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an everyday life

an everyday life

Category Archives: The Great Outdoors

Polar Opposites

31 Monday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, The Great Outdoors

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Everyday Life, OKC Dining Out, Snow Storms

Today was a study in opposites.  Either I ran into long lines of people.  Or I was all alone in a veritable ghost town.

The quick trip to the grocery store: Long lines.

The large downtown bank:  Nobody.

The post office:  Long lines — reminiscent of  Christmas rush.

Supper at my newest favorite downtown Mexican eatery, the Iguana Grill:  Nada.

The kitchen-bed-bath department store where I sometimes buy my coffee:  Mostly empty shelves.  The cashier ringing up my purchase apologized for their being so little selection.   But being the blizzard buzzard I’ve become today, I was glad to walk away with dregs.

All this mad dash of stockpiling groceries and tanking up on my gotta-have Mexican food and taking care of loose ends which really could have waited but for this sense that they really couldn’t — was due to what weather experts are already willing to call a record-breaking blizzard — hours before its scheduled arrival.

When it hits — any time now — it will begin with freezing rain and top us off with 12 hours of snow.  By this time tomorrow, there will be  8-12 inches on the ground so we’re advised to stay put.

I hate the certainty of it all —  the forgone conclusion that it’s a record-breaker before a single flake of snow has fallen from the sky — while at the same time, grateful for the warning that’s helped me be as prepared as possible.

Only a little watching of television weather news makes me wish to tune into my windows, where the real story waits to unfold without hype.  And without long lines. And without question that my little slice of the world will soon become a veritable ghost town.

Memories on Ice

20 Thursday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in Life at Home, The Great Outdoors

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Tags

Childhood Memories, Death, Everyday Life, Grandchildren, Spiritual Direction

Sleet danced on the rooftop last night.

But for the first time in years, it did not waken me.  Perhaps time has done its job in healing the wounds of Mother’s death.  Still.  While no longer linked to winter’s pounding ice, I suppose her December funeral and the crippling central Oklahoma snow storm that followed will live in memory until I die.

It is no small consolation that my memories no longer seem to reach out of a frozen past to startle me into sadness.  If there is winter ice sadness today, it will come from being housebound — from a fear of driving on slick roads, enough to keep me from my daughter’s side.  Today will be my first absence —  if one doesn’t count last weekend’s self-enforced exile, when I left my post as ‘New Mother’s Helper” to create space for my son-in-law’s parents to discover new granddaughter delights on their own — without benefit of any color commentary I would have struggled to contain:  “Oh, try this…;” or …. “Oh, no, she doesn’t like that….!”  —  all those sort of truthful remarks that hinder rather than help.

Yet the glad and sad-for-grandmother truth is that mother and child are weaning themselves away from true need of my help.  Yesterday, I mostly carried out a few household chores — laundry and more laundry —  while taking time to preserve Reese’s first days with still images.

With much to do, it’s hard to stand still — to allow these first moments near my new grandchild to swaddle me.  Yet, how easy it is to sit when Reese is placed in my arms.  Then and only then does time cease to matter as I rock away cares and chores and the tick-tock minutes.

I look down at her miniature features to watch the myriad expressions baptize her nose, eyes and Gerber cheeks — accompanied by a symphony of sounds rising out of her slightly parted lips.  My eyes water at mystery.  I wonder about what she is thinking — what memories she is even now this very minute forming that can never be shared for lack of words and images and maturity to convey them.

Words about a baby’s memory from a book I’m reading intersect with everyday life today.  They come from a science fiction novel — Orson Scott Card’s Speaker for the Dead — which I would never have read, but for urging from a close friend.  I am grateful for his suggestion and for several lines of Card’s thoughts which have invited deeper contemplations of life, like this:

A human child loses almost all the memories of the first years of its life, and its long-term memories only take root in the second or third year of life; everything before that is lost, so that the child cannot remember the beginning of life.

What thoughts dance at the top of my grandchild’s mind, especially when she flails her arms about startled?  Whatever they are, they cause me to respond with a soothing word.  With all the love that I am, I cuddle her close and console her with soft pats on her back.

As Reese dozed yesterday, time melted away to startle me awake with my own first memory.  What it is I may one day share.  But what interests me most today is not mine, but yours.  So I ask: What is your first memory, the first of many frozen in time?  When was it born?

Wintertime Berries

04 Tuesday Jan 2011

Posted by Janell in In the Garden, Life at Home, The Great Outdoors, Writing

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Entertaining, Everyday Life, Oklahoma Gardening, Parents, Writing

The berries have been there for months.  First hidden behind a flush of summer green, they began small green and hard.  But with leaves now gone, my Possumhaw Holly stands alone in silent splendor, within a winter garden gone dormant and brown.

With a male holly near by to play his role in creation, only females set fruit.  The birds love her bright red berries as much as me.  While I enjoy the mere sight of her from my kitchen window, I especially like to bring a few cuttings indoors.  The trimming improves her form while the trimmings form effortlessly into a nice table centerpiece —  like the one I put together Sunday with sprigs of French Lavender, in honor of my mother-in-law’s birthday supper.

The post could stop here but for that word, “mother-in-law,” which carries with it such common connotations.  Most are unflattering; and they hurt and belittle with a big bite.  I wish to remove its tarnish and soften the sharp edges with my own small words.  But try as I write, words evade.  I search for phrases and images to honor, to tell of the many ways my mother-in-law has enriched my life.  And I come up empty.

So I begin with a confession:  Janice and I have come a long way, since the first time we met thirty-eight years ago; because I’m positive she didn’t like me.  Or if not me in particular, then at least the general idea of her son dating anyone exclusively.  At seventeen, he was too young to narrow the field.  And when considering her son’s girlfriend as a prospective daughter-in-law, perhaps Janice felt her son could do better.  Having greater appreciation for her wisdom these days, I’m inclined to agree — though I’m very glad that son of hers  believes otherwise.  And she as well —  now that we know each other better.

Janice is infinitely interesting.  Unlike me, she can comfortably converse with anyone anywhere.  She is well-read and borrows many books each week from her local library.  She especially enjoys a good mystery.  She’s a fine cook, though she cooks less these days — nine years of living with cancer and chemotherapy cocktails takes its toll — though she lives everyday grateful.

Her grandmother raised Janice because her mother wasn’t up to the task.  As a new widow with two toddlers at home, having lost her husband in a tragic train accident, Janice’s mother knew her  limits.  So Janice grew up calling her grandmother “Mother,”  and her mother she called “Mammy”, same as all her mother’s grandchildren.

Janice married young.  Ironically, at sixteen.  But thanks to her Mother, she married for love.  Because her Mother wanted for Janice what she herself had been denied, when forced to marry a man she did not love.

When time drew near for delivery of my oldest son, Janice put aside her fear of flying and came to Texas to help out.   But it’s not the help I’m remembering today but all our good visits.  During one lovely afternoon chat, in my final days of that third pregnancy, Janice fondly recounted how she had “a thing” for a man in uniform when young.  I suppose her future husband looked fine in his crisp Marine khakis, walking down the streets of the small town where Janice lived.  It wasn’t long before they married.  Then not much longer before Janice and a new daughter were on their way to France.  And a year or so later and a very long way from home, with no family nearby save for her young husband, Janice gave birth to her second child: My husband.

To this day, Janice cannot resist the hard crusty french bread she came to love as a young French housewife.   Enough so, that I created her birthday menu around loaves of  hard crusty bread, ensuring I acquired the finest Oklahoma City offers.  With them, I served a side of my best spaghetti and meatballs.  And a fresh tossed salad and home-made vinaigrette and croutons — made  with french bread, of course.  And because I make pies and cobblers better than cakes, Janice had birthday candles planted into a big dish of apple cobbler.

But as I look back on Sunday night’s supper table, it’s not the food or the beloved people seated there which grab at my attention but that lovely mix of winter flora:  Those silvery sprigs of French Lavender which I have adored for so long — whose scent fills my home and my soap dispensers and lingers above my pillow at night — reminds me of Janice and the gift of a French-born husband whose love we share; and those spacious berries remind me of Janice too, since she always has space and time to visit.

These wintertime berries invite me to make my own space — for visits with those I love —  with time ripe for picking.

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

-- Thornton Wilder, "Our Town"

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