small task to fit into my regular duties.  I must keep bringing my focus back to the taxes.   


Lunch is Served 

Handful of spinach
Leftover chicken bites
Chopped cucumber and celery
Fresh Homemade Salsa
Large dollop of Pesto (see recipe below)
Small handful of pistachios


 

My Favorite Green Juice

Place in VitaMix or your sturdy blender and Puree:

1 Apple sliced
Large Handful of Spinach
Ice
1 generous teaspoon cinnamon
Plain Yogurt or Coconut Milk


High in Vitamin C

Stuffed Sweet Mini Peppers

1 cup cilantro
1 small garlic clove
2/3 cup toasted Walnuts
Small pinch Sea Salt
1/4 Cup parmesan cheese
1/2 Cup Olive Oil
1 Tablespoon Fresh Orange Juice

Put all of the above ingredients in a blender or food processor and puree.

1 pound bag of Sweet Mini Peppers
8 ounces cream cheese or goat cheese

  Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Leaving stem on peppers, slice and remove the seeds.
Fill each pepper with cheese.  Arrange on a baking sheet, drizzle with a touch of olive oil and bake 
8-10 minutes until peppers are tender-crisp.  Arrange on a platter and spoon pesto on top.




Homemade Salsa on the Fly

1/2 Onion
1/2 bunch Cilantro
3 Tomatoes
1/2 Green chili pepper
1 garlic clove
Sprinkles of salt, about 1 teaspoon if you are measuring.
Splash of lime juice, about 2 teaspoons.

Chop and combine or use a food processor to combine and chop, but go easy.  We aren't trying to puree this one.  A little chunky is okay.

I was out of lime juice so used a small splash of red wine vinegar, to taste.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Seizing the Day




A  Doe, a Deer



Horse Back Riders



Horse Feathers




















Pizza Salad


Be My Honey






                        


                                   What about love,
                              Like paper and lace,
                                  A telling expression on
                                        An innocent face,
                                           A heart full of joy
                                    For a funny faced boy
                                 What about love?

                              
                                Wish I could make life
                                      Just like that heart
                          Placed slightly off center,
                                    Wall collage art.
                                And blunt Cupid’s sharp bow -
                                       Where warm feelings now grow.
                         What about love?
               







                        After watching the above video that one of my friends posted on facebook today, February 14, 2013, I thought about how I like to go to an event with a friend.  I have been thinking about this because I had two choices today.  I could go to a concert with a friend, or to dinner with my husband.  Because of his work/time constraints, going to the concert with me was not an option.  I wanted to go to the concert because I know music is good for me.  One of my goals this year is to attend more musical events, and a total of 12, or one each month, is the general plan.  My husband said we could go out to dinner another night.  After discussing my choices with my friend, I chose to go to dinner with my husband.  Today is Valentine's Day, after all! 

     I remember when we went to a high school play in our little hometown, we always enjoyed the afterwards, when the effects of the previous ninety or so minutes lingered in our minds, and we talked it over in the car on the way home.
  
             What if we found something in this day, Valentine's Day, that accentuated our disappointment with something about life?  Some people call this day Single Awareness Day.  With a bit of zest, one friend noted that had her former husband given her flowers, some 30 years ago, it probably wouldn't have killed him.  I smiled a little, knowingly.  I remember her interesting sparkle, a contrary streak during our teens.  

         Why is the gift of life, perhaps, not enough when it should be?  What little disappointment or joy is taking the majority of my thoughts; affecting the look on my face, the tone of my voice on the phone, my posture as I walk down the street?  What messages am I sending today to the people within my realm of influence? What message is the universe getting from me?  And am I open to receive the message the universe is sending me back?  All around us, I think, there are messages, loving messages coming our way! How should we respond?
                      
                "Let the gratefulness overflow into blessing all around you." 











Saturday, February 9, 2013


Song and Dance


Wings in the Afternoon 



If I were a dancer, I would dance with great passion.  Indian style has certain appeal - bending forward, moving with the rhythum of the drumbeats, with echoing war whoops - a childlike tapping over the mouth to sound more, oh, fearsome and war-like, with feathers flying. The play of children, in this case, resulted from the threat that if we didn't behave ourselves, we would be given to the indians.  This thought was especially provoking when we were driving by the reservation on the long but interesting trip which included a ride on the ferry, to visit an old friend of Dad's, Franz Vinion.

If I were a a bird, I would be an eagle, elusive and aloof -  bombing directly towards the earth at full tilt, beak first with focused eye, seeking relief from hunger.  The majestic bird was seldom seen, but as an emblem of our country, was a mysterious creature with super powers that sparked my imagination, and proud patriotism welling up, filled my heart.

 If I sang, I would sing in the shower with the water pouring over my face to wash away the tears and letting the water bubble into my mouth, muffling the sobs that rack my body, before composing myself with difficulty, and after that momentary distress, I would lather up with forced calm.  And if I was a star, I would march onto the stage and take charge of the whole mess, throwing all the musicians off the stage who think the notes have to be more perfect than passionate.  I’d pour out my soul for the loss; for time that passed into eternity right under my nose while there was nothing I could do about it.

I would weep right there in front of everyone, doubled over with pain.  The audience would never know the truth.  They would think it was an act, but the heart broken in so many directions and pieces, all the king’s horses and all the king’s men could never put together again. 

Then, abruptly, I would stop in the middle of it all, and I would look sadly at all the pieces and then pick up a dustpan and sweep them up like shattered glass, and slowly let them slide from the blue plastic scoop, lodging deeply into the garbage can with a quiet swoosh.   I would lift the bag out of the container and tie up the ends.  I would take it outside to the receptacle where, after inserting the bag, I would close the lid and secure the latch, decisive and symbolic.

Returning to the house, I would go on as if nothing had ever happened, mechanically washing up the dishes, as if my heart had never been in anguish, as if the songs that I sang were untrue, as if that hollow, empty place in my chest was not the life of me being ripped to shreds, as if my silent, gasping sobs really were depositing tears into the scented, soapy water of the sink where I am helplessly leaning, sapped of strength.  I would empty the dishwasher, absentmindedly place the silverware in the proper spaces, feeling like I'm the one being stomped underfoot by Indian war dances.  Bruised, broken, sad and confused. I would search on for a reason why.

For one moment when the music ends I would stand still, but the moment would pass and the audience would turn away, not knowing that I, bereft but blocking an escaping sob with the back of my hand, had embraced every tear they have shed as my own.  Every loss, each heart with a missing piece could have taken some of mine to make it’s own whole again, so what was left was just a jumble of patches and stitches and gauze bandages, the work of a child who practices medicine of the candy-pill style on a more-or-less sterile stuffed bear, using, to my mind, the all too real hospital toys -  syringes, a  pink medical pitcher and a surgical tray.

I am like the child that can’t bear to part with a filthy, ragged toy, but having no mother to sew it together, he tries to patch it himself.  Or maybe his mother tried, but the toy is so  loved and worn that there is hardly enough to salvage.  I wonder if maybe the mother's heart was broken in two as well, long ago.

Every so often, I remember a moment when she stood there in the cafeteria area of the Ronald McDonald house, a certain radiant child, my niece who although facing me, seemed to be unaware of my presence.  She was in the process of dying - but in those moments, completely and fully joyous, a tiny Master of Ceremonies at play.  It would have been difficult to believe she was in the fight of her life, because even though she was old before her time, not even four years in age, she was so vibrantly active.  Her feet were braced in a wide stance and she was surrounded with several running children.  In her simple homemade dress, a gift from a friend, her eyes sparkled with fun and laughter. As she tried to figure out how to run in two directions at once she seemed suspended, momentarily in a sort of quiet stillness, a moment in space.

Salted tears sting with memories.  Aware that acrid moisture is squeezing out from between the outer edges of my eyelids,  I embrace the familiar picture again, surprised it can still make me cry.  I could not tell her what she meant to me before she went on.  She, however, accepted that it was time to go, when I did not.  Perhaps she knew and put on one last show for me, in which she played the main part.  Perhaps she was just doing what children do - living each moment fully, embracing life; setting aside her pain, the suffering - none of it disturbing this event even for a moment.

I learned that God wins, not I.  Score: God 1, Me 0. Or is my score zero?  I learned that song was right - the heart truly cannot forget something like that.  The intensity of the pain waxes and wanes, at times feeling as if it is slapping me up against the side of the head just to make sure I remember.  I learned that allowing my heart to care introduces harshness, feelings that seem on the verge of violent.  Angrily, I sort of wish it was okay to break something.  Defiantly, I remember wise counsel and instead allow the TLC of friends' to comfort me and soothe the ache.

Life does go on, but in a new way.  I will be forever horrified by the outrage of childhood cancer and its ability to separate best friends.  My heart has been exposed so I have a new reality.  I am part of a select group now, those who have a gossamer connection to a beautiful, new world, where there are things to see; things too wonderful, so wonderful we would never look back. 


Cloud Bank


Cranky Goose
















Getting my Geese in a Row





Saturday, February 2, 2013


Kids These Days





















Love must be as much a light, as it is a flame. 

 ~Henry David Thoreau


Swan Pose









Age is a high price to pay for maturity.  


~Tom Stoppard

The Shiny Sink Club and the
Fly Lady Student-Teacher



Alterations


At 20 years of age the will reigns; at 30 the wit; at 40 the judgment.  

~Benjamin Franklin, Poor Richard's Almanac





Be on the alert to recognize your prime at whatever time of your life it may occur.  

~Muriel Spark

One of My great Nieces

Who, being loved, is poor? 

                                                                                  ~Oscar Wilde

Season In The Sun

The pessimist complains about the wind; 
the optimist expects it to change; 
the realist adjusts the sails. 


William Arthur Ward 

 
Butter Rum Peach Pie, Demarle Style, and a Couple of  Short Order Cooks in Cody

A Rare Day Without Sunshine