No Better Place

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I can think of no better place to spend Holy Week than down on my knees, out in the garden.

I’ve devoted the better part of the last three days to my garden; I’ve trimmed, cleaned up leaf debris and planted a few bulbs.  Except for planting annuals, which will need to wait for a few more days, my garden is reading for its Spring growing fling.

Caring for my small Mesta Park garden is no full-time job.  After caring for lawn and gardens at our Texas home — which covered almost half an acre, I’m almost embarrassed to call what I do here in Mesta Park ‘gardening.’

Today, with all my ‘gardening’ chores done, but with leftover desire to keep gardening, I rang up the owner of the duplex next door today to see if I could come over and play in his dirt.  He’s so pleased with what we did together last fall — with his money and my time — that I learned I’m to come over any time I want.

So now, in addition to my own property, I have two duplexes whose front yards I care for on the block, counting the ‘Cinderella’ duplex across the street.  These three are still only half of what I cared for in Texas.  It’s my own little ministry, where I share my know-how and love of gardening with some good neighbors.  It’s just me and God creating a little beauty together.

It feels good to work with my hands, to think creatively off of the written page.  The down-side, for my husband anyways, is that I’ve been so tired, we’ve gone out to eat the last three evenings.

Tonight, after dinner, my husband suggested an evening walk with the dogs.  It was so pretty, I had to run back in to grab my camera.  It was quiet — we walked in silence — covered by the light from old streetlamps.  The sky was rosy pink when we began and soft cornflower blue by the time we got home.

On days like these, I can think of no better place to live than in this old neighborhood.

Never on Sundays

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Daddy & Romeo

Use to be, folks would go calling on Sunday afternoons — long leisurely face-to-face visits rather than the at most, quick chats on the phone that suffice these days.

The visits often came by surprise.  At my grandparent’s house, the visitors were mostly family, who just dropped by to chat without making an appointment.  Invariably, the impromptu call would interrupt the standing Sunday afternoon domino or Canasta game taking place at the kitchen table.  But no one viewed this as a problem.  Those playing would put their game on ice, or put it all away for later, and they and their surprise guests would make their way to the living room to visit.

It was a different time then.  Certainly, the pace was slower.  But it was more a difference in attitude in that folks didn’t regard Sunday as just another day of the week.   For sure, you’d never have caught my Granny doing her shopping at Safeway on Sunday’s.  No, Ma’am.  Sundays were special.  Sundays were reserved for morning church and big lunches and gathering family and playing games.  And if some of the family that dropped in were unexpected, well, so much the better.

As my brother and I were making our way down to call on Daddy today, I was thinking about my grandparent’s unexpected Sunday visitors all those years ago — and how now,  every guest Daddy receives is an unexpected visitor.   Like a child, Dad has lost his ‘poker face’ skills, for Dad always wears that slightly befuddled look when he first sees us — rather than pretending to know who we are.

But today, Dad was actually at home.  And not just physically. Daddy pointed his finger at objects, his way of giving us his commands — like when he wanted to go to the bathroom, or be put into his recliner.  Daddy flipped through the newspaper I brought — and he really read a article on the sports page.  And as my brother and I were having  a conversation about our favorite Frank Sinatra tunes, Daddy followed our conversation, shaking his head in memory of songs he liked too.

I also told Daddy that his granddaughter Abigail turned sixteen today;  “Daddy, can you believe today is Abigail’s sixteenth birthday?”  And just like it was nothing special, Daddy shook his head ‘no’, in the wonder of it all.  And, of course, it was so incredibly special that Daddy shook his head at all, because in his shaking, Daddy connected with me in a moment of wonder that was, in and of itself, as wonderful as what we both wondered at together.

Our visit was exactly what a surprise Sunday visit should be:  The host received the treat of surprised guests and we, his guests, found our host home.  And like two little pigs who’d gone to market, my brother and I celebrated our good fortune all the way back home.

And then, because we all have to come back to earth and reality sooner or later, my brother asked me to take him to the market  so he could buy a  few groceries.  And though I could have picked up a few groceries myself, I decided to sit this one.

After all, why ruin a perfectly good Sunday with grocery shopping?

Blog Interrupted

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It’s good when friends catch up with one another after a move.

Already, I’ve had friends drop by my new web home.  And I must say… it really made me feel good.

After all, think about it.  How many times have  we let friends slip between our fingers because life has taken us in different directions?  How many high school classmates do we keep up with on a regular basis?  College buddies?  Bridesmaids?   Former co-workers? And the list goes on…

So to have friends think I’m worth the effort of tracking down really tickled me.  Of course, I had every intention of forwarding my new address.  And looking back on it, I probably should have waited to make the URL switch until later — but like a kid at Christmas, I couldn’t wait.

My new web address is AnEverydayLife.com — short for “Stories from AN EVERYDAY LIFE” — which was my original subtitle, when I began my blog, almost sixteen months ago now.

So you might wonder what instigated the move?  There’s more than one reason.

First, I’m not the best of Mesta — and to imply otherwise, with a name like bestamesta as my chosen website, was becoming a tad uncomfortable.

Second, I don’t plan to live in Mesta Park — or at least, in this particular lovely old house — for the rest of my life.  I want to live in a historic one-story, if my husband I can find one to fit our needs.  Because already my knees are a little arthritic — and my bones are growing thin.  Not a morning goes by that I don’t think of falling down the stairs, as I carry my Scottie princess down in my arms to begin a new day.

Third, when I began my blog, I imagined I would write more about life in Mesta Park than everyday life in general.  But it hasn’t worked out the way I thought it would.  Keeping a blog is truly an evolving process — even the name I began writing under, has changed with the times.

Some may recall that I wrote my first posts under my middle and maiden names — remember “Ann Pappas?” — because I thought it might grant me greater freedom to express what I wanted to say, perhaps even open the creativity coffers that I once enjoyed as a child.   But within  a few months, it didn’t feel right to write under anything but my real name.   So quietly, without fanfare, I made the change.

In the end, the best of Mesta Park is, and always will be, the old homes that fill the historic district that I currently and proudly call home.   It could never be my website.  So when my bestamesta.com URL subscription came up for renewal a few months ago, I began quietly pondering a new name.  And after two months of reflection, I opted to return to my original subtitle, albeit with a shortcut version.

The old URL subscription will quietly expire on April 5th.  And between now and then, if you drop in at good old bestamesta.com, you will automatically be forwarded here, to my new web address.  After that, I don’t know where bestamesta.com will send you… but I hope you’ll eventually find your way here.

May my new URL address stay the same —  even as I (and the place I call home) continue to evolve.