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an everyday life

an everyday life

Category Archives: Life at Home

White Spaces

25 Tuesday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in Home Restoration, Life at Home, Writing

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Home Restoration, House Painting, Writing

Painting a room is much like writing my everyday life on this sliver of white space; I’m finished only when I’m willing to walk away from it.

Usually it’s because I’m satisfied with the result.  But when not, I’ve learned to leave well enough alone — that is, until I know how to improve upon it.

Downstairs in my living room, I lived with a smudged and streaked ceiling for three years.  After three failed attempts at getting it right, I realized I didn’t possess the skills to make it better.   So I lived with it, looking up at it ever so often, as if wishing upon a star.

A few weeks ago I knew it was time to try again.  I had just finished the dining room and had spent the last seven months painting for others.  So, with my husband’s help, I emptied the room of all its furnishings and spread drops cloths all over the floor.  And painting quickly, with a very wet roller cover, I covered the ceiling with paint and smoothed out the lines, trying not to look back on what I had just finished.

It doesn’t matter whether it’s painting or writing — it’s hard to move forward without a backwards glance, and not get caught up in fine-tuning what’s not ready for finishing touches.  As it dries, a freshly painted ceiling will appear streaky when it’s not; and when I give in to temptation to roll-over those phantom streaks, I end up making streaks where there were none.

When I write, if I don’t continue to dash forward on my thoughts —  instead editing away on what’s all ready there —  I not only get derailed but often eliminate what ultimately could be an important thread.  But it’s hard, so very hard to keep moving across this digital page, to see where my thoughts will take me, to encounter emptiness and white space.

I don’t have white spaces in my house.   Unless one counts woodwork.  Bathroom tile.  And crisply painted white ceilings.

Starched and Pretentious

24 Monday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Comfort Foods, Raising Children, Travel, True Self

Nothing I served trumped her first taste of oatmeal mixed with bananas.

Which is surprising, given the time I spent in the kitchen that first week Kara and her newborn were home from the hospital.

Not the chicken fajitas I made for their first supper.  Not the quiche and lovely fruit salad I fed her on Friday.  Not even the roast beef dinner with all the trimmings on Wednesday or all those pimento-cheese and chicken salad spreads I stuffed into fresh baguettes for lunch.  Nothing I made measured up to that seventy second microwave oatmeal, which I learned only later, was Kara’s favorite meal of the week.

But looking back on it, why am I surprised?  Even now, I recall how Kara’s eyes widened with her first bite.  And how an inescapable “yum” followed her second.  And as I reflect upon it more, I realize Kara’s response to bananas mixed with oatmeal was not so dissimilar from my own — though unlike Kara, I tried very hard to keep my pleasure under wraps.

It was years ago that I was sitting in a fancy restaurant at the Grand Hyatt Hotel in mid-town Manhattan.   And except for the fresh flowers at the center of the table, I was quite alone.  Like all the other thirty-something aged business executives waiting to give breakfast orders to a team of waiters as starched as the table-cloth that brushed my dress-for-success attire, I was in a hurry.  And I wanted something that could be prepared quickly — that might already be waiting in a pot to serve.

And since it was a gray winter day, I wanted something warm.   And maybe because I was feeling anxious, anticipating the jump-through-hoops, three-ring circus meetings I would soon be part of, I wanted something comforting.  So when the waiter came, I ordered simple coffee and oatmeal.  And he, looking up from his order pad, asked whether I might like bananas on top of my oatmeal.  And covering my surprise — because I didn’t want him to know I’d never heard of bananas on top of warm cereal — I volleyed back a quick and confident ‘yes,” deciding  I could eat around some slightly cooked bananas if I didn’t like them.

It’s funny that what happened that day at the office is not nearly as memorable as what happened at breakfast.  But I imagine it was just another day of my pretending to know all the answers to a set of highly creative “who-thinks-up-this-stuff” kind of business scenarios.  I learned early in my tax career that it wasn’t good to speak words like, “I don’t know”, when talking to people who paid big bucks for you doing just that.   So I stalled when answers didn’t fall off the top of my head, hoping those who were asking would get sidetracked.  It wasn’t all that hard.

Except it was.  Because after a while of pretending to be this or that, it became easy to forget what was true and what was false, and which was really important.  And I find it interesting that what I remember today about those five stressful years of my life, is a  simple breakfast meal I had one day before going into the office.

What we remember is often interesting.  There are times when I can’t remember where I’ve placed my keys.  And yet, how easy it is to recall in rich detail that first serving of bananas and oatmeal right down to the starched white tablecloth.

Can it be that we remember those moments when our senses are most engaged — whether it’s taste or smell, like a favorite food from our childhood — or hearing the sounds of  a certain song which transport us back to a different time in our lives — or the way something or someone once made us cry?

And on the flip side, how easy it is to forget moments — like where in the heck we’ve placed those keys — when operating on autopilot, or when living a lie as I once did, pretending to be what I was not.

Right now I’m wishing I had said “Yum” all those years ago, sitting by myself at that pretty table  in the Grand Hyatt restaurant.  I wish I’d said it loud enough for all my fellow starched-shirts to hear my unsophisticated surprise.  But since I can’t rewind time, I’ll do the next best thing.

“Yum”

Egg Salad Revival

22 Saturday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in In the Kitchen, Life at Home

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Apple's Way, Everyday Life, Friends, In the Kitchen

The first time I tried it was at Apple’s Way, a cute little tea room in Lake Jackson locally famous for serving plates of assorted triangle-cut triple layer sandwiches full of salad mixes — chicken, tuna, ham, pimento-cheese and egg — mostly to women.

Being unsuitably impressed, I avoided egg salad with something akin to religious fervor for fifteen years.  My mantra, when ordering my favorite assorted plate of sandwiches during frequent stops at the tearoom became  — “Anything but egg salad, please.”

But somehow, in the twenty years of residing near Apple’s Way, I grew a change of heart.  Perhaps it was living amongst friends who had roots in the deep South which caused me to give egg salad another taste  — or maybe it was a certain Methodist preacher who shamelessly hinted for egg salad sandwiches to be brought to every church function that made me wonder if there was a certain charm about egg salad I had previously missed.

Whatever it was, and whenever and however it happened, I now confess to loving this simple stuffing.  My redemption was so absolute that when my good friend Ann and this certain preacher-friend and I would gather for our weekly book study on Wednesdays at Noon, it was me bringing in the sheaves — carrying individually wrapped egg salad spread on fresh-baked white bread as repentance.

Five hundred miles away and who knows how many years, egg salad has found a permanent  spot on my rotating lunch menu —  though no longer  limited to Wednesdays.  And while there are many recipes for egg salad — I believe my father favored one including chopped olives — I like this one the best.  Appropriately, it hails from a recipe I found in the pages of Southern Living, which I’ve adapted to my own taste.

Thank goodness our hearts do soften toward new ideas and tastes when we keep minds and mouths open.  Care to confess your own food conversion story?

Egg Salad Sandwiches

Makes 4 sandwiches

5 large hard-boiled eggs, grated
2 Tbsp. finely chopped celery
1 Tbsp. sweet pickle relish
1 Tbsp. finely chopped onion
2 Tbsp. mayonnaise
1 Tbsp. sour cream
1 tsp. dried salad seasoning
1/2 tsp. Dijon mustard
1/4 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. sugar
1/4 tsp. pepper

Combine ingredients in a bowl. Cover and chill for an hour or two to allow flavors to mix and mingle.

To serve, spread evenly on a slice of white sandwich bread — fold it like my father would — or make it a holy trinity sandwich, by topping it with another slice of bread and another layer of spread and another slice of bread, slicing that triple-decker sandwich into tea-room triangles.

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