Friday, July 26, 2024
I Followed Your Advice
Thursday, July 25, 2024
Joe
Wednesday, July 24, 2024
Hiking in Marin
Tuesday, July 23, 2024
Could It Be?
Monday, July 22, 2024
Marin Farmers Market
Friday, July 19, 2024
More Books
I read After Annie today. A review I read once said that you don't just read about Anna Quindlan's characters, you inhabit them. Or maybe it was that they inhabit you. It doesn't matter; they're both true.
I could smell their dinners and hear their sobs. I was as bewildered, as lost, as uncertain as they were. After all, Annie dies on the first page. Where is this book possibly going to go that won't rip my heart out and leave it on the sidewalk to fry?
The reason Anna Quindlan won a Pulitzer is that she is able to find that space between the unbearable and the alarm clock. Her gift is presenting the life that must go on, the quotidian details like laundry and hamster food, side by side with the inescapable reality.
She's covered every possible relationship. Immediate family, in-laws' families, replacement people for estranged families all bump up against one another as life goes on. Nothing very unusual happens yet everyone is different at the end, but only around the edges.
I feel like I've known them my entire life.
I've really been on a roll; the library has been fulfilling all my wishes. Yesterday, I read S. A. Cosby's All the Sinners Bleed. It's a police procedural and a family drama and a meditation on race and power. It's beautifully written.
I think I've read it before. Pieces of the story felt familiar, but only like an old friend reminding me of a story and telling it again, filling in the parts that are really important. I remembered who dunnit, but that was much less important than what was happening around the edges of the investigation.
Cosby gives you enough room to make up your own mind about his characters. There are surprises and there are sorrows in a place that feels familiar and extremely strange at the same time. It feels that way to the residents, too, which makes it just that much more relatable and believable.
Which is weird to say because there is nothing about their lives which looks anything like mine.
An older and wiser James Lee Burke's latest collection of stories, Harbor Lights, has left me breathless. The stories still have the wit of the young Dave Robicheaux, who was an old man even then, but it's tinged with wisdom and the knowledge that there's more behind him than in front of him.
It was hard to read more than one at a time. There was a lot to digest, much of it melancholy. I tried to remember to read it when the sun was shining.
That's not to say that it should be avoided. On the contrary, every bit of it was wonderful. The landscape is still as much of a character as the humans. He reveals truths and then lets them sit with the characters, so they can sit with you. It is not to be taken lightly.
Thursday, July 18, 2024
Crocheting
I learned from my mother. Her mother sewed, Daddooooo's mother crocheted. I don't think there's a story behind that, but I wanted to share the data anyway.
Knitting was G'ma's go-to craft, and we had the handmade ski sweaters to prove it. Unfortunately, she used scratchy wools that no one who's been alive since acrylics hit the scene would ever put. on their bodies again. I gave them all away, heartbreaking though it was. I like to think of a cold un-housed human being comforted by her stitches.
I have a closet full of yarns that I really did think would become a project when I bought them. Somehow, shopping was more fun than creating and now the skeins sit, taking up closet space, waiting to be put to use.
Taos Bubbe texted me today, wondering if I would teach her granddaughter to crochet. We have a date on Friday. Green is her color, and I certainly have enough of it to get her started.
I've always had a problem finding the last stitch on the row. My scarves end up with diagonal edges. I've become the master at putting edging round the errors, like putting lipstick on a pig. If I'm the only one who knows it's there, what's the harm? That's the lesson I'm going to share.
Crocheting is better than biting your nails. It's better than sitting in front of a screen, hands idle, brain absorbing but not participating. It gives you small gifts for friends and big gifts for special occasions. It calms the soul.
As I type this I am reminded that I have a wedding present afghan that's almost but not quite finished. The wedding was two years ago.
My last crocheting craze started when Little Cuter was first pregnant. Baby hats, round blankets, stroller sized wraps, swaddles, tiny mittens - they were produced at an alarming rate. The fascination lasted through her second pregnancy, went on hiatus for a few years, then sprung into action once HoneyBunny was preparing to arrive.
There's a giant pink blanket waiting to be completed. Her little brother will be delivered in January, and thus far nothing has been created to welcome him. I think Taos Bubbe's request is just what I need to get going.
Her granddaughter will learn on green. I'll get started on a blue baby blanket for my next grandson. Gender specific colors can be useful when the baby is teeny tiny and not obviously male or female. As Big Cuter told people looking at his bald baby sister in the stroller - It's wearing PINK!! It's a GIRL!!!
And then we went home and scotch taped a bow to her head.
Wednesday, July 17, 2024
My New Chair
Weighted inflatable ball with hand pump and foot rest. American flag quilt by Not-Kathy. |
It seemed simpler than it's turned out to be.
Balancing while typing requires two sets of brain functions, both of which are used to being the only one in charge in any given moment. It's a challenge to stay balanced and think deep thoughts.
Initially, it was too soft. I was too low to the keyboard and didn't feel enough support from below. My feeble attempts at inflating it did nothing to improve the situation. TBG didn't think he accomplished anything after he tried, but he was wrong.
At this moment, I am precariously balanced atop a rather unforgiving and ever changing surface. Weighted to exist in a state of almost-stationary-but-not-quite, staying in one place requires constant motion by the sitter.
Yes, it's counterintuitive. But it's true. One deep breath and the whole thing reacts.... usually just as one of those deep thoughts is emerging. Hanging onto both at the same time is giving my brain new challenges, and that's a good thing. Losing my train of thought, not so much.
Then there's question of stature. My feet don't reach the floor if I sit at the very top. I have a foot rest, but my feet don't reach it if my knees are at a ninety degree angle. I can lean forward and sway side to side. I can put the foot rest under one foot. while the other is on its toes. Finding a stack of something to put under the other foot is a new priority.
No matter what position I choose for my feet, my back and gluteal musculature must be engaged so I don't fall forward or back. This makes typing to you a form of exercise, one which will speak to me later this evening.
While it is very difficult to stay focused when the chair is an active participant in the activity, when I know what I'm going to write it's fun to bounce up and down.
This is an enjoyable conundrum.
Tuesday, July 16, 2024
It Was Quite a Storm
The root balls don't send enough deep tendrils to hold the tall trees in place. This makes sense since our limited water supply rarely seeps down into the soil, but it's not much help when the winds start whirling.
Limbs the size of my thigh broke off and tilted the trees along with them.
Not all of them left the trunk completely,
Our next door neighbors lost two olive trees and a desert willow.
The UV was a victim as well. This is what I found wedged underneath when I parked at Pilates after driving past the devastation.
Monday, July 15, 2024
Untitled
I tried several titles on for size. None of them fit recent events... or else they were not fit to print.
There's a lot I might say aloud, but I'm reluctant to write most of it down. I'm following Daddooooo's advice: Don't do anything you don't want published on the front page of the New York Times.
I've spent this afternoon curating my remarks. These are the few that passed muster.
Where are the pundits calling out the crisis actors who created this scene? Those pundits were noisy about the bullets flying around me, and that was certainly a blatant (if insane) political act.
I smile when I read gun safety advocates' posts holding the victims in their hearts and sending prayers. I really hope that is all those poor souls need right now.
And finally, rail all you want at immigrants and people of color, but it was a young white American man with a legally purchased firearm who tried to take your head off, Donald.
I'm just sayin'