Monday, April 28, 2008

The Daffodil Principle

I received this in an email and thought it worthy of sharing here.  Hope you enjoy.

 

The Daffodil Principle

Several times my daughter had telephoned to say, "Mother, you must come to see the daffodils before they are over.''

I wanted to go, but it was a two-hour drive from Laguna to Lake Arrowhead
. "I will come next Tuesday", I promised a little reluctantly on her third call.

Next Tuesday dawned cold and rainy. Still, I had promised, and reluctantly I drove there. When I finally walked into Carolyn's house
, I was welcomed by the joyful sounds of happy children. I delightedly hugged and greeted my grandchildren.

"Forget the daffodils, Carolyn!  The road is invisible in these clouds and fog, and there is nothing in the world except you and these children that I want to see badly enough to drive another inch!"

My daughter smiled calmly and said, "We drive in this all the time, Mother."

"Well, you won't get me back on the road until it clears, and then I'm heading for home!" I assured her.

"But first we're going to see the daffodils. It's just a few blocks," Carolyn said. "I'll drive. I'm used to this."

"Carolyn," I said sternly, "Please turn around."

"It's all right, Mother, I promise. You will never forgive yourself if you miss this experience."

After about twenty minutes, we turned onto a small gravel road and I saw a small church. On the far side of the church, I saw a hand lettered sign with an arrow that read, "Daffodil Garden."


W e got out of the car, each took a child's hand, and I followed Carolyn down the path. Then, as we turned a corner, I looked up and gasped.  Before me, lay the most glorious sight.

It looked as though someone had taken a great vat of gold and poured it over the mountain peak and its surrounding slopes. The flowers were planted in majestic, swirling patterns, great ribbons and swaths of deep orange, creamy white, lemon yellow, salmon pink, saffron and butter yellow. Each different-colored variety was planted in large groups so that it swirled and flowed like its own river with its own unique hue. There were five acres of flowers.

"Who did this?" I asked Carolyn.

"Just one woman," Carolyn answered. "She lives on the property. That's her home." Carolyn pointed to a well-kept A-frame house, small and modestly sitting in the midst of all that glory. We walked up to the house.

On the patio, we saw a poster. "Answers to the Questions I Know You Are Asking", was the headline.



The first answer was a simple one. "50,000 bulbs," it read.


The second answer was, "One at a time, by one woman. Two hands, two feet, and one brain."

The third answer was, "Began in 1958."

For me, that moment was a life-changing experience. I thought of this woman whom I had never met, who, more than forty years before, had begun, one bulb at a time, to bring her vision of beauty and joy to an obscure mountaintop. Planting one bulb at a time, year after year, this unknown woman had forever changed the world in which she lived.


One day at a time, she had created something of extraordinary magnificence, beauty, and inspiration. The principle her daffodil garden taught is one of the greatest principles of celebration.


That is, learning to move toward our goals and desires one step at a time, often just one baby-step at a time and learning to love the doing, learning to use the accumulation of time. When we multiply tiny pieces of time with small increments of daily effort, we too will find we can accomplish magnificent things. We can change the world

"It makes me sad in a way," I admitted to Carolyn.  "What might I have accomplished if I had thought of a wonderful goal thirty fiveor forty years ago and had worked away at it 'one bulb at a time' through all those years?  Just think what I might have been able to achieve!"

My daughter summed up the message of the day in her usual direct way. "Start tomorrow," she said.

She was right. It's so pointless to think of the lost hours of yesterdays. The way to make learning a lesson of celebration instead of a cause for regret is to only ask, "How can I put this to use today?"

Use the Daffodil Principle. Stop waiting.....


Until your car or home is paid off
Until you get a new car or home
Until your kids leave the house
Until you go back to school
Until you finish school
Until you clean the house
Until you organize the garage
Until you clean off your desk
Until you lose 10 lbs.
Until you gain 10 lbs.
Until you get married
Until you get a divorce
Until you have kids
Until the kids go to school
Until you retire
Until summer
Until spring
Until winter
Until fall
Until you die...

There is no better time than right now to be happy. Happiness is a journey, not a destination.

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Derby Pie

I just had a nice warm piece of Derby Pie and a glass of milk.

My dear readers, I pity you your Derby-Pie-less state!~

 

 

From their web site: ". . .Rupp vigilantly guards his forbears' recipe. Kern's Kitchen has filed 10 trademark infringement lawsuits, going up against big names such as Nestlé Foods. Rupp's six employees sign confidentiality agreements, and no one is allowed in the kitchen when the baker is combining ingredients."

The rich chocolate and walnut combination attacks my taste buds even as the pie melts in my mouth.

We're in the Money!

Has anyone else received their one-time refund yet?  Thomas went to the bank on Friday and came home with the pleasant information that not only had ours been deposited, but that it was more than we were expecting.

Then someone who owed him some money paid him $300.00 of it on Friday. 

And then I brought in the mail and we had an unexpected refund from our county auditor for $45.00.

Wow!  Made for a very nice Friday, I can tell you!

Sunday, April 27, 2008

In Case You Want To Catch Up With My Week . . .

Feeling much better today!  Actually I didn't feel too bad for most of the day yesterday.  I was just very tired.  (I didn't do any crunches or take a walk or anything! Gasp!)  I stayed home this morning, too.  But I'm feeling better and well enough to post, so I thought I'd catch up a bit.

I was sorry to read last night that Mary's father had passed away.  Even though we knew it was coming, it was still difficult to read.  One journaler commented to Mary that it was the entry she (Mary) "didn't want to write and the one we didn't want to read", and I thought that said it very, very well.

In Call For Support, it was touching that the entry about Mary's father's passing was followed by one announcing the birth of a new baby for another journaler.  The circle of life, eh?

It's sunny here today, but chillier than it has been with a cool breeze blowing.  Last week every day was simply gorgeous.  We had no rain until I think Thursday evening, and then just a few showers and a little thunder early Friday morning.  Or was that Saturday morning?  Next week it's going to be much cooler, but I can live with that.  It is still Spring, and that's the main thing.

As far as Springs go, this one has turned out to be a beautiful one, color-wise.  The early bloomers -- the dogwoods, blossoming cherry and apple trees, and others are still showing off for us.  About midway through the week I noticed that the deciduous trees were leafing out fully.  Eler Beth's bleeding heart had 18 blossoms on it this year, and my flowering almond was full of pretty, fluffy pink blossoms.

Last week I took Eler Beth to Perrin park twice to fly a kite and feed the ducks, (more on Perrin Park later -- I can't believe they don't have a web site!) and three times we took a couple of the dogs to Vissing Park to walk through the woods.  Eler Beth loves kites, and does a great job flying them (and getting them out of trees when they get stuck!), and now she is obsessed with stunt kites (also called "sport kites").  For two days in a row I listened to a running commentary on them.  I can now tell you how the techniques for getting them into the air and for flying them are different from those used for regular kites; I can tell you what they're made out of; I can direct you to several videos by professional stunt "kiters"; I can tell you the three closest kiting shops to us (and none of them is very close, let me tell you!); and I know when and where the next few kiting events are being held.  Thomas had to actually order her to stop talking about kites Wednesday night.  He folded much more quickly than I did, I might add.

My sister was in from Florida last weekend.  It was one of her flying visits.  I think the older she gets the more she needs to come in to reassure herself that all is well with Mom and the rest of us.  She'll probably be back in June or July. 

Last night a new Wii game was being released at midnight, one that Andrew had reserved for him and Eler Beth.  He took her with him to get it, because she informed me she had to go, as it would be her "first time getting to go to a new release!!"  This was a big deal, apparently.  They were going at 10:00 p.m. to a local Gamestop where one of Andrew's best friends works, and they'd be inside, so I said she could go.  I have never, ever waited up for Andrew in my life, but I actually waited up for them last night, just because she was with him.  To kill the time I gave my keyboard a really good cleaning -- popped the keys off and cleaned them individually.  It was past time for that to be done!

Andrew went to a play at the local high school yesterday.  One of his best friends was in it.  The high school has a really good, award-winning theater department.  They were performing "And Then There Were None", and Andrew's friend T was playing the part of General Mandrake.  I thought I might go see it today, but I'm just too lazy to venture out.

And I guess that catches me up to some extent.  Perhaps I'll be back later.  I hope everyone is well this weekend and enjoying a nice Spring day.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Very Rude Awakening!

I shouldn't be up right now.  I should be tucked up in my bed asleep for a bit longer.  I was up late last night.  I finally dragged myself off to bed and was just drifting off to sleep when I had to jump up and run to the bathroom.  Ooh, you really want to read about that, don't you?

Well, anyway, that was the first of five or six trips to the bathroom, so I finally just decided to stay up a while.  At least I got caught up with several journals.  But I'm getting sleepy now, and my plumbing seems to be calmed down for the time being, so I will try to get a little sleep.  I wonder if it was somthing I ate?  That would be strange, though, because I don't think I ate anything yesterday that at least one other person in the house didn't eat, and no one else seems to be ill.

I'm not going to do my crunches this morning.  I'll save them for this evening.  I have a lot of things planned for today, but I am going to get at least a couple hours of sleep before I get started on the day.  At some point I'll come back and write about my past week.  It has been a really good one, and a busy one!  We've had gorgeous weather.  I don't even begrudge the rain we're getting right now.

So, until later then!

Friday, April 18, 2008

Earthquake

We just had a tremor a few minutes ago.

It woke me up out of a dead sleep!!!

I woke up to my bed shaking and I could hear the furniture hitting the walls.  It felt like it lasted at least 30 seconds.  When it was over I got up, walked to the living room, noted our clock said 5:36 a.m., and turned on the TV to one of our local news programs.  They were just coming back from a commercial break and they said, "Yes, that was an earthquake you just felt!"

I am still really shocked that it was strong enough to wake me up.

They are just now saying that the center was in Illinois and that it registered 5.4 on the Richter scale.  My sister-in-law, Maxi, just called me a few minutes ago to see if we were okay.  She and Mary had just woke up and felt it.  I called my Mom, and my sister Lois said that she woke up to it, too.  Thomas is at work, but I haven't been able to get in touch with him yet.

We do live near the New Madrid fault, so we get small earthquakes or tremors a lot, but usually don't feel them.  The last one that I felt was around 1981, and this one was worse.

Oh well, just wanted to share.  I'm going to stay tuned to the news for a few more minutes.  Did any of my fellow J-Landers in Kentucky or Indiana feel that?? 

Update:  The earthquake was 10 miles below the surface.  Tall buildings in Indianapolis were actually shaking.  A building across from the KY Derby Headquarters on West Kentucky Street in Louisville had some damage.  My bedroom phone and its base fell off the bedside table.  I just remembered that I heard it fall when I woke up.  This was "only" a 5.4, so that's pretty minor, but still -- !!

 

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Thursday, April 17, 2008

Little Sisters and Big Brothers

Andrew is 18 now, and usually has a pretty full schedule, with work, school, his band, and socializing.  (He is currently "single", having broken up with his girlfriend of last summer.)  He still makes time to play video games with Eler Beth or watch certain TV shows or movies that they both find amusing.  It means a lot to Eler Beth, and he really is a good-hearted boy.  But this week he has been just super busy and hasn't had the time for her that she feels like he should have had.

Well she just found out that he is going to Nashville, TN this weekend with his best friend Jason and won't be back until Sunday night.  I heard her ask him, wistfully, "Don't you ever miss us when you're gone?"

His answer surprised me. "Yes.  Yes I do, actually."

That was nice for both of us to know!

Crunch Tally So Far . . .

Andy left a comment asking how many crunches I'd done, so I decided to tally them up.   I have been keeping track of the comments and then how many crunches I do each day on a calendar.  (And my little task-master is helping keep up with them, too.)

On Friday, the 11th, I did 21 in the morning and 12 in the evening, for a total of 33.  Waaaay too many to do on the first day!

On Saturday I did 39.  Looking back I'm pretty sure that I messed up and did more than I actually had to, but -- oh well!  For the record, 39 is also waaaay too many to do on the second day!

On Sunday I had 12 to do.  It didn't seem right to drop from 39 all the way down to 12, so I made it an even 20.  On Monday, my comments garnered only 7, so I made it an even 20 again.  On Tuesday I had 10 comments for crunches and again made it an even 20. 

Yesterday there were 14, so I again rounded up to 20.  Today I had 10 comments to crunch to, so I stuck with 20 again.  So far I only have three comments for tomorrow.

I am saving my comment alerts each day until after I do my crunches; then I'm deleting them.  Hopefully I haven't missed any.  I'd like to get up to 50 a day before the end of the month.  Perhaps next month I'll do a different exercise or alternate between crunches and something different.

I can tell a difference in my abs.  For one thing I'm terribly sore! lol  I've been walking every day, and doing Curves every other day.  I haven't weighed yet this week, but the shorts I put on today did seem more loose.  I guess when I measure next month I'll be able to tell what kind of difference I've made.  I have had more energy, that's for sure!

Anyway, there you have it:  I've done a total of 172 crunches this week!

Monday, April 14, 2008

Crunches, Sisters, and Lightning

This morning as soon as Eler Beth got up she asked me how many crunches I'd have to do today! lol  I think she's enjoying this waaay too much!

I didn't go to Curves or take a walk today, but I did do my crunches.  I'm still sore!  We had a busy day yesterday, and I was just so tired today I didn't feel like doing any more than I have to.  I hope this chilly weather doesn't last too long. 

My sister P.J. and her husband came up and spent the afternoon with us yesterday.  Bill, her husband, works here in town, even though they live about 60 miles away in Kentucky.  He had a meeting yesterday at noon, so P.J. decided to ride up with him and come by to see us.  We had a great visit.  She brought me some new pictures of her grandkids.  And of course, as happens whenever any of us get together, we eventually made ourselves laugh till we cried.  Maybe my sides are sore from that as much as from the crunches!

We got to talking about how Bill has been struck by lightning three times in his life -- yes, it's true.  He was struck once when he was a child, once when he was in the army, and once not too many years ago at his place of employment.  After that last time, if it was storming, the people he worked with would get nowhere near him.

A week or so ago it was storming badly at my Mom's house when my sister Dennice left to go home.  Dennice lives only about 100 yards from my Mom's house, so she was walking.  She stepped out, realized how badly it was raining, and came back inside.  My Mom offered her an umbrella.  Now, both of them should have realized that it might not have been the safest thing to have an umbrella during a storm with lightning.  P.J. said that our sister Lois, who is the one who had told her this story, said that not long after Dennice left the house, they heard a tremendous clap of thunder and saw a bright strike of lightning.  They were just sure Dennice had been hit, but she hadn't.  She said one second she was walking up her drive, the next second she felt the hair on her neck tingling and everything went dark.  Now here's the funny part.  Everything went dark because her umbrella closed up on her!  She may have jumped out of fright and hit the button that closes it up, we don't know, but somehow it closed up on her.  She said the first thing she thought was "Everything doesn't get all bright when you get struck by lightning, everything goes gray!"  Well, everything went gray because she was seeing the inside of her umbrella.  Bill assures us that it does get bright!  That type of thing always happens to Dennice. 

That story led to the one about a guy P.J. knew who knocked himself in the forehead three times with a claw hammer.  He was putting in a tongue-in-groove ceiling, and a piece came unstuck or something, hit the hammer, which he was holding in front of and above his head, bounced off his hammer, then came back and struck it two more times.  Each time the strip of wood hit the hammer, the hammer hit his head.  Poor thing.

Then there was the story about another guy that both she and Bill know who was using a snow shovel to clean some debris out of a storm drain during a thunderstorm, when a huge clap of thunder startled him.  He jumped, slipped, and fell backward.  As he fell somehow he hit himself in the head with the shovel and almost knocked himself out.

Yes, I really enjoyed my sister's visit.  It was late when we all got to bed last night, and I was really dragging this morning.  And now here it is late again.  I guess I should take myself off to bed.  I hope everyone has a great week!

A Very Chilly "Thunder"

Thomas took Eler Beth and her friend, B, to Thunder Over Louisville Saturday.  This is the twelfth "Thunder" that Eler Beth has gone to.  She was less than three months old for her first one.  I remember before the fireworks started that year I put half of a foam ear plug in each of her ears, then put a boggin over her head and ears, put ear muffs over that, and held my hands over her ears as well.  Andrew was 6-1/2 that year.

I haven't gone in a few years now.  Thomas loves the air show, and the kids love the fireworks, of course, along with the vendors and the games, etc.  Andrew usually goes with some friends, but because it was so cold this year he sat it out.  We watched the show on TV.

It didn't really rain, just misted a little, but it was very cold.  Most everyone on the riverfront was bundled up in blankets and sweaters.  Eler Beth and B had a little tent up, and they watched the fireworks from inside it.  When they got home Eler Beth told me that they'd had a blast.  She said, "And Dad was making friends with everybody and giving out earplugs and seeing people he knew from work, and this was the best year ever!"

The Louisville Courier-Journal has lots of pictures of the air show, the fireworks, and the crowds at www.courierjournal.com and click on the "Thunder" tab, if you're interested.  There are some cute videos here, including one of a very excited little five-year-old.  He's adorable!

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Rose Buds and Hanging Baskets

ROSE BUDS & HANGING BASKETS
 
A teenage granddaughter comes downstairs for her date with this see-through blouse on and no bra. 
Her grandmother just pitched a fit, telling her not to dare go out like that! 

The teenager tells her, "Loosen up Grams.  These are modern times.  You gotta let your rose buds show!" and out she goes. 


The next day the teenager comes downstairs, and the grandmother is sitting there with no top on. The teenager wants to die.  She explains to her grandmother that she has friends coming over and that it is just not appropriate.... 


The grandmother says, "Loosen up, Sweetie.  If you can show off your rose buds, then I can display my hanging baskets."

Happy Gardening.


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Friday, April 11, 2008

Friday Notes

We had a great day today.  Although it stormed this morning, and rained off and on most of the early afternoon, by this evening the rain had stopped and the sun peeked out once in a while.

Andrew had to work this evening, and Thomas had to work late, so Eler Beth and I had dinner at CiCi's Pizza and did a little shopping.  There is a Dollar Tree next door to CiCi's, so we went in there and browsed around.  The fact that Eler Beth is growing up showed while we were there; she didn't spend any time at all in the toys sections, but only in the candles and crafts section.  We dropped by KSS School Supply Store and I picked up a few things I needed, including a study guide for Little Women, which we just started.  I just love that store and could spend a fortune there very easily!  I have been able to find study guides or come up with something on my own for most of the classics that we have read, but hadn't found anything that I liked for Little Women.  This one looks like it will work just fine.

I had 18 more crunches to do this evening as of 8:30 p.m.  I did them, and they are all I'm doing for today, a total of 39.  I'm going to Curves in the morning, but I will do my crunches, too.  I am sore right now, so don't let anyone tell you that crunches don't do anything -- they are definitely doing something!

Now I'm ready to relax for a while, read a few journals, and then get to bed.  Tomorrow will be a busy day.  I hope that everyone is having a great weekend!

Phew!!

Oh. My. Goodness.

I should have gone online and done my crunches first thing this morning.  Tomorrow I am going to do it that way.

Today, at about 11:30 I checked, and I had 18 comments on my last entry, plus three on my entry on The Best I Can Be.  So I did 21 crunches; three reps of seven.  Eler Beth said I had to do them before lunch.  You know when you haven't done sit-ups or crunches in a loooong time, it is not easy!!

What I actually had planned to do, though, is count in the comments on any other entries I had done that day.  If I did that I would have to add 12 more crunches, making a total of 33 for the day.

Eler Beth says that I have to do them, so I will do them this evening.  It works out well because it is raining cats and dogs right now, so my daily walk is out, and I wasn't going to Curves today anyway.

This could work!

On any day that I don't do an entry I'll just do at least the number that I'd done the day before.  Hopefully I'll be able to do 50 a day in no time!  Thank you to everyone who "helped" by leaving a comment! lol

Thursday, April 10, 2008

Exercising 4 Comments!

I have mentioned the journal The Best I Can Be where several J-Landers are posting their progress in reaching certain personal goals and encouraging one another.  Well, recently Martha brought to our attention Lisa's blog where she is Exercising 4 Comments!  She does a sit-up (or crunch) for each comment she receives.  I thought that was a wonderful idea for a motivator!!

So, starting tomorrow I'm going to do that too.  For every comment I receive in this and any other of my journals I will do one crunch.  Eler Beth is going to be my witness to make sure I do it.  So I hope you will all trust me (and Eler Beth), because after all I have no way of proving to you that I'm doing them.  But I will, on my honor.

Haha!!  I just got a comment on my previous post from Lisa, who started this, and she said "1 crunch!  Ha-ha-ha".  So I guess I'm off and running -- or crunching!!

This, That, and T'Other

It has actually been a great week.  All that rain we were supposed to get every day except Monday, just didn't materialize.  I think it's coming tonight, though.

Tuesday Eler Beth and I caught up from taking off on Monday.  We still managed to spend a good bit of the day outside.  We even did our Social Studies research outside.  She brought out her laptop and notebook, and the two of us sat on the porch and worked.

Wednesday I had a headache all day, but still managed to get done what needed to be done.  Last night I made a good start on getting caught up with journal reading.  My headache went away in the evening, and then for some reason I couldn't get to sleep until late last night.

Today has been pretty ho-hum.  I called to talk to my Mom and sisters.  My sister, Maxine, is coming up to Kentucky once again for a flying visit on the weekend of the 19th.  Hopefully I'll get down to my Mom's to see her while she's in.  Eler Beth and I did some yard work this afternoon.  The regular school kids had a half day, so the neighborhood was loud with the sounds of happy children playing -- I love that sound!

My grass is ready to be cut.  I guess if we don't get the rain they're calling for, I'll pull out the lawn mower this weekend.  Saturday is Thunder Over Louisville, the official kick-off for the Derby celebrations.  It's supposed to be cool, with the possibility of some light showers, but I'm sure that won't stop Thomas, Eler Beth, and her friend, B, from going.  Andrew will probably go with some of his friends, and I'll stay home and watch it on TV! lol  I did Thunder for several years, and don't care to get out there much anymore.  Thomas loves the air show, and Eler Beth loves it all.

My sister-in-law is doing very well.  I will probably stop by to see her tomorrow, and maybe take her and her sister, Maxi, a dessert or something.  There have been so many losses in J-Land recently, and my heart goes out to everyone who has suffered.

As for me, I'm feeling much better than I have in several weeks.  I've been writing a lot (not here, necessarily) and that has helped.  It feels, looks, and smells like Spring finally, and that has helped a lot, too.  I can't wait to plant, and I can't wait to do some painting inside the house.  I want to pull up all my carpets, too, and lay down some wood flooring.   I said I was going to do that last year, but we never got around to getting it planned out and doing it.  This year I'm determined!

I hope everyone has had a decent week.  Take care, and have a great weekend!

Thank you Donna for the beautiful graphics.

Weekly Sentence #9, Belated

I'm late, but had to play this week, anyway.

Click here to play:  Weekly Sentence 
This week's letters:
DUSBTH
 
Here is my choice:
Dizzyingly Useful Suggestions By The Helmses
 

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

Since I'm Up Anyway . . .

I was tagged a few days ago by Beth at Nutwood Junction.  It has been so long since I've actually received a "tag" that her "You've been tagged!" at the end of her comment to one of my entries almost went unnoticed.  I actually did a "double-take".

So I will perform my duties now.  Here are the rules:

1. The rules of the game get posted at the beginning.
2. Each player answers the questions about themselves.
3. At the end of the post, the player then tags 5 people and posts their names, then goes to their blogs and leaves them a comment, letting them know they’ve been tagged and asking them to read your blog.

QUESTIONS:

1) What was I doing 10 yrs ago?

In 1998 I was, as I am now, a stay-at-home mom, although I believe I was working part-time for a caterer.  Thomas was working where he is now, actually.  Andrew was 8 years old, and joyful little third grader.  He was becoming more social, with neighborhood friends dropping by to play video games and calling on the phone.  Eler Beth was 2 years old, and the same whirlwind she is now, only with shorter legs and a shorter attention span.  My father was still living then, too.  We were just getting ready to buy our house.

2) What are 5 things on my to-do list for today (not in any particular order):

1.  Call to make a dentist's appointment for Andrew.

2.  Print out some social studies lessons for Eler Beth.

3.  Gas up my car before the prices go up again tonight!!

4.  Pull some tenderloin out of the freezer for dinner.

5.  Call my Mom.

3) Snacks I enjoy:

  Popcorn, Triscuit crackers, Grapes, Almond Joy bars, Bananas

4) Things I would do if I were a billionaire:

Pay my kids college fees, give my Mom, sisters, and brother, WHATEVER they wanted, buy Thomas the property he wants for hunting and fishing and then build my dream house on it, give Andrew the best graduation party he could imagine this year, oh my, where would I stop??

5) Five of my bad habits:

I twirl my hair,

twiddle my thumbs,

hum a lot,

stay up too late at night,

and pop my knuckles. 

Wouldn't I look pretty demented if I were doing all those things at once?

6) 5 places I have lived:

Hardinsburg, Kentucky;

Louisville, Kentucky;

Harned, Kentucky;

and Jeffersonville, Indiana. 

That's it, just four places.  Five if you consider that I grew up actually living just outside of Hardinsburg, and then I lived within the city limits of Hardinsburg for a while when we were first married.

7) 5 jobs I have had:

Layout artist, proofreader, and features writer for a newspaper;

HR liaison for a gravure company;

comptroller for a food broker;

document management clerk for an insurance company;

office manager for a welding company.

5 people I'll tag:

Pam

Jenny

Shelly

Roxie

Gem

 


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Hope/My Thoughts and Feelings

Again, this is a duplicate of a Call For Support entry.  Please take a minute to send Hope some encouraging words.

Tuesday, April 8, 2008

Please Stop By Mara's

If you haven't already done so, please stop by Mara's Journal, I Have Tea.  Mara's baby brother died suddenly yesterday evening.  I'm sure she would appreciate all the good thoughts and prayers for her and her brother's family right now.

I posted this news on the shared journal Call For Support that Guido started a while back.

If you aren't already subscribing to alerts from this journal, I encourage you to do so.  There are many others in J-Land who have suffered losses recently, including Anne at Saturday's Child, who, I am sure, would also appreciate your calling 'round.

Monday, April 7, 2008

School Has Been Called Off Today On Account Of Good Weather!

We're supposed to get rain the rest of the week, but today is absolutely gorgeous!  It is warm and sunny, and I couldn't see doing schoolwork when there's a nice Spring day to enjoy.  We did do our daily reading, though.  Everything else can be caught up tomorrow to the accompaniment of rain.  Blech!

I drank my coffee out on my front porch this morning and listened to the birds singing.  I could hear our tiels and keets answering from inside the house.  I wandered around the yard checking to see what plants were poking their heads out of the ground and what was showing off new buds, leaves, or blooms.  Occasionally I would nudge some dried leaves and grass out of the way with the toe of my shoe, to see what new growth was hiding below. 

I ambled around the house, critically checking  windows, eaves, and gutters, making a mental to-do list.  I washed sheets and bedding and hung them out on the lines to dry.  I turned the dogs out of their kennels to watch them rolling on their backs in the new grass, scratching off winter coats.  With the help of a step ladder I peeked inside a dove's nest to see if there were any eggs yet.  There weren't.  I responded happily to a neighbor, cleaning out the bed of phlox surrounding her mailbox, who asked me if I was out getting some vitamin D.

I hope they're wrong about the forecast for the rest of the week.  But if they aren't, then I'll make this day count as much as I can.  I hope everyone is having a wonderful Monday out there.

Thank you Donna for the beautifulgraphics.

"A good name is better than precious ointment; . . .

. . . and the day of death than the day of one's birth."  Eccl. 7:1 (KJV)

                                           

Well, the funeral service for my BIL was very nice, and there was quite a crowd there.  He was one of 10 children, with 1 brother and 7 sisters and his mother surviving him.  Many of his nieces and nephews were there as well.  Everyone loved Uncle Jerry.

There was quite a crowd of people from the community who had known Mary and Jerry for decades who were there as well.  It was also good to see Thomas' brother and his family, and his sister and her husband, all of whom came in from Nashville.  We got to meet a new grand-nephew (2 months old) for the first time as well.  Mary's first husband, his brother, a sister, and a nephew were there as well.  I thought that was rather remarkable, since they weren't related to Jerry, but Thomas said that he wasn't surprised because they'd all known one another, Jerry included, even before Mary had married either time. 

"It is better to go to the house of mourning, than to the house of feasting: for that is the end of all man; and the living will lay it to his heart."  Eccl. 7:2 (KJV)

It was obvious how well-thought-of Jerry was in the community, and Mary as well.  Nieces and nephews spoke of Jerry taking them fishing when they little, how he gave the nieces and nephews nicknames, how he would travel to Glasgow, Kentucky just to fish with his mother and father because they wanted to see him and that was their favorite recreation, how he was the one who taught Thomas how to drive and how when Thomas and his brothers were sent up here to live with Mary after their mother died (Thomas was only nine), that Jerry spent hours with them fishing and talking and keeping them occupied.  He may have lived only 62 short years, but they were good years and he built up a good name for himself.

"Better is the end of a thing than the beginning thereof; . . . ."  Eccl. 7:8 (KJV)

But funerals for two Saturdays in a row is enough for me for a while.

Mary continues to do very well.  Their sister, Maxi, never left her side through Jerry's brief illness, surgery, coma, and then following his death.  Mary is staying with Maxi for as long as Maxi can get her to. 

Thank you again to all who left comments of sympathy and encouragement. 

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Thirty-Fourth Anniversary of the April 3 Tornadoes

This is a re-print of the April 3 entry from last year:

On April 3, 1974 I was just a few days short of my 8th birthday, a second grader at Hardinsburg Elementary School, in Breckinridge County, Kentucky.  I have only one really clear memory of that day, and that was when our school bus stopped about a quarter of a mile from our house, in front of what had been the house of a great-aunt.

This was not a scheduled bus stop, so when our driver slowed to a stop it brought my attention out of the book I was reading.  I looked out the right side of the bus and was greatly surprised to see my mother standing there.  I called to my sister, Barbara, six years my senior, "What's Mom doing there?"  She looked at me like I was an idiot, and that is when I realized that Dad was there too, holding a chain saw, along with other men, neighbors, cousins and uncles, also with chain saws, and they were engaged in cutting up the huge oak that had once stood at the end of my great-aunt's drive.  The tree had been pulled up out of the ground by the roots, and as my horrified gaze drifted past that sight I realized that the old house that had stood a bit back from the road was gone!

Our driver, after talking to some of the adults outside, continued on the route; ours was actually the next stop.  I was thoroughly upset.  My sister was still irritated with me -- "Didn't you know we had a tornado come through today?  What did you think that tornado drill was all about?"

Well, I swear I have no recollection of any tornado drill.  I don't think I even had any memory of it at the time she said that.  Either the fact that a tornado had come through that close to home and had destroyed a house that was familiar to me had wiped all other recollections of the day out of my mind, or the drill had been conducted as a regular drill and had been so innocuous that it had meant nothing to me, I don't know.  I'm sure the older kids, like my sister, had either been told by their teachers that it hadn't been a drill, but the real thing, or they'd figured it out, but I'm sure we younger ones were just led to believe that it was only a drill.

I foundout later that at our house, my father, who had been outside working in his shed when the weather took a horrible turn, had watched from about a half-acre to the back of the house as the tornado had headed straight for our home and then had seemed to just "jump" over it.  He said it literally picked itself up right before it got to our house, stepped over the house, and then lowered itself back down.  This would have been right after it had taken out my great-aunt's house.

Inside the house, my mother, two of my sisters, a four-year-old niece and a family friend, had all crawled under my parent's iron bed as soon as they saw the tornado approaching.  We didn't have a basement, and that was deemed the safest place to be on such short notice.  A lot of praying was going on under that bed, I can tell you!

That tornado, an F5 by the time it hit Brandenburg, to our East, was one of at least 26 deadly tornados that hit Kentucky that day.  The one that jumped over our house was considered the most severe and one of only 7 F5 tornados recorded.  In Breckinridge and Meade Counties I believe 31 people died.  The most damage in our county was done to the town of Irvington, to our East.  The city of Brandenburg, in Meade County, was almost completely wiped out, and many of the deaths were of children playing outside.  The city of Louisville, Kentucky, in Jefferson County, was hit by a different tornado and also saw a lot of damage and deaths.  The April 3, 1974 tornado outbreak is considered one of the worst, if not the worst, in U.S. history.

The following is a quote from this site:

The forecast for Wednesday April 3, 1974 was for showers on the East coast and for thunderstorms across the Midwest. In the heavens, a storm of an overwhelming magnitude was forming. Children went to school, people went to work and lives went on as normal until the second worst storm of the 1900's struck. Tornadoes broke across the heartland with such an intensity and frequency never seen before in the United States. Homes and schools destroyed. Loved ones lost. This site looks at the events of that day .This site is dedicated to the 315 people who lost their lives in this storm and to the over 5,000 people who were injured.
 
There are some really awesome photos on that site.
 
The following information is from this site:
 
 
April 3, 1974
Counties: Breckinridge and Meade, Kentucky, Harrison, Indiana Meade, Harrison IN
F-Scale:  F5
Deaths:  31
Injuries:  270
Path width: 500 ft.
Path length:  32 miles
Time:  2:20pm
Grazulis narrative:  Touching down five miles southwest of Hardinsburg, Breckinridge County, the tornado passed along the northern edge of that town, with F3 damage to homes.  Thirteen people were injured and 35 homes were destroyed as the funnel moved to the northeast across Breckinridge County and into Meade County.  The tornado gradually enlarged and intensified as it approached Brandenburg.  The funnel devastated that town and crossed the Ohio River into Harrison County, Indiana.  At Brandenburg 128 homes were completely destroyed, many of them leveled and swept away.  Thirty businesses were destroyed and damage totaled over ten million dollars.  There were 28 deaths in the Brandenburg area.  The F4 damage occurred from north of Irvington, into Indiana.
Noted discrepancies:  SPC and NCDC give a time of 2:20pm, Grazulis gives 3:25pm, Storm Data 3:30pm.  SPC and NCDC give a path length of 32 miles, Grazulis gives 34.  SPC and NCDC give a path width of 430 yards, Grazulis give 800 yards.
Click here for emails of personal accounts of the April 3 tornado.
 
For many years walks in the woods or camping trips would invariably include the sight of tin roofing high up in trees and the comment, "Must have been from the April 3 tornado."

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

Welcoming Another April

LADY APRIL by Richard Le Galliene

So, April, here thou art again,

      Thou pretty, pretty lady!

With broidered skirts of sunkissed rain --

      A grown-up girl, already!

Thy sister May

Is on her way,

     And June, with tresses shady;

But, of the three,

I love best thee --

     Thou pretty, pretty lady!

Thou hauntest all the sobering year,

     With echos of thy laughter;

And life is nought till thou appear,

     And but remembrance after.

Though Autumn's yield

From garth and field

     Run o'er from floor to rafter,

Thy wild-rose breast

Haunts all the rest,

     And makes it poor with laughter.

   I posted this poem last year and remarked that it was one of few poems I had committed to memory when I was a child.  I loved the cadence of the words.

Todaywas certainly a beautiful April day, but rain is coming in tonight, and it's going to be sitting on top of us all day tomorrow.  We're expecting to get four or five inches.  I'll be glad when my yard dries out and I can plant things.

I noticed dogwoods blooming over the weekend, and today everywhere I went I saw forsythia, apple, and cherry blossoms.  I have crocus and daffodils blooming.

My sister-in-law is doing very well.  I called and chatted with her a while today.  Her sister was there with her.  I don't think she's left her side through the whole ordeal.  I expect her to break down to some extent on Saturday.  She and Jerry would have been married for 37 years this September.  That's quite a long while.

I've made my way to a few journals today, and hope to visit some more tomorrow.  Slowly, but surely, I'll get caught up.