I always get a bit annoyed by bloggers who don't update in a timely manner and now, look, I'm one of them.
A quick update then. Today on Palm Sunday, I made calls, a Texas sheet cake, rehearsed, went to church, sang at church with my niece Halli (Gethsemane by Melanie and Roger Hoffman), went to choir practice, and about four and one half hours after I left for church. I went home for dinner, helped a bit with cleaning up, did a facial mask, shower and spent some time catching up on my emails and blogs.
That was my day of rest!
Sunday, March 24, 2013
Sunday, December 2, 2012
air freshener is EVIL and should be illegal! (small rant)
Talk about an unhappy homecoming. We'd just returned from my sisters Deborah and Tara's home, where we had a lovely dinner. Walking in the living room, bam, burning eyes, tight chest, and instantly irritable, a cloud of air freshener. I'd rather smell whatever they are supposed to be covering, then feeling sick and headachey. clean linen and blue sky-my ass.
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Thanksgiving
Thanksgiving dinner is over. It came togather pretty easily this year, no drama, which is always nice...I was in charge of apple and pecan pie and stuffing. I made everything yesterday and I am sure that contributed to the ease of today.
Since this is Thanksgiving Day. I'd though I'd list some of what and who I am thankful for:
Music
Food
The roof over my head
New, Nice FREE clothes
my very cozy bed and room
Mom, Dad, Matt, Laurel, Nicole, Deborah, Tara, Leah, Brandon, Braedon, Jordyn, Bryson, Jack, Jackie, Jo, Grace, Sam and Parker, Colby, Halli, McKinnley,Charlee, Reilly
Charlie, Houdini, KittKatt, GrisGris, Jasmine
My Aunt Margie and Uncle Richard, Kim and Rick and their families, my Aunts Jeanie and Suzanne, Uncle Frank and their families and all my Cluff cousins.
My garden and wild house finches, hummingbirds and the Desert Botanical Gardens
BOOKS, and the wonderfully talented Authors and Editors who created them
Theresa, Toni, Suzanne and Carla, Sheston, Connie, Shannon, Leslie, Mark, Vicki, Lisa
The ability to attend College and the teachers who work there
yarn and floss and the wonderfull people who create patterns
Singing in the choir
The list could go on and on...If I left someone off, it was just because I got tired. I'm thankful for you too!
Happy Thanksgiving.
Since this is Thanksgiving Day. I'd though I'd list some of what and who I am thankful for:
Music
Food
The roof over my head
New, Nice FREE clothes
my very cozy bed and room
Mom, Dad, Matt, Laurel, Nicole, Deborah, Tara, Leah, Brandon, Braedon, Jordyn, Bryson, Jack, Jackie, Jo, Grace, Sam and Parker, Colby, Halli, McKinnley,Charlee, Reilly
Charlie, Houdini, KittKatt, GrisGris, Jasmine
My Aunt Margie and Uncle Richard, Kim and Rick and their families, my Aunts Jeanie and Suzanne, Uncle Frank and their families and all my Cluff cousins.
My garden and wild house finches, hummingbirds and the Desert Botanical Gardens
BOOKS, and the wonderfully talented Authors and Editors who created them
Theresa, Toni, Suzanne and Carla, Sheston, Connie, Shannon, Leslie, Mark, Vicki, Lisa
The ability to attend College and the teachers who work there
yarn and floss and the wonderfull people who create patterns
Singing in the choir
The list could go on and on...If I left someone off, it was just because I got tired. I'm thankful for you too!
Happy Thanksgiving.
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
So...
I'm sitting on my bed listening to Christmas music (yes I know it's not even Thanksgiving yet, but I love Christmas music). I'm trying to decide how to start my essay and know that the only way to start is ...wait for it... to simply start writing.
not that I haven't had plenty of time today to write, but oh, I've had some lovely distractions. My sister Leah and hubby and kids all showed up to visit this afternoon with bags of clothes for me to sort through.
I have better stop and start what I'm really supposed to be working on.
Aude, igitur, semper esse idem! (Dare, therefore, always to be the same (man,person))
not that I haven't had plenty of time today to write, but oh, I've had some lovely distractions. My sister Leah and hubby and kids all showed up to visit this afternoon with bags of clothes for me to sort through.
I have better stop and start what I'm really supposed to be working on.
Aude, igitur, semper esse idem! (Dare, therefore, always to be the same (man,person))
Wednesday, September 26, 2012
I'm back.....
Haven't felt like writing, then I felt to busy to write. It is, however, time to get back on the bandwagon. I turned in my first paper of school year today and thought I'd share it. I just
hope my instructor likes it.
hope my instructor likes it.
Wandering at the War
On
the long President’s weekend in February, an oddly assorted group of people gathered
at Estrella Mountain Park for what we called the “Estrella War”. Produced by the members of the Society of
Creative Anachronism or the SCA, this war brought together about 3000 of our
closest acquaintances from around the world to recreate the Middle Ages (just
the good parts). One week to leave the everyday
mundane world behind to become the person we wished we could be. Knights and
ladies, merchants and bards, the war enabled us to play ‘let’s pretend’ on a
truly life-sized stage. Camping and costumes, hard-suit fighting and arts
competitions, music, dancing, shopping, feasting and especially camp-hopping
were the order of the day.
Wandering the war during daylight hours is
bright and busy. There are bravely colored banners billowing in the wind,
bright painted tents and outlandish garb to behold; it hums with voices, with the
crash and bash of the fighters on the field, marshals crying “hoolldd…” Merchants
on merchant row selling, customers buying trims, knives, books, jewelry,
anything and everything we could need to help create the semblance of medieval
times. In the market are exotic delights called ‘ice cream’ or ‘fry bread’ as
well as stew or steak on a stick to try. We greet friends, unseen since the
previous war. There are classes to go to, art tourneys to attend, battles to
observe, bards to hear, and courts to grace with our presence. At times,
wearing full garb, we run into town for ice or something else that was
forgotten. We call that ‘freaking the mundanes’ for obvious reasons. We cook and clean, and we prepared for the
coming darkness with prepping lanterns and fire pits, setting out candles ready
in their holders. Just going to the privy (the port o’ johns) at night
necessitated taking a lantern. As wonderfully
anachronistic (an anachronism is something belonging to a time other than the
one being represented) as the day-time hours were, night-time transported us
even further from the modern world. At dusk we let the bright colored business
of daytime pass away.
We
forget how deeply dark the night is, in the modern cities we have. There are no
street lights or lit houses here. Out in the middle of nowhere, we remembered
and played in a world lit by only by fire, moonlight and the faint glow of
stars.
Walking
away from the camp’s ruddy glow into the chilly unlit lanes to visit other
camps, darkness folded in around us. Over head were the stars, beautiful sparks
brighter here than in the city from which we had fled. Surrounding camps were
marked by greater sparks, glimmering guides to lead us in. Under foot was the
crunch of gravel giving way at times to the softer brush of shoes on sand and
dirt. At times, a grunt or exclamation as someone miss-stepped then caught
themselves. The thud of drums playing came from several encampments,
accompanied by strains of violins and flutes. The thump of feet, women’s voices
exclaiming ‘lalalalalala’ as they shimmied ‘round the blaze. Those drums played
till the wee hours of morning, a steady rhythm that underlay the night so
thoroughly as to wake many from sleep when the constant thump gave way to quiet.
Further off the mumble of faint conversations, sweet whispers of singing and
the snap of banners arrived on a gust. Occasionally we’d hear the swoosh of
cars or the rumble of airplanes reminding us the everyday world was still
there. That same wind brought the familiar scent of desert plants, wood smoke,
roasting meat, cooking food, perfume and incense. A heady mix stirred -up wonderfully
together. Other times, the cold draft
also carried the tang of piss, sickly sweet odor of human waste, the rot of
garbage letting us know we were passing by the privies.
Approaching
the encampment of fellow players, we call “Hello the fire”. Drawing closer, the firelight reveals a
peculiar assortment of modern 20th century camping supplies with
items painstakingly recreated to carry out the illusion of the medieval era. Coleman
tents sit side by side with brightly painted pavilions, hand embroidered cloths
disguise coolers, and propane stoves as well as campfires cook food and heat
water. We seat ourselves on store-bought fold-out seats as well as elaborate
hand crafted chairs. Even our appearances mixed medieval and modern, cloaks and
robes covering tee-shirts and jeans as often as they did tunics and kirtles.
But somehow the cloaking darkness and the firelight that played hide and seek
with our eyes, made it all fit together.
We settle around the fire, bringing out
drinking horns, tankards, earthenware cups and goblets to taste whatever
libations are to hand. Then with faces and knees warmed and our backs nipped by
the breeze, the serious work begins: Gossip. We speak, of course, of our
interests; different ways to make garb
(costumes) that are true to the medieval ages, how to embroider and embellish
them, to paint or do calligraphy or dance more authentically, better ways to
make armor or fight. Mostly, however we
gossip, the ever human need to know what our fellow humans are up to. The old
who was doing what for how many chocolate chip cookies?
So
our nights go, wandering in the icy dark until we found a warm haven to visit
for a bit followed by yet more meandering through the fire lanes. We go dance at the drummers’ encampment,
listen to a first timer wonder at everything they’d seen that day, hold a baby
that was conceived on the chilliest night of the war prior, flirt with tipsy
strangers in the shadowed lanes and congratulate a friend on finally getting
their award of arms to become a lord or lady. Finally our feet worn out and our
bodies chilled to the bone, we find our way back to our home camp. There, we
receive our own camp-hoppers wandering in the dark, drawn to the spark of our
fire to be warmed under a cold starry sky.
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
zuchinni and onions
Weird opening I know but that's how today rolled. See, I was given a HUGE zuchinni about three weeks ago. Today I grated it up and using a recipe by Paula Deen, made the best zuchinni bread ever. Or at least I think it is. It's been a while since I've had zuchinni bread.
Onto the onion part, My Dad has managed to grow onions in the garden and harvested them yesterday. actual real onions. So, I made spanish rice with onions and bell peppers from our backyard garden. I should have used a hot peppers as well. We have tons of them growing and don't really use them much.
Onto the onion part, My Dad has managed to grow onions in the garden and harvested them yesterday. actual real onions. So, I made spanish rice with onions and bell peppers from our backyard garden. I should have used a hot peppers as well. We have tons of them growing and don't really use them much.
Monday, May 7, 2012
touching my toes
It seems a simple thing, but the truth is, I haven't been able to touch my toes for a long time.
It's a little validation that I am on the right track.
I just need to keep reminding myself that I am a work constantly in progress.
It's a little validation that I am on the right track.
I just need to keep reminding myself that I am a work constantly in progress.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)