Saturday, July 08, 2023

Saturday 9: Mercy


Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.
 
1) In this song, Shawn Mendes pleads with the girl he loves to be careful with his heart. Clearly, he feels she's more important to him than he is to her. Do you believe that, in every relationship, someone always loves more?

A. I think it varies from time to time. I've been married for almost 40 years, and I am sure that there have been times when I've loved him more and vice versa. So no, not always. I think it comes and goes, as does the give and take. Marriage is work. Love is work. Friendship is work. Any relationship worth having takes a little work. Sometimes one person does more work, or maybe loves more, but not always.

2) He says that he'd willingly drive through the night just to be near her. Do you enjoy your time behind the wheel? Or do you consider driving necessary but not necessarily pleasurable?


A. I like driving in the country, but I am not a fan of driving in heavy traffic. So, I do ok close to home, but not in the city. In the city it is necessary but not pleasurable. Out here, it's both pleasurable and necessary.

3) He acknowledges that she has good intentions, but she hurt him anyway. Can you think of a time when you unintentionally hurt someone's feelings?

A. Yes, I can think of such a time, but I am not going to write about it.
 
4) Shawn Mendes was a serious skateboarder during his high school years. Crazy Sam admits she's never even been on a skateboard. How about you? Are you more like Shawn or Sam, or are you somewhere in between?

A. I tried skateboarding when I was 10 or so. They were the "new" thing back then, and it was a relief to get rid of the street roller skates that barely held on to your shoes with funky little clamps and a strap. But I was not a good skateboarder and gave it up fairly quickly.

5) While in his teens, he taught himself to play guitar while watching YouTube videos. Do you spend a lot of time on YouTube? If yes, what type of videos do you watch most often?

A. I don't spend a lot of time on YouTube. If I am up there killing time, I watch music videos, the videos of people who are hearing music for the first time, bloopers from shows, and guitar playing videos. But except for when I watch Saturday 9 music videos, YouTube is seldom on my visit list.

6) When he's traveling or busy working, Shawn eats cold cereal for every meal -- breakfast, lunch and dinner. He says it's fast, tasty, and better than the fast food he'd grab otherwise. Will you be getting any meals "to go" this weekend?

A. I don't know. Probably not, but sometimes one gets in the mood for something different.
 
7) In 2016, the year this song was popular, Game of Thrones was TV's hottest show. Were you a fan?

A. I watched all of the shows. I did not rewatch them because they were gory and misogynistic, and I didn't need to see them a second time. I was a fan but not an afficionado.
 
8) Also in 2016, a German shorthaired pointer won Best in Show at the Westminster Dog Show. Tell us about a dog who holds a special place in your heart.

Major looked nothing like this.

A. In 1970, we lived in a trailer. We had a poodle named Heidi, and she gave birth to puppies. One of those puppies was white. A day or so after they were born, the white puppy fell into Heidi's water dish, and I heard the plop of the water in the night and went to check. I fished him out of the dish and took him in to my parents, who massaged him back to breathing again. We named him Major and he was with us from then until about 1980, when he was running after my car and just keeled over dead in the road. He had grass in his mouth. I think he may have been eating grass, saw me leave, and ran after me without chewing and choked, which now that I write this seems rather symmetrical since I saved him from drowning/choking on water to begin with. He was a good dog. Very affectionate. We had him about 10 years, which is close to average for a poodle. He was getting old. He was my favorite of my childhood pets.

9) Random question: What's the subject line of the top email in your spam folder?

A. "Give yourself an ultra-luxurious Saatva mattress." (I don't even know what that is.)


*Bing AI drew the cartoons.
_______________

I encourage you to visit the posts of other participants in Saturday 9 and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however.  

Friday, July 07, 2023

Long Week

This has been a long week.

I had an echocardiogram on Wednesday. This was for a new heart murmur my doctor discovered a few months ago. She sent me to a cardiologist. The test wasn't too bad; the waiting on it to happen was, though. The test results have been released to me and I didn't think it looked bad.

Then I saw the chiropractor on Thursday, which always leaves me feeling kind of tired.

Last night, the air conditioning unit stopped working. It was 90 degrees today so we needed to get that fixed ASAP. With my asthma, I need the air quality in the house to be the best we can make it, and the air conditioning helps with that.

Even though we pay a company an annual fee to be available, they had no one who could come last night. But they had someone here by 10:30 a.m., and he was able to fix it. He had to replace the flux capacitor. I had figured it was that as it is a part that continually needs to be replaced.

The heat pump unit is 21 years old, so it is time to purchase a new one. Or it will be soon, anyway.

This morning, I saw my primary care doctor. She is always so kind. She asked if a medical student she was training could see me because she wanted her to see the "cool kids" that are in her practice. How nice to be thought of as one of the "cool kids" at my age! Her nurse managed to get blood out of me this time, too. I am a "hard stick" and sometimes the blood just doesn't want to come.

Also, my husband saw the dentist on Thursday. No cavities this time, thankfully. He is not a dentist person, but since his hip replacement surgery he has been better about going. He's had a lot of cavities filled in the last year.

Neither of us slept well last night because the air conditioning was off and fans don't do a thing for humidity. Hopefully we will both rest better tonight.

I am rather glad this week is coming to an end. It has been busy with doctor visits. And who wants to see that many doctors in just a few days?




Thursday, July 06, 2023

Thursday Thirteen #815

Recently an NPR show was discussing "crushes." I thought at first they were talking about the boy a girl fell in love with in second grade, but the discussion was more about fan crushes than real-life crushes.

I'm not sure I had actual crushes so much as admiration, and even then, it was likely more so for the character the actor was playing than the actual person. Or singing a song I really liked.

I also had what one might call "fangirl" crushes on various female actors - mostly women playing strong roles, the kind of woman who could stick up for herself and others. And of course, there were singers I liked for various reasons.

So, without further ado, here are 13 "crushes" that I can recall over the last 60 years.

1. David Cassidy. Not the actual David Cassidy, but David Cassidy as Keith Partridge in The Patridge Family. I love that long hair, slightly bad boy look. I don't know much about David Cassidy except that Shirley Jones was his stepmother. And he sang well. 

2. Shaun Cassidy. David Cassidy's half-brother caught my attention when he starred in The Hardy Boys. He wasn't as cute as David, but he certainly was easy on the eyes.

3. John Travolta. I saw him in Grease and thought he was hot and cute. But otherwise, I have never been a Travolta fan. I think he overacts. But Olivia Newton John liked him and that was good enough for me. (I suppose I was a fangirl for Olivia, too.)

4. Erik Estrada. Yes, I liked the motorcycle cop from CHIPS. In retrospect, he reminds me of Ranger from the Stephanie Plum books by Janet Evanovich.

5. Viggo Mortenson as Aragon in Lord of the Rings. Mortenson is a wonderful actor, but I honestly only like him as Aragorn. I've seen other things he's been in and was like, "meh." Again, I think it's that long hair shaggy look.

6. Orlando Bloom as Legolas in Lord of the Rings. I don't like the dark-haired Bloom in Pirates of the Carribean and other movies. Maybe it's a Lord of the Rings thing.

7. Kate Jackson, first in The Rookies and then as Jill Duncan in Charlie's Angels. I watched The Scarecrow and Mrs. King but did not like that as well. I always thought Jackson could act, and I admired the strong role of Jill Duncan.

8. Sharon Gless, as Christine Cagney in Cagney & Lacey. Another strong woman role model, although I related to the character for other reasons, too, including her vulnerability. 

9. Lucy Lawless as Xena: Warrior Princess. I haven't seen anything else much that Lawless has been in, so it was really the character I admired. Xena was bad-ass and took no names but took care of herself and her gal pal Gabrielle without any trouble.

10. Stevie Nicks. How could I not love that witchy vibe she put off? And how could I not love her songs?

11. Melissa Etheridge. She's a singer songwriter that I've always admired. We're about the same age.

12. Lynda Carter. She played Wonder Woman in the series of the same name. I wasn't that big a fan, but I'm running out of names.

13. Johnny Gage, played by Randolph Mantooth. Gage was one of the paramedics on Emergency! I couldn't have told you the name of the actor, but I did have a crush on the character.

How about you? Who did you admire or "crush" on? Who do you admire or "crush" on now?


Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while, and this is my 815th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Wednesday, July 05, 2023

Strange Fungi

We had a little rain about 10 days ago, and the strange fungi around the oak tree has returned. It's been popping up occasionally since about 2014. It seems very weather dependent as to whether or not it grows.

My brother told me one year that this was edible, but I am not giving it a go.

I don't know the exact name of this fungus. It may be Armillaria root fungus of some kind, or it may be this kind of fungus: http://www.first-nature.com/fungi/trametes-gibbosa.php.

As best I can tell, though, it's not good for the tree.


My size 7 foot for size comparison.





Tuesday, July 04, 2023

Monday, July 03, 2023

Wineberries

It's berry pickin' time here in ol' Virginia. The wineberries in particular are ripe, with the blackberries not far behind.

Wineberries (Rubus phoenicolasius), are an invasive species here. They are native to Asia but have found their way into the hearts of us Appalachians. With their vibrant red hue, delicate structure, and unique flavor, wineberries are a true treasure in the botanical kingdom.

The berries are part of the raspberry family. Wineberries are not purple, however. They are deep red in color, resembling a fine red wine (hence the name).

The taste of wineberries is a harmonious blend of sweet and tangy. Their flavor profile is often described as reminiscent of raspberries with a hint of wine-like complexity, hence their name. This unique taste makes wineberries a popular choice for jams, jellies, pies, and other culinary delights.

Wineberries also offer a range of health benefits. They are rich in antioxidants, vitamins, and minerals, which contribute to overall well-being. These berries are known to boost the immune system, improve cardiovascular health, and enhance cognitive function. Additionally, their high fiber content promotes digestive health and aids in weight management.

We have only a few here, and I didn't risk the poison oak that was all around them to fetch the ones remaining. The birds and squirrels are already making off with them as quickly as they ripen.



I have always liked how the berry/flower leaves a star shape after the berry's been picked.

This about the extent of our wineberry patch.


Nonexistent

Having anxiety and depression is like being scared and tired at the same time. It's the fear of failure, but no urge to be productive. It's wanting friends but hating to socialize. It's wanting to be alone, but not wanting to be lonely.  

It's feeling everything at once, then feeling paralyzingly numb.

                                        -- Found on Facebook under "Nonexistent"


I ran across this paragraph on Facebook the other day, and I saved it because it resonated with me.

Actually, it rang about 10,000 bells, and I had to stop and admit to myself that this is it. Even though I tell myself all the time that I'm not anxious and I am not depressed, I am.

It's painful to admit but I have always felt this way. Maybe when I was born I did not, but I do not ever remember a time when I was not depressed. Not just sad, but depressed. Not just scared, but hopeless, for the most part.

And always anxious. Always insecure. Always sure that I am the alien who landed on the wrong planet, but I don't know where home is, or how to get back there.

What I feel daily feels like walking through molasses every single minute of every hour of the day. One foot up, plop it back down into the molasses. A big deep hole filled with molasses, one that I can never swim out of, because I can't see a top, or feel a bottom, or see a shoreline.

There is a story that comes to me occasionally about a donkey that fell into a deep hole. The farmer couldn't figure out how to pull the donkey out, so he decided just to bury the donkey alive. The donkey, seeing the dirt fall, climbed atop each pile of dirt as it fell until it hopped out of the hole.

If only it were that easy. If only the hole full of molasses had an end, a beginning, a middle, instead of just being always there.

If only somebody could tell me where to find the dirt that would take away the molasses and leave me on solid ground. But there are no answers. I've had 100s of hours of therapy and read 100s of books, and there are no answers. Not for me, anyway.

People don't see it, I guess. Some do if they're paying close attention. But I've always felt like the person who didn't belong, the unwanted one, the unwelcomed one, the needy, obsolete, imperfect one. The one who couldn't do it right no matter how hard the trying. Always wrong, never correct, never good enough, never perfect enough.

I suspect I know where that comes from. I imagine you know where it comes from, too, because I don't think we're born feeling imperfect, unless maybe you weren't wanted to begin with, and those feelings seeped on into your DNA as you were a fetus being formed in the womb. 

Some days I consider it a win if I get up, dress, do the laundry, the dishes, and make the bed. This, I know, is more than many people with depression can manage. I function, so what am I complaining about? I have always functioned. I have never let this emotional angst take me completely, but it's been a long and tiring fight. A constant struggle to stay above the molasses.

There are days when I feel l'appel du vide - the call of the void - so strongly that it's a wonder I don't get in the car and drive it off a bridge somewhere. But I do not do that. 

Before I had my gallbladder removed and chronic pain in my abdomen took my life away from me, I fought it better. I could fill my days easier, because I didn't also have to account for the pain. I liked deadlines and I needed - and still need - external pushes, like expectations from someone else - to get things accomplished.

The pain brought a different kind of time suck as I maneuvered through the health care system, trusted that eventually physical therapy would fix me (after 10 years I know that's not happening), and hoped up until I was about 55 that my 50s would be better than the rest of my life. That was what I'd been counting on - a good decade. That was all I wanted, was one good decade out of a lifetime.

But my 50s sucked. And now I'm 60, and I don't see how to change things, to make things different, to bring myself out of the hole and send the molasses down the sink drain so that my 60s don't suck. Because right now, they don't look any different and the horizon hasn't changed.

After 60 years of fighting it, I have to wonder if it's simply time to accept that this is how I am, this is my personality trait, this is my failure. I'm simply not capable of anything more. I always thought I was made of sterner stuff, stronger stuff, but I guess not. 

Or maybe I am, in fact, incredibly strong, and the fact that I've survived these 60 years is really a testament to strength, to resiliency, to some inner something that keeps a person still standing up even as the molasses goes over her head.


Sunday, July 02, 2023

Sunday Stealing

Sunday Stealing

1. If your house was on fire, which three items would you save?

A. That's a tough question. I'd probably grab my external hard drive, the folder with all of my ID and important papers in it (along with my husband's), and my purse, if I had time. However, the most important thing is to get yourself out of a burning house and not worry about anything else. You can replace stuff, but you can't replace your life.

2. What is the strangest or most awkward date you’ve ever been on?

A. I haven't been on a date in 40 years. I don't remember.

3. What are your biggest fears?

A. Being alone and penniless, not living up to my potential (which seems to be exactly what I am doing), and snakes.

4. How do you spend your time when you are procrastinating?

A. The computer is a time suck for me. I also read, clean the house, talk on the phone, and do most anything else except the thing I know I should be doing.

5. What has been your most memorable birthday so far, and why?

A. My husband threw me a nice surprise party when I turned 50. I was surprised at all the people who came.

6. What is your favorite snack?

A. At the moment it's yogurt-covered pretzels. It changes.

7. What was your first pet?

A. I am not sure they were the first, but we had a pair of Dalmation dogs named Prince and Princess. Those are the first animals I remember. I watched them both get run over by the milk truck.

8. What’s your favorite city in your country?

A. I don't have one. I don't like cities. I wouldn't mind a visit to D.C. sometime, but who knows when that would happen.

9. Do you have a garden?

A. I do! We hadn't had one for four years, but this year we have one with tomatoes, zucchini, yellow squash, cucumbers, radishes, watermelon, kale, and lettuce. The lettuce is the only thing that didn't do well.

10. What is your favorite thing about your hometown?

A. I don't have a hometown. I have a county. My favorite thing about it is its rural nature and the fact that I belong here.

11. What was the last book you read?

A. I just finished Plum Spooky, by Janet Evanovich.

12. What is the best book you have ever read?

A. I don't know. That's such a subjective question. Anne of Green Gables ranks pretty high up on my list, but I daresay it's not a book most people would choose.

13. Who is your favorite author?

A. I don't have one. I like a lot of authors - Janet Evanovich, Kristin Hannah, Nora Roberts, David Sedaris, David Baldacci, Louise Penny, Sue Grafton, Naomi Novik, Laini Taylor, Ray Bradbury, Debbie Macomber, Melissa Caruso, etc.

14. Is there a food that you hate?

A. Coconut. I refuse to eat anything with coconut in it.

15. Do you get along with your neighbors?

A. Yes, I do. 

16. Do you have any tattoos or piercings?

A. I have a piercing in each ear, but that's it.

__________

I encourage you to visit other participants in Sunday Stealing posts and leave a comment. Cheers to all us thieves who love memes, however we come by them.

Saturday, July 01, 2023

Saturday 9: Over There

 Saturday 9: Over There (1942)

. . . because it's the 4th of July weekend. 

Unfamiliar with this rendition? Hear it here.



1) George M. Cohan wrote this song in 1917, inspired by our country's entry into WWI. It was not only popular with the young men who enlisted, it was reassuring to their families. Tell us about a time when music was a comfort to you.

A. Music has long been a comfort to me. When I play my guitar, I'm in the moment (practicing mindfulness without realizing it since 1974!) and it helps take my blues away. I'm fairly sure that all of my time playing music has kept me somewhat sane.

2) "Over There" was revived at the start of WWII, and President Franklin Roosevelt cited this song specifically when he awarded Cohan with the Congressional Gold Medal. What's your favorite patriotic song?

A. This Land is Your Land.

3) This rendition of the song is from the 1942 film, Yankee Doodle Dandy. James Cagney won an Oscar for his performance as George M. Cohan. Also nominated that year was Gary Cooper, who portrayed a different Yankee, Lou Gehrig, in Pride of the Yankees. Tell us about a movie biography you have enjoyed.

A. Does The Blind Side count? I like that movie.

4) Cagney had a rebellious streak. His boss, studio head Jack Warner, nicknamed Cagney, "The Professional Againster." Cagney joked that he was proud of the title. How about you? Are you rebellious?

A. I used to be. When I wrote for the newspaper, my middle name was "Trouble." The county administrator would see me, and he always said, "Here comes Trouble." Now I'm just old.

5) In the clip linked above, a woman sings with Cagney. Her name was Frances Langford, nicknamed the "GI Nightingale" because during WWII she performed for the troops at bases throughout Europe, North Africa and the South Pacific. Do you have any nicknames?

A. Trouble, as stated above, and a nickname my father gave me when I was born that I do not like for others to use.

6) In 1942, when audiences were enjoying this performance of "Over There" in movie theaters, the fashion trend was for mothers and their young daughters to wear identical dresses. Moms would buy lots of fabric and patterns for the same casual day dress in both their own sizes and their little girls'. Can you sew?

A. I can sew on a button and hem pants, but that's about it.

7) The Fourth of July means we're in the middle of summer. Are you careful about applying sunscreen?

A. I generally don't go out to sunbathe, so it's not foremost on my mind. 

8) Mosquito bites can be a major summer annoyance. Are you scratching any itches right now?

A. I have a new little set of moles on my thigh that itch. Eventually they will stop but new moles itch like crazy when they first come on.

9) Celebrity chef Rachael Ray says she considers mini-hamburgers, or "sliders," the All-American food. What will you be eating this 4th of July? 

A. I don't know right now. I'm not sure we will be doing anything special.

_______________

I encourage you to visit the posts of other participants in Saturday 9 and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however.  

Friday, June 30, 2023

Fly Away

Yesterday as I was talking on the phone with a friend, I heard a "bam" against the front door.

I looked out and saw a bird fluttering on the porch. It looked dazed and confused.

The air was full of tree swallows, and they swirled around the hurt little bird, flying quickly in circles over it, so many that I could not count them. They flew fast and furiously, and my presence at the window did not deter them.

It was a magical site to see these beautiful blueish birds flying as if caught in a little tornado, round and round, over the head of the injured one.

I watched to see if the bird on the ground was simply dazed or hurt. It began fluttering and moving about, finally tumbling the inch from the porch onto the grass. I hung up the phone, and when I turned back, the birds were no longer flying around.

When I stepped outside to check, the one that banged into the door was gone. It had flown off to join the others.

It was pretty cool to see. It happened to fast I didn't get video or anything, but it really was a great moment with nature.


Thursday, June 29, 2023

Thursday Thirteen

I was pondering ethical/moral dilemmas recently. There are a lot of them, and I suspect most of us face some kind of moral or ethical issue almost every day. For example, simply posting on social medial might be a moral or ethical decision - do I really need to state my opinion here? That one causes me a lot of angst sometimes (so I mostly just don't post on social media). But there are lots of these types of questions.


1. Should a person speak up when they feel strongly about something, even if speaking up brings on the possibility of harm (to a job, personal harm, reputation, etc.), or stay quiet?

2. If a news media person saw a house on fire, should they go save the people or do his/her job and stand back and take photographs?

3. Should one respect a loved one's privacy on social media, or check on it to see if they are doing anything risky or harmful (especially with younger people)?

4. If one wants to end a relationship, should you end a relationship by ignoring the other person completely (ghosting) or by communicating your reasons and feelings honestly?

5. Should a person claim the credit for a project that was done by someone else or acknowledge their contribution and share the recognition?

6. Should someone sell a product that is of poor quality or defective to a client who trusts him/her, or inform the client of the problem and lose the sale?


7. Should someone use confidential or privileged information for financial gain or respect the rules of fair competition and disclosure?

8. Should a person exaggerate skills, experience, or qualifications to get a job, or be honest and risk losing the opportunity even though the person is qualified for the position?

9. Should someone report a colleague who is breaking the rules, cheating, stealing, harassing, or abusing someone or keep silent and avoid conflict or retaliation?

10. Should a person expose illegal, unethical, or harmful practices that he/she witnesses in his/her organization or stay loyal and protect his/her reputation and career?

11. Should people donate their organs after death to save the lives of others or respect their religious beliefs or personal preferences that prohibit organ donation?

12. Should society support the right of a terminally ill person to end their life with dignity and avoid suffering or respect the sanctity of life and oppose assisted suicide?


13. Should a person trap mice with spring traps that kill them, or use humane traps and release the mouse?


Bing AI helped with some of these moral issues and created the images.


Thursday Thirteen is played by lots of people; there is a list here if you want to read other Thursday Thirteens and/or play along. I've been playing for a while, and this is my 814th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Wednesday, June 28, 2023

Another "Objectionable" Book

Will Grayson, Will Grayson
By John Green & David Levithan
Audiobook 8 hrs
Copyright 2011

YA, ages 14 & up

One thing the folks who are objecting to homosexual books in the local library have done is to get me to read books I otherwise would have overlooked. I don't read a lot of YA unless it's fantasy.

This book was one of the books they challenged, and when it came up as available while I was skimming for something new to listen to, I chose it.

It's not great literature, but I also didn't find anything objectionable about it. There were curse words, and yes, young men fell in love, they masturbated, they kissed. I was more upset with the fat shaming in the book than I was with anything else. One of the main characters, Tiny, is a huge overweight fellow and his size is commented on frequently. He is also a flamboyant homosexual who writes a play.

I found the book rather sweet in that most of the youth were accepting of these characters (some were not, but they weren't overly hateful), and it had a rather unrealistic but loving ending. If only people really were so accepting of one another.

In this story, two young men are both named Will Grayson. They do not know each other but eventually meet. They are quite different people. One Will Grayson is Tiny's best friend; later, the other Will Grayson becomes Tiny's boyfriend, though not for very long.
 
The story revolves around the growing up of these young men and how they handle themselves and deal with those around them. Neither is a jock, class clown, or superstar, but Will (1) has a better grasp on himself, his life, and his family than the other. He comes from an upper middle-class family. Will (2) lives with his mother and suffers from depression. The family is not poor but not middle class, either. He has no friends except for a person he has met online and a girl he doesn't want to talk to.

When Will (2) ventures into Chicago to meet his online friend, he instead meets Will (1) and discovers his cyber friend is not who he claimed to be. 

Throughout the story, Tiny's efforts to write a musical play and stage it forms a backdrop. The play is about love and acceptance.

Since I listened to this instead of reading it, I can't address issues I saw in some of the Amazon reviews about sentence grammar and such. I know there is a lot of instant messaging, chatroom talk, and emails in the book, which at times were hard to follow while I was listening. On the page they may not be so bad. I cannot address that aside from noting that it didn't take away from the story.

I do not set out to read books about homosexuality. It is not my thing. However, I also do not find it distasteful, sinful, abhorrent or anything else. What people do is their own business, and these books serve as an introduction to a lifestyle with which I am not familiar. They have, if anything, made me more aware of what the folks are dealing with and going through, and have made me more empathetic towards them. 

More accepting, even.

Maybe that's what the objection is: some people don't want others to be accepted.

Tuesday, June 27, 2023

Timber!

Over the last several years, as the ash borer beetle made its way through here, we have lost numerous trees. They died seemingly overnight. One year they were fine, the next, they were dead.

While most of these were ash, we have also lost a few red oak trees. This may have been because of something called oak wilt, which can cause red oaks to die in weeks. It is a disease spread by beetles, so perhaps it is no coincidence that these trees are dying or have died around the same time.

We have removed most of the dead trees around the house, but a giant red oak just over our property line remained. It was on my husband's mother's property.

We finally had it removed this weekend.

You'd think out of the 30,000 photos I have there would be a picture of this tree before it died, and there probably is, but I couldn't find it.

This is what it looked like before it was cut. Imagine it all nice and green, blocking the sky.

Tree before it was cut, next to an 8 x 10 shed.

Sorry to see you go, old friend.

The view after the tree was cut.

Compare the stump to the size of the guys.

My husband said it was about 3 feet across the stump. The tree wasn't hollow, either.

When the poison oak has died out in the fall, I may go down and see if I can count the tree rings. I'd like to know how old it was.

Sunday, June 25, 2023

Sunday Stealing


1. Would you rather ride a bike, ride a horse, or drive a car?

A. The appropriate ecological answer would be ride a bike or a horse, but I haven't been on a horse in 50 years, and I haven't been on a bike in about 40.

2. Who is your favorite author?

A. I don't have a favorite. I like different authors for different reasons. 

3. Would you rather vacation in Hawaii or Alaska, and why?

A. I would rather vacation in Hawaii, because it would be warmer there (probably too warm for me) and there is lots to see that I haven't seen.

4. If you could go back in time, what year would you travel to?

A. I would go back and watch the founding fathers write the U.S. Constitution so I could come back and explain what the 2nd Amendment is really supposed to mean, since no one seems to understand it.

5. What's your favorite zoo animal?

A. I don't have a favorite "zoo" animal. I like the exotic animals - lions, elephants, tigers - if they're not going to eat me.

6. What's the tallest building you've been to the top of?

A. Good question. I don't know the answer. It might be the local hospital. I have been to New York City and to Paris, but I didn't go to any tall buildings in either one that I recall. I know I didn't go up in the Eiffel Tower; it was pouring rain the day we were supposed to do that with my group, and no one wanted to do it so we went back to the Louvre instead. I am fairly sure I haven't been in the Empire State Building, but not 100%. I was there when I was 14 but I don't remember what all we did.

7. How often do you buy clothes?

A. Maybe once or twice a year, if that. 

8. What was the last thing you recorded on TV?

A. My husband records car shows. I don't remember the last thing I personally recorded. Maybe Everything Everywhere All At Once. I haven't watched it yet.

9. What was the last book you read?

A. The Summer I Turned Pretty, by Jenny Han, was the last audiobook I listened to. The last book I read was The Princess Bride, by William Goldman. I am currently listening to Will Grayson, Will Grayson, by John Green (it's on the banned book list, I am working my way down them), and I am reading Tarzan, Lord of the Apes, by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

10. What's your favorite type of foreign food?

A. Chinese, I guess, although I strongly suspect what passes for Chinese food around here is quite Americanized.

11. What kitchen appliance do you use every day?

A. The refrigerator and the microwave.

12. How old were you when you learned Santa wasn't real? How did you find out?

A. I was 5 when I found out. I was dusting for my mother and ran across a dish full of 50 cent pieces. The tooth fairy had just brought me a 50-cent piece for a tooth that I'd knocked out of my head in a fall. I quickly deduced that the tooth fairy money came from this dish, and that this dish belonged to my parents. From there it was a quick leap to knowing that my parents were the tooth fairy, and also the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus. I confronted my parents, who admitted such to me, but asked me to pretend for my brother. This I did, and I think he was close to 9 or 10 before he realized Santa did not exist.

13. What was your favorite subject in school?

A. English, although I also enjoyed history, civics (which given the state of things must not be taught anymore), and science. About the only thing I didn't like was phys ed.

14. What's the most unusual thing you've ever eaten?

A. Escargot. Or maybe a random bug.

15. What's your favorite family recipe?



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I encourage you to visit other participants in Sunday Stealing posts and leave a comment. Cheers to all us thieves who love memes, however we come by them.


Saturday, June 24, 2023

Saturday 9: It Ain't Over 'Til It's Over


Unfamiliar with this week's song? Hear it here.

1) In this song, Lenny Kravitz sings about all the tears he's cried over this relationship. Scientists theorize that human tears fall into two categories: emotional and irritant. "Emotional tears" are most often shed over physical pain, empathy, compassion, depression, and anger/frustration. Think about the last time you cried. What triggered your tears?

A. I was upset because someone had insulted me.

2) We also cry "irritant tears," which means we well up when a foreign particle gets in our eye. Over-the-counter drops can help. What's the last thing you bought at the drugstore? Was it a medication (OTC or prescription) or something else entirely?

A. I bought medication and gum.

3) TV actresses have played a big part in Lenny Kravitz' life. His mother was Roxie Roker, who played the neighbor Helen on The Jeffersons. His wife (and the inspiration for this song) was Lisa Bonet, who played one of the daughters on The Cosby Show. Their daughter, Zoe Kravitz, appeared in the HBO series Big Little Lies. What TV series do you never tire of, and could watch again and again? 

A. We rewatch The Big Bang Theory a lot. I also could watch MASH, Gilligan's Island, Little House on the Prairie, and Band of Brothers multiple times. I'm sure there are others but those are the ones that come to mind.

4) Thinking of Big Little Lies . . . Zoe Kravitz co-starred with Nicole Kidman. Shortly after Kidman divorced Tom Cruise, she dated Lenny Kravitz. Have you ever been curious about a partner's past love?

A. I'm on my 40th year of marriage. That is all that matters.

5) Lenny Kravitz and Today Show weatherman Al Roker are second cousins (their grandfathers were brothers). Do you turn to a TV weatherman for the forecast? Or do you check a website or app?

A. We watch Brent Watts on WDBJ7, mostly, or WDBJ7 weather/news. Sometimes we compare predictions, but not often.

6) Also a talented photographer, Lenny's work has been displayed at the Leica Gallery in Wetzlar, Germany. What's the most recent photo you took?

A. 
My brother and his girlfriend.


7) In 1991, when this song was popular, Murray Bicycles were the top seller among younger set. Popularity is fleeting, though. By 2004, the company filed for bankruptcy and no longer produces bicycles. Was your bike a big part of your summer when you were a kid?

A. Yes. We rode them all over the place. We stayed with my grandmother in the summers until I was 12. Up the block from her, the National Park Service had a small acreage filled with pine trees, and we made paths all through them. We were pirates, detectives, superheroes, cowboys and Indians, and anything else we could think of in that little patch of trees.

8) Also in 1991, Gene Roddenberry died. Mr. Roddenberry is best known as the creator of Star Trek. Who's your favorite Star Trek character?

A. Captain Kathryn Janeway, from Star Trek: Voyager

9) Random Question: How do you think your high school classmates remember you?

A. It depends on the classmate, I imagine. Some may remember me fondly, others not so much. Some may not remember me at all. I was quiet but also a little wild at times, so some may remember me as a bit unpredictable.

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I encourage you to visit the posts of other participants in Saturday 9 and leave a comment. Because there are no rules, it is your choice. Saturday 9 players hate rules. We love memes, however.