Saturday, August 31, 2024

The Tricksy English Language


As Josie grapples with the English language and its many non-intuitive spellings, I applaud her determination--and tell her that, apart from memorizing everything, a great way to be a good speller is to read a lot so that you will recognize when a word isn't spelled correctly.

I think of this when I see numerous posts on FB about stray dogs described as skiddish. Or when someone is described as giving free reign to something. Or, to take another horsey mistake, using Woah instead of the time-honored Whoa. 

It's hard to get over being an English teacher. I read a novel the other day in which a bird was pruning its feathers. And a wall was described as being made of waddle-and-daub.

Arrgh! I think I need a cup of covefe.


 

Friday, August 30, 2024

Shepherds' Salad



A tasty salad for a hot summer day. Chopped cucumber, green pepper, tomato, and onion--add lemon juice and olive oil, salt to taste, fresh parsley, feta cheese and kalamata olives. Chill well.

It also makes a nice filling for a pita or a crusty sub roll.

                                                                                  




Thursday, August 29, 2024

Justice and Righteousness


Let Justice roll down like the waters, and Righteousness like an everflowing stream.
  Amos 5:24

Wouldn't it be nice? 

Or, just as a start, what if everyone just told the truth?

What with AI and all the disinformation rolling around, it can be difficult to sort out the truth. 

Difficult, but not impossible.

There are a number of fact checkers out there: Snopes.com.
Politifact.com, and FactCheck.org.

I'm trying to resist jumping on memes that agree with my political views--the JD Vance couch thing is funny but completely disproven--so I'm attempting due diligence.

Imagine a world where lying wans physically impossible. Speak a lie (that you know to be a lie) and you turn blue---or your pants catch on fire--or your nose grows to ridiculous lengths.

If only we could put this in place for the upcoming debate.



 

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

Sunrise for a Hot Day


A little after seven, I sat on the front porch, waiting . . .


Cloudless mornings suggest a hot day ahead.


And here it comes!


Back inside, I was hit with a reflection of the event in a picture frame.




 

Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Cracked Vessels-- A Miss Birdie Repost

                                                                  

Miss Birdie, Dor'thy , and the Cracked Vessels

 

Why, honey, how good to see you this fine spring morning. Look at that old pear tree, just a-busting with blooms. But this wind’s right chilly—we best go in where it’s warm. Git you a chair and we can have a nice visit.

That sign or whatever it is down at the church? Now what about that! Spray painted right there on the bridge PLEASE GOD FORGIVE. Now there’s a right quare story about that. I first saw it a few days back when Dor’thy was carrying me to the store. I asked her if she knowed how it come to be there and she said, ‘Well, it happened after the revival preaching.’

                             

‘Well,’ says I, ‘you uns have revivals several times a year, don’t you?’ and she said this time there was a new preacher from somewhere in Tennessee and he had brought the Word like one thing. She said that he was a lively somebody and he leaped and jumped about and flung his arms around and cried and sweated and got red-faced till she thought he was like to have a stroke.

‘But what about that sign? I asked her. ‘Did that preacher paint it?’

“Now, Birdie,’ says she, ‘I’m getting to that. The preacher’s text was something about how we are all sinners--cracked vessels, standing in need of redemption, and how our only hope is to ask the Lord’s forgiveness and mercy. And then he went on to tell of the fiery lake and everlasting torment waiting for them as weren’t saved.

‘By the time he was near done, most all of the church was crying and sweating and calling out to the Lord for mercy. And when church was over, we all went home, and I was the last one to leave because it was my month to tidy up and turn off lights and such. They wasn’t a soul left when I come out and I know those words weren’t painted then.’

 ‘But Dor’thy-’

‘Let me tell it, Birdie. I come back to the church early the next morning to sweep and run a mop and there were those words. So someone had come in the night and done them. I did my work, wondering all the time who would have done such. And when I got back home, I got on the phone.’

                                                             

Dor’thy do go on, don’t she? But she was like a dog worrying a bone, trying to figure who it was wrote them words. She said it was because that person likely needed prayers and she would do her best in that line but, betwixt you and me, honey, Dor’thy’s a right quizzy somebody. She should have been one of them detectives on the TV.

Now the first person she called was Rhody Payne who said that she thought Hensley Phillips probably done it for he had looked right sick during the preaching, and everyone knows he’s been carrying on with that Roberts woman and his poor wife pretending ain’t nothing the matter.

But then, later on, Dor’thy got a call from Rhody’s sister who said she reckoned it was one of them Burtons for the spray- painted words was the same color as the spray-painted name on the Burton’s mailbox. And the Lord knows, them Burtons is cracked vessels, ever last one of them—cock-fighting and worse. But ain’t none of them ever set foot in the church, said Dorothy, so how would they have known about the preaching.

Ay, law, honey, folks is bad to gossip, ain’t they. By the time the day was out, most every woman in the church had called Dor’thy to say who it was they thought had painted the words. Everyone of them was sure it was a man, though Dor’thy said when Leota called, Dor’thy could hear Hobart in the background hollering that it was likely Almira for everyone knowed about her. But Leota reminded him that Almira hadn’t been in church that evening and that shut him up right quick.

By the time the week was out, Dor’thy weren’t no nearer to finding out the truth of thing. What she had found out, she told me, was that the church was plumb full of cracked vessels, every one of them standing in the need of prayer.

‘And Birdie, honey,’ she told me, ‘I reckon I’m one too—just a nosy old woman who could have prayed for that sinner ‘thout having to know their name. Now it looks like I got most the whole church to pray for. I'll likely have to give up watching my story, it's gonna take so much time.'

                                                        

Monday, August 26, 2024

Work in Progress

                                                                 


Sunday, August 25, 2024

Little Pleasures


A scallop-winged pretty--maybe an Eastern Comma?


An unexpected flower--self-seeded from last year's portulaca.


Beneath the suet feeder--a gift from (probably) a downy woodpecker.


 

Saturday, August 24, 2024

Salade 'Week-End'

                                                                          


Yesterday I was still a little hung-over from the excitement of the convention and the unusual for me late night. 

After cleaning and reorganizing the refrigerator--a terrible smell caused by a hidden plastic bag full of the liquid remains of a forgotten squash made it necessary--I realized that there were some other veg on the edge and what I needed to do was make a salad for dinner.

I had a good start with a simple potato salad I'd made the day before with some extra boiled potatoes--just added a bit of mayo, dill weed, and chopped celery and onion.

A bed of Romaine lettuce, the potato salad, tomato wedges, sliced cucumber, ditto onion, leftover cooked green beans, a little salt, a drizzle of olive oil and white balsamic vinegar and the fancy touch of a handful of shrimp, sauteed in a little butter and Sriracha sauce came together to make this not-quite Salade Nicoise.

Some ciabattas toasted with garlic butter and a glass of white wine made for a rather elegant summer supper.

And now for an early night.




Friday, August 23, 2024

I Saw America Last Night . . .

                                                                            

                                                                             


     

 I saw America last night . . . 

A rainbow of people . . .

Ordinary, extraordinary people . . .

United in purpose, in joy, in love.

As it should be . . .

As it could be . . .

And, if we do the work,

As it will be.


Thursday, August 22, 2024

One of the New Neighbors



What a sweet face! Still makes me say Aye, law! though.

                                                                                 

Wednesday, August 21, 2024

Blue Moon --Tuesday and Monday

                                                                                    



Monday night was cloudy and the moon was shy. Last night was clear, but she rose just behind a large poplar and took a while to show her splendor.   

                                                                        




                                                                                


                                                                                          

These last two are from Monday night.



 

Tuesday, August 20, 2024

A Little Political



It wasn't till Obama's first campaign that I really became interested in following political news. Even Watergate went by in a blur as I was dealing with a toddler. I'd always voted and voted Democrat--not particularly for the candidate but because it was my feeling that, on the whole, the Democrats were more interested in taking care of ordinary folks, as opposed to Republicans, kowtowing to the wealthy.

Obama was something different. I felt really invested in his candidacy and was delighted when he won two terms.

I was impressed with Hilary's intelligence and composure during her debate with the Orange man and bereft when she lost--not the popular vote but in the Electoral College.


Four years of the Orange One were, in my opinion, a national embarrassment. And worse was seeing how his crass and vulgar demeanor emboldened so many of my fellow citizens to give vent to their racism and misogyny.

Joe Biden served his country well these past three and a half years. And, unlike the Former Guy, he proved himself capable of putting his country and party ahead of his ego. 

And now we have Kamala--whose vision and happy energy have brought forth a surge of support.

Yeah, I'm deep in the daily reports--as well as the odd stuff that washes up on Facebook (my only social media.) 

And I watch in amazement as the MAGA crowd decorate their ears with sanitary pads, wear adult diapers over their clothes, and wave plastic cups purporting to be filled with JD Vance's semen.

WTAF?

As John said, If this were a novel you were writing, you'd dismiss most of this as too far-fetched. 

True.

I only wish I could read the history of this time, say fifty years from now. Assuming, of course, that propaganda hasn't replaced history by then.

Interesting times. . .

                                                                                          

Monday, August 19, 2024

Promethea


This pretty thing is a Promethea Silk Moth (I think.) I found it on our hearth hidden behind some of Josie's books, and carried it outside, pausing to grab my camera.


How and when it got in, I do not know. The caterpillars are said to feed on apple trees, and we do have an apple tree just behind the house. It looked unharmed and I watched it flutter off. I hope it finds a mate.

For moths, like the worldview of a certain VP candidate, reproduction is everything.




 

Sunday, August 18, 2024

Wait for It






                                                                                   


 

Saturday, August 17, 2024

All Around




Dancing in the light


Lost another tooth
                                                                                       

Let there always be geraniums

                                                     And long-leggity girls



Pensive pibble


Oh, so welcome volunteers--morning glory, autumn clematis (maiden's bower), and hollyhocks.



 

Friday, August 16, 2024

Speaking as a Post-Menopausal Tradwife . . .


                                                                         


 With the latest (the latest as I write this, no doubt there'll be more) revelation of JD Vance's deeply weird world view--i.e., that post-menopausal women's primary function is childcare, I find myself in a bit of a quandary.

I mean, here I am, happily providing a significant amount of childcare, while at the same time deploring the view that it's my only worth.

I disagree strongly with this view. Post menopause, I wrote and saw published seven novels and taught writing classes for many years. This was pre-childcare. Now I'm retired from the writing game and enjoying seeing the world through the eyes of my granddaughter.

Then I realize that for most of my life, I've also been a stay-at-home mom and housewife--a tradwife, as some would call it. Yikes! (Except for nine years spent as a teacher. According to the Orange One, that's not a job in the private sector and makes me almost a Communist. Oh, but wait, eight of those years were in private schools . . .it's complicated, isn't it?)

There's something disturbing about a party that is so up in everyone's business--worried about restrooms and life choices and books and religion--a party that was once all about personal freedom from government.

I'm with the Harris/Walz team--Mind Your Own Damn Business. 

As for the view that women belong at home, making and caring for children--there's nothing wrong with that IF IT'S YOUR CHOICE. 

But I choose a world where folks like Nancy Pelosi and Kamala Harris--or Mary Oliver or Taylor Swift or Jane Goodall-- aren't defined by the number of children they birth or care for, but by what they choose to do with their lives.

Thursday, August 15, 2024

Memorable Moments

                                                    

                                               

Lying awake one night, I found myself remembering certain moments--all involving food and/or drink. Vivid memories, as I've always been probably overly fond of food and drink.

 There was the tall glass of a perfect vodka and tonic, the rim rubbed with lime and a generous slice of lime within. Back in the early Seventies, our friends Bob and Eleanor had invited us to dinner. We'd spent a hot summer day working on the house we were building on a lake outside Tampa. We showered and drove in to Tampa and our friends' place. The house was air conditioned; the meal was undoubtedly excellent as Eleanor was and is a fantastic cook; but it's that vodka and tonic that lingers in my memory. Respite!

 Another hot day memory-- late Fifties. Bahamas with my friend Lynn and her family. and the amazing jolt of an iced coca cola after hours of snorkeling--and I didn't even much like cola drinks.

July 1972--just home from the hospital with a new baby and recovering from a C-section. My mother-in-law appeared with a cold bowl of sliced mangoes. Absolute heaven! Bless you, Frances!

And then there's the cup of coffee that John brings me every morning and most evenings--the elixir of magic beans, made even more potent because someone else fixed it. 

Sometimes it's the simplest things that mean the most. Do you have any similar memories?