Thursday, May 14, 2026

Glory in the Morning

      

                         

I am so very fortunate to awake (with Jenny's help,) to this glorious view.


As I sit on the chest at the foot of the bed and put on my socks and shoes, I watch the early sun gilding the trees.




Those same trees are hiding the full sweep of the horizon, but somehow it only emphasizes the beauty of the far off mountains that are still visible.

As an old English major I'm tempted to see some sort of lesson here, to draw some sort of parallel . . .

But I'll save that for another day.




Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Octopus Ex Machina

                                             

As with many very popular books, I resisted reading Remarkably Bright Creatures, expecting that it would be a tad too sweet and predictable for my taste. But I kept hearing about it and when the Kindle edition showed up on BookBub for a couple of bucks, I decided to see what all the fuss was about.

Well, it is pretty sweet and somewhat predictable but, in my current frame of mind, with the political situation ongoing. it was just the escape I needed. I gulped it down like a comforting cup of coffee (with cream and sugar.)

I liked all the characters but who I really liked was Marcellus, the octopus. Marcellus who narrates short bits of the story; Marcellus who (unaccountably but who cares) knows a lot more about humans than they know about him; Marcellus who, like the deus ex machina of Greek classical theater, is the one to resolve some difficult kinks in the plot. 

Marcellus is charming and he lifts the story out of the humdrum into something strange and wonderful.

               

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Dear Sirs

                                                                


Your president has demanded an "election integrity army" -- partisan forces deployed to polling places in every state. Armed? Masked? As brutal as ICE? Do you support this threat?

He has also threatened to "pack the court" and has attacked by name justices for following the law.

Do you support your president in these threats? 

And then there's that ballroom that he and his 'friends' were going to pay for. Now its cost has ballooned and may be passed on to the taxpayers.

I can assure you that most taxpayers want lower gas and grocery prices rather than a ballroom they will never be invited to. 

And if said ballroom is so important for security, why does the president expose himself to danger on a weekly basis at various golf courses?

I'm old enough to remember when the GOP had at least the appearance of integrity. Now it's little more than a den of grifters and yes-men--and yes-women too, alas.  




Sunday, May 10, 2026

The Mother of Us All

Mother Earth's bounty, so beautiful, so generous . . .



May her children honor her every day . . .


And may they always remember that, without her, there is nothing.


 

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Putting Away Childish Things

              


In the ongoing attempt to rid the house of excess baggage, I attacked Josie's art cupboard and a closet and a chest with lots of her toys stored therein. 

In the art cupboard I recycled old, used coloring books, trashed an assortment of broken bits and bobs and generally tidied. Some of her jigsaw puzzles are going to a thrift store, as are some unused workbooks and flash cards she no longer needs. I don't think she'll miss any of my removals. 

Her toy chest though is full of stuffies and a few baby dolls (Margo and Dolly and all their clothes,) I felt I needed her permission, even though she hasn't played with any of them in a long time. So, on the way home from school, I asked about the dolls and the stuffies.

She was excited to get home as a friend with a daughter almost Josie's age was coming for the weekend and Josie had a mandate from her dad to clean up her room.

So she thought a a few seconds and then said the dolls and stuffies could go. Of course I mentioned how much some little girls would love them and she agreed. "How about the doctor kit?' I asked. 

'Keep that,' she said. And then, 'No, it can go too.'

'How about the big building blocks in the living room closet?' I asked.

'They can go.'

I was amazed. And a little sad. (Not Margo and Dolly!) But pleased. I'd expected her to want to hang on to most of this stuff, even though she no longer plays with it, as books and podcasts, videos and art projects have filled the gap. And we still have the puppets and the dress-up box, as well as the amazing crocheted Octalia Octopus and the dolly llama from her Aunt Aileen.

Our little girl is a big girl now--almost nine, going on twenty-seven.

Ay, law!

                             


 

Friday, May 8, 2026

Too Much Text Begging!

                                          


I have, in the past, donated to various candidates and progressive/liberal political groups. As they say, no good deed goes unpunished and now I am the recipient of multiple daily scare/begging text messages. Beep, beep, beep, goes my phone way too many times a day from these guys.

Yes, I know that we're in a dire situation. But the frantic tone of these messages is really annoying--We're begging! My jaw hit the floor when I saw . . ., This is a hard thing to say. . ., Have you switched parties? We need your input for this to be complete . . . Important survey! Your voice is missing!

And the thing is, maybe they want my voice but what they really want is my money. Answer the survey and hit SUBMIT but nothing happens till you fill out the amount of your donation.

So I'm taking a hard line: texting STOP and blocking the number. 

No doubt I'll still do some donating. But not to these pests.


 

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Reading Mary Stewart





In my ongoing book purge, I occasionally have to read a book to decide if it goes or stays. Such is the case with Mary Stewart, whose gentle mystery/romances I devoured in my younger days.

So I was surprised when, on rereading This Rough Magic, a book I'd loved,  set on Corfu and full of ties to Prospero and Shakespeare's Tempest as well as gorgeous passages of description, to find myself losing interest and being a tad annoyed at the well- worn trope of the young woman who is at first antagonistic to the young man with whom she will sooner or later fall in love.

I don't know--I still love Pride and Prejudice--possibly the grandmother of this trope. But I eventually put the book down and added it to the box destined for the next library book sale.


But then I gave Stewart another chance and am currently rereading her Arthurian quartet -- The Crystal Cave, The Hollow Hills, The Last Enchantment, and The Wicked Day. And am delighted to say that the magic I remembered is still there. Her descriptions are gorgeous and if the Matter of Britain--the story of Merlin and Arthur--is more enchanting than the proto chick-lit of her earlier books, well it's not to be wondered at.

And on a blessedly rainy afternoon and evening, it's a delight!
                                     

       

 

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Dear Sirs


 You and your party are behaving like the over-indulgent parents of a spoiled toddler--parents that are afraid of said toddler and turn a blind eye to his terrible behavior and ongoing mental and physical breakdown. I'd like to call Family Protective Services on you.

But the toddler in question isn't playing with toy soldiers and plastic boats. He's gambling with lives and burning through our nation's store of weapons in his war of choice. Gas prices, food prices, everything is affected by the toddler's ego-driven war. 

And just as an out-of-control toddler might smear his feces on the walls and furniture of his house, your toddler is moving to desecrate our nation's capitol with his glitzy makeovers. And like a toddler with a magic marker, he's attempting to smear his name everywhere.

This is so far  from presidential behavior that I am amazed that the GOP, which controls both House and Senate, as well as the Supreme Court, has made no effort to rein in this demented toddler-in- chief.

I look forward to midterms and the coming of some grownups who aren't afraid to tell the toddler a resounding NO.

Sunday, May 3, 2026

Test Your Vision!


 I believe that the more we post these numbers  (8647)that mean to throw the Orange One out of office, the more ridiculous his lawsuit against Comey becomes. Will he sue everyone? DUMP TRUMP! 

Saturday, May 2, 2026

What Goes Around . . .


A quarter of a century ago, when the quilting book a friend and I had written was published and being written up here and there, a woman I didn't know contacted me and asked if I'd like some fabric, as she no longer made quilts and needed to get rid of an accumulation.

Well, of course I would, and with visions of some really interesting fabrics from the past, my friend and I drove to Etowah on the other side of Asheville.




 What it was was a PILE of fabric in a back room full of junk. It didn't look especially promising --lots of synthetic stuff--but the lady was so nice and pleased that we were there that we loaded up most of the stuff and hauled it off, stopping at a Goodwill to offload the polyester pieces.


And now, here I am, no longer making quilts (my back won't let me sit at a sewing machine for longer than twenty minutes) but possessed of lots of interesting fabrics. I've been going through the collection and weeding out a first round but then I wanted to find a good home for the pieces, most too small for big projects but fine for patchwork or scrap quilting.

I  could just take it to a thrift store but then I bethought me of a quilter Facebook friend in the area. I asked if she'd be interested in 3 boxes of fabric and she said yes! Plus she's part of a quilting guild and can share with them.

Perfect!  

I still have lots of fabric left. As well as lots of unfinished projects. Maybe Josie will be interested in making a quilt. We'll see.

But it was strange to think how I've gone from trying to get fabric to trying to get rid of fabric.

I saved so much that, as I went through the various boxes of different colors and types, I found countless  tiny scraps which I consigned to a garbage bag.

I'm evidently in danger of being something like the old lady in a story John reminded me of: when she died, her family found a box labelled String Too Short to Save. It was full of short bits of string.