title explained

Onward and upward! something that you say in order to encourage someone to forget an unpleasant experience or failure and to think about the future instead and move forward.

My e-mail: jjmiller6213@comcast.net

Wednesday, November 20, 2013

Strange and Weird--just a pastime thing to write

Death Comes In Threes


            I hung up the phone and leaned back in my chair.
            “He shoulda known better,” I whispered to myself.
            Connie had called with news about Lee.
            “They’ve moved him to a hospice.  They don’t expect him to live out the month,” she wailed.
            “Oh, that’s too bad,” I said, trying to keep a smile from my voice.  “I will pray for him.”

            I hadn’t seen the connection, four years ago, when Harold died. 
Cirrhosis of the liver.    
That’s what they put on his death certificate. 
The man was a minister. He never took a drink in his life. 
            Harold was a persuasive man. 
Sweet talker.  It came with the business he was in.
            He whispered that I was beautiful.     
“Your soul shines from the inside out.”
We had to be very careful and not go out together in public.
            He liked to visit me Saturday nights.
            “Being with you gives me inspiration for my sermon tomorrow,” he always said.
One Sunday morning, as I sat in the choir looking out at the congregation, I noticed a lady smiling at everything Harold said. 
            After nine months of us being together, he was sweet talking her.
            I didn’t think she was all that pretty, but perhaps she had a beautiful soul that shone from the inside out? 
           He didn't come out to my house on Saturday nights anymore.  
           He said he was busy studying for his Doctorate.  They married the next year.   

Eighteen months later when Tim died, something clicked in my mind. 
I wondered if this was a coincidence. 
They said he had a massive heart attack. 
The man was a health freak. 
Four days a week at the gym. 
Running seven miles a day on Saturday and Sunday. 
Cholesterol at one-thirty-five and weight at one- seventy. 
I was told he had just had a physical; complete with imaging of his heart, Doppler sonogram on his carotid arteries and legs and an ultra sound of his aorta.
            “Tim was in perfect health,” his father said at the funeral home visitation.
            He shoulda known better.

Tim loved my sensitive, non-judgmental side. 
“You are the sweetest woman I have ever known.  You light up the room when you enter it.  You are so open minded, kind and sweet to everyone you meet.”
Tim seemed sincere. 
I introduced him to all my friends and they liked him.  I even bought a membership at the gym so we could work out together. 
Six months later, I found out he was having an affair with his personal trainer; Robert.

            Coincidence?
Two men whom I had a relationship with and loved.  
Two men who betrayed me and dumped me. Dead?
It would be a natural thing if I were eighty, but at fifty-five?
I wondered.
I was the common denominator.
It felt strange. 
It felt good.
            It was exhilarating.
I had power.

Now it was Lee’s turn.
Connie said he had a brain tumor.  The doctor’s had told him they “got it all” and with chemotherapy, he was cured.
I knew better.
Seven months later it was in his bone marrow.  His liver and kidneys were shutting down.  They moved him to hospice.
“Jane,” Connie had sobbed on the phone.  “They say hospice won’t take a person unless they have less than three months to live.  I talked to the nurse.  She said Lee only has a few weeks at best.”
Justice.

I sat in my chair and thought about Lee.
I met Lee Wrightman three years ago, shortly after Tim dumped me.  We met on the Internet and wrote back and forth for a couple of weeks.  I.M’d each other every night.  He wanted my phone number right away, but I wouldn't give it to him.
“I want to get to know you better,” I wrote.
“Why?  You think I might be a midnight stalker?”
“Might be,” I laughed as I typed my answer..

We hit it off right away. 
He had a great sense of humor, which I thoroughly appreciated.  He also had a way of complimenting me that made me feel like the luckiest woman in the world.
`“You know you are so gorgeous, Doll.”
He liked to call me Doll.
“I feel so proud every time we walk into the club, because you are on my arm".
I lapped it up.  Like a puppy with a warm bowl of milk.
We dated for two years. 
Spent every weekend together…at his insistence. 
My friends told me I was investing too much of myself in him.  They were just jealous because I no longer had time to join them and their frivolous luncheons.
“Don’t invest more of yourself than you can afford to lose,” one of my dear friends had said.
“I’m not about to lose anything.  Lee is committed to our relationship.”
Well, I said that to them…and I believed it.
Then, almost to the day of our two year anniversary, Lee said, “Jane, I feel like my foot is nailed to the floor.” 
I sat there calmly on his couch, but I could feel the red tide coming up from my stomach, into my throat, about to explode in my brain.
“What do you mean?” I asked sweetly.
“I feel like we spend too much time together.  I might want to go out alone on the weekend, but you are here.”
“But you invite me here for the weekend.”
He went on, “Even when I go out during the week…you are with me.”
“I’m not here during the week, Honey,” I laughed.
“Even when you aren’t with me physically…you are still in my mind.” he said.
That didn’t make any sense to me.
“If I happen to talk to another woman, dance with a woman at the club…I feel guilty.”
“Well, you should, ass hole,” I thought to myself.
I didn’t say a word.  Got up and went into his bedroom.  I opened the closet and pulled out the clothes I kept there for the weekends. 
Took off the sapphire ring he had given me for Christmas and put it in his under wear drawer where I knew he’d find it.
I went into the bathroom, got my shampoo and body wash out of his shower.  Took it all, stuffed it into my over night bag and walked out. 
Walked right past him sitting in his chair watching television and just kept on walking.
“Doll, where are you going?” he called.
“Home,” I quietly said.

That was the way it ended. 
I liked feeling that I had taken the upper hand. 
Left him before he could ask me to leave. 
Broke up with him before he had the chance. 
Power. 

I laughed all the way on my drive home.
Tears rolled down my face and blurred my vision, I laughed so hard.
When I got home there was a message from Lee on the machine.
“I didn’t want to break up forever…I just want to take a couple of weeks break so I don’t feel so smothered. Please call me back.”
Nah…you aren’t having it your way idiot. 
The end.

Then I came down off my high.
For the next ten days I hardly slept or ate. 
I didn’t leave my house. 
I didn’t shower. 
One night at three o’clock in the morning, I thought I was having a nervous breakdown. 
I cried until my sinuses were so congested I couldn’t breathe.
My throat was so swollen I couldn’t swallow. 
He kept calling me, but I wouldn't answer the phone. 
“He’s just not worth it,” I yelled to the empty room.

Two months later I found out through the club gossip that Lee and Connie were dating. 
I was livid with rage. 
It didn’t show. 
I have learned over the years how to put on “the face”. 
“Jane is the sweetest woman I have ever known.”  I knew that’s how they all felt about me.  I had heard them say it.
            When I saw Connie…“Connie, that’s wonderful,” I smiled as I gave her a hug.
“You don’t mind?”
            “Mind? No, Honey.  Lee and I just didn’t have enough in common to build a relationship.  You are perfect for him.”
            Now she was paying the price.
That bastard had hurt me and soon…he would pay the price for his actions.
I didn’t need a sleeping pill the night Connie called to say Lee was dying.
I slept like a baby.

I got up the next day and noticed what a beautiful day it was. 
Lee was breathing his last. 
Medicated on morphine out of his mind.
The tumor still growing in his brain.
His body turning yellow from the shut down of  his kidney's and liver.
I was enjoying a beautiful, sunny fall day. 
Connie, well, now poor Connie, she is in so much pain. 
Much like the pain I had suffered. 
I felt wonderful!

            As I sat at my breakfast table, I could feel it build in me.
A physical feeling coursing through my body.
            I even felt a small twinge of pain in the base of my skull from the exhilaration.
            He shoulda known better.

            I walked out to the porch, breathed in the crisp fall air and bent over to pick up the Mannion Falls Press. 
            I quickly scanned the headlines. 
No good news there for sure.
            Everyone was beating up on the President.
            I turned to the second section and an item in the obituary column caught my eye.
                                   
“Vern Stark died Thursday of burns
suffered on Saturday.  Mr. Stark
was filling his lawn mower with
gasoline when it exploded, covering
eighty percent of his body in burns.
                        Mr. Stark leaves behind his fiancee
                        Darlene Rose, his son, John and a
host of friends.”

Vern Stark. 
We had a wonderful relationship that lasted for four years. 
He was, and if I wanted to admit it, still the love of my life.
Two kindred souls.  So much alike it was eerie. 
The year before I met him, he had dated Darlene.  She had broken up with him which left him feeling depressed and withdrawn. 
I guess she was the love of his life? 
She had soon married and moved to Wyoming
When Vern and I first met, we talked about it and when I questioned him on how he felt about Darlene, he assured me.
“That’s all water over the dam.  She used me…she knew how to manipulate me and I couldn’t see it.  She wanted me when she wanted something from me and then when I thought our relationship was going somewhere…well…she pushed me away. I never want to see her again.”
Okay.  I was reassured.
Six months before Vern broke up with me, Darlene came back to town.  Newly divorced and looking for an old friend to talk to.
“It’s just a friendly lunch,” he told me.  “There is nothing to it.”
Then the “friendly lunch” turned into friendly dinners and friendly phone calls almost every day.
Then frantic pleas of, “The kitchen cabinet door fell off the hinges.  Vern, could you please come and fix it for me,” and off to Darlene’s he went. 
Just being a friend.
 It took me a long time to get wise.  Maybe I just didn’t want to see?

He was dead!
I wondered if he had suffered. 
Burns over eighty percent of his body?  He must have suffered horribly for those five days.
I put the newspaper down, leaned back in my chair and smiled.
Grinned, actually. 
Grinned so hard my cheeks hurt.
One by one, they were dying!

The phone rang.
“What? I can’t understand you,” I said.
“It’s Connie.  Jane…he’s gone.”
Connie was sobbing uncontrollably.  I could hardly understand her.
“What?  Connie…slow down.  Take a deep breath.  Is it Lee?”
“Yes…Jane…he died early this morning.  They said he would live a month, but his whole body shut down.  He was comatose.  I never got a chance to say goodbye. “
I frowned to keep the laughter out of my voice.
“Oh, Sweetie.  I am so very, very sorry.  I know how much you loved him.  I know that you are…suffering.  I am just so sorry.”
“Jane, I knew you would understand.  You are the kindest woman I know?”
“Have you had time to make any arrangements?” I asked.
“Well, I have talked to the funeral home and they said we could have the funeral on Monday.  Visitation will be tomorrow evening and again on Sunday.”
“Well Dear, you know I will be there for you.  You just call me when you have all the arrangements made and I will be at the funeral home with you for as long as you need me.”
“Thanks, Jane.  I have to go now and talk to his sister.”
“Please tell Annie that I send my sympathy.”
“I will Dear.  Goodbye.”
Good thing she got off the phone.  I could barely contain the giggle that welled up in my throat. 
That wouldn’t have been nice of me.

Now.  Right now--two past loves…both dead within a day of each other.
I thought…“Death comes in threes.  Wonder who will be next. 
Jim, George? Perhaps that bastard David?”
They could run, but eventually….
They all had the same “disease” in common.  Harold, Tim, Vern and now Lee.
I had known and loved them all and they had thrown me away.
They took the gift I offered them.  Unwrapped the shiny golden paper and threw it on the ground; stomped on it, kicked it aside and walked away.
Thrown me away like worthless junk. 
A used, fast food container thrown in the ditch.
I deserved to be treated better than garbage.

I felt the warm physical exhilaration start again.  Blood rushed through my body and into my head.  I could hear my heart pounding in my ears.
I would have no problem sleeping tonight.









                        Mannion Falls Press     
                        Police found the body of Jane Martin
                        in her east side home Saturday morning. 
They were alerted by her best friend
Connie Wilson after she had called
Ms. Martin several times, with no answer.
The coroner ruled death from a brain aneurysm.
                        Ms. Martin was a member of the Mannion Falls
Methodist Church, President of the Mannion
Falls Singles Club, and secretary of the
Willow Grove Ladies Golf League.
She leaves behind her beloved
                        cat Molly and a host of friends.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

I Can See Daylight

Today's high temperature was: 42 degrees
Sunny and bright all day, with no wind!

=================================
more rungs added today



I have just finished a book I thoroughly enjoyed!  It is written by our friend Jean R. who comments on here everyday.  She wrote it as a diary of her first year as a widow.  How to cope.  How to figure out how to build a new life.  She is humorous in her writings--has a dark sense of humor at times, which I like because I have that also.  It is amazing some of the things we share.  She also likes light colors in her home--like you'd find in a beach cottage.

Her blog is here, and her book is here.

There are a couple of widows who read this blog and we all share one thing in common; our men died in January 2012.  Fred, January 1st.  Howard, January 2nd.  Don, January 18th.  We are all facing the end of the Terrible Second Year (which I pooh poohed, but it is true.)  I wonder if anyone has written how the 3rd year goes.  Maybe we will all find out--together? 

Thanks for all your help and understanding, Jean.  I do appreciate it.
===============================

I am having a hard time crocheting lately.  My Chiropractor's receptionist is having her first baby in February.  A girl, so I am trying to crochet her my favorite baby afghan.  It seems, almost every time I take my hook and hover over the "hole-stitch", my right hand starts shaking and jumps all around.  Plus I am having Carpal Tunnel syndrome quite a bit in both hands.  I am also just about to the point where I can't do cross stitch anymore, unless it is stamped cross stitch.  Those dang little holes are hard to aim my needle into with my right hand twitching.  It isn't Parkinson's or anything like that--it is called---some fancy name benign tremor.  Nothing to do about it--however, if I am a bit nervous or stressed, it is worse.  I did notice, Sunday afternoon, when I was wound tighter then a watch spring that has been wound too tight, I took an Ativan and it seemed to help the shakies.

I can't write anymore because of it--I had to sign my name the other day and had to hold my right hand with my left hand to steady it so I could get a decent signature.  BOTHERATION!!!
================================
I WILL have somewhere to go on Thanksgiving!  In fact, I have two invitations!  Karen is having her in-laws and other family members and invited me.  I didn't really want to go.  They are a noisy group--lots of kids.  I was pondering how to get out of it when my sister called and asked me.  She and her husband are going to be alone.  Then she also invited Pammie!  How nice to only have 4 people--and they all won't be watching and screaming at a football game.  YES--I am going to Susan's house--the old homestead--for Thanksgiving.  Maybe I can make it and stay for more then two hours?

Monday, November 18, 2013

Every Rung Goes Higher, Higher

Today's high temperature was: 36
Wind, rolling grey clouds--not one peek of sun.
=====================================

My ladder is progressing.

Boy did we have some bad storms!  The worst storms we have had (for the entire state) in 10 years.  Not as bad as Indiana, Illinois and Ohio--such devastation and at this time of year.  Weird.  My sister said, "When the storm hit it was a like a blanket descended over the house--we couldn't see out of any window and the wind howled like a train!  I can't believe the 150 year old outhouse is still standing!"  Their house is on a small hill and with no wind breaks to the west of them, only open fields.  But, the house (along with the out house) has stood for over 150 years, so no 75 mph wind is going to take her down!!

We got lots of slanted rain here and 50 mph wind gusts with 40 mph straight line winds.  My house is built to withstand 110 mph winds, plus I have the added wind break of the house west of me and the woods south of me.  My lawn has a lot of leaves on it again, but they will just have to stay.  None of my bags blew over or away and will be picked up tomorrow.

My Michigan State Spartan basketball game is now rated #1 in the country.  A long time since that has happened and the football team beat Nebraska and we are like 6-0--perhaps a Rose Bowl visit this coming New Year's Day?  We have to get past Minnesota first!

I have wanted an electric fireplace for a few years now--actually since I moved in here and look what I found--just what I need.  Combination fireplace and media center--which would sit where my entertainment center is now.


It would sit flat against the wall, across from my chair

taking the place of the entertainment center
which I am increasingly sick to death of!

It however costs, $629 and then I would also have to buy the insert with the fake flames and all for another $150.  Then I would have to get someone to put it together and move the TV and all the components out of the one I have and get them hooked up correctly and...and......well, let's just say, I will go on "wanting" for quite a while.

===========================================

I am building my ladder, rung-by-rung and gaining a bit of ground.  I still cannot see the top of the pit, but I know there is top edge and I will get there.  It is just, first thing in the morning, I think about Jen and it makes a squiggly kind of feeling in my stomach.

Today, I cleaned the bedroom, washer and dryer area, bathroom and then mopped the kitchen floor, dusted everything and as long as I was dusting, decided to take all the stuff of where I want my Christmas nativities, Santas and other stuff to go.  It all looks very clean and bare--I kind of like the uncluttered look!  While moving things in the kitchen, I found all 6 of Maggies, little mousies and so she is very happy.  All Buddy did was complain all the time because I had the cat food and water dish sitting in the living room so I could mop.

I have let Fred go back to resting in peace (whatever that means).  Every night, I still hear him say, "Night. Night.  Don't let the bed bugs bite"--whatever that meant.  That nightly saying use to rile me a bit, but then he'd say, "I love you, Sweetheart. See you on the other side of midnight.", and that kind of made up for it.  When he could no longer lay on  his right side, so I could snuggle up behind him, and had to lay on his back, with his breathing machine, I would roll over on my right side, bend my knee so it touched his thigh, and hold his left thumb until I went to sleep.  Now, I just pet big Buddy's soft fur until he lays his head on my hand and we go off to sleep.

See you tomorrow--it promises to be sunny and in the 40's.






Sunday, November 17, 2013

Spaghetti Sauce

Today's high temperature was: 61
Rainy in the a.m.
Bad storms rolled through--quite a bit of damage with 75 mph winds--all safe here.
Now--40 mph consistent winds with 50 mph gusts.

==================================
This is how the spaghetti sauce recipe reads.  I got it in 1978 from my dear little 4'11" Italian friend, Francine.


In large stock pot

Brown:
2 # ground beef
3 Hot Italian sausage links--Johnsonville
          (slit skin, peel off and make small meatballs out of sausage.)

Add:
1 medium onion chopped
1 green pepper chopped
2 garlic buds, diced
Cook with meats until tender

Add: 
2 quarts diced tomatoes
1 quart tomato sauce
48 oz. tomato juice
2 Tbls. Oregano
2 Tbls. Sweet basil
2 Tbls. Italian seasoning
2 Tbls. Garlic powder
¾ cup granulated sugar
(Can add 1 can mushrooms)

Cover and simmer for hours and hours J stirring occasionally—about 5 hours

Uncover and simmer to thicken.

Can be frozen in quart freezer bags

Make about 6-7 quarts of sauce

Use for all Italian dishes

Makes a nice chunky sauce that is out of this world!!!!!
================================

First: Put on your long, bib apron to keep red, staining, tomato stuff off your clothes.



 Then get out your favorite stock pot.  This is the one I bought last year just for this project (and making chili) because this Farber Ware will not stick and burn!!

I sometimes start with a bit of olive oil, but usually there is enough grease from the ground beef .
The Johnsonville HOT Italian Sausage Links are not HOT--I make it into small meatballs and everyone loves coming across one while eating the sauce.

After I get everything all in the pot, I have a special "simmer" burner on the back right of the stove and that is where I let is simmer--for about five hours.

I uncover it and throw in 4 of these capsules, to break up the fat.


Let it simmer, uncovered to thicken--I don't know how long--you will know when it is ready.

Then, I put the pot in my sink to cool and so I won't make a mess when I transfer it over into the quart Zip Lock baggies.



Using my handy-dandy wide mouth funnel and ladle, I put the
sauce into the quart freezer bags--about 5 scoops full.

Put them in freezer.  Later, I will take a gallon zip lock freezer bag, label it with their name, and put two quart bags into it.  Even Pammie gets some this year :-)

If there is any small amount left over, I usually just use it and have spaghetti the next day for myself.

The nice part is, when it is re-warmed, it is even a bit thicker.
===================
Friday, I paid $40 to get this job done.



Then the bad storms were predicted, so I went out, moved the bags over to the east side of the drive and parked my car next to them to protect from the south-west gales.  If the gales tip over my car, it will pin the bags nicely to the drive and they won't blow onto my neighbor's yard :-).



Man--it is roaring out there right now!!!



Saturday, November 16, 2013

Saturday

Sticks for my ladder.

I got so spooked early this morning that I went into this blog and put a couple of my last two posts back into draft format so they don't show up.  That of course means, I lost all your comments--I didn't realize that would happen.  I am so sorry and if you go looking back for those posts, you won't find them.  

I didn't delete any of the comments--I would not nor have I ever deleted a comment--oh wait--I did too. Some anonymous person left a comment about wanting to sell me something and I deleted that one--a long time ago.

Anyway--that's what happened.  As you can tell-I am not well emotionally right now and for some reason, in the middle of the night last night, I had a dream that Jen was screaming at me because she had seen the new posts--so I freaked out this morning.  

I am not too well physically today either--I have felt barfy all day--probably a nervous stomach from all of it?   I am going to bed now and I am not setting my alarm--I am just going to sleep until I wake up.

I did make 12 quarts of spaghetti sauce today and have it in baggies and in the freezer--for Christmas presents for the guys on my list.  I am wondering about Jen's husband--I always make it for him too and he loves it (and used to love me).  Should I?  Will he just throw it out?

Quandaries, quandaries.  My whole damn life is just one quandary right now!!

Friday, November 15, 2013

Where Can I Find Some Sticks?

Today's high temperature was: 52 degrees
Sunny all day.
========================

Melissa!!! Thanks for supper.  I picked-up a Subway on
the way home from the Chiropractor!!  Bless you!


I have been a writer since I was twelve, when my story of a hermit living in the woods, won me an A+ in sixth grade.  I got my first Diary at age 14.  I used to write things in my diary, hoping my mother would find it and read it, so she would know how I felt.  Then, when I was a senior in high school, I started using codes so if she DID read it, she wouldn't know what I was writing about, LOL.  I have a large plastic storage box filled with journals from the last 40 years.

I have never been good at showing my emotions.  I can't articulate them verbally--I get too emotional.  So, I have to write them down...more or less to see them, read them and get the emotions out of my mind so I don't think about them all the time. I sometimes open up that big plastic box and re-read those journals. 

OHMYGOSH! I cannot believe how stupid I have been over the last "post-divorce" two decades.  It makes me feel good to see how I have changed and grown a lot wiser, but...do I want my kids or sister to read them when I am primped and pretty in my casket?

I should burn them, but there is a no burning rule in this park.  I should throw them in the garbage, but then I can just see someone going through the land fill, hunting for blue bottles and coming upon my journals and writing a novel.  I do like to read them from time to time, but...I am thinking of how I can keep them and then make them disappear moments before the heart attack or stroke takes me out of here, never to return.  

Of all you "nameless, faceless" blessed women who read my posts, you are neither nameless or faceless too me.  By what you have written on your own blogs, by the pictures you have posted,  I can visualize where you are.  I can see your faces.  I know about your families and friends AND, I DO feel very close to you.  It would be wonderful to all get together and yet...perhaps that would spoil the mystique?  I would be embarrassed to stand before you and then, of course, I would cry and.......................well, you know.  Better this way, where we can comment and encourage, give advice, and just be brutally honest in what we write on our own pages.

Actually, in this group of 9 or 10 women who read my posts, I have 2, not so nameless nor faceless.  My real life in the body friends, Beth and Chris.  I have known Beth for nearly 70 years and I have known Chris for 30.  I dare say, in all those years, they probably know me better through this blog then they ever did in "real" life.  I just don't share my desperation in "real" life, as I do on this blog. (Although, Chris did see that about 25 years ago.)

I didn't even share these kinds of things with my very best friend Arlene.  She would have looked at me strangely and said, "Dammit Jude!  You can't do anything about it so, get over it!"  If she ever WAS into deep thinking about emotions, she certainly never showed it nor talked about it.

My sister gets me, but then again, I have a certain big sister status I must maintain.  About this Jennifer thing, my sister said, "Oh well, you know how overly dramatic she can get.  I refuse to be involved in her drama."  I don't share too much with my daughter's because,  Jen is their baby sister and I am their mother and I don't want to ever make them feel they have to choose sides.  They have both felt the "Wrath of Jennifer", as we call it, so they know, but they also care deeply about her.  Besides, if I tried to discuss it with them and my son, I would just cry and that's no good!

I can't really share these feelings with Pearl or Dar.  Neither one of them would understand why, two years out, I am still going through grief.  Dar would understand the whole alienation of daughter thing, as her daughter has not talked to her for almost 3 years and she hasn't seen her grandchildren, but in Dar's case, it is NOT her fault (but of course it is) and she explains it away because "my daughter is mentally ill, (which of course she isn't)  Besides all that, I am their go-to person for their problems.  I am their listener--the one to see it in an objective way--the one to calm them down..

So--you are the poor ones who have to read this stuff--or just pass on by--whatever.  There is no way you will ever realize how much your comments mean to me.  Just to know that there IS someone out there who "gets it", makes it a whole lot better!

As Jaye commented yesterday, I gotta find the sticks to start building a ladder out of the deep hole I am in.  I promise you I will--just like that picture on the upper right side of this blog says, "I always get up"-  I may not stand as straight as before, but I will get back up!

Monday, November 11, 2013

Another Monday--Another Grandchild Play Date

Today's high temperature was: 40 degrees
Rainy and grey
=====================================

I had a nice day yesterday.  Karen called about 9:30 and wanted to know if I wanted to go up to The Farm with her, to visit Susan.  She picked me up  around 11:00 and off we went, nice conversation all the way there.

She had taken her quilting and so she and Susan sat and chatted, stitching away, while I sat on the couch and listened.

I got a bit restless so I got up and walked out into the entryway.  Susan has a display case just inside the side door.  In it are family treasures.  Political buttons.  A little wooden tool set that our great grandfather carved.  A padlock to the horse barn.  A small mourning brooch, made from the braided air of our great grandmother.  On the glass top, Susan has the fox stole our grandmother used to wear.  Every time I enter, I always have to pet the stole and talk to the fox.  Our Daddy had a trap line and caught the fox, dressed it, stretched the fur, tanned the hide and made the stole for his mother.  He later made one just like it for our mother.  It was very fashionable to wear this back in the '30's and '40's.  I used to play with it when I was little.

I put the thing on, walked back into the living room and stood there until Karen and Susan noticed.  Karen squealed and grabbed my camera.  It actually gives Susan the creeps so she was yelling, "No!"
I am trying to look elegant and all I can see in this picture--
the fox has aged much better then me!

When the squealing and laughing was done, I whipped that stole off, held the fox by his nose, with his tail dragging on the floor and did a stripper sort of bump and grind as I left the room.  (Just about threw out my right hip!)  Ta Da Da DaDa Da--bump!  

Then, they went out to pick apples and I sat down and talked sports with my brother-in-law, Chuck.
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On our way home, Karen brought up the subject of Jennifer and me.  I finally found out what Jennifer is so angry about.  On my old blog, I posted that I was going to their church during Lent.  I wrote about how every Sunday, I didn't know if they were going (because she never called and told me) and I never knew where they were going to sit.  She told me they sat in the balcony, and we all did the first week.  The next week, I went up into the balcony and never saw them--they didn't come that Sunday.  The next Sunday, up in the balcony again and I never saw them.  Come to find out, they were sitting on the main floor way over by the exit--they did not try to find me after church.  The next Sunday, I sat on the main floor, by the main entrance so that I wouldn't miss them, and they went up in the balcony via another entrance.  

So--I felt like they were trying to avoid me.  Then, when I went to Good Friday services, I sat on the main floor and afterwards, noticed she and the kids were four rows behind me, but never even acknowledged me.  I was upset.

So, when the cousin told her I was bashing her family on the blog, Jen got very incensed when she read those posts.  She said I was maligning her family and defaming her character.  Even my son-in-law is angry at me.  

I asked Karen if she has ever read my blog--any blog and she said, "No."

Then I said, "Well, most of my readers are older women.  At times our blog is where we rant.  Sometimes about children and grand children--sometimes we feel neglected by them.  It's no big deal and no one takes it very seriously--we just sympathize with each other.  No one on my blog thought I had said anything so horrible that my daughter would quite speaking to me.  How do I fix it?"

Karen said, "I don't know, Mom."

"I said, "Well, I've apologized to her.  I have asked her forgiveness and I have asked God's forgiveness and I pray every day for reconciliation.  What more can I do?  She won't allow me to communicate with her, so I just don't know."

"Well, Pam and Aunt Susan and I have all said we aren't going to let Jennifer tear up our family.  We will still have Christmas together and family get togethers and if Jennifer doesn't want to attend--that is up to her.  I think she is going through a lot since Grandma Helen died.  Remember--I have been on her angry side.  You just have to go on normally and hope she quits holding the grudge.  At least she lets you see the kids now--that is a step forward."

Jen is very strong willed.  I am afraid that even if she wants to reconcile, now, her husband won't let her.  They both have a lot of "never forgive, never forget" attitude in their life.  At least I know what caused the problem, so if the subject ever comes up, I will know what she is talking about.  GEEZ!!!
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So--this afternoon, Pammie dropped off Elise after school for our evening together.  I was snowing like crazy and blowing, but we hopped into the car and went to Wal-Mart where she helped me get some groceries.  When we came out of the store, it was very blowy and snowy, I said, "Hop in the car Honey and stay warm.  I'll just put these in the trunk."

"Grandma, let me  help you," and she did.

Such a beautiful child.  We went on into Brighton to Red Robin for supper.  We talked and talked and talked.  She told me all about the trip her and her Mom (Jen) took to London and Paris--they were gone for 10 days.  About all the places they had seen--and they saw it all!  

"They call Paris, the City of Light, but they have had to cut back to save energy...but it was still beautiful at night.  They have the most beautiful and famous paintings in the Louvre.  We got to ride a double-decker bus  in London and saw the Queen's Palace and West Minister Abbey and the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris."

Then she told me about her girl friends, how some of them get so dramatic.  "It seems every day, one of them is whining about how no one likes her or they want me to play with them and no one else.  Jill is my best friend because she isn't like that.  I try to be nice to all of my friends.  I don't know why those silly girls act like that.  Maybe they are insecure or something."

She is so well spoken and mannerly.  When we got back to her place, she leaned over and hugged me and told me how much fun she had and "I love you Grandma."
Look how tall she is for nine years old.

So--I can die happy now!  I got to see all four of my youngest in the last four weeks.  Got to know them better, what they are thinking, how they act, what they know.  Jennifer is doing a real good job at raising them.  I am very happy!