Sunday, December 05, 2021

Sunday Stealing



1. What are your plans for December?

A. Go to my husband's long-delayed retirement party, see my doctor, have Christmas.

2. How do you celebrate your wins/success?

A. I tell somebody, usually the husband.

3. Are holiday movies only for the holiday season?

A. No, but I prefer them then.

4. What would you consider a waste of money?

A. Diamonds.

5. What do you like to eat for breakfast?

A. Eggs, bacon, grits, toast, grape jelly. That's what I like to eat, but it is not what I eat.

6. How do you feel about poetry?

A. I love poetry. I write and publish poetry.

7. Are you shy?

A. Yes.

8. Do you take time to reflect on your goals?

A. I don't have goals at the moment. It's something I need to fix.

9. Name something you are curious to know more about.

A. The weather. I would like to know more about how the weather works than I do.

10. Name something that makes you feel fancy.

A. Wearing dangling earrings.

11. How are you still handling the pandemic?

A. I have my vaccinations and booster shot, and I continue to wear a mask in public. I greet people at the door with a mask on, unless I know them. I also continue to do pickup at the grocery store, though I sometimes go in because let's face it, those kids can't pick out a decent cut of meat. Mostly, I stay home.

12. A close friend you’ve never met in person.

A. I have several friends among the respondents in this meme who I consider "a close friend" but I've never met them in person. I also have a friend in England whom I haven't met, and friends in my video game that I likely will never meet.

13. Do you get in on trends early or later?

A. If I am in on a trend, it's an accident.

14. What is something you do on a regular basis?

A. Eat. Drink. Sleep. Read the newspaper. Look at my watch. Ask Alexa to play music. Play music myself. Write. Read.

15. Do you enjoy spending time with family?

A. Sometimes. Depends on who it is.

 _______________

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, December 04, 2021

My Friend Has Gone

Last night I received word that my old friend, someone I've known and loved for decades, passed away.

My regular readers may be surprised by this relationship, for I seldom wrote about it. My friend, whom I called "B." generally if I did happen to mention her, was the most private person I ever met, and out of respect for her, I did not write about our friendship often.

I may have occasionally mentioned lunch, but I never wrote about our relationship. 

But now my friend B. has moved on and she knows what lies beyond. She has answered the unanswerable question, one we discussed in detail many, many times.

She had been ill for a long time. I remember her anger when she told me she'd been diagnosed with a terminal illness, though she had some time (5 years) until death. Her anger was palatable over the telephone, like a demon racing through the wires to end at my heart. She seldom was angry with me, and I knew she wasn't angry with me then. She was angry at the situation, and at the world. I was simply a part of it. She was about the age I am now when she learned of her diagnosis, that she had the same disease that had killed her mother, her aunts, an uncle. I know she wondered if she'd passed it on to her child.

She had a wickedly delightful sense of humor. Few people get my sarcastic and sardonic wit (and those who do are friends for life), but she caught every nuance in the silly and inane things I'd say during our long lunches together. I always made her laugh. She made me laugh, too.

For years, we had lunch once or twice a week. I was working for the paper, she worked for an accountant. We both loved books, but she preferred mysteries to fantasy - she never read a fantasy, I suppose - although to me mysteries are fantasies and I enjoy them as well. We both cheered on Stephanie Plum in her adventures, wishing she'd settle on the very romantic Ranger over the more boyish guy-next-door Morelli. She stayed ahead of me in the series, usually, because the books would come out while I was in the midst of some 1200-page fantasy, and she devoured the stories of Stephanie Plum as soon as the library made them available. I introduced her to Stuart Woods and his stories of Stone Barrington and Hollie Barker, and she soon read all of those. She also liked Kinsey Milhone in Sue Grafton's books, though not as well as Janet Evanovich's books. She read other mystery series that I did not (especially ones with recipes).

For a short time, we both tried to read Elizabeth Peters books and neither of us cared for them. It became a running joke for a bit - if there was something we didn't like, we compared it to an Elizabeth Peters book. For us, that meant it was really bad.

We met over 30 years ago. We both worked part-time at the Botetourt County History Museum as it was trying to rebuild itself. I only worked on weekends. We were cataloging items, and we were doing it by hand. I wanted to do it on a computer and so did B., but the person in charge at the time was a bit behind the times. Finally, I confronted said person, and I lost the job in the process. B., who was about as nonconfrontational as my husband, continued doing as she was told.

Then we served together on the Board of Historic Fincastle, Inc. (HFI), working to help preserve and protect the tiny town of Fincastle and its historic properties. The town is like a miniature Williamsburg, really, with great potential as yet still unrealized. I served as president of HFI and B. followed immediately after me.

And then our mothers died the same year. B.'s passed in April from the same disease that she would ultimately have, and my mother died of cancer in August. The loss of our mothers that same year created a firm and yet seldom discussed bond. Motherless daughters, but not alone in our loss because we had one another. The following year, for my birthday, B. gave me a rose bush to plant. It bloomed orange, the color my mother said she'd "send" to me from beyond, to prove there was a beyond.

I did not consider it a coincidence.

For some time - a decade, at least - we were the best of friends, yet most people did not know it. We didn't keep it a secret, we just ran in different circles that seldom overlapped.

As friendships do, ours waned off and on, though we were always in touch. She and her husband built a new home, and she became preoccupied with that endeavor. They loved to travel and so she was away a lot, either exploring the United States - she visited every single state, I think, and the "four corners" of the country - or off on craft shows with her artistic husband. 

After I became disabled and less able to move about (and more reclusive as a result), she continued on with her life while I tried to rebuild mine. She was supportive when I whined, but after her diagnosis of pulmonary fibrosis, I whined less. A lifetime of chronic pain versus a shortened life span? What kind of comparison can one make of that, after all?

We still had lunch occasionally, but with her travels and my health, not often. But it didn't matter how frequently we saw one another, because we had one of those relationships that began again as soon as we were back together. And we emailed. We emailed right up until last month, when she said she needed to switch to text because she could only manage short comments. And then we texted. The last thing I sent her were pictures from out my front door of a beautiful blue sky, one of the clearest days we'd had in a long time. I told her I wanted to share the view with her.

She never responded back, though the text is marked, Read.

I will miss her.

Saturday 9: Got My Mind Set


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

1) George Harrison sings that he requires money, patience and time. Which of those three do you wish for most this morning?

A. Money.

2) This was long one of George's favorite songs. He first heard it back in September 1963 -- months before the Beatles became an international phenomenon -- when he visited his sister in Benton, IL. Is there a song that reminds you of a trip you took?

A. Not really, although I was traveling with my parents across the US and we were in some really flat state with cornfields when we heard that Elvis Presley passed away. Elvis songs remind me of that.
 
3) For years, George thought his birthday was February 25. When he was 17, he saw his birth certificate and learned he was really born on the 24th. His mother explained that he was born just before midnight on the 24th and she didn't get to hold him until early morning on the 25th, so she considered the 25th as his birthday. Do you know any interesting stories about the day you were born?

A. According to my mother, I didn't want her. She held me and I kicked and stretched and she knew right away that I didn't love her because I didn't meet her expectations of melting in her arms or something. Also, I had a big mole on my chest in the shape of a bullet, so she took that as a sign that my father should quit the police force (he eventually did) because a bullet would kill him.

4) When George was just 14, he met Paul McCartney on a bus en route to school. Tell us about a time when you met someone who ended up changing your life.

A. I met my husband on a bus route to school, too, but he doesn't remember it. Later we met again underneath the goal posts of the football field while watching the interschool rivalry game on Friday, October 15, 1982. He asked me out.

5) Then 17, John Lennon was not interested in letting George perform with his band. He dismissed George as too young. Paul insisted George get a chance and the rest, as they say, is history. Tell us about someone who stood up for you and helped you succeed.

A. Many of my teachers "stood up for me" from time to time over various and sundry things. I was a good but troubled student, and most of them knew that.
 
6) In the 1970s, George took up gardening. He said that clearing away weeds and overgrowth helped him clear his head, and he was very proud of his jasmine flowers. What's your hobby? Why do you enjoy it?

A. I play guitar. I love to make music and write music, and create new sounds, and learn old sounds, and challenge myself to do better.

7) He also enjoyed playing ukulele and encouraged others to do the same. George often gave ukuleles as birthday and Christmas gifts. What's the last gift you received?

A. A friend brought me a Covid-19 test kit on Thursday. Her time and effort to get me that was a great gift, and I was glad to get the test kit. (I tested negative.)

8) At the Academy Awards in spring 1976, another George was in the news. George Burns won an Oscar for his performance in The Sunshine Boys. Who was in the last movie you watched?

A. The last movie I watched was Dune and I have no idea who was in it.

9) What's the last thing you dropped? Did it break?

A. My cellphone, and no, it didn't break. I have it in one of those military grade cases.

_______________
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, December 03, 2021

But What About . . .

A long time ago, about 2005, I think, for we were at war in Iraq at the time, my husband and I went to Myrtle Beach for our vacation.

Being a news reporter and somewhat gregarious when I'm in public, even though I'm more reclusive and introverted than most folks, I tend to strike up conversations with people as we stand in line or sit and wait for tables or whatever. It's the Gemini in me.

That year, I struck a conversation with a nice couple. They were a little older than we were, and we were talking congenially about the weather and the beach, the things that had changed over the years, and this and that.

Suddenly, abruptly and bristly, and frankly out of nowhere, the man spoke up and said that his wife's cancer, which we'd not even mentioned, would not be cured because of abortion.

"Excuse me?" I said.

"We've let so many people die, probably the one who would have invented the cure for cancer has been aborted. The people who could make the best inventions are the ones women are killing off for their own personal perversions." The man's face reddened. He was nearly apoplectic, and my initial thought was something along the lines of, Holy shit, he's a nut and we're trapped in a line here.

But I also am not one to back to down. And abortion, my dear reader, is a touchy issue. I'd never have had one myself, but I don't think it's my place to tell anyone what they must do, even if it is only for 9 months and they can give the child away after they pop it out, as a Supreme Court Justice recently noted. 

After all, pregnancy carries great risks, emotional, physical, and financial, to the pregnant woman, and who I am to force gestational diabetes on someone, or to make a 12-year-old give birth to her half-sister conceived through incest with her father? Or force a woman to lose her job, or possibly her life, carrying a child she doesn't want?

That was not the tact I took, however. As I am a pacifist, the current war was a better target.

"Could be that we've just murdered the child who could cure cancer in the war in Iraq," I responded. "Or the mother who would have had that child. We're killing so many."

His wife gave the slightest of nods of her agreement with me but said nothing.

"The child who could cure cancer would have come from the United States," he retorted. I raised my eyebrows at that.

"You mean a white child, I suppose."

He nodded.

Fortunately, my husband, ever nonconfrontational, grabbed me by the arm and said, "They've got us a table," and dragged me away before I could become embroiled in an argument with a bigoted white supremacist.

I report this memory because it came to mind as I have read about the recent Supreme Court hearing on a southern state law that basically stops abortion. Many more laws will follow regardless of what the Supreme Court rules, but I write about this because it is a great illustration of what the abortion argument is really about.

It is not about women of color having abortions, or about killing women of color overseas in stupid wars that are for rich men and have nothing to do with protecting this country. 

It is about white women having abortions. It is about racism, it is about misogynistic ideas, it is about control. 

It is not about saving children so they can grow up to cure cancer. Because in order for a child, any child and every child, to grow up to cure cancer, that child must first have opportunity - the opportunity to be fed nutritious food, to live in a loving and supporting home, to have a quality education, to move about unburdened by depression or any other mental illness and be physically fit and appropriately raised.

We don't ensure any of that. In fact, the people who want abortion go to great lengths to ensure that children are not raised with such security.

Until we ensure that every single child born in this country has every opportunity to be the child who can grow up to cure cancer, and we ensure that the women we're forcing to have babies receive prompt, appropriate care, both mentally and physically, paid for and supported with tax dollars, then I support the right of women to choose whether or not to have a child.

Thursday, December 02, 2021

Thursday Thirteen

1. Thinking about what to write for Thursday Thirteen becomes difficult when I am not thinking well at all.

2. I'm not thinking well because there are too many thoughts swirling around, so many I can't grab one and plop it down. There are thoughts that are personal, thoughts about my husband, thoughts about my friends, thoughts about my community, thoughts about my nation, thoughts about the world. Complex, tangible, yet incoherent thoughts because so much is going on.

3. It was inconceivable to me prior to 2016 that there were people who wanted to destroy whatever it is we have, which is not Democracy or a Republic, really, but a sort of autocratic semi-fascist socialist democracy, and replace it with a total autocracy (aka as a king), but apparently there are plenty of people who want to dismantle the nation and return to something that never really existed in the first place.

4. Many of those people are still in the government. At least two were recently appointed to the United States Supreme Court.

5. While I think our autocratic semi-fascist socialist democracy or whatever it is needs loads of repair, it doesn't need autocracy or more fascism. It doesn't need to be run by a cult.

6. Knowledge is power. The things unknown were always the things I did my best to find when I was a news reporter. Not because I wanted to be powerful, but because I then gave the knowledge back to the people in a news story. I gave the power back to the people. The power belongs to the people. Not to a single person, or a small few, or a single party. To the people.

7. We have a lovely day ahead of us, with warm temperatures and sunshine after the partly cloudy part goes away. I am missing out because I am inside with a sinus infection. Perhaps I shall step out on the porch for a sniff of fresh air.

8. The Lord of the Rings is not a Christmas movie, but it was released at Christmas 20 years ago, and I try to watch it at Christmas every year. All three movies. Over 10+ hours.

9. Yesterday, I thought I saw a moose in the field. Then I thought I saw a buffalo. They were but shadows shifting, but I had taken some guaifenesin and that medication tends to make me jittery. I need to take some this morning but I wanted to write this first. Who knows what strange things I will see in the shadows today.

10. My cellphone is about 4 years old. The battery says it holds 87% charge but it drains quickly, especially if I'm listening to a book or playing a game. I ordered a replacement battery and I'm going to try to put in a new battery myself. If I can't, I will have to go buy a new cellphone. Fingers crossed. I don't want a new cellphone. I like this one.

11. You can find anything on youtube, even videos about how to replace the battery for your exact cellphone. I've watched several. It looks tedious but doable.

12. Still struggling with finding things that are in my brain. Maybe it's the antibiotic? Oh brain, latch on to a thought! Yoohoo! Brains!

13. I have a fortune from a fortune cookie on my desk. It says "We write our own destiny. We become what we do." Do you think that's true? Are we what we do? Does that mean I'm a washing machine, or a vacuum cleaner?


_____________________
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 733rd time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Wednesday, December 01, 2021

Happy December!

Here we are, 24 days away from the big day now! Christmas is coming whether one wants it or not.

Thinking back, I can't say that I have a favorite Christmas. As an adult, the two that stand out are the first two I spent with my husband. The first we were dating; the second we were married.

His first Christmas present to me was a pair of cowboy boots. They were the rage at the time. I gave him a sweater jacket.

I don't remember the presents of our second Christmas, only the feeling of waking up to my own tree in my own home with my husband of just over a month in the room beside me. Then it became a whirlwind as we visited my parents and then his, then grandparents, too, all in the same day. We ended that as soon as possible, visiting my family on Christmas Eve and his on Christmas Day. Too much running around for me all in one day.

My childhood Christmas memories tend toward watching. Watching my brother open his presents. Watching the interactions between my parents. Watching the tree, the lights twinkling. Watching the pile of presents grow. Watching my mother wrap things. Watching to see where the toys that "Santa" would place under the tree might be hidden. (I did not always find them.)

My brother and I played with some of the decorations and having great adventures with them. We had an ornament we called Santa Mouse that my brother and I played with, using him as the hero, dashing off in his sleigh to solve whatever we could come up with. Saving Barbie from Johnny West or delivering those little green Army men to the poor underdeveloped Ken to shore up his self-esteem. Whatever.

My brother always received the better presents - the guy things. Electric trains, Lego sets, Erector sets. I received girl stuff - dolls, clothes, makeup mirrors. I am not and never have been a girly girl, so I always coveted my brother's more manly gains. Fortunately, when we were alone and not bothered by other children, we generally played well together although of course there were lots of brother and sister arguments. Young children always have them.

I remember snow at Christmas, something we seldom see now. I remember sleds and toboggans that we used to race down the hill. I remember riding like lightning down a hillside and crashing into a frozen cow pile and nearly knocking myself silly when I hit it, and the laughter from my companions, who at that time would have been my brother and the Stewarts and maybe a couple of Lees.

My father once brought home these snow pans. They were an invention and he wanted to see how they worked. He gave them to my brother and I and told us to go play with them. He watched while we fell down and sat on them and generally could not figure out how to use them. He decided not to invest in them, I think. In my mind, they were the precursor to the snow board. They apparently weren't, but I wonder if that man ever took his invention elsewhere and did something with it. I don't know. But I'm afraid one could not have found a klutzier person to test such a thing on than I. I generally spent more time on the ground than I ever did on things like skates or skies.

The first day of December arrives with bleak gray. I don't know how much of that is cloud and how much is smoke from a major fire on Pilot Mountain in North Carolina.  It appears to be a combination of both. It is not overly chilly, though. It's just cold enough to let everyone know that winter is on the way.

Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Now I'm Vintage

My brother found these vintage aerial photos of some of the places I've lived.

The first is the house my husband and I lived in from 1984 to 1987.


This is the house I lived in from 1976 to 1983, when I married.


This is the house I lived in from about 1974 to 1976.


None of them look like this now, and would be hard to find in the rolls of film unless you know what you're looking for. I like the middle photo because it has my husband's old truck and my Pontiac T-1000 in the picture; apparently, we had both our vehicles there the day the picture was taken.


Sunday, November 28, 2021

Sunday Stealing



1. What is the craziest, most outrageous thing you want to achieve?

A. This is a bucket-list kind of thing, I suppose. I always wanted to go into outer space, but I am not famous nor rich so I don't suppose that will happen. If I had the chance, though, I'd be put to sleep and sent on a rocket ship far into outer space, so far that I'd have no chance of returning to earth.

2. Have your parents influenced what goals you have?

A. In a round-about way. I intended to be what they said I could not. I was somewhat successful, in a modest sort of way, depending upon one's definition of success.

3. What is a fashion trend you’re glad went away?

A. Big hair in the 1980s. I think I've destroyed all of those photos. Egads.

4. What word or saying from the past do you think should come back?

A. Bless my soul!

5. What do you bring with you everywhere you go?

A. My watch and my brains.

6. Is there such a thing as a soul?

A. There is something inside each of us, we may call it what it we may. Mine dances about like stardust that misses the star from which it fell, constantly yearning to return to that from whence it came. However, stardust and star shall never reunite, and so there the stardust remains, roaming about seeking always something, sometimes not even knowing what it is that it seeks.

7. Is there life after death?

A. There is something after death. I personally do not believe in the Christian version of heaven and hell, but I think that we become part of the universe, that dancing stardust of the soul rushing about, sometimes remaining together in a cluster so that other clusters may recognize it and rejoice, sometimes dissipating so expediently that whatever cluster it was shall never again come together.

8. Do you think there will ever be a third world war?

A. Oh yes. Probably tomorrow. Actually, I think we're in it now, it's simply not been officially declared or acknowledged.

9. What smell brings back great memories?

A. Baking cookies reminds of kinder times.

10. How would you like to be remembered?

A. I would simply like to be remembered. Hopefully it will be in a kind way, but since I've no children, I daresay in a generation or so I will be entirely forgotten, unless some student chances upon my byline someplace and wonders momentarily who this person was who wrote so much about her county and its citizens during a particular period of time. The dead can hear our thoughts, you know, so if someone thinks of me, I shall know it, even if I am a zillion pieces of stardust zooming along the Milky Way.

11. What kind of music are you into?

A. I dig 1970s and early 1980s music, mostly, but I like various kinds of songs, so it is hard for me to say simply one kind.

12. What is the biggest surprise of your life?

A. That I am still here. I did not expect to live this long.

13. If you could eat only one thing for the rest of your life, what would it be?

A. It would be boring, after a time, whatever it was. I suppose the best choice would be some kind of supplemental drink that offered up nutrition and protein.

14. Where is the most awe-inspiring place you have been?

A. I need only walk outside to be inspired and awe-struck by the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains that I call home. They call to me as a lark sings to the sunshine on a lovely spring day, and I can hear their whispers late at night, mimicking the thin, edgy sound of a train whistle heading towards the cement plant. 

15. Describe your life in six words.

A. She thinks, writes, plays, loves, hurts.

_______________

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, November 27, 2021

Saturday 9: Black Velvet


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

Oh, this one is on my favorites playlist.

1) This song was chosen because yesterday was Black Friday, the traditional day of sales. Have you begun your Christmas shopping?

A. I started shopping back in October. Most of it is online.

2)  Was there an adult beverage served with your Thanksgiving feast?

A. I do not partake, but I suspect others did.
 
3) Did any pets enjoy scraps from your Thanksgiving table?

A. The stray cat my father feeds may have enjoyed something after I left.

4) Are there any Thanksgiving leftovers in your refrigerator right now?

A. Yes. It's Thanksgiving. There are always leftovers.

5) Football is a popular Thanksgiving weekend pastime. Will you be watching any games over the next few days? If yes, which team(s) are you rooting for?

A. I do not watch football, but I root for the Kansas City Chiefs because Melissa Etheridge roots for them.

6) This week's song is by Canadian Alannah Myles. She was born Alannah Byles (with a B), but changed her name to differentiate herself from her father. He was influential in Canadian broadcasting and she didn't want to be accused of riding his coattails. Have you ever received a professional leg up from a relative?

A. Not that I am aware of. I am a pave-your-own-path sort of girl.

7) In Canada, Thanksgiving is celebrated on the second Monday in October. Instead of pumpkin pie, Canadians traditionally enjoy butter tarts for dessert. What dessert was on your Thanksgiving menu?

A. My brother fixed the desserts. He is the cook in the family. He offered up a wide variety and I had a sample of them all.

8) "Black Velvet" is a tribute to Elvis. Songwriter Christopher Ward said he was inspired by a trip to Memphis, long after Elvis' death, where he spoke to The King's fans and was touched by how much they still loved their favorite singer. Who is your favorite singer?

A. Well, not Elvis. I like Melissa Etheridge and Sheryl Crow, but I listen to a lot of music so it's hard for me to pick a favorite. Others might be Stevie Nicks, Bonnie Raitt, Anne Murray, Dolly Parton, Taylor Swift, Cindi Lauper, etc.

9) Share a memory from Thanksgiving 2020.

A. We were having a pandemic in 2020 and there was not yet a vaccine. Covid-19 was running wild through our community, so I fixed a small turkey. My husband and I ate at home with some side dishes, and sent a plate up to his mother, who'd been in the vicinity of someone with Covid at a church function and thus was in quarantine at her house. I don't think Thanksgiving, 2020 will be one I remember.

_______________
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. 

Thursday, November 25, 2021

Thursday Thirteen

Happy Thanksgiving!

I hope everyone has plenty of good food and lots of fellowship today.

Here's a cheesy 13 things to be thankful for:

1. Sunlight

2. Rain

3. Spouses

4. Children

5. Music

6. Poems

7. Stories

8. The five senses

9. A place to sleep

10. Food

11. Water

12. Friends

13. Family

Extra: Cheese!

_____________________
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 732nd time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

This Is Not Like Me

 So unlike me not to have posted for three days - yikes!

And I still have nothing to say.


Sunday, November 21, 2021

Sunday Stealing



1) What teacher are you most thankful for and why?  What did you learn from him or her?

A. I am thankful for all of my teachers, even the ones I didn't particularly care for, but there are several with whom I am still in contact. My high school math teacher is in contact with me regularly, and I am friends on Facebook with my high school English teacher and two of my English professors from college. It amuses me to realize that generally these folks are only 12 to 15 years older than I am - at the time they were my mentors, they seemed so much older and knowledgeable than I ever thought I might be. Aside from the curriculum they taught me, all of these women have taught me the strength of the feminine, and to look inside myself for my own source of uniqueness and strength. They taught me how to be a person. One cannot ask for a better lesson than that.

2) What’s the season you’re most thankful for, and what’s your favorite part of each season?

A. I am much more fond of Spring and Autumn than Summer and Winter. Spring and Autumn are both lovely in their own ways, and the temperatures are tolerable. Summer is pretty, too, with all the green and the new fawns and such, but it is terribly hot. Winter is simply miserable with its dour grayness and unwillingness to bend in any direction that would cause one to love such a season. However, a light snow (one that covers everything and then disappears quickly) can salvage the meanness of the cold time of year, as the silent snows transform the world into something full of whiteness and lace, bringing about a kind of peace that is soon broken by the sound of the tractors firing up to whisk the snows from the roads.

3) What electronic device are you most grateful for, and what does it add to your life?

A. My PC. I can read many things on here and connect with others through it. I know most people do that on their phones but it is very hard to read on that tiny little screen. I do my writing on the PC as well.

4) What musician or type of music are you most thankful for?

A. I love many types of music, though I am not especially fond of rap or hip hop. I enjoy guitar music and I am an ardent fan of music from the 1970s and early 1980s. As for musicians, I am especially happy to hear the female singers such as Linda Ronstadt, Stevie Nicks, Bonnie Raitt, Sheryl Crow, Melissa Etheridge, Chrissy Hynde, Pat Benatar, and others.

5) What are you most grateful for that brings beauty to your daily life?

A. The area we live in is lovely, and the animals that constantly roam around the exterior of the house are fun to watch.

6) What philanthropic cause or organization do you feel thankful for?

A. I'm very glad there are organizations that help the homeless people and the organizations that feed the folks who cannot afford food otherwise.

7) What foods are you most thankful for?

A. All of them. At the moment I am most grateful for Lays Baked Potato Chips because for some reason, that seems to be the one food I can eat that doesn't set off my reflux or make me feel sick.

8) What local store or restaurant are you most grateful for?  How does it contribute to your quality of life?

A. Bellacino's is a chain food store that sells grinders and salads. They have take out and during the pandemic they brought things to the car. It is good not to have to cook every single meal. (I do not know if this is a local chain or a national chain.)

9) What book are you most grateful for, and why?

A. I know the answer here is supposed to be the Bible, but I am not most grateful for that book. Too much blood has been shed and continues to be shed because of it for me to find it a book for which I should be grateful. I shall say The Lord of the Rings trilogy, because it has great life lessons it, and many good quotes.

10) What act of kindness has made the greatest difference in your life?

A. I'm going to say my marriage. I know that was an act of love, but it was also an act of kindness.

11) What challenging experience has ended up changing your life for the better?

A. It took me eight years to work my way through college and obtain my bachelor's degree. The entire experience was life changing.

12) What vacation are you most grateful for?

A. I am grateful for all of my vacations. We've had some that were terrible, but they were all learning experiences.

13) Name three days in your life that you feel especially grateful for.

A. Yesterday, today, and tomorrow. Those are good days for which to be grateful. 

14) What product do you use on a daily basis that you most appreciate?

A. Soap. I'm really glad we have soap.

15) What, from this year, do you feel most grateful for?

A. This has been a long year, but I am grateful that I have taken the time to do more reading and playing my guitar. 

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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, November 20, 2021

Saturday 9: Somewhere


Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.
 
1) This song is from the hit musical West Side Story. It has just been remade by Steven Speilberg. Are you interested in seeing the 2021 version?

A. I'm not sure I ever saw the original, so sure. I'm game to watch a new version.

2) Growing up, Crazy Sam thought this song was called, "A Place for Us." Tell us about a song whose title or lyrics you got wrong or misheard.

A. I used to think that the Do Re Mi song said, Tea, a drink with Jane and Fred, instead of Ti, a drink with jam and bread. I wondered who Jane and Fred were.
 
3) Barbra Streisand sings of longing for "time to spare, time to learn and time to care." The holidays are often too busy for many of us. With Thanksgiving almost upon us, do you wish you had more time?

A. Not about the holiday. Mostly about getting older.
 
4) Early in her career, Barbra was pressured to have her nose fixed. She stubbornly refused, and did rather well anyway. Tell us about a time you resisted pressure.

A. My parents sent me off to a college in Tennessee. I didn't stay. It wasn't right for me.
 
5) In the late 1960s she briefly dated Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, father of current PM Justin Trudeau. Obviously Barbra knew what became of Pierre and his family without having to look them up. Without the advantage of Google, do you know where one of your former loves is in 2021?

A. No. I have an idea where one is, but I'm not even sure he's still alive.
 
6) One of Barbra's hit movies is The Way We Were, a love story about hopelessly mismatched lovers. Streisand always wanted to do a sequel and worked with a screenwriter on a treatment. Her costar, Robert Redford, refused. He simply was not interested in revisiting his character. Is there a movie series that you especially enjoy?

A. The Lord of the Rings, all three movies.

7) Barbra met her husband, James Brolin, at a dinner thrown by friends. They hit it off immediately, but he had to leave the next day to begin a movie in Ireland, so they began their romance over the phone. Do you enjoy long phone calls? Would you prefer video calls (Zoom)?

A. I prefer a phone call to a zoom call. I don't mind long phone calls; I get a lot of housework done during long phone calls sometimes.

8) On July 1, 1998, two years to the day after their first meeting, Barbra and Brolin married. It used to be that brides were advised against wearing white for their second wedding, but Barbra ignored that, wearing a white beaded gown. Do you believe brides should still avoid white the second time around?

A. I think a bride should wear anything she wants.

9) Random question: Is anyone on your bad side this morning?

A. Yes, but they are just names and avatars in a multiplayer video game. I'm hoping some of them leave my team.

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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, November 19, 2021

Lunar Eclipse

Last night there was a partial lunar eclipse of the Beaver moon. It was the longest eclipse this century and the first of this length in over 500 years.

I took these shots around 3:45 a.m.  The eclipse lasted 3 hours and 28 minutes and started around 2:18 a.m. The peak was about 4:02 a.m. so I am not far from the peak in these shots.

It was quite cold here and the wind was blowing hard, so I had a difficult time keeping the camera steady even on the tripod, as the wind was shaking it, too. I did not dress warmly enough but I guess a little cold air won't hurt me.






That last one has a little wobble I guess, but I though the lit spot looked a bit like it was making the moon take off so I kept it.


 

Thursday, November 18, 2021

Thursday Thirteen

Today is my anniversary! We've been married for 38 years.

Here are 13 things about my husband.

1. He's kind and generous. 
He hates to have
his picture taken.


2. He's loyal.

3. He works hard.

4. He is retired from the city fire department, but continues to run a construction company and farm.

5. His hugs are fierce and protective.

6. He likes hunting and NASCAR.

7. He enjoys reading, too, especially Stuart Woods books.

8. He loves the land we live on.

9. He takes good care of his mother.

10. His favorite band is the Rolling Stones.

11. He likes to watch car shows on TV.

12. He is proud of me.

13. He loves me unconditionally.


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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 731st time to do a list of 13 on a Thursday. Or so sayth the Blogger counter, anyway.

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Hunting With My Camera

It's hunting season here in Virginia, which means my man is off on the hinter parts of the farm looking for that elusive buck.

Meanwhile, I took the photos below from the house this morning. This one will live another day.







He's a pretty deer. I'm glad I was the one doing the "shooting" and not my husband.