Cold Cucumber Soup

Just the dish for a hot summer day.

3 stalks of celery
2 large cucumbers
1 small onion (I would put in less….)
1 1/2 avacados
1 1/2 lemons juiced
1/2 seasalt
large handfull of mint  (spear, pepper and apple)
garnish with parsley, mint and dulse (I actually haven’t done this)

Blend all together and our over chopped veggies or eat alone.
The mint and onion can be overpowering if you use it straight up as a soup.

Orchid Day

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For Pat 11/27/2014

It was Orchid Day

Behind us
a wall of snow
immense,
like a huge wave
frozen in time.
Pinned to our coats
orchids from Jones Pharmacy,
the petals, edges brown, so fragile
in the cold.

It was Orchid Day.
High above us the muffled noise of traffic,
In front of us birds carried cold bits of seed
across the ice.

Your thick black hair had only one
streak of silver then,
And your ungloved hand
balanced with elegance
only one cane.

But it was Orchid Day.
Your eyes dark like chocolate
mine round and wide,
Even our jeans looked new
unwrinkled and clean.

 

Push Me Pull You

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Anna Lee Foster entered this world after thirty hours of back labor. My husband and I, like so many first-time parents, had our hearts set on natural childbirth, but after about fifteen hours of agonizing pain, I took the meds which, of course, slowed “progress” down to a crawl. I developed a fever and she began to show signs of distress, so they decided to go to plan B which was pulling her out with a baby-sized plumbers friend. The dance went like this: at the beginning of a contraction I would push and they would pull. We could do this only three times, they said. Then they would go to the dreaded plan C. We pushed and pulled unsuccessfully through two contractions. And then on the third and final push and pull out she came with a bruised and slightly misshapen head. The nurses scooped her up, cleaned her off and placed her in her father’s arms. She gazed into his eyes, breathtakingly beautiful.

Few rites of passage exist in our modern world. And fewer of them consciously acknowledge and value those corner-turning moments of our lives. However, something dawns on me when I look at photos from Annalee’s prom. The dress is sage colored. Strapless. Flows from a sequined bodice in the style of a Greek goddess. She smiles at us, a mix of bubbly soda and sophistication. Grace frozen in time. The moment is truly ceremony. A step toward leaving home.
A little family secret is that during most of her senior year, Annalee lived hermit-style in our house. Her room fell into an abysmal state. Like Thoreau she saw mostly no one, appeared for short mandatory visits at mealtime then disappeared again into some foreign and probably exotic place behind her bedroom door. I understood this need for disconnection and trod gingerly when gifted with her presence. Until, of course, I couldn’t stand it anymore. “Annalee…your room….the house will be condemned if anyone steps in there…” And “If you live like this next year your roommate will hate you.” And “…you need to get a haircut to boot.” She rebelled quietly. The room began to smell.
And then……she was gone.

The dance of push-me-pull-you is over and I am left with absence. Her vacant room has taken on a new identity. The door, closed for the past year, now always stands open. The bare bed she left behind has been remade with fresh sheets and a Mexican blanket. The room is clean. Floor, uncluttered. The books that did not go with her are neatly shelved. Old journals are stacked on her desk. I rifle through a couple of them. A few months ago Annalee would have howled at this invasion, but now,  her ghostly presence just shrugs nonchalantly. An unopened carton of organic hearty chicken soup stock (good for colds!) sits left behind on her dresser. It is a reminder of how this corner-turning is about choice.

For Annalee and me, the daily dance of ‘push-me-pull-you’ is over forever. This truth hits hardest during my meditative stretching class. It is evening and the lights are dim. Soft music plays. As I reach my arms up to the sky, grief washes down over me like blood, and I feel the primariness of my relationship with my daughter flow out of my hands and disappear into the ether. My years of big influence are over. Even if she comes back to live in her room, our relationship will be different. I will step back so that she can step forward. Musical notes tumble out of the window into dusky night. As our stretching winds down, the wave of grief subsides, but I am glad for the soothing music and comforting darkness.

 

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How do I look?

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A youtube video of Dustin Hoffman being interviewed made the rounds on facebook about a year ago. In the moving interview Hoffman recounted revelations he had had while portraying a woman during the filming of “Tootsie.” He realized that he would never approach his female self at a party because, let’s face it, as a woman, he was not very “attractive”. And on the heels of that realization, he understood something profound about the female experience and his own bias towards appearance.
After watching him shed a few tears, my mind flashed to an afternoon  when I walked out of my free make-over at Merle Norman Cosmetics crestfallen that the makeover hadn’t worked. I was not any closer to being beautiful. Not one iota. I looked the same fucking way. Only more so. As Dustin Hoffman put it, this was as good as it was going to get. I brushed all that makeup off my 25-year old self and never told anyone.
Dustin’s tears made me grieve a little for my own struggles with appearance, especially as I begin to age. Of course there are all kinds of platitudes about inner beauty and the various forms of beauty. And how old, lined faces are beautiful. They are all true, but it is still a shock to see an elderly version of my mother’s lined face staring back at me from mirrors and shop windows.

In high school, my friend Rab (short for Barbara) would walk around and sing Janice Ian’s song “Seventeen” looking especially pitiful turning the phrase ‘ugly duckling girls like me.’ But Rab really wasn’t an ugly duckling. She had many pleasing features. Nice hair and skin. Big, blue eyes. Radiant smile. But her perception of herself was of someone shamefully unattractive. Well, she was rather a Miss Know-It-All, and this did not procure her many  boyfriends. And she was wicked bright to boot which also probably scared guys off. All the same, her desire to be viewed as attractive was fierce.

When I was barely thirty, a drunk man in his fifties or sixties came up to me at a bar, stared at me for a long second and told me I was sure going to be an ugly old woman. It was so spontaneous that I shamefully felt there must be truth in it. However, when I told my husband about that incident twenty years later, he laughed. He was right. It was ludicrous. What a bizarre thing for a lumbering drunk to say. And I laughed, too. And to laugh together with my husband at that man’s audacious comment did something to assuage that small, decades old hurt.

Aging brings with it all sorts of mania about one’s physical appearance. I seem to be of two minds. On one hand, aging is kind of a mirage. Anne Lamott has written about looking at photos of her younger self and being pleasantly surprised by the beauty staring back at her, but knowing how self-critical  she had been at the time. I think this happens in each cycle of aging. I look back, “wow… then I thought I was pudgy and getting wrinkles, but I looked great! But now…well, now…..”
And on the other hand the waning of my physical “beauty” is very real. When I was forty, I thought aging was a breeze. I thought fifty was good because it gave me freedom to not care that much. Wrinkles were, like they say, prizes for a life well-lived. But now — now the beginning of ‘real’ aging seems to be setting in and I am no longer merrily coasting along.  I have reached the age where, seriously, if Dustin came into the room he would likely pass me by and not see any potential for an interesting conversation. On good days, I envision my future self to be a slightly eccentric, radiant old woman who people might find interesting. However, on other days I feel I am already a shadow on the road to invisibility. The truth is, as I age, I will sometimes be overlooked. Perhaps often. Sometimes by choice. However, I know how to take some responsibility for my experience. Indeed, I can walk up to people and say hello. Or step into the middle of a conversational floor with my own thoughtful opinions. It is also just as likely that in ten or twenty years I will look at photos of my fifty-seven year old self and say, “wow…I looked pretty damn good!”

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Brock Dale on Love

An alter for Bettie

An alter for Bettie

Delivered by Brock Dale to the UUFM on 5/28/09

“…The kind of love I’m talking about is the deep-seated concern that makes you put your loved one’s concern above your own. Eric Fromm says that you can really love someone only if you love all mankind. Well, he wasn’t talking about B. Dale. B.D. is afflicted with too much natural cussedness, as are a lot of my friends, to love on such a high plane. We are vain and thoughtless. And if you have to learn it, we are in school 7 days a week. The love I’m talking about sort of sneaks up on you when you aren’t looking. It becomes as natural as breathing, and, like Tevye’s wife, you hardly notice it.
There is pain in loving. On two counts. First, when your loved one hurts, you hurt, too. Second, when you love, you are really vulnerable to being hurt by your loved one. Cf. the aforementioned cussedness. And on these occasions you do notice it.
I’d like to talk for a minute about the last couple of decades of a marriage. You have long ago given up on trying to change each other. You’ve decided who’s boss and who’s REALLY boss. You’ve learned which buttons will cause your spouse to a) scream, b) fly into a rage, or c) give you THE LOOK designed to shrivel you up like a peach. So you don’t push these buttons except now and then (cf. cussedness). It’s not thrilling, but it’s warm and comfortable.
In this connection I have a regret: That on a typical, dull Sunday afternoon, when nothing was going on, and we were just sitting around reading or doing nothing in particular, I didn’t pause to realize how much I was enjoying it. And my advice is: Stop now and then on a dull day when nothing much is happening. Stop and remember how good you’ve got it…”

Unitarian Easter Breakfast

Apologies to my brother who has always detested this recipe…
I just couldn’t let Easter go by without one more meander down memory lane.

CREAMED EGGS (the orginal Unitarian recipe from Margaret Grayden)

9 quartered hard boiled eggs
3/4 lb sliced mushrooms
1/2 lb butter
1/2 C flour
3 C milk
1 C cream
1/8 C sherry or cognac
2 T chopped chives

Saute the mushrooms in 1/4 lb. or butter. Make a cream sauce using the remaining butter and the four, milk, cream and chives. Remove from the stove and ad the sherry, eggs and mushrooms. This is usually served over rice. Will serve 12 people.

UNITARIAN FRUIT CUP

2 10 oz. pkg. frozen strawberries (I use fresh.)
2 or 3 bananas
2 small cans (or 1 big can) of mandarin oranges drained (if using fresh strawberries a bit of the juice added to the fruit salad is tasty.)

Easter

Annalee and Easter Egg

Annalee and Easter Egg

Blue tree and AL

Blue tree and AL

It’s Easter. For the first time ever, I did nothing. No little gifties for my family. No church. Not even meditation with my Tibetan Buddhist buddies (highly recommended if you have poor executive function skills). Outside my neighbors are having their annual gigantic Easter egg hunt. Kids and grown kids both run amok in their search for eggy prizes. It takes me back to my childhood Easter celebrations which, in good Unitarian style, took place in the middle of a Spring explosion at Cecil and Dorothy Miller’s big farmhouse. After the mandatory Easter egg hunt, a beautiful breakfast was served with ‘ Creamed Eggs over Rice’, Banana/Strawberry/Mandarin Orange fruit salad and a sweet punch topped with violet blossoms. .
No matter what one’s faith, it’s a day to celebrate renewal.

For the beauty of the Earth,
For the splendor of the sky,
For the love which from our birth,
Over and around us lie,
Lord of all to these we pray,
This our hymn of grateful praise.
(Shaker hymn)

Beginnings

are such fragile things. The infinite number of blank, white pages here is daunting. However, I’m hopeful that with a bit of tech support from my trusty husband this blog will become my “go to” spot for recording progressions – from discoveries in my fiber art to epic family tales and pesky ideas that won’t leave me alone during the darkest hours of the night.

Below is a photo Annalee took a few years ago when she was about 13 or 14. I often wonder what on earth moved her to create this lovely sculpture and photo.

 

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