Blog Archive

Monday, December 15, 2008

Winter Doings


There are many, many winter doings to record, but it's late--almost one this morning--and I want to be a busy one tomorrow, mailing out packages and baking. I hope to finally finish my decorating tomorrow, too.

I've been struck this year at how Christmas is such a poignant time for many people--a hard time to be away from family, those who are absent for a short while and those who are gone for a long, long time. To those who suffer in this season, I bid you peace and hope you find unexpected joy.


My heart feels full of the many good people I love and who love me in return. Soon Martin and I will celebrate ten years of marriage, and soon we will mark Merry's 7th and Elspeth's third birthday. This season is so packed with celebrations that it is tricky to engage fully in each one, but I mean to try.

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Advent

Outside my office window the rain beads on the bare red branches of the stripped black walnut. I suppose this is how my soul should be, this time of advent--still, waiting. But it is not. My soul feels more like a decked-out tinsel tree, laden with blinking colored lights, at times giddy and at time irritated by the tickling of fake snowflakes.

It is December 11th. Just around the corner are the girls' birthdays, our anniversary, Christmas, and a house full of family. There is so much to look forward to, and my mind feels fragmented and busy.

Advent is all about waiting, for preparing ourselves for the baby who changed the world and who changes us daily. Waiting for babies at advent is my specialty, and an experience that brings me closer to understanding Mary's waiting. As our pregnant pastor reflected last Sunday, and as I have often thought, being pregnant is a perfect metaphor for the advent season. At those times of waiting for Merry and Elspeth, I felt filled with life, life that spoke to me in secret ways as I went about daily tasks. I sat quietly as others talked, and the baby would rise to meet my hands. But that life was cloaked in secrets. I could not rush the opening of my gift; I had to wait, sometimes in great discomfort, sometimes overwhelmed by the enchantment of my baby's dancing. This baby, separate from me but inside of me, this new gift for the world and for myself, would be born through the paradox of pain and hope. All I had to do was wait.

But waiting is not very easy. For me, waiting makes me want to fill my life with busyness before an event arrives. I want to be so busy that I do not have time to be impatient. I want to occupy myself with lesser joys so that I do not have a moment to feel sorry that the greater joy is not yet upon me. But that destroys the magic of waiting, the silence that should enfold us, the solitude where we prepare ourselves for Coming.

This solitude is hard to find these days. As I write, Elspeth is up AGAIN from her nap and she scoots around the floor with the baby. I am just waiting for Merry's wail, where she informs me that Elspeth is UP and she is IN BED. I envy the tree outside my window. There are no squirrels or birds or two-year olds hanging on its branches.

But advent is also about seasons, and about accepting, with joy, the season that you and I have been given. Is my life crazzzzzzzy? Then I accept it with joy (this said sometimes through clenched teeth). Some day my life will be different, and I will struggle to accept that change with joy as well. I know myself all too well--always jumping to the next stage in my mind, assuring myself that tomorrow will be more exciting, more peaceful, more something or other.

Little baby, little child, I wait for you. Help me to wait well.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Solitude and Crazy Life

So I'm reading an entry on this great blog, Kicking the Gourd, and suddenly I find myself writing a paragraph or two on the comments. And suddenly I realized I haven't really written in a long time. Also, this comment turned into one directed back at me, with big letters: GO AND WRITE. Seriously, I lose so much time just messing around. By the time the girls are fed and in bed and the house has been saved once again from falling to the ground in a heap of cobwebs and dust, I just can't summon the energy to do anything but peruse some magazine or stare open-mouthed into the TV screen. So R.P., I would add that my life is imbalanced, too. Do I lack the commitment, the sisu, the devotion? Is it enough some days to survive, engaging all day with three sweet faces and congratulating myself that all five of us are still alive at the end of the day?

So with apologies to R.P. from K the Gourd, and with assurances that this comment was really for you, well, here it is:

i have a slightly different perspective on the "giving to people" thing than you. that is because i am in the midst of a crazy parenting phase in my life--three girls, one who just learned how to crawl--and I have to tell myself that it is okay to stop and do something else once and a while besides giving to other human beings. nobody gives perfectly, that's inarguable, and giving to another is a choice whether the motivations begin or follow the act. so i'm thinking, reading your blog, that life is all about balance. a life lived entirely in art and not in true community with humans is empty, no doubt. however, a life lived in constant, active giving to others can also be one of selfishness (to every sacrificial act, an ugly, self-congratulatory underbelly can be present).

i guess i'm thinking this way: i have to be fed by solitude, by communing with god through writing, silence, reading--i need to be filled if i am to be spilled out for someone else. on the other hand, being with people, actively serving and bungling through real life with my hands dirty makes me a much better, much more humble writer.

there is no dichotomy. the two work together, feed and eat one another. jesus' life shows us this. solitude, people. people, solitude. we desperately need both. take this perspective from someone on the "other end" of your spectrum: no time to write, exhausted by people. there are seasons to life, and each season demands that we back up, eye the scales, and balance again.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

Giving Thanks


For friends (nineteen of us in our house this year, including my brother!),

For girls all three,


For warm applesauce fresh and local,

(Merry with our friend and pastor Carrie & inutero boy 2),

For this crawling, dimpled baby,


For snow,


For mischevious middle child,


For saucy gourds and pumpkins,


For candlelight,


For sleep


sleep


sleep and holidays.

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Kenneth Wheeler, My Grandpa


My Grandpa passed away last evening right after supper time, very peacefully and surrounded by people who loved him and who sang him his favorite hymns as he died.

He was my last living grandparent, and I feel privileged that my girls were able to know him. Yesterday as Merry sketched at the breakfast table, completely out the blue, she began humming "I'll Fly Away," which was my Nana's favorite hymn. I took this as a sign, found the hymnal, and began singing for Grandpa: I'll Fly Away, Marching to Zion, and Pass Me Not. The girls joined in and I felt that God somehow took our songs to Grandpa since we could not be there in Ohio with him. (We'll head down on Wednesday for services).

The girls and Martin and I discussed at supper what Grandpa would eat for his first meal in heaven, after so long with Parkinson's disease, living in his weak, failing body--I think the consensus was pancakes. It's sad that he is gone but such a mercy too--he was taken care of at home by hospice care, by my mother who travelled to Ohio once a month for years, and most importantly, by his loving, generous wife--a woman whom I admire and who has shown me a real picture of Jesus: patient, gentle, and faithful.

We love you, Grandpa!

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Baking Days, and Apple Days too


Here I show off some images from my first baking day. Merry convinced me not to buy bread from the store anymore and so I acquiesced. And then we figured out that bread done completely by hand tastes so much better than bread from the bread maker. And besides, did not my own mama bake (and mostly burn) buttery rolls for dinner? I remember her famous dough dance, when, in order to knead, she would haul off the dough to us across the room, jumping up and down on the furniture and whipping the dog into a frenzy. I remember one time in particular when she jumped onto the rocking chair and threw--was it dough or a head of cauliflower? Indeed I think it was cauliflower.

And am I not prepared to replicate the happy ethos of my own blissful childhood?

Merry at least is aiming to replicate Laura Ingall Wilder's childhood, but I may just be falling a little short.

Baking day was not the sort of day I imagine uber-organized Ma Ingalls spending, with everything organized, the bread happily and calmly rising under a checked cloth. No, with my three children, my broody baking day was far from calm, though it was fun. Skating in flour is always a good time! I decided to double the whole wheat recipe so I could get a lot done at once to freeze and the pile of dough was absolutely massive. I mixed with one hand (Beatrix on my hip) for a while as Merry sprinkled in flour, and then Merry did the lion's share of kneading. We had Sally and her boys for dinner and basically we all ate bread. . .and more bread. . .and more bread. IMMMM.


LOST (We finally ducked under some caution tape).

Well, the garden has frozen three times now; the lovely, tall pink and white cosmos and the marigolds and what was left of the tomato plants are black and dry.

Good luck to them. It is a little sad to see the garden dead, but mostly I am glad not to feel guilty anymore about not keeping up with the raspberries and cherry tomatoes.

In the meanwhile, Martin has completed the fence (!!)--pictures later. And we have been doing apple days things: the girls and I and friends found ourselves hopelessly lost in a corn maze; we and friends stuck our jaws tightly shut with caramel apples; I have stashed away loads of applesauce, and we have had to turn on our heat three times already. Baby's got a cold and Merry has healed well after her face was stepped on by a soccer cleat.
CHARMING WITCH

I chopped loads and loads and LOADS of celery from market and I can't for the life of me get motivated to take care of our endless hot peppers (thinking of drying but dread sewing them up).
BEATRIX ON THE HAY RIDE, AND MY HAIR

HARVEST IS IN!

So I've started my Christmas shopping and begun planning for company. I do so want my dining room wall to go away! I received an estimate and gasped, but I am conniving how to trim costs. . .and no, you worriers, this does not entail me with a sledgehammer, though in my parallel life I am a sledgehammer wielding menace.

Friday, October 17, 2008

Mommy, can you please go away?


The above is what Elspeth asked me in the bath the other night, before she bounced a ball off Beatrix's head. It had been a red letter day for Elspeth. I stood in the doorway and took notes, attempting to remember in just what sequence the craziness happened.

Wednesdays are my extra kid days, because that is when I keep an eye (and teach music to) two or three additional sweetpeas while their mama is at the doctor. Usually my friend Sally takes pity on me and whisks Elspeth away for the morning to run with her son, Benjamin, but today Sally was absorbed in oldest son's field trip and not in the series of small comic crises that knit the fabulous Cockroft fabric.

Let me also preview this day by recalling the memory of a recent nightmare I endured: someone gave me a long-division problem. My dream-self tried to slog through this problem but hopelessly lost her way, and the dream ended in despondence and hopelessness. This horrible dream became reality when the oldest boy arrived with a whole slough of long-division problems. I optimistically sat down beside him at the table and began working alongside him on a piece of scratch paper until Martin took pity on me (laughed, actually), and sent me away: "You can't trust Aunt Kim with numbers. . ."

So Martin stayed with the children. . .hallelujah. . .and I zoomed off with the two smallest to farmer's market, where I spent approximately sixty dollars on the end of the season items, most interestingly, a bunch of celery made up of gorgeous stalks about three feet long.

A hot-dog for Elspeth and I was back again. The kids were finishing up their work, Martin was on his way out the door, and all was right with the world. And then, to crown the morning, the handsome UPS man dropped off Martin's and my early Christmas present to each other: a player for our SansaFuze (our nifty Mp3 player). I took it out of the packaging with one hand (the other, needless to say, busy with Beatrix on my hip), and set it up. Turns out the process was longer than I expected--the thing needed software downloaded, which I started--and I don't know whether it was during this process that one of the children spilled hot soup all over herself or not. Shortly after this clean-up, the three kids left with their grandma and I called Martin, pumped about the SansaFuze player, and blasted him with music over the phone. Sounds great! I enthused. I had done my research on this one, planned carefully for a long time, waited until just the right time to buy--and like all of you who live on one income or pinch pennies regardless, we were pretty excited to spend money on something we really wanted (besides milk or water or eggs or diapers).

I had anticipated playing some stunning guitar music on this player for a long time, and after I hung up the phone, (regardless of the fact the children should have been going down for naps), I turned up the volume. And noticed that--yes--the speakers were buzzing! Like an old car stereo. I couldn't believe it--I was inordinately disappointed. After troubleshooting for a while and then calling Martin completely exasperated, I tried to put the disappointment behind me and bundled the children off to bed.

(The other night, I must tell you, Elspeth learned how to successfully climb out of her crib. Was it the third time she came downstairs, cute as a button in her nightgown, or the fourth time Martin paused our movie, when we realized our days in the shade (our days of legal and approved toddler confinement) were over?) At any rate, after several disciplining sessions on Wednesday afternoon where I dragged Elspeth off the bed and deposited her back in her big-girl bed, I felt surprised and encouraged to hear--absolutely NOTHING from her room. Splendid! She had fallen fast asleep!

So I read chapter after chapter of Dr. Doolittle to Merry, all about the despicable Pirates of Barbary and how Dr. Dolittle (with the help of a rather large shark) convinces Ben Ali, the most horrid of the pirates, to give up his rude ways and become a birdseed farmer instead. And Ben Ali agrees. This scene is enough to give hope to the most exasperated parent. Change is possible, and indeed it seemed as though it were as I read to Merry in peace and quiet while Beatrix and Elspeth slept obediently in their proper places. Like little bitty angels no less.

I was finishing a chapter in bliss when I heard the front door creak open. Martin was home already? Could the day just get better and better? But no, it was not my dear husband at the door but the middle child, all devil, cute as a button, covered in sand, who had let herself quietly down the stairs and out the door and who had been playing unsupervised for about an hour or so. Let me tell you too that Martin has made one gate for the fence, but not the gate that matters most: that is, the one at the end of our path for the postal carrier which leads unhindered into the road a foot or two away.

It was through this gaping hole that Elspeth later that Wednesday afternoon kicked a pumpkin from our recent trip to a farm. The pumpkin bumped down the stairs, down our walk, and then in some parody of a picture book or silly song, went galumphing down the road toward an approaching car. "That's my pumpkin!" Merry cried. I bravely and clumsily took off barefoot after the runaway pumpkin with Beatrix bouncing along on my hip and retrieved it before a car made it into pie filling.

This takes us to the evening, where I somehow still had the gumption to act like a responsible adult and not order pizza. In an effort to lighten the nonsense in our freezer, I finally bit the bullet and thawed an enormous box of cheap fish which Martin purchased a good year and an half earlier in hopes that we would eat more [cheap] fish and live longer lives as a result. I have been avoiding this box of [cheapo] fish because I know something about [cheapass] fish: if it is cheap, it tastes like it was cheap. The same applies to bad, cheap fish as applies to bad men: you can try to disguise it (with breading, for instance), but you cannot change it. The nasty remains. But I am trying to be economical and not waste food, and so I cut open these leaking, smelly bags of fish and began to deal with what would become our supper. These tepid fillets kept coming. There was an ungodly amount of the stuff, and it did not smell good. I filled two large sheets full of fillets, fixed two different ways, and shoved them into the oven. And then I had to go to work ridding the kitchen of the essence de YUCK (as my cousin Jordana says) with a bottle of Windex and papertowels.

Martin finally arrived home and it turns out he had just had a lovely tea at the tea room in town so he wasn't terribly hungry--too bad for that poor man, because the nameless fish he had bought was plenty and the eaters were few.

What can I say? I took a bite and refused to eat more, and as I watched Merry polish off hers, I began hoping we would not spend the night retching. Martin had not eaten much of his, either--"What kind of fish IS this?" I asked him, and he shrugged. "I'm not sure," he said, "It's cheaper-than-cod. I bought it from Wal-Mart [a year and a half ago]."

GO FIGURE.

I scraped every last of those endless fillets into the trash, and we ate my friend Tonya's amazing bourbon applesauce for supper (in new, clean dishes, mind you)--even the baby ate the applesauce, and whether it was the bourbon or the sugar, we all felt happier for it.

That night as Beatrix splashed maniacally in the bathtub, sucking like crazy on her lower lip, trying in vain to reach one of the bobbing bath toys, I stood and watched my children and though I was alone (Martin teaching) and though I was still tasting the fish from dinner at intervals, I began to relax. The day was almost over, and though I did not know at that moment how Elsepth would fling a box of dried spaghetti noodles all over the sun room the very next day, I would be ready. For these days do run by all too slowly and then all too quickly: blink, and another day is ending, sigh too long and I miss the magic in the chaos.

Monday, October 13, 2008

Life Lovin'


I love autumn. And I unabashedly love my own life, with my three girls (in various states of crazy) and my silly husband who can dance a jig and build a fence.

Yes, a fence. Yes, dance. But not at the same time.

Yes, I DO love life. Sometimes I have to remind myself of this--sometimes when Elspeth is crawling out of her crib for the fifth time in one night or Elspeth is squirting out all my dish soap and all the baby soap and starting in on a bottle of hand sanitizer

or when Elspeth is spitting out dried beans all over the floor

or when Elspeth is coloring herself and the furniture with markers or when Elspeth is falling off chairs or when Elspeth is scribbling in books or when Elspeth is jumping around the baby's head

or when Elspeth is telling me NO

or when Elspeth is smearing sunscreen into the driveway or when Elspeth is throwing food or when Elspeth is gluing her sister's head to the bathroom tile.

Actually, this last one has not happened yet but it is just a matter of time.

I have to love every minute, every nanosecond, at least in some overarching way, because it is going by so quickly. I only have to look at Merry to see how quickly my babies grow.

Thursday, October 9, 2008

Old Fashioned Days, Again


Martin chose the girl's bedtime tonight to go ahead and cook up the deer burger patties sitting in our fridge. It wasn't long before the delectable smells of bread baking (my concession to Merry's wishes for simplicity--no more bread from the grocery--) were eclipsed by Martin's venison chili. I'm sure Pa's freshly killed buck simmering on Ma's stove smelled wonderful to Laura and Merry, but I have no fond reactions to the edgy, bitter smell of dead deer or the tangy taste of its meat. In fact, it makes me sick to my stomach. So I took a break from feeding the baby to sleep to spray the entire upstairs with vanilla room spray--imagine that delightful combination.

But I did think you all would enjoy seeing pictures from our recent trip to an "old fashioned" village here in Pennsylvania. Merry was so excited that she withdrew and became very shy (a pattern she started early--frowning furiously on merry-go-rounds, etc.). In fact when the school teacher asked her to ring the bell, she could barely pull the rope. Elspeth (of a disposition not given to much introspection or consequence weighing) evidenced no such reservations--she would have rung it dry given the chance.

Merry internalizes much and I think she filed away this bright, cool day in particular for further inspiration. She even found an old fashioned toy--a wooden cup and ball on a string--at the gift shop, something she had patiently saved her money in hopes of finding someday.

Martin's got this bowl full of deer meat and chips and he's waving it under my nose. "It's really good," he says, "Take a bite."

No thanks, Pa.

Obama!


Obama fever rises in our house daily. Every time I pass a yard with the blue sign I want to yell out the window. Yeah! That's right! ObaMA! ObaMA!

Martin and I have been getting through the debates lately by eating varying amounts of junk while we watch. I steadily worked through the girl's gummy bears: an attempt at sugar therapy to keep me skating through the morass of folksy talk in the VP debate. (And counting Palin's winks: Three in total. If I were a bird, say, even a relatively large bird with a fountain of yellow feathers and Big Bird were running, I would not vote for Big Bird just because Big Bird is a bird.)

Tuesday evening--we bundled the girls off to bed with ten minutes to spare, in which we loaded up on food and headed up to the computer. We settled on the couch, I with a mega bowl of ice cream, Martin with the salt and vinegar chips. One minute to spare. And then Martin disappears. "Hurry up, Martin!" I yell--and there's nothing but groans. Did I mention Martin, when stressed, gets incredible tummy upset? He finally joined me, rather green, and I ate his chips after I finished my ice cream.

I usually steer away from politics in my blog, but I have never cared more about any election as I do about this one. I think Obama and I feel hope and energy. There's so much I feel is at stake, and though neither party is perfect, I am excited about all that Obama can bring to this country of ours: to education, health care, diplomacy, energy, the environment.

For my children and me:

Yes, we can!

Monday, September 29, 2008

Nighty Night


Trying to get Merry sleepy here. She's planning a play and she's so full of vim and crazy she can't go to sleep. Almost ten.

She is proposing ways to fall asleep. The latest: make a picture frame, cover it with feathers, put in a picture of someone you like, hang it on the wall, look at it, and go to sleep with good dreams.

I just figured out she is describing a Native American dream catcher. Maybe we'll make one soon. Will it banish endless brain prattling? It had better have a lot of feathers.

Mommy? Do you know something? Do you know what helps me go to sleep? . . .A little sound. Like music or something. . .like music without singing, like the music we listen to on Bach.

And. . .she's off to bed. I think I made her yawn.

Tonight Elspeth said (her book is Mickey and the Night Kitchen. She fills in on the "Cockledoddle-do!" with great gusto--Merry's was Where the Wild Things Are. Sendak fans.)--Mommy, Mickey is my friend.

And it occurred to me that she expressed the power and magic of good characters and good books. We feel as if a character, no matter how messy or lovely or crazy, is our friend. We know that person intimately by the end of the book, and we miss them when the book is over.

I just finished enjoying the latest installment in Alexander McCall Smith's Botswana #1 Ladies' Detective Agency series. Prior to this novel, I had finished a more challenging, serious book and I was ready for a bit of a holiday, so I checked out Happiness and Blue Shoes from the Library. What a treat. Precious Ramotswe, and all those engaging characters, they are my friends. My friends. At one point, after finishing a chapter (I savor every word, like chocolate drops, like Smarties), the baby asleep beside me and Martin beside her, a certain illusive feeling swept over me: a memory of childhood in Kenya, when all was safe and the weather was warm and the skies were clear and the dust sparkled in the air and I could hear the swish-swish sound of bare feet on wooden floors. . .this feeling washed over me like warm afternoon sunshine and I thought, "If only I could fall asleep in this feeling." And so I did.

If only I could bottle up that feeling and take little sips of it after a long, taxing day. But that would be cheating the magic, and then it would not be magic anymore but medication. Because that sort of contentment, that deep peace that hits you when you least expect it--it's like encountering a good character--you extend your hand with surprise, but with steady recognition. Ah, yes, it's you. Haven't I met you somewhere before?

Friday, September 19, 2008

Finding Potatoes



Ate these beauties last week, flavored by our own rosemary.

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Sarah Palin ... In My Dreams

Like most people I know, Kim and I (Martin writing) have felt some tumolt over the presidential campaign. Certainly no candidate has received as much attention recently as Sarah Palin. And although at times I'd like to NOT know the latest news, polls, and rumors about the major players--I'm supposed to be writing poetry with abandon this semester--I can't seem to ignore what's in front of my nose all the time.

None of this, however, explains why I keep dreaming about Ms. Palin. Once, previous to this week (at least two years ago, in fact), I had a dream about Missoula that I felt, upon waking, I should immediately set down as a poem. I did so, and the poem created itself as easily as the dream had.

But now, twice this week, I've had vivid dreams about Sarah Palin which I felt I should set down as poems. I have done so, as faithfully as I can, with the realization that dreams play like movies, and poetry is words and lines.

Sarah Palin = unlikely muse?

If you know what's going on here, please do tell.


Walking with Sarah Palin

I walked last night with Sarah Palin.
I wanted to ask her
whether I a liberal and she
could be friends
We were walking through neighborhoods
a city park
I remember a man snapped a picture
with a large bellows camera
and a big smoking flash
only I seemed to notice she walked
with her head down
We crossed the parking lot of a strip center
she said she liked
Portobello mushroom sandwiches
and she made one right there

We turned into another residential street
stopped at her house
a stone bungalow
Where do you live I asked
she said This is San Francisco
She threw her keys on a small table
as I waited on her porch
I was surprised by Sarah Palin she was
quietly lovely
We started again
how leafy the West can be
but I wanted to ask my question
can we
can a person like me and a person like you
comfort one another
She anticipated me
No politics she said No questions on politics
if we’re going to walk


(dreamt on 9/15/08)

---------------------------------------

Working with Sarah Palin

My new officemate is
Sarah Palin
She moves in
with two men as tall and broad
as billboards
There is no advance notice
I look up
from my work
to see my lamp replaced
with a different lamp
dangling with beads
The men
fan across the room
without once seeing me

Leave the desk alone
she tells them
sitting
She swivels in her
black bucket chair
as if testing it all out
yes perhaps she thinks
this will do this will do
nicely
She swivels to face me
We are knee to knee
and I am wearing
nothing
but a blue T shirt
which I tug as low as it can go
not low enough
Sarah Palin shows no alarm she
just smiles
Cold Pacific waves break
against our office windows

~

We’re at a restaurant
a booth for six
but she and I are the only
people I recognize
the rest laugh and pass food
like they’re in a Chili’s ad
It’s as if
Sarah Palin has never been
to Chili’s
she grabs at unpeeled garlic
stuffs raw onion
in her mouth
Somehow I’m her agent her image-maker
laughing with the others
as I frantically bat away her hands

~

Sarah Palin and I are in a large assembly
we don’t know each other we’ve
never met
and a seated crowd separates us
It’s like the crowning scene in
Scent of a Woman
all of us talking under our breath
expectant and
Sarah Palin this event is
in her honor

A man stands speaks sits another man
stands and
Sarah Palin is introduced
called to the stage
As she begins to get up
the spotlight falls
on a mocking caricature
already on stage a
grotesque political cartoon
The crowd erupts
the real Sarah Palin
unrecognized cycles through
seven shades of shame
and runs she runs out of there
I follow

~

We play a primitive baseball game
with the boys

~

Operatives from her own party
try to push her from a plane

~

O Sarah Palin what did you do
to deserve this


(dreamt 9/17/08)

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Birthday Festivities


Petit cupcakes. . .I, as adopted aunt, indulge in ze frufru of pink icing and the yum-yum of seven-minute frosting and raspberries from our garden.



Thought I'd post a quick log on my adopted niece Cat's birthday. My friend Nancy Greenthumb did me the honor of letting me throw a turning-seven festival. The day was so hot that the backpack (and baby inside) became very sticky. . .but I got my baking done early. I covered the tables in white butcher paper so we could write notes to the birthday girl.

After cake, when we were opening presents, Hurricane Ike's winds finally got to us and blew mightily. Martin's newspapers and hay he had laid earlier on the garden beds scattered wildly all over our yard (and they are still there on this day).

Happy eighth year, my dear! Live it well!

Cat's kind, classy Aunt M.J.--always with a dry sense of humor and kind observation.
More adopted family. . .

Birthday Mama (this shot, from Martin's shindig, is too perfect not to include here, though it's out of place).
The Birthday Papa, (and brother),

And oldest brother, with dear Grandma in the background.

And Baby's awake! Again!