Monday, December 31, 2012
out with the old...
I've
made several attempts to write an end of year post while I worked
yesterday on cleaning the detritus of the last six months off my
drawing table, computer area, and work table. I don't want to
start the new year with the clutter of last year.
I'm
not feeling very philosophical this year like years past. Maybe
it's because I'm busy. I have already made a list of
work related items I need to accomplish the first half week of the
new year.
Because...
Because
we have a lot of work waiting for us!
This
is a far cry from how 2012 started out. Life has
shifted back into the certainty lane, at least for the next six
months or so and I have things to focus on.
It's
been a challenging year. By mid-summer, things were looking
pretty dismal. With no work, dwindling personal resources and reducing our expenditures to as little as possible, with the IRS
breathing down our necks, we were beginning to wonder if we still had
a business, wondering how much longer we could tread water.
Proposals
that looked promising languished. I filed for SS, we
taught a workshop, then a windfall from a previous inheritance came, and I
had my little part-time job at the antique store. Income came
from varied and unexpected places while the garden kept us fed.
And
then in July, everything changed. I sold a cast piece to an art
consultant and we won 1st place at a gallery exhibition with a money
prize. After that, a very large commission was finally funded
and other commissions have come in. We have been very busy
since August and the year is ending in abundance.
The
Universe took care of us for another year and I am thankful.
Well,
I see I managed a post after all.
Happy
New Year everyone, may it be well and prosperous for us all.
Friday, December 28, 2012
catching up
I
seem incapable of finishing a blog post these days off. I have a
couple I started but then got distracted and then it was the next
day. Plus, I've been working more days in the antique store,
covering for my sister.
Today
we drive into the city to dole out the gifts to the grandkids and
daughter and SonIL. They all left on the Saturday before Christmas to
go spend the holiday with Mike's brother and cousins and also Sarah's
cousins on Marc's side in Dallas.
My
SisterIL had called us the week before christmas asking us if we were
planning on coming since the kids were, they would love to have us
visit, but we declined. We had just finished the mountain wall and
the last thing we wanted to do was take a four hour drive to Dallas
and a four hour drive back. Besides, we were dog sitting and I had to work at the
store.
So
here are my two incomplete posts:
Sunday,
December 23rd...
I
have been puttering with the best of them today. Or maybe more like
a butterfly and flitting from thing to thing. I picked up a couple
of handfuls of pecans and got most of the fallen leaves out of the
garden intending to go back and tend to it after I ate a late
breakfast.
The
garden is in sad shape since we haven't been here to take care of it
and the few days of the week we were in residence about all I had
time for was making sure it got watered. It's not weedy but all the
fallen leaves had blown in and there was a heavy mulch around all the
plants. That's a good thing for flowers but not so good for food
plants because it harbors food plant eating bugs. Everything except
for the broccoli, I think, has aphids and pill bugs and some kind of
little bitty back beetle. It's a mess.
But
by the time I was ready to go back out a strong wind had come up and
although the temperature is in the mid-70s, it's no fun being out in
it. So I am entertaining myself indoors today. I've made one stab
at washing the dishes from yesterday. That being my chore I'm
constantly confounded by how fast they pile up and there is just two
of us!
I
have other tasks I am entertaining like juicing three bags of meyer
lemons that my friend Kathy foisted off on generously gave me when we
went to pick up our stuff from the open house.
I
also want to photograph the individual little pediment pieces I cast
for the open house. That involves cleaning off and setting up a
suitable area and unpacking them all from the box they are in which
sounds like a lot of effort. Maybe I'll just aim for getting them
unpacked.
And
I need to go over to my sister's house and check on the cats and
while I'm at it I'll go by the store and get my book which I
inadvertently left yesterday when I closed up. It's handy having
keys to the store.
Thursday,
December 27th...
Today
is Marcmas around here. That's how we refer to Marc's birthday.
It's cold and overcast, drizzly and rainy out there and will warm up
some but it will still be colder than the 65˚ we keep the house. We
slept late, snuggled in bed, and are still in our lounging clothes.
I'm
not working in the store today and the dogs go home this afternoon.
Probably we will take them home so they will be waiting there for my
sister when she gets in. Usually she just picks them up on her way
home from the airport but I think we will go to a movie later.
That's always our fall back birthday gig.
I
can't believe it's been over a week since we finished the 'big job'
and I have not lifted a single finger towards cleaning up my drawing
desk, computer area, and work table. Actually I made a bigger mess
when I brought the drill press in to make a little teacup bird feeder
for my sister. And one for me. It's still sitting here on the end
of my work table. The drill press, I mean.
---------
Well,
we did not get to see the Hobbit after all. We arrived for the 3:45
show to a full parking lot and adults streaming in. Why aren't all
these people at work?! Anyway, the ticket seller was kind enough to
tell us that it was pretty crowded in there and it would probably be
difficult to find two seats together, so not wanting to watch a
nearly 3 hour movie on the first couple of rows or separated, we put
it off for another day. Instead, we rented Rise Of The Dark Knight
from Redbox and watched that. It was terrible BTW.
So,
off to the city we go.
Labels:
country stuff,
other mundane things,
vacation
Tuesday, December 25, 2012
blessings on us all
(I
wrote this last night but didn't publish it until today)
It's
Christmas eve and not being an adherent of either the religious
aspect or the cultural extravaganza it's become on the secular side,
I am having a normal relaxed evening and my day tomorrow will be one
of those rare days in which nothing will be asked or expected of me.
I
worked at the store today for my sister who is visiting her family and
for who this holiday still means something. I'll cover for her
on Wednesday too. I'm happy to do it and happy I successfully tracked down several
items for people over the last few days.
I
missed a couple too. Like the antique ironing board someone's
friend had told her she'd seen. I assumed she meant the child's
metal toy ironing board I had sold the previous week but when the man
showed up Saturday and picked up the china cabinet he had bought,
there in plain sight was an old wood antique ironing board.
Another
day a woman came in looking for antique irons, the kind you heat on
the stove. I knew we had some but could not find them so I sent
her to another shop, same vendor. Later Joe, the vendor, came
in and I related the referral. Then he showed me in his section
the two antique irons.
I've
been in a pretty good mood since last week after we finished that big
job, relief and elation at being finished and feeling pretty good
about the product coupled with some pretty nice weather and the
general good mood of the population.
Christmas,
or at least the last few days before, does seem to put people in good
moods and that kind of energy is contagious whether you believe the
religious myths or not, good moods are contagious just like laughter,
you can't help but be buoyed by the energy field.
At
least that's how I think of it this year. I don't generally
like the Christmas season but I'll save my scroogey attitude for a different post. While I like Christmas carols,
ironically enough, and would sing them with feeling given the
opportunity, I do not believe in the divinity they proclaim.
My
family is scattered and varied on this night. I was raised as
an Episcopalian, I raised my children as Jews. I left Judaism
behind as I had Christianity before it as my understanding of the divine deepened and matured. I
hold to no religion that defines the undefinable, that tries
to hold themselves above all others as more beloved, right, or true.
We
are all children of the divine no matter how we express it, no matter
what story we attach to it to help us divine the Divine. Even
the atheist is as beloved as the most devout religious follower
because each story, each myth is as only one petal of a glorious flower.
So
I say Happy Holidays to friends and family as there are many
holidays, some ancient, some old, some new, celebrated in the weeks
before the end of the secular year. May you all be blessed in
the year to come.
Labels:
balance,
being human,
blessings,
freedom from religion,
holiday
Friday, December 21, 2012
solstice
Nature
is awesome. I just saw a picture of a parasitic nematode, the kind
that can be transmitted by mosquito, that can, given no resistance,
suck the life right out of you.
It's
quite beautiful, don't you think? I do.
Makes
you wonder about how something that can kill you can be so beautiful
to look upon.
But
if you think about it, the roundworm is also an expression of the
godhead, whatever you
conceive that to be. To me it is simply the source from which all
this reality that we
perceive emanates. It seems obvious that there was as much love
expressed through this nematode as through us.
I
have no way to describe what that source is besides life, energy,
magnetism, love. A totally unknown source, of which you are but one
expression but all of creation an expression of the same thing, floats in an
unknown realm and...dreams.
I
imagine the tendril of dream becoming thought and the thought
becoming crystallized and the crystallization becoming manifest with
the atomic breath and the link that cannot be broken because it is
us. All of us. All of it.
Whatever
ritual you pursue or recognition of a greater whole, whatever play
you hold dear created to counter the long nights or if you have no
pageant at all, the root of all is the end of the long night and the welcoming of the light. It is a story that has been told and retold over and
over and written down for as long as humans have been able to write.
The
long night is over and even though we know winter is still to come,
we also know it will end.
It
is a holiday for those with a religion and those without. It is a
human holiday.
We celebrate the coming of the light!
well and truly done
We
are well and truly done with the mountain wall. The four panels are
cleaned, covered with protective film, and stacked waiting for pick
up. With the holidays and businesses having days off and the end of
year madness, Henry, from the glass company, and I decided to put off
pick up and installation til the first week of January. Whew! I
can't be available for the installation til then anyway.
After
my last post I kept the composite picture of the mountain on my
computer screen all weekend, pausing to look at it with a less
critical eye every time I passed it. By the time it was time for us
to head back in to the city to do the last touch-up, I was happy with
the overall piece. I think it's going to look really good. I still
don't like installations, but at least I don't have to deal with that
til next year.
We
actually finished everything up last Tuesday. Wednesday I was in the
best mood. It didn't hurt that it was a beautiful temperate day. I
took advantage of it and did what little holiday shopping I intended
to do. Well, except for the three grandgirls. The twins are getting
new mattresses and the youngest is getting cash. We'll do that when
we go in on the 28th for our gift giving.
Whenever
we work on big projects like these two walls that have kept us busy
for the last 4½ months, I tend to lose my grip on all other
activities. It doesn't happen all at once, gradually letting things
slip. My posting has gone way down, my reading of blogs and
commenting as well. I am single minded, focused on the work. I
expected to do a new post when we returned home Wednesday evening but
now, here it is Friday and I'm just now composing.
Well,
that's not entirely true. I was working on a post about the latest
shootings and the whole gun proliferation thing in this country,
about how we worship violence but to tell you the truth, I'm sick of
it. I've read so many really excellent essays on the subject, the
knee-jerk 'more guns is the answer' responses that display so much
ignorance of what it is really like to be in the middle of a
situation like that. Perhaps I will still publish it down the road
though it needs a lot of work.
So
now, the end of the world has come and gone, once again. And I still
feel fine. Another blog post that didn't get written. Or the one on
christmas trees.
The
good thing is that now the time of the long nights is over. Even
though the winter solstice marks the beginning of winter and we will
have our coldest days in the coming months, those days will be
growing longer and the nights shorter.
We
are dog-sitting for the next week while my sister visits her daughter
and grandchildren in Albuquerque. It will be a quiet week with no
demands on me. A week in which I get to putter around, doing or not
doing whatever I want. Resting. After the new year it will be back
to work on the three jobs we have waiting with another confirmed and
another possible. So it looks like next year will be business as
usual at least for the first 6 months.
That's
about all.
I'm
still here.
Friday, December 14, 2012
all but done
Well,
the mountain wall is finished for the most part. We still need to
touch up ever so lightly one or two spots on the last panel (far left
in the image), mostly so it will match the adjoining sections on the
panel next to it.
I
expected to feel elated or at least relieved but what I'm fighting
off, trying to hold in abeyance, is disappointment.
This
whole process, after the carving is done, is so subjective. For one
thing, these panels are so big and heavy that there is no way to put
them all together to see how well the tones are matching. We look at
the one in the sandblast booth, then go look at the adjoining panel
on the rack, trying to hold the density in mind. More? Does it need
more? Does it match, too much?
Everything
is so dusty. After he blasts, I dust off the surface with a bench
brush but there's no getting to the back of the panel where dust also
collects. We try to mitigate that by putting clean black paper on
the blast booth wall and replacing the protective film on the back of
the panel so it's clean also before he does the softer tones. But of
course, after he blasts the first time, dust starts to collect again.
So
we have been taking the protective film off the backs again and
photographing each panel as we finish and then compare the photos to
see how well they match and then making adjustments the next trip in.
But even doing that it's hard to decide because the photos are
taken on different days with different light conditions that we
cannot control. The smooth side we are photographing wants to
reflect the wall of the shop and while the first two panels were
photographed with a bare white wall, the last two were photographed
with the two finished panels against the wall which subtly changes
the intensity of the tones. Not to mention the reflection of the
extruded metal stored high up on that wall and of course, my own
reflection.
This
I do know. The lightest tone on the third panel (second from left in
the image) is too heavy. There is nothing we can do about this and
we are both and neither at fault as we constantly consult until we
either agree or just quit in a fog of indecision. There is no
erasing with sandblasting so now, in order for the fourth panel to
match it must also be too heavy, at least where they join up. This
is what glares at me, that the other main area of the lightest tone
is too heavy.
This
I suspect. That the lightest tone on the first panel (far right in
the image) may be too light. It looks that way in the picture (I
didn't adjust the brightness or contrast at all fearing that I will
diddle with them til they match when they don't) but when we went
back the next week and looked at the actual panels again we each
agreed that they looked similar enough. I'm resisting the urge to
unwrap that one and look again.
Next
week, we will go back, make our final evaluation/adjustment and call
them done, clean them, seal them, wrap them and arrange for pick-up.
I'll
withhold judgement til installation during which I will be a nervous
wreck until I can see if we did well or not.
the
mountain wall, 16' x 9'
the
photograph of the mountain we worked from
Sunday, December 9, 2012
love and marriage
I
see that the Supreme Court is going to take on Prop 8 and the Defense
Of Marriage Act. I would be glad that this debate is finally going
to be put to rest but with such a conservative court, I'm not sure
that they will be able to keep their religious views out of it and
come to the only right decision.
Prop
8, in case you aren't aware, is California's amendment to their state
constitution that banned gay marriage. It has been challenged in the
courts and found to be unconstitutional but it's proponents keep
pushing it to a higher court and it finally made it's way to the top.
The challenge to DOMA is only against the section that prevents the
federal government from recognizing and giving the rightful benefits
to same sex marriages even if it is legal in the couple's home state.
It
seems to me the outcome should be pretty clear. In this country we
are supposed to have separation of church and state.
Although
many states have banned same sex marriages, their main reason for
doing so is based on their religious beliefs, a 5,000 year old book
of stories. Their god finds it abhorrent so they find it abhorrent
and since so many LGBT are not staying in the closet and insist on
being who they are in their public lives as well as their private
lives and they fall in love and want to get married, that somehow
threatens these religious people so they scrambled to make it against
the law. To 'define' marriage. And, by god, their tax dollars will
not go towards benefits to people that god abhors.
Only,
that's just their religious opinion.
The
reality of it is that human gender and sexuality is extremely
complex. It comes in many forms and there is no one 'right' way to
be.
Isn't
it enough that two people, regardless of their sex, have bonded in
love and want to have a committed relationship? And if special civil
rights are given to married people should not same sex couples be
granted those rights as well? Because it's not just about being able
to get health insurance through your spouse's job. It's about having
the right to sit by your loved one and make decisions for them while
they are gravely ill. It's about having the right to inherit,
without all the taxes, the estate of your partner. It's about having
the right to be recognized as a unit by all the powers that be. It's
about not being marginalized in your community. And yes, it's about
getting the same perks from the government as opposite sex couples
and why not?
Regardless
of what they claim, this group of religious people did not invent
marriage and should not be allowed to define marriage, an institution
that has existed in many forms throughout human civilization. I'm
not saying that these religious groups should be forced to marry LGBT
people if they are against it. I am saying they should not be
allowed to force their particular religious beliefs about the right
or wrong of human sexuality on the rest of the population and deny
marriage to anyone who so desires it. Marriage does not require a
religious ceremony.
It
is my great hope that the Supreme Court will be able to take religion
out of the equation altogether when they deliberate these two cases
because when you take religion out of the equation, there is not one
single good reason to deny the gay community the right to marry.
Labels:
being human,
being inhuman,
church,
freedom from religion,
life,
love,
nature,
politics,
rants
Thursday, December 6, 2012
falling
It's
been raining in earnest the last two weeks or so but we still need
rain because it hasn't been raining water but leaves.
We
weren't home even 24 hours last week and while we were gone the trees
shed their leaves in earnest.
They
had been dropping for weeks but not really serious about it.
Now,
the yard lays under a blanket.
oak,
pecan, maple, and tallow
gingko
Tuesday, December 4, 2012
fallbacks
I
wish I could think of something smart or witty or topical to write
about but we are closing in on finishing the mountain wall and that's
pretty much all on my mind. At least the open house is over now so
my days home will be freed up to read or relax or, more probably
knowing me, finish up the peach box. I have two posts planned on
some of the work we've been doing (the wall and the little castings)
but not until it's all finished lest you tire of 'in progress' pics.
Well, the little castings are done but I didn't get them photographed
yet besides the group shot at the show in my last post.
On
to my regular fallback...the yard.
Walking
around the yard yesterday I noticed that the yellow jackets were
swarming on the morning glory bush, harvesting the nectar I guess. I
took several pictures but only these two came out. There were also a
few of some other types of wasps and lots of lady bugs too.
Can
you see all the yellow jackets? There were at least 8 on this
cluster but I guess the other two flew away or are hidden.
This
guy was trying to decide if I was a threat or not. Glad he made the
right decision.
Monday, December 3, 2012
an arty glassy week/end
I'm
tired and I don't want to go back into the city today. We just got
home last night about 9:30. Now we are supposed to go back this
afternoon for our work week on the mountain wall. This going into
the city every week for the last 3 ½ months is beginning to tell on
me. But we are so close to being finished. Two more weeks we think.
We hope. The carving is done on panel 3 so we just have the shading
to do and then the last panel.
We
worked our week last week, came home Thursday evening and then turned
around and went back on Friday for the open house at our friends'
glass blowing studio. It was fun to see the regular participants,
our friend Gene who does fused and stained glass, our friend Jennifer
who flame works beads and makes some awesome earrings, and of course
Dick and Kathy who host the open house in their studio and blow
glass.
It
was a different crowd this year seemed like. Some regulars showed up
but many seemed to be missing. We did all right though. Sold a vase
and a small bowl and one of the little pieces I made just for the
show. Might have sold more but I just wasn't up for explaining over
and over about why these small castings cost so much. Since we have
so much commission work these days I wasn't motivated as much as I
have been at past shows. For me, it was all about the socializing
this year.
Saturday
night after we closed down Marc and I headed over to our local
gallery for their very last opening. Oliver and Nancy are retiring
at the end of the year, closing the gallery. We'll have to find a
new local gallery but it's going to be hard I think, finding the
right one. Goldesberry Gallery was very unique, the only fine craft
gallery in the city and they did very well for us over the years.
We're going to miss them.
And
Sunday after closing we all went to Star Pizza for dinner and
relaxing and laughing with our friends which is why we didn't get
home til 9:30 last night.
Now,
today, I am ready for a day in which nothing is required of me.
Labels:
art glass,
cast glass,
city stuff,
craft,
friendship,
work
Friday, November 30, 2012
fall reading list
-A
very short list this quarter. I've been far too busy to read and my
down time, what little I've had of it, has been spent mindlessly
playing Spider solitaire.-
Goodbye
For Now by Laurie Frankel – a
love story of sorts. Sam, an exceptionally smart software engineer
working for an online dating service develops an algorithm that
actually matches you up with your soul mate. He tests it on himself
and finds and falls in love with the one who happened to also be
employed by the same company. In fact, it works so well, he gets
fired because the company doesn't really want people to meet their
soul mate on the first try because if they do then the company
doesn't make money. When Sam's soul mate Meredith's grandmother dies
suddenly, she is inconsolable and talks Sam into developing an
algorithm that will let her email and chat with her dead grandmother.
Eventually, with the help of Meredith's cousin, they develop it into
a company to help people with their grief. As you might guess, the
inevitable happens and Sam is left bereft. It's a sweet story about
love, loss, mourning, and finally, living.
Black
List by Brad Thor – what does
it say about the reader (or about the heros) when the guys you are
rooting for, the ones you want to win in the end, are basically cold
blooded killers? Perspective is everything, right? The main
character, Scot Harvath, a highly trained and skilled
counterterrorism operative, kills, like, 21 people before the book is
over. Granted, they were all bad guys who were trying to kill him
first and his usual victims were government identified enemies of the
state. Still... The story unfolds as a female hacker, Carolyn, is
trying to send off terribly incriminating evidence of a plot to
overthrow the government by releasing a virus to bring down the
internet before she is caught and killed. There follows an attempt
to kill Harvath, his boss, and all the other operatives that work for
that organization, and it is mostly successful, in an attempt to set
up a frame for the coming 'digital Pearl Harbor'. The story
continues as Harvath meets up with an internationally known hacker,
the recipient of the flash drive, as they try to unravel the attacks
on Caroline and Harvath and the Carlton Group. It's a good story,
well written, and there is a lot of scary information about
surveillance techniques, the role of the internet, and just how often
the government spies on us thanks to the abrogation of our civil
rights in the aftermath of 9/11.
Corduroy
Mansions by Alexander McCall
Smith – I was a little disappointed in this novel which was fairly
entertaining and enjoyable enough. It was very reminiscent of Maeve
Binchy with a central location, in this case the old home turned into
three flats, and separate story lines for all the characters that
occasionally intersect but not as well done. I didn't feel like he
tidied everything up in the end, there were a lot of loose ends.
It's like the story just stopped without any resolution. But beside
that it was a decent, but not great, read.
Earth
Unaware by Orson Scott Card and
Aaron Johnston – this is a prequel to Ender's Game and it centers
on the first contact between humans and formics. Out in the Kuiper
Belt, the free miner families excavate metals from the asteroids and
send them by unmanned quickship to one of the Weigh Stations that
buys the metals. The families live their whole lives on their
spaceship homes in the outer reaches of the solar system. On El
Cavador, Edimar, whose job it is to scan space and interpret the data
from the Sky Eye, finds an object moving much faster than any human
ship is capable of and decelerating on a path that will take it to
the solar System. Unable to contact the Italians family with whom
they have just had a trade meeting, they hurry to intercept them when
they notice another small craft coming from the direction of, what
they now believe to be, an alien spacecraft. They are too late
however and find the four ships of the Italians to be just a debris
field. While they search for survivors, the probe returns and they
have an encounter with the aliens. On board El Cavador, Victor
volunteers to modify a quickship and take the 6 month journey to
Earth to warn the home planet at great risk to his life. After
Victor's departure, El Cavador contacts two other ships in the
vicinity to come up with a plan to try and stop the now obviously
hostile aliens. It's a good book, but then I'm a big fan of Orson
Scott Card. Ender's Game is the story of how humans finally triumph
over the formics, the hero of which is a young boy.
Old
Twentieth by Joe Haldeman –
another sci-fi tale. I had a hard time getting into this one which
is why it took me so long to read. I finally finished it this
morning and my end reaction was WTF!? I thought I knew what the
story was about but now I'm not so sure. A vaccine of sorts is
developed that basically causes the body to repair itself ad
infinitum making people, for all intents and purposes, immortal.
Because, as we all know, when pharmaceuticals first come out they are
exorbitantly expensive so that at first only the wealthy and powerful
can avail themselves of it. Eventually it would have become
available to everyone but panic took hold of the population and a war
between the immortals and the nots broke out. The immortals won by
developing a toxin that killed everyone that had not had the
treatment. They soon discovered how much they had depended on the
segment of society that hadn't been wealthy enough to have had access
to the treatment. This is all narrated and filled in as background
by a guy who was 16 or so when the war happened. He's over two
hundred now and on a starship with 800 other volunteers headed for an
earth-like planet 20 light years away. His job on this multi-ship
expedition is to run the 'time-machine' for the residents, a sort of
virtual reality travel agent/technician to the past (the total
sensory illusions are built up out of people's memories and histories
so only the past is available). At least half the story takes place
in the time machine on the ship where Jake begins to notice
'anomolies' and one day on one of his 'observational trips' he meets
himself and himself says 'we have to talk'. Anyway, people start
dying, the first two while they were in the machine and then they
hear from earth that people are dying there too, mostly first
generation immortals, about half in their own time machines and true
to form, a third person dies on the ship but not in the machine.
There are discussions about going into suspended animation and Jake,
as a 1st
generation immortal makes plans to submit until brighter minds can
find out what is happening and fix it but before he does he wants to
go back in one more time and talk to the program that has recently
revealed itself as an AI. He has begun to realize that things are
not what he thought. Life is an illusion and it's on a loop while
the 600+ surviving in stasis immortals hurtle to their future 18
light years away in a dead ship. Or was that also illusion?
How
It All Began by Penelope Lively
– An older woman is mugged from behind, falls, and breaks her hip.
The story starts as she hits the ground. Writing in a narrative
style, the author tells the stories of the people affected by this
happenstance and how their lives are changed because of it. The
actions of a complete stranger cause a chain of events that affect
far more than anyone would suppose. Took me a while to get into it
but that probably has more to do with my state of mind than the
quality of the book.
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Z is for...
This is my
last entry for the Alphabet Game. I am finally at 'Z'. Unlike my
friend Jane of the messy hair, from whom I got this idea, who
finished her series in a timely fashion, it has taken me 1 year, 9
months, 15 days to get through mine. Once again, if you haven't been
following along all this time and would like to see the other
entries, there is a link on my side bar under the heading 'stuff
about me'. If you are from the link, keep clicking on 'older posts' at the bottom until you finally get to A.
Z is for...zany,
zebra, zone, zipper
Z is for zipper.
I have a pet
peeve. It's one shared by many people, I think, only my peeve is in
direct opposition to theirs.
The peeve in
question is how drivers act when approaching a lane ending sign on a
highway.
Quite a few
people believe that as soon as they see that sign they should, must,
move over to the lane that continues even if it doesn't end for
another 500 or 1000 yards. They dutifully move over as the traffic
gets slower and slower as it approaches the merge point.
And they get
angrier and angrier as they sit there 'doing the right thing' in
their minds while other drivers speed on by to the merge point. A
lot of road rage is generated this way with some people in the
continuing lane edging over to try to prevent drivers from passing
them in the lane that is ending further up.
I don't get
that. What is the purpose of abandoning a perfectly good lane long
before it ends just to get slowed down to a near stop as you creep
toward the merge point? Perhaps they see it as good manners on their
part and bad manners on the other driver's part.
Me? I'm one of
those drivers that speed along to the merge point and then move over.
There are also
overpasses where highways intersect that take you from one freeway to
another, and these ramps often start out as two lanes and merge down
to one. No one is moving over long before they get on the ramp even
knowing it will merge down to one lane. No one gets upset, no road
rage, no one trying to prevent other drivers from passing them before
the merge point. The two lanes simply merge at the merge point and
people continue on.
It's like a
zipper. You take turns. One car from this lane, one car from that
lane, one car from this lane, one car from that lane. Easy.
So why is it
different when a freeway or highway or even a surface road loses a
lane and traffic must merge? Because there is a sign that alerts you
to the loss of a lane?
It's a
zipper, people! Just keep going til you merge at the merge
point. Be polite, take turns, don't be a jackass if you choose to
move over early and get slowed down by the drivers passing you and
merging before you.
Now, those
people who use the shoulders to pass a long line of slow traffic and
then barge in in front of drivers in an actual lane is totally
different.
I'm all for
paint balling them as they pass.
If I had a paint
ball gun that is.
Friday, November 23, 2012
fun day
Yesterday
the family came out to the country house for Thanksgiving, children
and spouses and a friend and grandchildren. Even my sister stopped
by on her way home from spending the day with her daughter and
grandkids. The kids all came loaded down with food and all we had to
do was cook the turkey which Marc did early in the day.
We
pulled an assortment of chairs (an antique wheel chair, 2 beach
loungers, plastic patio chair, metal patio chair, and a 5 gallon
bucket) out into the Big Back Yard, put up the hammock, and sat
around enjoying the beautiful afternoon, drinking beer and messing
with the kids.
Mikey
and his dad were throwing the football around when it went into one
of the pecan trees and pecans rained down. The game with the ball
quickly changed to knocking pecans out of the trees. The grandkids
dragged out one of the ladders and climbed into the trees with a
baseball bat. The ball was no longer thrown to another person but
kicked into the canopies.
Warming
up all the food in a timely fashion was a challenge in our one oven
but no one seemed to mind that everything was less than hot. We
crowded around the dining room table and stuffed ourselves.
When
evening came, Mikey pulled one of the burn barrels up by the lawn
chairs and started a fire, not that it was cold, and Mikey's friends
from down the street showed up with fire crackers so the boys all had
a grand time.
Eventually
everyone headed home except for the four grandkids who are staying
with us til Sunday.
It
was a good day.
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Y is for...
sun salutation
This is the
second to last entry in my alphabet game. If you want to read them
all, there is a link on my side bar under the Stuff About Me heading
but you'll have to scroll down all the way to the bottom to get them
in the proper sequence. Not that it really matters.
Y is
for...yellow, yarrow, youth, yoga
Y is for yoga
I was introduced
to yoga when I was 20 years old...I think. It could have been a year
or so earlier when I was initiated into TM (that's transcendental
meditation) when I was 19 but I don't really remember any instruction
in yoga, just sitting in the group sessions or alone at home with
legs crossed trying to ignore how uncomfortable I was becoming. The
meditation thing didn't last long with me. I was only successful
with it a time or two. Mostly I just fell asleep or was fidgety
trying to focus on my mantra til the time was up.
But the
following year, the year I lived in Chicago, some friends and I
hitch-hiked to D.C. for the anti-war rally and we met some folk who
were involved in Ananda Marga, a meditation group with a different
spiritual leader than TM. I had become disenchanted with TM early on
because they were very much about the money. They charged you to be
initiated into their organization.
In D.C., my
boyfriend and I had become separated from our friends and we were
waiting, had been waiting for a while, at the designated 'meet up
again' spot when we were approached by a couple of guys offering us
respite and an eye out for our friends.
They offered us
food and water and a bathroom and rest, united us with the rest of
our group and found us a ride back. They asked for nothing in
return. Neither did they try to convert us or entice us in any way
but they were so serene and selfless and kind and you name it and so
we learned some stuff about who they were. Which I am not going into
now because this isn't really about them.
It happened that
there were only three teachers in this country at the time who were
qualified to initiate anyone into their 'meditative' life and one of
them lived in Chicago. So one evening found some of us at the home
of an Indian man and his family while he talked to us about his
spiritual leader and meditation and yoga and then he led us in some
simple yoga to relax our bodies and he initiated us one by one into
meditation with a mantra. I don't remember if it was all on the same
night or if it was the second time we went but what I do remember is
that while he softly spoke to us, his aura expanded with a bright
white light until it filled the room. Seriously. It was awesome.
My friend and I
continued to go once a week for a while but we had to take the train
out to a suburb and it was in the evenings because the man had a
regular job and then a few months later I moved back to Texas. I did
not become an adherent to the Indian guru but I did retain the yoga
and the mantra.
Even though I've
never been able to develop a daily or even weekly home practice I
find yoga to be very beneficial and it's one of the things or habits
that I attribute my fairly good health to. It keeps you limber and
agile and strengthens your muscles. It massages your organs and
helps them function, it rids you of toxins through measured breathing
and teaches you to pay attention to your body.
I have used
meditation and yoga sporadically as needed or as opportunity
presented itself in my life. For the past 20 years or so I have been
involved in one or another weekly gatherings with a teacher, though
not always every week or even every year.
My most recent
weekly get together was in the home of a wonderful amazing woman who
would lead a small group of friends in yoga and meditation. Alas,
she moved to New Orleans to be near her daughter and her family.
It's been over
two years now since I have done any yoga on a regular basis and I can
feel the difference. Out here though my options are limited so I
best find a way to set aside a little time one day a week at home if
I want to continue being able to get up off the floor.
Not that I'm on
the floor a lot unless I'm doing yoga.
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