Chicken & Dumplings

Outside my window, two standard poodles are running through the backyard gardens at break neck speed, totally unaware of the freezing rain and temperature surrounding them.  Our roads are already slick with a frosting of ice.  And so are the poodles – our dark-furred boy looks like he’s flashing rhinestones.  If the cars traveling up and down Walker Avenue could negotiate ice as well as the poodles… well, they wouldn’t be crashing into curbs and getting stuck on hills.  Maybe the poodles could offer lessons on when to brake and when to keep going? 

It’s an ideal night to stay home and cuddle up with a good book and some hot chocolate.  But alas, we have two Thunder tickets for tonight’s game, so my husband and I are going to slide downtown to cheer on the hometown team.  We frequently attended major league sports events in Texas, so we celebrate the Thunder’s arrival in OKC.  We make about half of the games. 

But on a night like tonight, if truth be told, I’d much rather stay home with that hot drink and the wonderful twelve hundred page novel I’m reading, — “…And the Ladies of the Club”.  I love stories written by so-called late bloomers – this one was published in 1982 by an eighty-seven year old author, Helen Hooven Santmeyer – it’s a story to be savored as I can easily imagine the author did for many years, before deciding to put words onto paper to tell it.  And behind it, is her personal witness – that even at eighty-seven, it’s never too late to pursue your dreams.  What gifts.

It’s time for me to go pursue reality — I’m making chicken & dumplings tonight for supper.  It’s great comfort food for an icy cold January evening.  No matter where you spend it.

Winter trees

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dsc01172a2Even now, on a winter’s day in Mesta Park, it’s the trees you notice first. In a position of prayer, they lift their stark naked limbs toward the sky.  What do they pray for?  Whatever it is, answers will come.  In God’s time.  And in unexpected packages.

For winter trees in need of strength, answers are often delivered by a strong gust of wind.  Living here in Oklahoma, their wait will be mercifully short; soon, the tree’s petition will be granted as it submits to the wind’s ministrations.  Limbs will sway back and forth and long skelton fingers will shake around madly.  The tree’s bare bones will grow strong in its dance with the wind.  But what of the trees restrained from dancing, those stretched taunt to the ground with wires and stakes?  No limbering up for these.  No strength.  No long life. They are crucified.

If winter trees are in prayer for leaves, they must be patient and persistent as not all answers are delivered by air mail.  Exposed and vulnerable, they must wait for new leaves to hide their scars and imperfections.   Hungry for a spring feast, they must wait for new leaves to cook a fresh meal.  Until then, they fast.  Or survive on leftovers.  Reduced to a state of dormancy, winter trees must hunker down and humble themselves with unseen busy work as they replenish their root systems deep within the earth.  In their wintery faith, they must prepare themselves for a season of visible growth.  God knows winter trees need leaves to fulfill their creative purpose — to take in nitrogen and give back oxygen, fruit and nuts to the world.  For this, they must wait.  Resurrection comes only with spring.

Questions answered

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Life seems to repeat itself until lessons are finally learned.  And so it is with our unanswered questions.  They want answered.  And when they’re not, they persistently raise their hands until they are.   

Within a few months of moving into our Mesta Park home, I began to notice shadows of some of my unanswered questions climb to a higher level of consciousness, to float along side my more recent experiences and thoughts.  They were the same types of questions as before, reflecting a child’s natural fascination about people they do not know, although they had grown lean while lying in the depths of childhood memories.  No longer were they general in nature.  They had become more particular, more focused on the old house we were now living in rather than those other homes of the neighborhood where former lives had resided.  I found myself wondering what interesting stories this old house could tell if it were able.  I tried to imagine what life had been like for the earliest family who lived here – the ones who painted the upstairs bedroom windows a light blue to match the sky, that I uncovered last winter when stripping them in preparation for painting.  I wondered if the family had a maid who lived in the smallish servant’s quarters out back, and if so, what her everyday life was like – especially as our remodel had revealed she would have lived without insulation in the walls to keep her warm.  While I was able to salvage fragments of this family’s story, it seems most is lost to history even though our home was theirs for over forty years.      

Lately, I’ve come to accept that I may not need their specific details to have a sense of their story.  People, then and now, are not so very different, though certainly the roles that are now mine may once have been filled by two or more.  This distinction matters little to me, as collectively I know, that within these walls and across the life span of this house, women have cooked, gardened, mothered, prayed and kept house – all in order to bring comfort to those they cared most about.

Their story is mine as mine is theirs.  I look forward to its unfolding.