The halfway point …

Good morning again!  For those in the workforce, it’s Wonderful Wednesday — I hope your day will live up to its name.  We have a light blanket of snow over everything and the cars out on the street are in creep mode.  Seems like a good morning for staying inside and stirring something up with my blogging friends!  These look good …

Mini Frittatas

 

Ingredients:

8 large eggs
1/2 cup half and half
1/4 teaspoon salt
fresh ground pepper to taste
Assorted Mix-ins, chopped small, such as:

Cheese – cheddar, parmesan, pepper-jack or any other favorite

Meat – ham, sausage, bacon

Veggies – peppers, mushrooms, shredded spinach,  green onions

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350F.  Spray a 12-cup muffin tin with cooking spray.  Whisk together the eggs, half-and-half, salt, and black pepper.  Pour the egg mixture into the muffin cups.  Add Mix-ins to each cup {add lots}.  Bake the frittatas until they are puffy and the edges are golden brown, about 15 minutes. Loosen with knife and serve warm.

Makes 12 frittatas

Note:  To freeze frittatas, allow to cool completely and store in ziplock bag.  Reheat for 1 1/2 – 2 minutes in the microwave.

Brought to you via Pinterest, courtesy of http://www.caramelpotatoes.com

If you make these, come back and let me know how you liked them — I haven’t tried them yet!

My Life in Books

Not everyone can say this, but I still live in the same town where I was born.  I was temporarily away, as I was raised twelve miles outside town, but in western Kansas that meant I could practically see the hospital from the farm.  I spent a summer in New Jersey in the 60s, a boyfriend thing.  I lived on yet another farm two counties away for almost 35 years, a marriage thing.  Even during those first-marriage years, though, I wasn’t more than a half-hour from my birthplace.  And now I’m back.

You might be tempted to think that my life has been deadly boring, but you’d be wrong, even though the potential was certainly there.  On the contrary, thanks to the wonderful world of books, I’ve traveled just about everywhere and gotten to know people I’ll never forget.  My mom, a woman blessedly ahead of her time, started reading to me from approximately the second I popped my head out in the delivery room, and she did the same for my sisters and brother.  Books were always a hot topic of conversation in our house and pretty much nothing was off-limits if we thought we were big enough to handle it (other than the fascinating volumes I discovered in my parents’ closet, but that’s a story that shall never be told).

Our mom fully understood that reading holds the power to ward off prejudice, ignorance, and dullness of spirit.  We all shared the isolation of the farm, but she had no intention of letting that shape us for life.  We even got by with ducking work sometimes, as long as it was for the sake of a book, the unspoken agreement being that we had to make sure no sibling saw it happening.

If you locked me in a room with only a bodice-ripping romance novel for company, I’d scan it for erotic parts, strictly in the interest of Continuing Adult Education, but I wouldn’t read it.  I really don’t think I could.  I’d rather count fly-specks on the walls or stains on the carpet.  If that makes me sound like a snob, I apolo … um, no, I don’t, it’s the truth.  But that’s just me … I’m not judging.

Give me a great biography or autobiography, a historical novel, a sophisticated mystery, a realistic crime novel or true account, an entertaining travel journal, stellar fiction … then walk away and I’m not likely to even notice.  A question I’ve never been able to answer … “What’s the best book you’ve ever read?”  Impossible!  Usually it’s the one I just finished.  I crawl inside every good book I read and live there until it’s done.  And then I take time to mourn just a bit before I pick up the next read …

A Reader

It’s a gray day …

And apparently gray days are just the ticket for …. procrastination!  I have a perfectly decent blog post languishing in WordPad awaiting my loving touch … and I do look at it from time to time … occasionally jot down a thought or two … but Hey!  Shiny!!  I’ve discovered amazing bloggers since this morning!  I promise to share them with you just as soon as ….

Say, you know what else gray days are good for?  Noshing!  Here’s a sweet lil’ recipe I tucked away on Pinterest months ago …

Nutella Rolls

Buy Pillsbury crescent rolls, put a scoop of Nutella in each one, roll it up, roll it in cinnamon and sugar, then bake according to the package.  Easily one of the best things I’ve ever tasted and SO simple you could write a blog post with one hand while you make ’em.  They had me at Nutella.

Finding beauty everywhere …

The calendar says it’s winter, the temperature not so much.  It reached at least 70° yesterday and is forecast to do the same today before cooling back down into the 40s.  Two balmy days in a row call for flowers!  Beauty heals the soul, so I encourage you to look for it everywhere today and I’m wishing everyone an amazing week, beginning with this morning — a Monday!

Flower Pots

 

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Girlfriends

Girlfriends.  I’ve always loved the way the word sounds, even though it carries a certain kind of angsty baggage because despite slumber parties and hanging out and all the other things girls do, the intimacy required for besties felt foreign to me.  Growing up on a farm, miles from town, my two younger sisters were my friends.  I didn’t think of them as girlfriends, though — they were my sisters.  There were the girls down the road, but they weren’t girlfriends, they were neighbors.  When I look back at the young me, it’s clear what a solitary soul I was.  My best days were spent lolling in the hammock stretched between two big trees in my grandparents’ yard, reading a book, thinking my own thoughts, accidentally drifting into a nap, then combing the garden for ripe strawberries and tomatoes, checking the orchard for intruders, and generally sticking to whatever was required to avoid my mom’s eyes landing on me and assigning me a job.  I wonder what I thought I was going to do on the off-chance that I happened to flush a few snakes, possums, or cross-country bums out of the trees.
Grade school is kind of a blur.  I was a good student, friendly, happy, clueless.  There were other girls, of course, and I made friends … but I can’t think of any girlfriends who’ve carried over from those years if we’re talking people I’ve never lost touch with at any time and with whom I share my deepest secrets and feelings.  High school, with forty-seven of us in the entire place, meant fun, freedom and fraternity … and continued cluelessness.  College brought more of the same.  I was popular, I guess, if you want to gauge it by things like being elected cheerleader seven years in a row and serving as a lady-in-waiting in the Homecoming court, but none of that felt quite authentic to me.  I think it took me so long to realize that I could define my own life, I missed a lot of stuff on the way up.
Don’t get me wrong, I have great acquaintances, friends, women I look up to, respect, like, even love.  I’ve just somehow never truly been girlfriend material.  I don’t spill my guts easily, except with my sisters, and it’s always been hard for me to ask for help.   I went through a hellish time ten years ago and held most of it inside — not exactly refusing to share my grief, pain, and stress with other women, just not really knowing how.  And without that open-up-and-let-it-all-hang-out mechanism, it’s hard to be a girlfriend, let alone accumulate them.  To my likely discredit I move on easily, I don’t send Christmas cards, I tend not to do even the minimum amount of work necessary to hang onto relationships, the notable exceptions being marriage and family.
All of this to say that there are suddenly women in my life who represent the best of what I always pictured a girlfriend to be, and they’re incredible.  I’m probably still not going to be very good at the gut-spilling thing, but if I ever do it I know they’ll be there.  Life continues to surprise …

Sort of besties, except that we went to different schools and didn't see each other very much.

Sort of besties, except that we went to different schools and didn’t see each other very much.

Simple joys …

I liked my first blog format just fine … except that it wasn’t exactly user-friendly and it was a little limited in options.  Or maybe I just never dedicated myself to it properly.  After spending the day immersed in WordPress tutorials, I’m sold.  It’s fun and it lets me be me.  Watch out!  I hope to have a long and productive relationship with my new WordPress blog, and I hope you’ll join me here — it gets a bit lonely just talking to myself.  Leave comments, share your thoughts, inspire me!

inspiration exists

What Am I Doing Here?

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My take on being retired is that it’s weird.  It’s beyond crazy that I’m this age instead of the 45 I feel in my head.  But I got here somehow, and I do love the play-time.  Writing is a have-to-do thing for me, and I have folders jammed with great graphics that I love to share.  So I’m inviting you to hang out with me here … and if you talk to me it’ll be even more fun.  I’m a Facebook addict, but this is my spot to run my way — eat your heart out, Markie Zuckerberg!

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