Saturday, September 11, 2021

Remembering September 11

Twenty years ago on this day, I, along with most Americans, watched the aftermath of two hijacked planes crashing into The Twin Towers in New York City. As a nation, we watched the towers collapse in a swirl of dust, debris and screams.

The 9/11 attacks are a sober reminder for me of how badly the US government sometimes behaves in world relations, how poorly some citizens of this world think of this country, and how hard our people work, pray, and play.

September 11 also reminds me that all in the world are a part of the circle of life. Everyone, regardless of race, color or creed, deserves a chance to live. That includes bankers in the World Trade Center and Iraqis huddled in their homes during bombings in Baghdad, shooting victims in schools and theaters, people who catch Covid-19, and everyone else who is robbed of their life prematurely.

I hope for peace every day and I wish for wisdom in the leaders who hold the decisions for such things in the palms of their hands.

Perhaps one day issues will be resolved without bloodshed and tears, and the world will lose its hatred for one another and embrace good will. Unfortunately, I don't see that happening any time soon.

Now we are more divided than ever, the world over. I remember that not long after the TV coverage began to die down, a feeling of helplessness settled over me. I think it settled over much of the nation. For many it never went away. I'm not sure it will. It left many feeling emasculated and I don't believe that has yet been assuaged.

The government used the attacks as a reason to implement the USA PATRIOT ACT, which abolished many civil liberties, including the right to check out what you wanted from a library without being turned into the police if somebody thought it was suspect. Unfortunately, while some of this kind of behavior settled down, the current atmosphere encourages these types of activities, particularly where it pertains to immigrants, women having abortions, or anyone perceived as "other."

The government also began spying on emails and telephone conversations and doing other Big Brother things. I seriously doubt that ever stopped.

I wish that love, not vengeance and revenge, had been the lesson learned from September 11, 2001. Because for a day or two there, we united as a nation, grieving and striving to rescue those in harm's way, and much of the world stood with us, too.

If only it had lasted.

From one end of the world to the other, we are all connected, each and every one. There is now so much hate, so much death. What can a person do in the face of so much anger and despair?

* * *
On this day I also remember the 343 firefighters who lost their lives in the Twin Towers. There is no greater sacrifice than to perish while trying to save others. May they be at peace.




Saturday 9: Jose Cuervo


Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here
 
1) In this song, Shelly West sings that she woke up late on a sunny morning. How's the weather in your part of the world?

A. It's cooled down from the 90s and 100s, but the humidity remains a little high.

2) She wonders if she started any fights while under the influence. Who's the last person you quarreled with?

A. I'm sure I snapped at my husband for something or another. That's what married people do.
 
3) OK, margaritas for everyone! Shelly sings that she likes hers with salt. What's your order? Classic or strawberry? Salt or sugar on the rim?

A. Um. I don't drink. Can I please just have a strawberry icy?

4) Jose Cuervo was a real person. He was one of the first to put tequila in bottles instead of barrels. Since bottles are easier to ship, it was a good decision. Tell us about a recent choice you're glad you made.

A. I started walking on the treadmill again.

5) This week's featured artist, Shelly West, decided upon a career in music while still very young. She went on the road and sang backup for her mom, country music legend Dottie West, when she was still in her teens. When Sam was in her teens, she really didn't give her professional future that much thought. How about you? Did you already have career ambitions when you were in your teens?

A. I always wanted to be a writer, but was never encouraged to do it except occasionally by a free-thinking teacher. My mother wanted me to be a secretary like her. My father wanted me to work for him. I wanted to go to college. It was a battle of wills. No one won, really.
 
6) In 1983, the year this song was popular, Sally Ride became the first American woman in space. Do you ever fantasize about being an astronaut?

A. I do, although I did it more when I was younger. Now I'm a bit old for space travel, I suspect. But what an adventure that would be! I'd want to head toward a distant galaxy, knowing I'd never return to Earth.

7) Also in 1983, quarterback Aaron Rodgers was born. The NFL season is just kicking off. Do you have high hopes for your team this year?

A. I don't have a team. But go University of Virginia!

8) In 1983, Motorola introduced the first cell phone. Do you have an easy time adapting to new technology?

A. Generally. Sometimes it throws me, and the older I am the weirder some of it seems.

9) Think of the last potato chip you had. Was it plain, sea salt, barbecue, sour cream and onion, etc.?

A. It was a Lays Baked Potato Chip. Those are the only kind I can eat.

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

Friday, September 10, 2021

Evening Sky, September 1

 




Thursday, September 09, 2021

Thursday Thirteen

Headlines today from my Bing newsfeed

1. Disgraceful: Former President Trump's niece reacts to what he's doing (why will this man not go away?

2. House panels starts writing $3.5 trillion social policy and climate bill

3. Hurricane Ida death toll jumps to 82

4.  The Taliban is bringing back its feared ministry of 'vice' and 'virtue'

5. White House signals new Covid-19 measures for unvaccinated Americans

6. Wheel of Fortune announces changes

7. Feeling overwhelmed? Here's one thing that can help.

8. 70-Year-Old Woman Dies at Hospital Where Two-Thirds of Staff Left

9. There's a Correct Way to Use a Can Opener, and You Probably Don't Know It.

10. Photos from North Korea suggest Kim Jong Un's weight loss has continued

11. Golf World Reacts to Significant Tiger Woods News

12. Fox News host awkwardly spoils pregnancy announcement for her co-host

13. Taco Bell wants you to send back your used sauce packets so it can reuse them

And what struck me about all of these, other than the fact that I cannot get this newsfeed to give me stories I really want to read? The difference in how some headlines use all capitals for major words and others don't. That's what I got out of this.

_______________________
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 722nd time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Wednesday, September 08, 2021

Diamond Webs



 

Tuesday, September 07, 2021

Sturgeon Moon


 

Here I am on the night of the new moon, when darkness reigns and the starlight is all that lights the evening, posting a picture of the August Sturgeon Moon. I was trying to make it look like it was sitting atop the trees, but I didn't quite succeed in that. Close, I guess.

My mood matches the coming deep quiet of the long dark sigh that new moons bring. I have things I want to write, things I want to say, opinions I want to express, stories I wish to tell - and I keep my mouth shut. I do not respond to the things that disturb me on social media, I do not call people I want to talk to, I say nothing to upset the air, I try not to breathe, even, so that my breath will not disturb the path of some butterfly. It is as if I am full of fury and frustration, and yet I remain as silent as a thimble pushing a needle into a garment. Hush, my mind says. Speak not.

But here is my place to speak. This is my blog, the place I do, on occasion, allow myself voice. Sometimes it is a little voice . . . most times it is a little voice. Occasionally I will let loose with a very loud Fuck You, because that sums up all of the frustration and pain, in an odd sort of way. Just fuck you, fuck myself. Fuck it. That's such a great word, fuck. It sums up everything in one syllable.

The list of topics is long. I am angry that the abortion issue remains an issue. It has been an issue my entire life - literally since before I was born. When I was born, abortions were not legal. My mother told me (frequently) that she tried to abort me but backed out at the last minute. I don't know if this is true or simply words she said to hurt me, because she was more than capable of that. My mother should not have been a mother. Some women should not be mothers and mine was one of them. Maternal love is a myth we foist upon women simply to make them feel guilty when they don't want their children. It doesn't exist in every female. Maybe it doesn't exist at all.

When I was in high school, abortion also was an issue (late 1970s early 1980s). I remember feeling that I was a walking poster child for why abortion should be legal. I felt unwanted, always, and mostly unloved. I suffered terribly from depression that went overlooked and unchecked. I was moody and a troublemaker who made straight As. No one thought to address my mental health except for me and a few of my teachers, who sent me to see the school psychologist, which helped until my parents found out and put a stop to that. 

That is not say that there weren't good times or that my parents didn't love me - I have come to terms with the fact that they did the best they could with the people that they were. They were barely adults themselves, after all. My mother was 18 when I was born. She was only 38 years old when I married. Some women are just starting families then. It would never have occurred to my father that there were better ways of raising children, or that his offspring might have been better off not being around their mother. He was busy being a businessman, making his money, and people didn't think that way then.

This all came to mind this morning while I was reading the comments on the abortion issue and the new vigilante laws in place in Texas that allow for bounties on the parties who assist a woman in obtaining an abortion. One woman noted that her mother had wanted to abort her, and she wished she had been successful. Many other women expressed astonishment: do you mean you wish you'd never been born? And I knew that yes, that was exactly what she meant. She wished she'd never been born. The gods know I have wished it myself often enough.

Sometimes I take that idea out and examine it, that ol' It's a Wonderful Life thing. Haven't I made positive impacts somewhere? Doesn't someone have a better life because I have existed? Generally speaking, no. I cost my husband his chance to be a father - his choice, I know, he could have divorced me and remarried but he loves me - and while I can think of good impacts some of my articles made - thousands of dollars raised for Angel Trees, funds pouring in for someone with some disease, because I was really good at writing those heartfelt articles that didn't actually sound like pleas for money but were - I think too that had I not written those stories, someone else would have. I helped save a few historical landmarks. I helped keep the local cement plant from burning tires back in the early 1990s. Everything I have done, someone else could have or would have done, maybe even better than I did. In the grand scheme of things, my existence is about as significant as that of an ant with a broken leg.

Another topic that frustrates me is the ongoing battle of masks and vaccines. As someone who has spent her entire life avoiding things to try to stay healthy, this makes me want to grab people who are unmasked in the stores and shake the life out of them. Long ago, it was cigarette smoke. I'm allergic to cigarette smoke. My grandfather smoked and I was always sick after visiting my grandparents. I'm also allergic to milk. Foods I can avoid, but I can't avoid the thin curl of smoke from the glowing end of a Marlboro. 

Nor can I avoid the toxic wastes to my west that spewing out of the cement plant, which is my county's number one polluter, or the toxic wastes to my east that tumble from a truck manufacturing plant, the second largest polluter. I am caught in between them, living on a farm where chemicals are used constantly, Round Up© and other herbicides that settle in the body and transform DNA and does who knows what else to a person's internal chemicals.

So I spent my entire life avoiding cigarette smoke, which meant I didn't go to most restaurants, because they allowed smoking (or had a smoking area, which was always a joke - those vents to nowhere did nothing), and I sat in my car waiting for people to stop smoking in front of doors. I held my breath in mad dashes to my car if I had to wade through a cloud of cigarette smoke because I would be late returning to work if I didn't. I took (and still take) lots of showers to wash off the smoke smell. I didn't wear a mask because no one ever suggested it and I never thought of it. It's not our culture. I would have worn an astronaut suit if it would have kept me from being sick four months out of every year. I was sick so often I couldn't hold a job. I used to miss 35 days of school every year. Who does that and still makes As? Me.

Finally, back in the early 2000s Virginia wised up and implemented no smoking laws in restaurants. I could eat out without having a sinus infection afterwards! It was literally a breath of fresh air. A single law changed my life. It didn't help with other things - the smells of perfume that give me migraines, the colognes that send me into sneezing fits, the off-gassing of various carpets that ultimately make me ill. But it helped that I could go somewhere to eat without it being an anxiety-ridden event.

And now we're back to not being able to go places because people are assholes. They insist upon their right to make other people sick. These are stupid people, and if you're one of them and you're still reading this blog, I'm sorry, but I think you're an idiot if you haven't received the vaccine and/or you won't wear a mask. (You may have a medical reason not to take the vaccine, but anyone can wear a mask, I have asthma and I wear a mask, I know people on oxygen tanks who wear masks, so there really is no excuse, it doesn't cut your airflow or do anything dangerous like the dummies try to say on youtube or FAUX or wherever this shit fucking comes from. You just don't like it, is all. Grow up.)

These very same people think it's horrific that we left 100 Americans in Afghanistan, but they don't care that 650,000 Americans have died of Covid or that they might kill their own grandma if they won't wear a surgical mask. What kind of lopsided logic is that? Don't these people realize how hypocritical they sound? Why is one ok and not the other?

So yes, I am pro-choice. I would not have had an abortion myself unless the child was going to kill me and not live. If I were to die but the child were to live, that would have been a decent trade-off, I guess. But in any event, it's a woman's choice and not something the government should have any say in. It's certainly none of my business what you or you or you or anyone else does. I try hard to mind my own business, thank you.

I am pro-vaccine and pro-mask. I'm also pro stay-the-fuck-out-of-other-nations' business, cut the army in half, and spend the dollars on the children that have been forced to be born who could use a hand up instead of another kick in the ass.

This is what life is like on the dark side of the moon. I'm pretty sure no one wants to join me here. That's why I worship it when it is full and bright.




Monday, September 06, 2021

Hat for Lunch?

 






Sunday, September 05, 2021

Sunday Stealing

Sunday Stealing

1. What's your favorite TV channel to watch in the middle of the night?

A. I don't watch TV in the middle of the night. If I wake up and can't go back to sleep, I read.

2. Which decade do you feel the most special connection to and why?

A. Probably the 1970s. That is when I was growing up. The music I tend to listen to is from the 1970s.

3. What is your favorite oldie/classic rock song?

A. Just take those old records off the shelf! I'll sit and listen to them by myself! Today's music ain't got the same soul! I like that old time rock and roll! . . . Probably American Pie, although there are so many it's really hard to single one out.

4. What Disney villain are you the most like and why?

A. I don't watch many Disney movies so this is difficult to answer. The only villain I can think of is Cruella DeVil and I am not like her at all, except that I'm a female. 

5. Have you ever been a Girl Scout/Boy Scout?

A. No. I desperately wanted to be in the Girl Scouts but I had no ride. My parents both worked and no one near me was a Girl Scout.

6. If you were traveling to another continent would you rather fly or take a boat?

A. I think a boat would be interesting and fun, but flying would get me where I wanted to go much more quickly.

7. What are three of your favorite dog names of all time?

A. Major, Ginger, and Schooner. Those were three of my dogs.

8. How do you feel when you see a rainbow?

A. Like I've seen something spectacular.

9. If you were in the Land of Oz would you want to live there or go home?

A. I would live there if I could live in the city and not in the haunted woods. Or if I could live over in Glenda the Good Witch's lands.

10. What is the first word that comes to mind when you see the word:
Air: Water
Meat: Beat
Different: Odd
Pink: Singer
Deserve: Clueless
White: Black
Elvis: Presley
Magic: The Way
Heart: Broken
Clash: War
Pulp: Fiction

_______________

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, September 04, 2021

Smile! You Know Who You Are.


 

A Hard Day's Night

Saturday9: Hard Day's Night

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

1) John Lennon sings that he's been working like a dog. What's the hardest job you've ever had? What made it so difficult?

A. One of the hardest jobs I ever had was when I was working with at temp agency. The women at the office I sent to were mean. As in nasty. They didn't want me there. They wouldn't give me any assignments. They called me names. They told me I was fat, to my face. They told me I was useless and they didn't know why I was born. They had me in tears, literally. They did not know but the two of them came after me like tigers chasing prey. I left at lunch and did not go back. I also didn't get any more work from that temp agency but that was fine with me. That was a half-day job but it still sticks with me because it made no sense - still makes no sense. Why be so cruel for no purpose, except for the purpose of getting rid of me, which they did successfully. That was a hard day. But it probably wasn't the hardest job I ever had. 

2) Despite the hard work, he likes his life and asks, "So why on earth should I moan?" What's the last thing you complained about? Who were you talking to?

A. I strongly suspect the last thing I complained about was the events taking place in Texas regarding women's reproductive rights, and I was would have been discussing it with either a friend or my husband, or perhaps some other decent human being who is rightly appalled at the Texas Taliban.

3) John was raised by his Aunt Mimi. She meant well when she told the teen-aged John, "The guitar's all right, but you'll never make a living out of it." What's the worst advice you've ever received?

A. That I would never be a writer.

4) This week's song was cowritten and also sung with Paul McCartney. Paul's father was more supportive of the lads' show business aspirations than Aunt Mimi was, but he still worried that his son wouldn't be able fully support himself as a musician. To please his dad, 17-year-old Paul worked over the Christmas holiday season as the "second man" on a delivery truck. Paul would be the one to hop off the truck and drop off the packages while the driver could keep the motor running and the heat on. Where was the last package you received from? (Extra points if you share what was in it.)

A. I received a package from Amazon. It had Sombra in it, which is a camphor and menthol rub for aching body parts. It was for my husband.

5) After Christmas was over, Dad insisted Paul get a full-time, year-around job. He ended up at a factory, winding heavy coils to be used in electric motors. He hated the work but enjoyed the lunch hours, eating jam sandwiches and, weather permitting, kicking a soccer ball around the yard with his coworkers. What's for lunch at your house today?

A. We are having sandwiches.

6) In early March 1961, the Beatles accepted a booking to play lunch hour gigs at Liverpool's Cavern Club, and so February 28, after less than two full months, Paul said goodbye to factory work. What's the shortest you ever stayed at a job?

A. See the answer to #1 above. I did a lot of temp jobs at various times, and those sometimes lasted a day or a week or longer. I had a job at a bank once and I think I lasted there about six weeks. Sometimes you just know you're not supposed to be somewhere.

7) Enough about these Brits! Labor Day was introduced to celebrate the achievements of the American worker. How many different employers have you had?

A. Um. Lots. If you counted baby sitting job, and then every different venue I've freelanced for, way lots.

8) This weekend may offer a golden opportunity for napping and sleeping in. Do you snore?

A. Yes. My husband calls them, "kitty cat snores." Fortunately, they are not very loud.

9) Labor Day traditionally marks the beginning of the new school year. When she was a kid, Samantha was crazy for her brand new box of 96 Crayola Crayons. It even had a sharpener in the back! What do you remember about preparing to go back to school? If you're an educator, let us know how you get the classroom ready for the kids.

A. I still love to go to the store this time of year and buy a new notebook or two or three. I always enjoyed the new notebooks, and we would get our textbooks and bring them home and Mom would carefully cover them with a brown paper bag cover so they wouldn't get torn or worn.

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


Friday, September 03, 2021

Night Moves

Last night was a beautiful, crisp, clear night. I went out to shoot photos in the darkness, because that is something I'm still learning how to do.

The Milky Way was visible above me - it has been a long time since I've seen the Milky Way. Venus was shining brightly low on the western horizon. My camera isn't strong enough to capture it looking light a planet, but I can view it and see that it is a planet through the camera lens. The Big Dipper was holding water above a tree.

The still was broken by the sound of an occasional low of a cow, a branch breaking as some unknown critter wandered nearby. The night smelled fresh and new because we'd had rain up until yesterday, so the pollen count was down. 

It was a lovely time to be outside.

Venus above the tree line.

No idea how I ended up with these straight lines, but they're pretty cool.

A 15-minute star trail capture, aimed at the Milky Way.

The Big Dipper

Me playing around with lighting. If you look closely you will see the Big Dipper above the green
space. I was shining a flashlight on a tree just to see what would happen. I think it's neat.


Thursday, September 02, 2021

Thursday Thirteen

1. No woman can call herself free who does not control her own body. ~ Margaret Sanger

2. Seventy-seven percent of anti-abortion leaders are men. 100% of them will never be pregnant. ~ Planned Parenthood advertisement

3. The emphasis must be not on the right to abortion but on the right to privacy and reproductive control. ~ Ruth Bader Ginsburg

4. If men could get pregnant, abortion would be a sacrament. ~ Florynce Kennedy

5. It’s real easy to say you’re 100% against abortion when you’ll never have to make that decision. ~ Anonymous

6. Decades ago, women suffered through horrifying back-alley abortions. Or, they used dangerous methods when they had no other recourse. So when the Republican Party launched an all-out assault on women’s health, pushing bills to limit access to vital services, we had to ask: Why is the GOP trying to send women back . . . to the back alley? ~ Lisa Edelstein

7. Listen to the pregnant woman. Value her. She values the life growing inside her. Listen to the pregnant woman, and you cannot help but defend her right to abortion. ~ Ayelet Waldman

8. Abortion is the insurance against that fate worse than death which is called a family. ~ Peter Kreeft

9. You cannot have maternal health without reproductive health. And reproductive health includes contraception and family planning and access to legal, safe abortion. ~ Hillary Clinton

10. If we lived in a culture that valued women’s autonomy and in which men and women practiced cooperative birth control, the abortion issue would be moot. ~ Christiane Northrup

11. My argument has always been that nature has a master plan pushing every species toward procreation and that it is our right and even obligation as rational human beings to defy nature’s fascism. Nature herself is a mass murderer, making casual, cruel experiments and condemning 10,000 to die so that one more fit will live and thrive. ~ Camille Paglia

12. The issue is not abortion. The issue is whether women can make up their own mind instead of some right-wing pastor, some right-wing politician telling them what to do. ~ Howard Dean

13. What is this ban on abortion—it is a survival of the veiled face, of the barred window and the locked door, burning, branding, mutilation, stoning, of all the grip of ownership and superstition come down on woman, thousands of years ago. ~ Stella Brown

_______________________
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 721st time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Tuesday, August 31, 2021

August 31 Happiness Challenge

It is early, but I am happy this morning because my husband was able to get three more physical therapy visits from our insurance company.

This is health care by insurance company. The doctor sent him to physical therapy, and the insurance company is allotting his visits three at a time. He needs to be going twice a week but can't because of this. Yet some people think this is great health care.

Anyway, he had been waiting on word on three more visits and it came late yesterday, and the physical therapist could see him at 8 a.m. this morning. So not only is he getting his physical therapy, I have a morning alone! I appreciate my alone time.

Each day in August you are to post about something that makes *you* happy. Pretty simple. And, it doesn't even have to be every day if you don't want it to be. It's a great way to remind ourselves that there are positive things going on in our lives, our communities, and the world.

Monday, August 30, 2021

August 30 Happiness Challenge

The underwear I ordered has arrived, and it fits! Finally, after three tries!

The Fit For Me by Fruit of the Loom are made in El Salvador now. They smell like insecticide and I had to wash them twice before I could try them on. They are not the same fit as before but they fit better than anything else I've bought recently.

(The Just My Size by Hanes are made in Guatemala. You learn these things when you're ordering undies.)

So that's my happiness for today. My bloomers fit!




Each day in August you are to post about something that makes *you* happy. Pretty simple. And, it doesn't even have to be every day if you don't want it to be. It's a great way to remind ourselves that there are positive things going on in our lives, our communities, and the world.

Sunday, August 29, 2021

Sunday Stealing

Sunday Stealing

1. Are you a Jeopardy! fan?  Who do you want to replace Alex Trebeck?

A. I am a fan. I want to replace Alex Trebeck! I never could, but it would be nice to try. Otherwise, I don't think anyone can replace Trebeck, but someone else can take over as host. I have no idea who.

2. What’s your favorite horror film?

A. I don't watch horror films anymore. The last one I saw was The Shining in 1980 or thereabouts.

3. Are you a possessive person?

A. Mine! Mine! No, I don't think so. I mean, I am about some things, I suppose, but mostly not.

4. Who’s your idol?

A. I don't really have one. I think my father is an astute businessman. My brother has a lot of patience. I think Melissa Etheridge is a great guitar player. Nora Roberts is a good writer. But I don't think I idolize anyone.

5. List five things you can’t live without.

A. Air, water, food, something to read, and a toilet. (Extra credit: toilet paper.)

6. Where do you feel home?

A. In my house.

7. What are your three best qualities?

A. According to my husband, I'm intelligent, kind, and caring.

8. Name three things that make you happy.

A. Being creative, being with or talking to my husband, family, or friends, and learning new things.

9. What helps you when you’re feeling down?

A. Music.

10. Which big cities have you been to?

A. New York, Madrid, San Francisco, San Diego, Orlando, New Orleans, Richmond, Charlotte, Paris.

11. What’s your favorite love story? ( Book, film, etc. )

A. In film, I guess it would be Dirty Dancing. In books, I don't know that I have a favorite. Generally it's whatever book I am reading at the moment.

12. Talk about the best concert you ever attended.

A. The best concert I ever attended was Linda Ronstadt with Aaron Neville back in the late 1980s. That woman had a set of pipes, I have to say. Neville was also good back then. But most importantly, it was a birthday present from my husband.

13. What’s one thing you don’t ever want to change?

A. My husband.

14. What scares you?

A. The thought of something happening to my husband.

15. What are three things you want to do before you die?

A. Write a book, see the Grand Canyon again, and obtain my Ph.D.

_______________

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, August 28, 2021

So I Had This Dream

Friday night, I dreamed I was in the Epsilon Quadrant (wherever that is), and I and others were trying to stop these men who dressed up in black top hats, white face, and suits that looked like a zebra who, when they sang, entranced people who listened to them. Those people would then do their bidding (rob banks, kill people, whatever), and then fling themselves off a cliff.

Somehow we captured them. I believe it involved ear plugs.

While we were taking them back to Earth for trial, Spock came in and did a mind meld with one of them. He then walked away saying we couldn't keep the men, and he let them all go. He'd been taken over by the guy and Spock flung himself out of the space ship.

By then we were near some other planet and we landed. My aunt lived there. I kept telling her not to listen to the men but she wouldn't listen to me. In fact, no one was listening to me, and it seemed only I knew how dangerous these men were.

The men immediately began setting up their singing trap at intersections of streets. My aunt heard them and was heading out and I had to lock her up in a closet.

That's all I remember.

My husband says I dream vividly when I eat mushrooms. I had mushrooms on my chicken marsala at dinner.

I am thinking now I should eat more mushrooms. 

Saturday 9: Friends in Low Places

SATURDAY 9: FRIENDS IN LOW PLACES (1990)

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

1) In this song, Garth Brooks tells us he wore boots to a black-tie affair. When did you most recently get dressed up? What did you wear?

A. I last dressed up last night for my stepmother's birthday dinner. I wore my nicest slacks and a new short-sleeved shirt, along with my nice earrings and a little eye makeup. (I've about given up on makeup with the pandemic.)

2) The lyrics refer to The Oasis, which was a real bar in Concordia, Kansas. What's the name of the last bar or restaurant where you ordered a beverage? (Yes, Dunkin' counts.)

A. Coach & Four, where I was last night. I ordered water because that's all I drink. Incidentally, this is also the establishment where my husband proposed to me in July 1983. 

3) Garth was having a stellar 2021. He kicked the year off by performing "Amazing Grace" at President Biden's inauguration in January, and then over the summer he received the prestigious Kennedy Center Honor. Now that we're past the halfway mark, how's your year going?

A. It is going ok. I had hoped we would be beyond the Covid 19 virus by now, but as it appears to be gaining steam in the form of the Delta variant, we have given up on trying to make vacation plans or otherwise do anything other than keep ourselves as safe as we can. Even going to a restaurant last night was chancy, we thought, but we did it anyway. It was the first time we'd been in a restaurant since March 2019. Looks like we will continue ordering take-out and having car picnics in parking lots.

4) But earlier this month, Garth cancelled the remaining August and September dates of his big concert tour. He's provided refunds for the 350,000 tickets that were sold. How do you tend to react when plans change? Are you easily annoyed, or do you roll with it?

A. It depends on the annoyance, but generally I accept it and move on. I had plans to see Melissa Etheridge in March 2020, and that was cancelled, and she rescheduled, and that was cancelled, so I asked for a refund. She is now touring and is scheduled to play here September 20, but I would not go even if I had tickets because of the rampaging virus. Personally, I think she should be cancelling her tours. I understand that she needs to perform, and people need to get out and do things - even an introvert like me can feel housebound - but we're nowhere near safe. We are appalled at the unfortunate deaths of 13 members of the military but shrug off 630,000 deaths from Covid. What does that say about our society, I wonder?

5) Before he sang about having friends in low places, Garth hung around in some. When he was as a struggling performer, he supported himself as a bouncer. What's the most physically taxing job you've ever had?

A. I guess farming, although my husband does all the heavy work. When I was younger, I helped my father on his farm.

6) According to the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America), Garth surpassed The Beatles as the top-selling recording artist of the last 30 years. Who do you listen to more often: Garth or the Beatles?

A. I don't listen to either one of them very much, but I occasionally listen to the Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Heart Club Band album by the Beatles. I never listen to anything by Garth Brooks.

7) Garth and singer Trisha Yearwood have been happily married for 15 years now. Trisha says that as much as she loves her husband, his whistling drives her crazy. Come clean: what's your most annoying habit?

A. I talk during the weather forecast. My husband thinks the weather forecast is the most important thing he has to listen to, and I forget. Usually I haven't seen him all day and he wants to watch TV instead of hear whatever I have to say.

8) In 1990, when this song was a hit, Soviet President Gorbachev traveled first to Ottawa to meet Prime Minister Mulroney and then to Washington DC to meet President Bush. Do you have any travel plans? We want to hear about them, even if you aren't meeting any politicians or heads of state.

A. I have no travel plans. We were considering day trips, and if the Covid numbers drop we still may, but for now it looks like we will be staying close to home.

9) Random question: Your dear friend spends weeks planning a party. After just 30 minutes, you find yourself having a terrible time. Would you leave at the earliest (polite) opportunity? Or would you stay till the bitter end out of loyalty?

A. I think it would depend on when the party was ending. I would stay as long as I could, but unless I'd volunteered to help clean up, I would go when I could without looking like I really wanted to get out of there. I don't do parties well anyway, so any of my good friends wouldn't be surprised if I didn't stay long, I suspect.

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

Friday, August 27, 2021

August 27 Happiness Challenge

This evening I went out to eat with my family. It was the first time I'd been inside a restaurant to eat since March 2020.

There were few people around us so I felt comfortable without my mask. We had a nice visit to celebrate my stepmother's birthday. 

We ate at Coach and Four, which is where my husband proposed to me in July of 1983. They even still have the same booth! I should have taken a picture.

For my family to get together and not have yelling and screaming is unusual, but this time we were all very polite and had a really nice time. So it can be done! We can get together and act normal.

It was also a relief to eat somewhere besides my house or in the car in the parking lot of a restaurant. Unfortunately, the way the Covid numbers are climbing, I suspect it will be a while before we return to any semblance of normal.

But at least we had one evening out. Also, Dad paid!





Each day in August you are to post about something that makes *you* happy. Pretty simple. And, it doesn't even have to be every day if you don't want it to be. It's a great way to remind ourselves that there are positive things going on in our lives, our communities, and the world.


In Velvet

 





Thursday, August 26, 2021

Thursday Thirteen #720

1. I consider myself fortunate that I've had no immediate family members pass away from the corona virus. I've had distant relations and friends die from it, though. It has not missed me. Globally, 3.9 million people have died from this "hoax" of a virus. Over 629,000 of those were in the United States. It is no hoax.

2. The thing I am writing about is first world inconvenience, to be sure. I realize things are worse in many other countries. I am writing from a place of privilege. I know that.

3. Of the many things I worried about having a shortage of, underwear was not one of them. Yet here I am having underwear issues.

4. I wear my underdrawers, as my husband calls them, until they need to be replaced. As in, there is no more cloth around the elastic, they barely stay up, and they wouldn't even make a good dust rag. I hadn't bought any new ones in several years. Of course I need some now.

5. I'm on my third attempt to purchase underwear that actually fits. Apparently, Hanes and Fruit of the Loom both have changed their manufacturers from those in China to industries in Guatemala. (Why they couldn't have brought those jobs to the USA is beyond me, but I don't own the corporations.) 

6. The new underwear are smaller. Flimsier. They are cut differently in the legs. 

7. They also cost double what they did pre-pandemic. If the reason for the manufacturing change was to keep from paying the tariffs the former guy imposed on China to keep prices low, well that didn't work.

8. I do not have a small butt. I am a big girl. I'm fat. I know this. But in years past, buying underwear has not been a problem.

9. First I bought the size I had been wearing in the Fruit of the Loom Fit for Me brand. Too small now. Apparently butt sizes are different in other countries.

10. Then I bought the size the chart said to purchase in the JMS Hanes brand. Too big. One pair was smaller than the others - what was up with that? Why didn't they fit? Was the chart wrong? Did I misread it? Who knows?

11. Today I ordered a larger size of the Fit for Me because they seem to be better made than the JMS, although from the comments online they are certainly not the quality we the consumer had become used to and expected from these companies.

12. I know in the grand scheme of thing that having your underwear fit is a non-thing. It pales in comparison to most of the ills of the world.

13. But damn, it's been a burr up my butt for four months now!

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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 720th time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.