• About
  • Recipe Index
  • Daddy Oh

an everyday life

an everyday life

Category Archives: Life at Home

Shopping Karma

13 Saturday Feb 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Everyday Life, Scottish Terriers, Shopping, St. Valentine's Day, Standard French Poodles, Valentine's Day, Woody Candy Co.

The purse I carry is a conversation starter.

People come up to me to tell me how cute it is or how they’ve seen it on television.  Sometimes they share a word about their Scottish Terrier — or maybe how they once had a Scottie or would like to have a Scottie someday.

Sometimes I’m asked if my purse is a Dooney & Burke.  The question surprised me at first.  Because I wouldn’t know the family line of one purse from another unless it happened to be on a labeled display.  And since I’m not too much on labels —  I’m about as unfashionable as a girl can be — this big purse has introduced me to a whole new circle of fashion conscious shoppers.

These days I field the question like the expert I’ve become — “Yes, it is,” I say, “It was a birthday gift from my sister.”   As soon as I say it, I can tell they’re thinking, yep, that explains why she’s wearing a pair of tacky warm-ups with this purse.  And if their also thinking that my television star purse deserves to be in the company of one whose a bit more pulled together…. well, I couldn’t agree more.

My most recent introduction by the D&B  occurred this week, when I was shopping in my favorite local candy store.  Most of the company’s business is wholesale, but the owners keep a small retail outlet for local shoppers that opens a few times a year, mostly around the holidays.  Clyde Woody, Jr., the company’s owner, recounts its history, on a local website:

Woody Candy Company was founded in 1927 by my parents. We are the oldest continuing candy manufacturer in Oklahoma and proud to have been a one family business for 82 years. We use the finest wholesome ingredients and 82 years of experience to make the most delicious candies available. Fresh butter, cream, peanuts, pecans and almonds…we make every effort to make candy the way our grandmothers did, but we make it everyday and a lot of it.

Well, the lovely woman who noticed my purse was married to Mr. Woody, though I didn’t find out until after we had talked fifteen minutes about dogs — her Scottie and mine, her Standard French Poodle and mine, and her hopes to add a new puppy soon and my promise to connect her to two reputable breeders with new litters of puppies.

Well, I couldn’t leave Mrs. Woody’s store without telling her who and what had sent me to her store.  It was obvious I’d come for Valentine’s candy, but she didn’t know that my six-year old granddaughter had called me up one night late with the sole purpose of finding out WHERE I had bought that good candy I had given her for Christmas.

Karson had eaten half of her solid chocolate Santa by the time she had called, but was rationing the rest to keep from running out.  So as soon as I told Karson that the candy store was close to my house, she was ready to go, even though she lives half an hour from my house in the opposite direction.  Of course, the store wasn’t open at eight o’clock at night anyway.  But any little candy shopper as discerning as Karson deserves the treat of shopping at this little boutique candy store.  Maybe I can make that happen for Easter.

In the meantime, shopping karma all around for Saint Valentine’s Day:  Karson got her candy “on the house;”  my lucky husband will get his candy tomorrow — white chocolate pretzels and a box of turtles.  And Mrs. Woody now has a few leads on a sweetheart puppy.

If all my shopping could be this fun, I might go more often.

Battles of the Heart

12 Friday Feb 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Abraham Lincoln, Birthdays, Black History Month, Everyday Life, Raising Children

I believe my youngest son would have been born on Valentine’s Day had the doctor not induced labor two days before.  As it was, Kyle was born on another Friday, twenty-two years ago today.

All of my children were happy “accidents.”   Yet when I became pregnant with Kyle, with Bryan scarcely five months old, I took enough “friendly” abuse upfront that I knew others were being unkind behind my back.  To this day I remain blissfully ignorant of the latter but  fondly recall the courageous that confronted  the hilarious truth head-on.  One in particular stands out.

It came from my good friend Donna  — one of my four “Gal-Pals” and the matron of honor at my wedding — who couldn’t stop laughing when I told her about my latest pregnancy.   No, that’s not quite the truth — Donna did stop laughing long enough to call me a “Fertile Myrtle.”   I’ve no doubt Donna regrets this hasty act of name-calling as she, not many months later, became unexpectedly pregnant herself.  And if you’re thinking that I had the last laugh, you would be half-right  —  Donna told me herself and together, we shared a friendly laugh.

There’s a lot of laughing that goes on within a large family.  I wish I had written half the stories that are now lost to history.  But in spite of being bereft of written evidence, there are two that I will always cherish, which speak loud of the man Kyle’s become.  Perhaps these two anecdotes also help explain why I’ve always felt Kyle lost out on a Valentine’s birthday.

From a very young age, Kyle has worn his heart on his sleeve.  One long ago evening ,during the Christmas school holidays, my husband, the boys and I were enjoying some rare family time together.  We were watching television from our bed when a three-year old Kyle plastered himself next to my husband; when he could get no closer, Kyle looked up into his father’s eyes, and said in his small sing-song toddler voice, “Daddy, you are my berry best friend.”

Kyle’s best friend, in one way or another, has always been his older brother Bryan.  But being so close in age, these boys had all sorts of skirmishes over nothing that began early in life.  At one point, the sounds of fighting were so common that  they sort of faded into the background of a strange normality.

I guess the fights prepared Kyle for his one and only battle outside of home, which came when my seven-year old son saw boys at daycare pinching off the wings of dragonflies. When Kyle told me about it, I expressed sadness; I told Kyle that dragonflies were good, as they helped us battle our mosquito population.  So the next day, when it happened again, and the boys didn’t heed Kyle’s warning, Kyle became a defender of the dragonfly, resulting in a few scrapes and bruises all around.  Though I probably encouraged Kyle to settle future differences without physical fighting, I was nevertheless proud of Kyle’s compassion for those in need of a champion.

Maybe it’s because I’m reading Kathryn Stockett’s The Help, that my recollection of Kyle’s daycare fight all those years ago now causes me to recall a more famous compassionate champion born on this day two hundred and one years ago; I refer, of course, to the sixteenth President of our United States, Abraham Lincoln.

The United States recognizes Black History during the month of February largely due to Lincoln’s birthday.  But even if Lincoln were the sole reason, it would be enough.  Not only did Lincoln courageously battle negative public opinion, he did it while watching the nation divide, which ultimately caused brother to fight against brother.  Before losing his life to the bullet of an assassin, before winning the war to keep our union together, Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation declared an end to that strange “normality” of slavery.  Regarded by most as our greatest president, we remember Lincoln as defender of our great union and champion of those without voice.

For those who engage in battles of the heart, February the Twelfth makes a very fine birthday indeed.

Senior Olympic Games

11 Thursday Feb 2010

Posted by Janell in Life at Home

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Aging, Everyday Life, Nursing Homes

“We grow neither better nor worse as we get old, but more like ourselves.”

—    May Lamberton Becker

All day long I’ve gone about housework or errands trying to solve yesterday’s puzzle.

What’s different about Daddy?  I can’t put my finger on it.   Is it resignation?  Acceptance?  Indifference?  Peace?  One thing’s for sure — no peace here  —  just an itch of unanswerable questions to scratch with no hands to do it.

If Daddy were able to talk or write, I could ask —  and with luck, Dad might answer.  But playing questions and answers with Daddy is a game whose time has come and gone.  No question there.

Each week I visit Daddy with my brother Jon.  Yet, to say we visit may stretch the boundaries of truth.  We watch a little television together — that’s all.  Bonanza mostly — sometimes Andy Griffith or Gunsmoke — perhaps a little Jeopardy! We stay a couple of hours, though it seems that time has less meaning to Dad than it once had — I’m not sure a 45 minute visit these days is much different from one twice that long.

Daddy tells time by listening to his body.  Is it time for the bathroom?  Time to sleep?  Daddy relies on others to tell him when it’s time to shower or time to eat.  And like a babe in the womb —  which his recliner has surely become —  Dad draws nourishment from a lifeline that connects near his navel.

When Daddy’s being mischievous, he twirls his feeding tube around like the end of a jump rope.  When he tires of that, Dad plays his body alarm like it’s a video game controller.  He puts the plug in, then out.  In then out.  When staff show up, they find Dad playing with a impish grin that says, “Gotcha!”

It’s no wonder the nurses are always stopping us in the hallway when we visit.  A cute little story here and there; words that describe how much they love our Daddy.  More than once, we’ve heard, “Though I”m not suppose to play favorites….

As  I observe Dad put on his best face for the nurses, it appears their love is not unrequited.  Yet, sometimes I wonder how Daddy can be so animated with the nurses yet so ‘not there’ with us?   It once was the other way around —  Daddy use to be more animated with family and less so with company; guests would come to the house and Daddy would run to his bedroom and close the door.

These days I feel like the company that shows up to find Dad not there.  And I guess the reality is —  that to Dad — I am less like family than a weekly guest, whereas nursing home staff are more like family than not.

Is my puzzle solved then?  Is Daddy still his same old self — but it’s my status that has changed?  Has the torch passed?

← Older posts
Newer posts →

“Do any human beings ever realize life while they live it? — every, every minute?”

-- Thornton Wilder, "Our Town"

Enter your email address to receive notifications of new posts.


prev|rnd|list|next
© Janell A West and An Everyday Life, January 2009 to Current Date. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given.

Recent Posts

  • Queen of Salads
  • Sweater Weather
  • Summer Lull Salads
  • That Roman Feast
  • Remodel Redux
  • Déjà vu, Déjà Voodoo
  • One Good Egg

Artful Living

  • Fred Gonsowski Garden Home
  • Kylie M Interiors
  • Laurel Bern Interiors
  • Lee Abbamonte
  • Mid-Century Modern Remodel
  • Ripple Effects
  • The Creativity Exchange
  • The Task at Hand
  • Tongue in Cheek
  • Zen & the Art of Tightrope Walking

Family ~ Now & Then

  • Chronicling America
  • Family
  • Kyle West
  • Pieces of Reese's Life
  • Vermont Digital Newspaper Project

Food for Life!

  • Elizabeth Minchilli in Rome
  • Manger
  • Once Upon a Chef
  • The Everyday French Chef

Literary Spaces

  • A Striped Armchair
  • Dolce Bellezza
  • Lit Salad
  • Living with Literature
  • Marks in the Margin
  • So Many Books
  • The Millions

the Garden, the Garden

  • An Obsessive Neurotic Gardener
  • Potager
  • Red Dirt Ramblings

Archives

Categories

  • Far Away Places
  • Good Reads
  • Home Restoration
  • In the Garden
  • In the Kitchen
  • Life at Home
  • Mesta Park
  • Prayer
  • Soul Care
  • The Great Outdoors
  • Writing

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • an everyday life
    • Join 89 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • an everyday life
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...