Thursday, November 26, 2020

Revenge of the turkeys?

Growing up, I always loved my mom’s display of little holiday candles: pilgrims and turkeys on Thanksgiving, choir singers and Santas at Christmas.

I’ve inherited a bit of that collection, and I think of her every year when I set them out.


Maybe it’s just 2020, but this year my brain leaped to a decidedly darker display.


This tragic scene decorates our piano. Seasons spent melting a bit in Mom and Dad’s attic gave the woman the perfect posture for her role. No, I did not behead the pilgrim. That happened in a (perhaps) accidental fall. 


I suspect our cat.


Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours.

We’re together in heart.


Monday, October 19, 2020



We did. Yesterday. You can, too.

T-shirt from League of Conservation Voters. 
I wear my heart on my ... shirt.
 

Sunday, April 12, 2020

A reprieve, for now.
Happy, weird Easter.

For those who celebrate the holiday, I hope you've shared the day with family and friends -- together or at a distance.

A

I'm feeling the pang of traditions put on hiatus by this pandemic, eased a bit by the flurry of shared messages and photos that came pinging throughout the day.

My extended family has a dark tradition of beheading the holiday butters: bunnies, lambs, turkeys. (I think even Santa lost his head one year.)
The role of executioner rotates through the grandchildren. Don't worry, we did not traumatize them at an early age. We waited until their sense of humor veered to the dark side before handing them the butter knife.

For now, I've stashed this year’s bunny butter in our refrigerator. 
His “best by” date is July 21, and I’m hoping we’ll be able to celebrate Easter together by then.
Alas, the bunny’s next stop is the freezer.
Not sure which fate is worse.

This guy's not having the happiest of Easters.
(He is delicious, though.)







Thursday, April 9, 2020

Peanut in repose.
With a camera-shy cat, sometimes you just get lucky.

I call it: Still cat with afternoon light.

Tuesday, April 7, 2020

It pays to look down.
It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood.

I just got back from my now almost daily walk.

So nice to see so many people channeling Mr. Rogers.
Kindness abounds.
He offered us so much good advice.
So ... let's make the most of this beautiful day.

Saturday, April 4, 2020

A simple pleasure
These days especially, it's good to make things last.
Case in point, these blue beauties.
When I brought them home this week, they graced a vase for a few days.
The leaves wilted, the stems weakened, our cats knocked over the vase.
Time to say goodbye.
Then I remembered: 
When your flowers fade, you can always float them.


Monday, March 30, 2020

An essential

I am not the most organized grocery shopper.

Sometimes I forget to buy things on the list … sometimes I just forget the list. 
(Am I the only one who texts home to ask for a photo of the list on the refrigerator?)

It seems necessity is the mother of organization. I live within walking distance of a wonderful family grocery store. If I forget something, it’s not much trouble to go back. Little necessity, little organization.
(My record, I believe, is going back three times in one day. Not a record I’m proud of, but so be it.)

Then came the pandemic, and with it the shutdown of shopping as we knew it. Suddenly, organization became a skill that I envied.

During my first attempt last week in one of the larger stores, I overheard an exchange that summed up my mindset perfectly:

Man: What are you looking for?
Woman (looking a bit lost): I don’t know.

My husband and I did take inventory before the next trip, and I carefully crossed things off the list as I made my way up and down the aisles. Not full-blown organization, but baby steps. (In my case, necessity is a very new mother.)

Today I made what I hope to be my last trek out for a while. The store limited the number of shoppers: When one left, another was allowed in, and the line stretched out for yards outside, especially given our six feet of separation. 

As we all waited, a woman who had just exited pushed her cart past the line, a colorful bouquet poking up from her bags. 

When someone admired the flowers, she replied: “You have to have them!” 

I added them to my list — and I was not alone. More than one shopping cart carried that touch of spring out into the world.

We humans do not live on bread alone.

Thursday, March 26, 2020



Can you see the bee?
My husband and I took a walk today after lunch.
(Does that make us … co-walkers?)
How wonderfully commonplace it is these days, to be out and about — on foot! — and greeting neighbors, known and unknown, doing the same.
Since he had to get back to work-from-home sooner than I did, my husband went ahead while I lingered in the sun. 
Our street was quiet, only birds chirping and the occasional car whooshing past in the distance.
Then, an unusual sound caught my ear.
A hum.
A loud hum.
Bees!
I am not an entomologist, but they looked like honeybees, swarming a neighbor’s cherry tree. 
OK, I’m not a botanist either, but I think it’s a type of cherry. And, to be honest, I first wrote “etymologist” in that sentence.
But back to those bees.
I stood and watched them buzzing from blossom to blossom. Their sheer number gave me such joy.
In the midst of this human pandemic, the natural world lives, and grows, on.
For that I give thanks.

Saturday, March 21, 2020

A new perspective

This is April, taking in the view of the vet's office from the dashboard of our car.
Today marked her third visit in three days for fluids treatment (old cat syndrome). She is, in a word, miffed.
The wonderful vet staff has come up with an efficient system of parking lot drop-offs and pickups. 
Efficient from my perspective, yes. Not so much by cat standards.
April lost patience in her carrier, and I let her out -- the first time she ever roamed free in the car. She seemed grateful.
When they called to let me know April was next, I gently corralled her back in her box.
She wasn't the happiest of campers.
I can relate.
May we all be let out of our boxes soon.


Thursday, March 19, 2020

For years now, my Facebook profile picture has been a closeup of a T-shirt I bought in 2016. 
 The white letters against a black background spell a single word: 

Resist

 These days that word has become more than a political mantra.
 In these weird, surreal and frightening times:

 May our miraculous immune systems resist this virus.
 May we resist the pull of panic.
 May we resist the tendency to focus on the future, rather than the present moment. 

That last one is especially helpful for me. Today I found myself wandering up and down the grocery store aisles, wondering what to buy, when the shelves would be restocked, whether things would ever go back to “normal.”
Many of my fellow shoppers looked worried, even pained, and I realized my face must be showing those feelings, too.

I decided to resist. I made eye contact with people as we passed each other. I smiled. Most of them smiled back, and we shared stories and small jokes about life as we know it now. The pull of panic receded.


Turns out human contact (albeit at a distance) is good medicine.