Change is what life’s all about …
16 Apr 2013 Leave a comment
http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2013/04/12/weekly-photo-challenge-change/
I can feel the mix of emotions experienced by the farm wife who, through the wonder of a time machine, finds herself standing in front of her former home — the one she watched her raw new husband build board by board, then furnished with the bare necessities of life and swept daily with a crude broom in order to keep the dust to a dull roar. I see her sending her stoic farmer for the mid-wife and birthing their babies in the same bed where they were made out of love and awkwardness-turned-to-familiarity. I see her well-tended garden gone to ruin and reclaimed by the elements. Her disbelief. Her chagrin. The ache in her heart. The incomprehensible change that overtook it all once she was out of the picture.
I see the change in my own life, moving from painful to sweet, that has brought me to the man who pulls off the highway, drives down a dirt road, and treks across a wheat field because he spots just the photograph I need for my blog.
I try to open-heartedly embrace change since I learned years ago that it’s what life’s all about. Once you get that far, it all becomes infinitely simpler to deal with.
Striking matadors could result in a lot of bull for Spain
11 Apr 2013 Leave a comment
in Daily Prompt, Press This, Re-blogging Tags: happy stuff, humor, life
Striking matadors could result in a lot of bull for Spain.
Ned’s humor suits me just fine and I laugh at nearly everything he writes. Funny guy.
Surgical Fun With Hobos
11 Apr 2013 Leave a comment
in Daily Prompt, Press This, Re-blogging Tags: family, humor, life, relationships
Fathead Follies rarely disappoints in the humor department. Any parent will relate (and cringe) upon reading this story.
You’re On Your Own, Pal
11 Apr 2013 2 Comments
in Daily Prompt, Press This, Re-blogging Tags: be real, blogging, brave, friendship, inspiration, learning, life, living, marriage, relationships
I love Transman and his story … and this one touched my heart in a unique way. It deserves to be Pressed.
My 100th Post
10 Apr 2013 6 Comments
in Graphics that Grab Me, My Thoughts Tags: celebrations, family, happiness, happy stuff, life, living, love, loving, marriage, relationships
The following post is in celebration of my time on WordPress — one hundred posts since January, 2013. My husband has retired a bit early, which is another reason for celebration, and he’s regaining his health and color more every day — the best reason for celebrating that I can think of. Here’s to life and health!
Things I love about my life …
- Slowly waking up, falling asleep again, rolling over, finally letting my eyes stay open.
- Talking in bed, then spacing off in front of my computer while sweetums makes coffee.
- Soaking in the hot-tub and talking, talking, talking.
- Enjoying whatever the cook is in the mood to make for breakfast.
- Spending the morning in our jammies, writing at our computers, sending each other emails … me upstairs, him in his downstairs studio … “This is funny.” “You’ll like this.” “Incredible musician – watch this clip!”
- Meeting in the kitchen for soup or sandwiches or salad or leftovers. Or maybe hopping in the car and sharing lunch out somewhere.
- Afternoons spent doing housework or yardwork – sweet feeling of accomplishment.
- Going for walks together, racking up steps on my Fitbit.
- Healthy dinners, cooked with love. A glass of wine served with conversation. Reading side by side, watching TV, falling asleep, drifting back to bed for snuggles and more conversation.
- Slowly waking up …
Finding out who you really are …
10 Apr 2013 2 Comments
in My Thoughts, Wisdom Tags: About Me, be real, brave, Facebook, friendship, learning, life, living, love, loving, relationships
I read an article this morning by Anne Lamott that latched onto my molecules and won’t let go. Anne is one of my most favorite writers anywhere, ever, in all the world, because she’s honest. She’s so honest she makes me flinch sometimes. And I love it. The article is here if you want to read it. http://www.oprah.com/spirit/How-To-Find-Out-Who-You-Really-Are-by-Anne-Lamott . I’m not usually a purveyor of O Magazine, but hey, Facebook.
Which segues directly into what Anne did for me this morning. I’d been thinking for days … weeks, really … about tweaking my friends list to make it a little more honest. Who has 350 actual friends, let alone wildly imaginative totals like 1,600? Or 6,000? I’ve seen those numbers and recognized them for exactly the popularity contest they represent, all the while knowing that there was no good reason for my own list of acquaintances to hold upwards of 400 names — at one time even topping 500. As with everyone on social media, there were at least 400 explanations as to how all those names got there, some of them not valid enough to warrant their staying. Anne’s ruthlessly straightforward article finally gave me the kick in the butt I needed to perform surgery.
Forty-seven excisions later, the list is starting to more closely line up with what my daily/weekly/monthly interactions on Facebook look like. There will be further cuts, but my brain already feels freer, lighter … more honest. It irks me when someone sends me a friend request and then never says hey. There were a lot of those. Of the people left, 58 of them are family. They don’t have to like me, in fact it’s highly probable that some of them have hidden me due to my intermittent political yammering, but it’s unlikely that I’ll be deleting any of them. Family is family. The other 251 consist either of people I’ve shared a relationship with in this life, or beautiful souls I’ve met via Facebook, and it would be impossible to say which group I feel closer to, even though it’s unlikely I’ll ever have a face-to-face meeting with most of those in Group Two. It was revealing to me that when I scrolled through the list to get a count of family members, I had to stop repeatedly and think “Is he/she a cousin? No. Hmm.”
Anne’s beautiful article is entitled “Becoming the Person You Were Meant to Be,” and this quote is so liberating I may print it on a card and put it where my eyes will land on it every day. ” … you are probably going to have to deal with whatever fugitive anger still needs to be examined—it may not look like anger; it may look like compulsive dieting or bingeing or exercising or shopping. But you must find a path and a person to help you deal with that anger. It will not be a Hallmark card. It is not the yellow brick road, with lovely trees on both sides, constant sunshine, birdsong, friends. It is going to be unbelievably hard some days—like the rawness of birth, all that blood and those fluids and shouting horrible terrible things—but then there will be that wonderful child right in the middle. And that wonderful child is you, with your exact mind and butt and thighs and goofy greatness.”
I realized some time ago that it makes me angry when other people tell me who I should be. Spitting cursing angry. So I don’t let people do that to me anymore. By the same token, I found that having people lurking on my Facebook page who never talked to me, never shared anything with me, never gave me anything of themselves to hang onto, get to know, be interested in, made me the same kind of angry. Fair or not, my antenna picked up judgment. And I decided I didn’t need it.
Facebook, as pitiful as it may sound, is a huge part of my social life. And now it feels a whole lot warmer and friendlier than it did when I got up this morning. My page is just that — mine. It’s good to be Queen. Thank you, Anne Lamott for being an honest, vulnerable human being and for gifting me with the wisdom you’ve gained from your joyous take on life.






















Join the conversation …