31 August 2009

Delightful Things




















Maxine Nadal

On this last day in August, I continue my focus to have less rants and more raves in my life. I thought with this day, sort of a passage from Summer to Autumn (even though that doesn't officially happen until September 21st), it would be a good day to count the blessings in my life this month. That is those things that truely delight me. So today is a list. However simple or complicated I end of making it, what follows are the "delightful things."

** My friend Tim's operation on Friday went well. And today already, the reports from his wife Laurie of his progress in recovery are very encouraging.

** My lovely grand-daughter Maxine will turn four months tomorrow. She definately is a delight in my life! These first two delights on my list are the two primary things on my mind these past months. I have given each of them considerable thought and prayer. My concerns for their health and well-being, a new life and a life well-lived; also brings a sense of balance to my own life at this time.

** Unexpected visitors!

** It didn't snow in August. This is a delight, as the weather was a frequent topic of conversation, concern and disappointment. Too cold a summer for most of us; missing the sunny days on Lake Superior and warm nights of the long days above the 45th parallel. So, my delight here is from the perspective of the glass is half full. (I am trying really hard!)

** Waking up every morning feeling refreshed.

** August was full of connects and re-connections. My interactions with family, old friends and new friends were plentiful this past month. New friends and old, some lost and nearly forgotten, as well as my circle of support of everyday friends surrounded me all month. Becky (Patrick & Sue's daughter) shared pictures and stories of her missionary work in Panama; while a steady stream of thoughts, stories and pictures from Barbara (& Larid) of Redit, Abel and Helen, their newly adopted children, are adorable and endlessly entertaining. Good conversations with Bruce & Cindy, and with my sister Joann. Connections across the peninsula from Sault Ste. Marie to Grand Marais to Marquette over good wine, great food, amazing music and entertaining conversation. Sharing music, meals and conversation, playing cards and watching the weather change, come and go. A good time with an old friend, turned new friendship. And a chance encounter, with a new friend with a new perspective, on his cross-country journey.

** Lake Superior at night: like black velvet waving in the wind, as it swells and rolls to shore.

** The "Devine Miss Peggy," she never ceases to amaze me! Her insight, wit and perspectives of life are equally encouraging, entertaining and cherished. Even those ordinary everyday things: "Up by the roots!" I am so fortunate to have her as my 'house-mate' for all these years.

** Sadie & Gus (and ultimately Heidi & Lou too!)

** A walk on Saturday morning to the Marquette Farmer's Market at the Commons in downtown Marquette, followed by a trip to the new bakery, the Marquette Food Co-Op and Dead River Coffee Shop. And then, a walk home along the shores of Lake Superior. See, meet & talk with friends - old & new - at the Saturday Market.

** Tres Pecos wine: Sharing a whole bottle with a friend!

** Roasted asparagus - the thin baby ones, with olive oil, cracked black pepper & garlic.

** Freshly washed sheets dryed on the line. Crisp and fragrant to sleep on.

** Talking with all three of my children in the same day. I should clarify that to say communicating. Talking with Ana in the morning, while Maxine coos in the background, about her day and how Maxine is changing and growing. A surprise visit from my son on his way home from the bike shop. And a text message (a start) from Elyse & Alex (enjoying the bottle of wine I gave them at Christmas in their new apartment - Tres Pecos). We shared a few text messages and her new address.

** Winning at cribbage. Winning big!! S-K-U-N-K! Double S-K-U-N-K!!

** Safe travels on the highway on my weekly commute to/from my home in Marquette and my job in Brimley. My commute is 155 miles, door to door, one way.

** Beet salad from the Rubyiat restaurant in Marquette.

** Live music outside in the afternoon sun, or under the evening sky in Grand Marais. Live music at a Dave & Ellen's going away party. Live music in celebration of a long time friend, with old friends and friendships renewed. Live music with friends on the deck at my house.

** Opened windows.

** A random act of kindness from an unexpected source. Long lost pictures from times nearly forgotten returned.

** Bostock. If you haven't tried it, you must! It is sinfully delicious & a rare find. Eaten with fresh raspberries, it has to be a sin!

** My friend Faye. A never ending source of postive energy.

** Tres Pecos. Did I mention that already? All things Spanish wine!

** Morning walks. Morning walks from Wetmore's Landing to Little Presque Isle. Morning walks around Presque Isle. Morning walks to the coffee shop, with a lazy walk along the lakeshore home in the early afternoon. Morning walks to the lake to see the sunrise. Morning walks to 'top-of-the-world.' Morning walks. Afternoon walks. Evening walks. Late night walks. Living in a walkable location.

** Sunrise. Sunset. Lake breezes.

RRR 1:7

29 August 2009

I Love This Photo


















This photo speaks volumes to me: about where I've been, what I have done, what I think and how I think it. The photo was taken by Dennis Stock at the Venice Beach Rock Festival in 1968.

In the late 1960s, Dennis Stock was photographing the Woodstock Generation, but he was also one of its free-spirited, anarchistic exemplars. You can find archives of his photos on line, and hear him this discuss this photo and how it happened to be taken that day at:

Dennis Stock's Woodstock Generation - The Picture Show Blog : NPR

All the publicity about Woodstock lately, the release of the movie; it has stirred some long time memories from that time in my life. Take the time, check out the link. Give the audio a listen, it is quite interesting. It just might bring back some long forgotten memories of yours.

RRR: 1:6

28 August 2009

A Girl Grows Up in Seattle




Crowded Corners





by Elyse Brownell



A woman wearing pink socks,
her toes wedged between her one size too small flip flops,
Shorts in February, bruised legs, matted hair, her hands
holding onto something that wasn't there,
said today,

"I'm not a parade"

I wanted to follow her around, to join in on her "not parade,"
raise her up like an award or throw tootsie rolls at her feet.
I wanted to carve a float out of the side of the building,
Use chewed bubble gum as glitter,
Stoplights as wheels, a crown out of graffiti.

I could hear the band, the honking horns, the wind started to pick up
And blew her hair, lifted the scent off her, like a floating dragon.

I wondered if anyone else heard her say it,
If anyone else was as affected by this as I was,
Or if the pink lady and I,
on crowded corners,
shared a moment together.

2.22.2008

Personal note: Elyse is my youngest daughter. A graduate of GVSU, with a double major in Legal Studies and Creative Writing. Elyse currently lives & works in Seattle, Washington. As a Legal Assistant at a well -known & respected law firm downtown, I understand that she expects to return to law school to acquire a law degree. Elyse has become the woman I always wanted to be. I am truely in awe of her accomplishments. Of all my children, she is the most like me.

RRR: 1:5

Chutes & Ladders: The Game of Life

Chutes & Ladders "This delightful game is simple and easy to play, even for children who can't read. Players spin the spinner and move their pawns, square by square, the number shown. If the pawn lands on a picture square at the bottom of a ladder, children climb up with a good deed! Naughty deeds slide you back when you land on a picture square at the top of a chute!" (Ages 3-6 for 2-4 Players). The game was sold as Snakes and ladders in England before Milton Bradley introduced the basic concept in the United States as Chutes and Ladders in 1952, an "improved new version of England's famous indoor sport." Its simplicity and the see-sawing nature of the contest made it popular with young children. (Wikipedia)

In a conversation this morning while getting a manicure and pedicure, Kate compared life to a game of chutes and ladders. It didn't take more than a couple of seconds for me to realize how true that was in my own life. You come to that upward, loftier, haughty, elevating "ladder in life," and up you go! You're a winner, world-class and more often than not you are uppity over your accomplishments. A bit full of yourself at times. Likewise, when there is a chute at your feet, and it can just be by chance, down you go and backwards in your progress along life's path to the future and old age. Often we are demeaned and defeated by our mistakes and backwards slides in life, you become just another old sod scratching your way along and back up in the world. You slide down the slippery slope of life's chutes to slink about beneath it all, and start all over again in the game of life and living. Friends and family often view and treat your differently. Maybe not always, but some do and it is often enough to add to the misery of mistakes and failure. I beleive that we all are guilty of basking in the ladders of life, as well as experiencing the slippery slope of life's chutes. And even guilty to some degree of casting a downward glance or comment about someone who has stumbled or fallen and slid down a chute in life's path.

I think it is safe to say that most everyone played Chutes & Ladders as a child. At least in my generation, the "fifty-somethings." And the generation before and the one after. I am also sure that I played the game with Ana, who is part of the "thirty-something" generation born in the 1970s. Which reminds me, I need to get two sets of this game now that I am a grandmother (here-to-fore always referred to as "Nan-na" - please make note). One game for my granddaughter Maxine - who lives in Seattle, for her to play and us to play when I visit. And another game for me at my house for two reasons. First, so that we can play when she comes to visit, and second so I can practice for when she comes to visit. That way, I hope to avoid completely embarassing myself once she becomes smarter than me. I am beginning to realize that I am getting older, and may be more likely not always keeping my wits and smarts about me (I suspect).

No doubt as children we all practiced the art of winning and loosing in life without even realizing it. Who knew? As life has unfolded, some of us were winners and some of us were not; and sometimes we win and sometimes we loose throughout life. Everyone has ups and downs along the road of life. Perhaps in addition to euchre, spades and hearts, even a friendly game of poker, we should continue with chutes & ladders just as reminder of what could be or could have been or might yet to be in our life. I know that I will look at the game differently once I begin to play it again with Maxine. Actually, I can't wait for us to play games! This Nan-na thing is going to be fun! At four months old, it might be a little early for her to start. Maybe just the gameboard on the wall behind her changing table for a start. What do you think?

I so look forward to playing with Maxine and watching her grow. I am anxious to see what parts of her are Ana and what parts of her are Jason and how that combination contributes to person she becomes. Being a Nan-na is definately a ladder in my game of life! Order your own Chutes and Ladders board game at www.boardgames.com/chutandlad.htm

RRR Quotient: 1:4

27 August 2009

Barefoot & Windy

“And forget not that the earth delights to feel your bare feet and the winds long to play with your hair.” Kahlil Gibran

Putting my life in terms of Rants & Raves, has put an interesting spin on my morning already. From the moment I wake, to the last thought before sleep. I want to look at my life more in terms of my Raves. You know: ‘the glass is half full not half empty,’ and therefore I need more Raves than Rants on my blog (and in my life).

My current blog score is 1:2/Rants to Raves (and oh what a Rant the one Rant was!). I am focused on looking to up my ‘Rant to Rave Ratio today – heretofore known as RRR or Rx3 (for texting purposes). Which brought me to barefoot or bare feet (my mind works in mysterious ways even I don’t understand). Barefoot, the exact opposite of shoes, boots, socks, ski boots, snowshoes, skates & the like. Hot sand squeezed between your toes, summer sandals, flip flops and barefoot in the park. And the wind in your hair: on a bicycle, on the beach, at the helm, on the backyard deck, in a hot red convertible (1969 MGB w/tantem top, preferably), or a mountaintop. Who doesn’t love that, wouldn’t embrace that feeling. Nothing feels more free or open. Well, perhaps completely naked in the rising sun, but naked is for another blog.

I am looking to affect my outlook on life, my attitude toward myself, my family, toward you and others, and toward life in general. Positive thinking is a more productive way to approach to the negative, unpleasant and depressing side of your life. Positive thinking, and/or one’s RRR, as most of you already know, is effective stress management. In an earlier blog (8.25.2009), I talked about the conversation in my head that has always been there. I wasn’t referring to voices, but to my self-talk. Self-talk is the endless stream of thoughts that run through your head every day. These automatic thoughts can be positive or negative. Some of your self-talk comes from logic and reason, life’s experience, the people and places in your life. Other self-talk may arise from misconceptions that one creates on their own, because of lack of information, rationalization, untruths and negativity in your life, abuse, etc. If the thoughts that run through your head are mostly negative, your outlook on life is more likely pessimistic - it stands to reason. If your thoughts are mostly positive, you're likely an optimist: you are someone who practices positive thinking. Basic stuff here.

Researchers continue to explore the effects of positive thinking and optimism on health. Health benefits that positive thinking may provide include: increasing your own life span; lessen distress level; lower rates of depression; support better psychological and physical well-being, and; reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease. Positive thinking and optimism can also improve your resistance to common illnesses like colds and flu, your coping skill for stress, your psychological and physical well-being, and reduce your risk of cardiovascular disease. It's unclear why people who engage in positive thinking experience these health benefits. One theory is that having a positive outlook enables you to cope better with stressful situations, which reduces the harmful health effects of stress on your body. It's also thought that positive and optimistic people live healthier lifestyles because they get more physical activity, follow a healthier diet, and have reduced rates of smoking and alcohol consumption. You exercise positive thinking and the power of it, your life is better, healthier and longer. Lecture over. Now to the good stuff!


It brings me to my friend Tim. Tim was always 'that guy.' You know, that guy. The one everyone knows & likes: a guy's guy and even a woman's man. The guy who is friend to everyone, great at any sport, walks & talks with confidence, looks good and everyone wants to be his friend. And Tim is that guy, and more, so very much more. More because, on top of it all, he has a breath and depth of personality that goes with it. That positive attitude, outlook and perspective that not only attracts people but inspires them as well. He is cool, calm, collect to us all, yet down-to-earth, realistic, humble and personable. Has a wonderful family, long time friends and a positive outlook. And he has cancer. After three years of treatments, operations and recovery, it is still cancer. Invading not only his body but his life and his family. Tim is set for a laryngectomy, the removal of his voice box.

On August 24th, he wrote: "One way or another I will become a neck breather. That will be a permanent reminder of my third battle with vocal cord cancer. The level of physical pain should be controlled with medication. The emotional pain and the recovery is still in question." His friends and family responded with love, kindness and support. Today, Tim wrote on his blog: "I am ready to go into Friday's surgery, I plan on coming out of the surgery with my dignity intact. I am ready to fight the battle." His surgery is tomorrow. The process of his self-talk, the power in his positive thinking was evident in his blog: from the first post after finding out the laryngectomy was necessary (loss of hope, dispair, defeat) to the this most recent post before his operation (positive, forward, confident). I have no doubt that the power of his postive thinking will contribute to a positive outcome with his surgery.

Please keep him and his family in your thoughts and prayers. He has many years left to enjoy barefeet and wind in his hair (at his back, on his face - whatever the case may be). He remains the most amazing person I know.

26 August 2009

My Dear Sweet Jenny


This is a rant, in a pure and simple form. It actually supports my earlier blog of today.

A little background is in order before you read on. Jenny is one of my (only) sister's six children, fourth in the birth line. Which makes her approximately eight years younger than me. She was roughly nine when I left home at 17 (and rarely looked back). Her parents - my sister and her husband - were more parents to me than my own parents were, in reality. I have always considered her six children: Patrick Jr., Michael, Cindy, Jenny, Barbara and Ron as my siblings. The better part of my growing up involves my sister & her family. In my later years, I feel that I have formed close bonds with Michael, Cindy, Barbara and each of their families, as well as a close relationship with Patrick, his wife Sue and his family. Ron was a baby when I left, and although I barely know him, Ron is as much family as each of the six are to me including Jenny. However, Jenny and I are like polar opposites, I have come to realize.

The following is a response I posted to Jenny's blog post that was specifically directed at/to me - which she ultimately censored (deleted). Life isn't always the way we: 1) remember it to be and, 2) the way we want it to be. While her comments regarding me stand, I want my reponse to stand as well. What she said in her blog, completely blindsided me. After more than 40 years have passed, it came out of nowhere. We obviously both share the 'pig-headed' gene - which I believe comes from my mother's side of the family.

I believe in the freedom of speech. Regardless of its point of view, we all are entittled to our own perspective. Her blog, her thoughts, her exercise of the freedom of speech, which we hold so dear in this country, stand just as she writes and as she decides who comments. Here is my response to her blog on me. Her blog, if you would like to read the words that prompted this (censored) rant can be found at: http://sandparty.blogspot.com/ The comments directed to me are listed under "What you have taught me" posted January 31, 2009. I am #5 under the list of people.

My censored response - in its COMPLETE, UNCENSORED AND UNCHANGED form - follows:

My dear sweet Jenny:

Wow! Some 35+ years later. Sorry I didn’t make it home more often – I never had any idea that anyone noticed or even cared. You need to understand that, first of all, you grew up a generation behind me, in a strong family environment that placed value on family & children. I didn’t. I grew up in the shadow of alcoholism and mental illness, with older parents who no longer had the interest or the patience for a child; particularly one that was strong willed and independent in the tumultuous 60s.

Although, years later I came to realize that your parents were more parents to me than my own, and all six of you were the brothers & sisters I never had (like my friends did). It was different having a sister that was old enough to be your mother. The person I became then and am today was molded in the ‘60s, diversely opposite of the ‘50s; and I was strongly influenced by the civil rights movement & the Vietnam war era; peppered with the 'age of Aquarius' movement that created tye-dye, the peace sign, hippy beads & psychedelic music.

And those two things: war and civil rights strongly affected the person I am today. From my graduating class, there were 23 soldiers killed in Vietnam - most of whom I went through my entire school years with. Of those who returned – another 10 or so whom I knew well – many of them were so screwed up in the head, dying of drugs or alcohol or coming home so completely screwed up in the head that communication was impossible. Let's add to that racial prejudice that was acceptable and primarily the norm in good ole' York County. Moving to the remote corner of Michigan where I have been for most of the last 39 years of my life was my way of saying 'no mas!' (no more). Understanding the remote region that I have called home for nearly 40 years might help.

While I didn’t visit often, my parents never visited me & my only sister and her family (including you) only once that I remember in the 70s. And then once when I married Garrett, your dad & mom were here. When I graduated from NMU at the top of my class, summa cum laude, valedictorian & keynote speaker at commencement - no one seemed to notice. That was 1978: a pinnacle in my life. Few of my family even know that I also have a Masters degree (1981), also summa cum laude. So I believe I do understand your disappointment in me not coming home.

This is probably more than you wanted in reply. My only point my dear niece, is that we all have disappointments in life. And like the good things in life, they all contribute to the person we are/become. I have come to realize they – my disappointments & my triumphs – are mine (they are each of ours; our own & of our own doing, and contribute significantly to each us as individuals), and generally of no fault of the ones we quietly hold accountable. That is life. And that is what makes us who we are.

So I am sorry I didn’t/couldn’t come home through the years – it was in no way personal or anyone’s fault. I say that honestly. I really am sorry. And I never knew or even suspected that anyone in my family cared one way or the other about me.

The short 18 years I spent growing up in PA was more painful than pleasant for me. And that kept me away. That kept me from my own father’s funeral – who I loved dearly regardless of all the pain that separated us. I am sorry you that you were caught up in that – my own pain and inability to cope with that portion of my life. Because we are blood, it shouldn’t matter to either of us, and neither of us should let it stand between family.

I remain Jesse.

It's Time for A Change

I remember, like many long-time friends, exactly where I was and what I was doing when John Kennedy was shot. I was twelve and in 8th grade, in Home Economics class – a freshman at Northeastern High School. We were making English muffin pizzas that day in class; something I had never even seen let alone eaten at that time in my life. The intercom on the wall crackled, and the National Anthem began to play through its tiny round speaker over the teacher’s desk in the front of the room. We were about to sit down to eat, but were required to all stand up at our chairs, face the flag and place our hands over our hearts, as was the custom of the time. Looking down at that English muffin pizza as it cooled, everything moved to slow motion from that point forward that day. Everything loomed in uncertainty and confusion. A voice came over the crackling intercom speaker that said, “The President of the United States is dead.” Our teacher burst into tears, while panic ensued among the twenty some odd Home Economics students and the English muffin pizzas cooled to cold. I recall being confused and scared.

The intercom crackled once again, and it was our school Principal – Mr. Sutton, I think – we were dismissed from class to go directly to our lockers, gather our things & go straight home. School would be closed until the following Monday. The halls were hushed as they filled with students, many in tears and frightened. As I walked, nearly ran home, the fire sirens were ringing in both of the two small towns nestled in the valley where I grew up in southeastern Pennsylvania, on the outskirts of the City of York. The streets were unusually busy with cars.

By the time I got home the TV was on and continued on throughout the rest of the week into the weekend, and throughout the funeral ceremonies. My mother was glued to that TV set. Many of the images of that time are still clear and I can recall clearly as if they just happened today. It was a frightening and confusing time, filled with the unknown and uncertainty. My father paced in the background, Camel straight in hand, rocking back and forth on his feet as he always did when something upset him. Panic loomed with the round the clock news commentary. Everything else stood still. My mother was near catatonic, never moving far from the newscast.

The decade began with the turmoil of the civil rights movement. There were marches and protests throughout the country: some peaceful, many not. Record crowds gathering in DC in August 1963 for Martin Luther King's I have a dream speech. Followed by the beginning of the series of assassinations to occur throughout the tumultuous 1960s in our country. JFK in November of 1963. Martin Luther King in April of 1968, followed closely by the assassination of Bobby Kennedy in June of 1968. With each event, the panic of my normal everyday life rocked me further from my childhood reality. If you grew up in that time – the sixties – you understand the overwhelming feeling of fear, unsettled and unsure times.

The mundane, predictable and automatic life of the 1950s grew into a world of uncertainty and constant change. With the assassinations closely followed by thousands upon thousands of young soldiers who went off to the war in Vietnam (a country I had never heard of before or had any idea where in the world it actually was), and the many who didn’t come home. So many who never came home, and the ones who did were vacant and forever changed. And the turmoil of the anti-war movement further created an increasingly unstable world. More fear, more uncertainty filled our everyday lives.

As young teen, from a small farming town in the rolling foothills on the eastern edge of the Appalachian Mountains, the uncertainty and fear of it all formed not only my perspectives and beliefs, but an underlying adjustment to insecurity and a familiarity with a constantly changing world. Everything that we grew up knowing and accepting came into question. And so, partly as a survival response (I have come to believe), I embraced change in everything; and I rejected that which was predictable, known and expected. For me, out of these changing times, uncertainty and panic grew the questioning of everything. I embraced the change in every form, to avoid that uncertainty and panic of growing up in the sixties. And I haven’t yet – curse or blessing – left that perspective behind. It is who I am, and who I will remain.

Today, I mourn the loss of Ted Kennedy. For better or worse, he dedicated his life’s work to making a difference. For better or worse in his successes and failures in life, he dedicated his life to a purpose of making this nation a better place. Ted Kennedy actually accomplished more of a difference in his 40+ years in congress through legislation than either of his brothers were able to do in their short careers/lives. Senator Ted Kennedy strongly believed in the right for everyone to have access to quality healthcare. And to that legacy, I believe that some form of universal healthcare should be passed into law. It's time for change.

25 August 2009

Taking the plunge


For as long as I can remember, I have had a conversation going on in my head. With whom I am not sure; it's not like it's me and another me. It's just a conversation of pros and cons, thoughts, advice, encouragement, opinions, criticism, observations and the like. I have always thought that it occurs in everyone. Recently, I am not so sure about that. Regardless, it is there. Always there in my head.

Which brought me to a diary, when I was younger. The kind with the little lock and key, and a matching pen with a loop to hold it. And you mostly wrote about things in school, on the playground or boys you liked or didn't like or who said what to whom about whomever. By college, I began journaling in notebooks and on envelopes , napkins and odd scraps of paper with blank space, that I kept in the notebooks. Seasonally, I would say: I was more committed to it during the winter months, less in the summer when the outdoors and the beach called. I have kept these diaries and journals, and envelopes full of words, and sometimes, privately, I go back to them. Reading & re-reading them, grounds me sometimes. Journals became less and less as life became more full. College, graduate school, research, jobs, kids, husbands, alcohol, drugs, all of it. And there was less and less time in my life to record my thoughts and observations. Each year always starts out more frequent in the early months, and then weeks without comments, followed by a more dedicated approach as the year end nears to a close. Altho intermittent, there is a spattering of those journals, envelops and scraps of paper writings, enough to keep a thread to my life. So, now it seems natural to come to blogs.

My work puts me at a keyboard more often than is probably good or even necessary. But blogging seems a good fit now that my life is slowing down - somewhat. My work is still bustling along, always writing, researching, following directions, researching, creating, editing, submitting, waiting. Waiting. For triumph or setback, failure. And then again, and again. It's an annual calendar, with a rythmn; made easier by a system. So I have become a system at work, making it mundane on some level; bringing rythmn on another. Allowing for an expectation, a preparation and more time for such things as this. Blogging.

So all I want to accomplish is a place for my comments. A place of record. For that conversation, never-ending conversation, within me. A place to leave my thoughts, and what/who I am. Which is that conversation inside my head. My rantings. And my ravings. Those rants and raves of a woman who has lived an interesting, and sometimes challenging, but never boring life. So, welcome to anyone who might want follow along, as it all unravels in a blog. Yes, welcome to my rants and raves.