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Author Archive for Sue – Page 2

In Which I Became Lousy at Math

By Sue · Comments (14) · February 27th, 2014

I wasn’t always lousy at math.trigonometry

I was a good student across the board in elementary school and whipped through my times tables in third grade to earn the reward of a triple scoop ice-cream cone from Mrs. Bonine.

That was in the late 70′s, before childhood allergies, hygiene issues, and the epidemic of American obesity found their ways into our classrooms.  And it was heavenly.  I relished that drippy, sticky mess at my desk and was so consumed by its awesomeness that I forgot that there was a paper napkin wrapped around it and gobbled the chocolate-soaked napkin right along with the cone.

I made my way through junior high holding my own in mathematics, including studies under the first year-teacher Mr. Richards, a ruddy-faced man with a prematurely receding hairline that belied his tender age. Using the overhead projector to guide us through simple algebraic procedures, he had an affinity for drawing little cartoons that related loosely to the equations.

Tyson Moran and Jim Farrelli sat behind me in that class and never ceased to find some some kind of sexual interpretation for each and every one of his drawings, and they would lean forward and whisper into my innocent twelve year-old ears, “Heh.  You know what that surfboard looks just like, Sue?  Do ya?”

You might say that I received a two-for one bonus of sex ed. right in my math class.  Tyson and Jim delighted in making the back of my neck and ears turn as red as Mr. Richards’ cheeks.

But still.  I was pretty good at math then, if not somewhat scarred.

For me, it unraveled toward the end of high school.  I threw myself into reading and writing to the point that the logical side of my brain grew atrophied.  My A’s slipped to B’s, threatening my place on the High Honor Roll and in the National Honor Society.

And then?

It happened.

I was assigned to Miss Garrity’s trigonometry class.

The rumors that swirled in that woman’s wake were nothing short of harrowing:

She lived alone with forty-eight cats.

She purchased all of the clothing for her large frame at the Salvation Army four sizes too big to accommodate weight fluctuations.

She had served a top-secret stint in the armed forces that had left her without two fingers on her right hand.

Now.  I never could decipher fact from fiction with regard to the gossip.

But I will say this:

I recall, as if it were yesterday, sliding into my seat as a senior on the first day of trigonometry.  Miss Garrity was at the blackboard with her hands clasped behind her back as we silently filed in, all the other students as filled with trepidation as I.

Without a word of greeting, she launched into a trigonometric tirade, turned on her heels, and raised her arm to scrawl an equation on the blackboard.

In slow motion.

With the Jaws theme suddenly and mysteriously playing in the background.

And, friends?  The oversized sweater cuff engulfing her entire right arm fell back to reveal…

…a three-fingered hand.

I stared, jaw agape, not so much grossed out as much as in awe of how she could write with two fingers missing.  My shock and awe continued through the semester, rendering me incapable of following anything Miss Garrity said.  All analytical ability leaked out of my slack jaw as I simply marked time for four months, staring.  It is through the grace of God alone that I escaped that class with a C+.

And that?  Is when I became lousy at math.

How about you?  What was your least favorite subject in school?

Inspired by a prompt from Mama Kat.

Comments (14)

Divergent: Book Review and Suggested Activities

By Sue · Comments (25) · February 20th, 2014

“Momomygoshthisissuchagoodbookandyoumustreaditrightnow.”  Twin A pressed a paperback novel into my hand as I was preparing dinner a few months ago.

I mentally clicked pause, rewind, and then replay on 33 rpm.  I reviewed the audio footage in my mind’s eye and determined that she wanted me to read the book that she had just finished.  I didn’t bother chiding her about her rapid rate of 12 and a half year-old speech as I knew that it was hereditary gift from me.

I glanced at the title.

Divergent

Ah, yes…I had seen it on her nightstand.  ”Good stuff, huh?” I inquired with a grin.

“Yesoyesitslikehungergamesbutnotandwellyoujustneedtotrustmeandreaditjustreaditokayplease?”

“Okay, hon…I’ll read it.”  I put it down on the counter and dumped a can of garbanzo beans (Chick peas? Garbanzo beans? Why the duplicity?) into the Crock Pot.

“Imgoingtoputitonyournightstandsoyouwontforgetokay?”

“Yes…yes…that sounds like a great idea.  On my nightstand. Thanks.”

And there it sat for four months.  Until my girlfriend selected Divergent as my book club’s read for January.  At which point I decided that I’d still skip it and join the group at her house for some dinner, conversation, and wine.  Not necessarily in that order.

Book Club

And then? A change of time and venue for our group’s discussion was requested.  Guess who found herself named host for this month, with Divergent on the dockett?

Sometimes fate is an arse-kicker, no?

So I read it.

And, friends?  I liked it.

For those of you who have read The Hunger Games trilogy, it is most definitely reminiscent of that series. In a post-apocolyptic society, factions of survivors band together.  Each faction has a distinct unifying trait.  Tweens and teens are separated from their families to train with their peers. Violence and psychological thrills run rampant.

But in Divergent?  Said tweens and teens, after taking an aptitude test of sorts, have the option to leave their original faction and join with another more suited to their own innate characteristics.

And so begins the story.  Beatrice, the heroine, leaves Abegnation, the faction into which she was born, to join the Dauntless, a group known for its unshakable abandon and strength.  She renames herself Tris (huh?), and along with the other newly renamed transfers, undergoes rigorous training in hopes of being initiated as a Dauntless.  Fail initiation?  And they face life as one of the destitute Factionless, without a home or identity.

It’s an interesting read for sure.  Whereas The Hunger Games delivers its literary punch primarily through violence, Divergent is more of a psychological thriller.  Through a series of drug and technologically induced simulations, and then real-life experiences, Tris is forced to face and overcome her own most harrowing fears.

Can she?  Will she?

As Twin A would say, “youlljusthavetoreadittofindoutwontcha?”

But I will tell you this:  In preparation for my book club, which is this evening, I have planned a handful of group activities that will enable us to have a Very Divergent Evening.

Checkitout:

-Kick things off by giving ourselves new names.  I will be Ue.

-Raid my closet and exchange our evening wear for body-hugging, skin-bearing lycra and spandex.

-Take turns plummeting off the roof of my house into the six-foot Chiberian snowbanks beneath.

-Venture over to the train tracks a couple of miles away and jump the train while it is in motion.

-Tuck and roll off the train when it passes by the unsavory side of town and hit Tito’s Tattoos.

-Those of us who survive, including the train ride back home, will enjoy an initiation celebration and consume my homemade Martha Stewart-Inspired Ice Cream Lego Cake with our bare hands.

Lego Cake

Have any of you read Divergent?  Do you have any additional ideas for activities?  Do you want to come over tonight?  Everyone from my book club has cancelled for some reason.

Inspired by a prompt from Mama Kat:  Write a Book Review!

Comments (25)

In Which I Fall in Love

By Sue · Comments (11) · February 13th, 2014

I am in love.

Like, head over heels in love.

I know…I know…with Valentines Day approaching, one might be prone to get all googly-eyed at the drop of a hat. But let me assure you:

This relationship is as serious as a Chiberian snowstorm.

How do I adequately describe the object of my affections?

Reliable.

Steadfast.

Good for me.

I wake up each morning with a smile of my face, stretch languidly, and pad downstairs to greet my love, anticipating the beauty that we will create together.

No, we’re not sharing a bed…I’m not *that* kind of girl.  But make no mistake:

This is the real deal.

Want to see a picture?

Nutribullet

My Nutribullet. *cue Barry White*

While I still carry a torch for all things starchy, salty, and cheese-smothered, my Nutribullet has made its way into my heart for good.  And I mean it.  Literally.

For good.

It is so good for me, I can hardly stand it.

Now?  I ingest enough good stuff at breakfast to propel me through my morning workout with energy to spare.

With my Nutribullet at my side? I feel better.  Look better.  Am better.

As much as I despise that tired line from Jerry Maguire…

Jerry Maguire

You complete me.  Nutribullet.

I’ve been sharing my concoctions on Facebook, Pinterest, and Google Plus…and today, my Nutribullet and I are simply giddy to bring you something in keeping with Valentines Day:

Healthy Smoothie

The Heartthrob.  Ga gung…ga gung.

The Heartthrob:

One banana

Four strawberries

Two tablespoons of pomegranate seeds

A splash of almond milk

A tablespoon of hemp seeds

Throw in your Nutribullet and blend until that thang is as pink as my love-flushed cheeks.

BOOM.   Vitamins, protein, and fiber out the wazoo.  Um…wait an hour or so for the “out the wazoo” part.

Want to keep in touch with my love affair with the Nutribullet?  Be sure to follow my Eats:  Keeping it Clean board on Pinterest.

*This is NOT a sponsored post, and I received no compensation from Nutribullet for voicing my opinions.  Although I totally should.  I just feel compelled to announce my joy from the mountaintops.  Tell me…do YOU have a healthy object of affection?  I’d love to hear about it in the comments.

**Inspired by a prompt from Mama Kat.

Comments (11)

The Gym Rat Holds the Vert

By Sue · Comments (27) · February 6th, 2014

Friends?1970s TV

I have joined a gym.

With four girlfriends. A little place a couple of miles up the road. For an unbelievably low monthly fee, we get unlimited access to the facilities as well as the attention of a trainer who leads our group through hour-long workouts three times a week.

It’s quite the deal.  I wonder how the place can stay in business with its fees as low as they are.

It may very well be because they utilize child labor. Our trainer, though knowledgeable and pleasant and funny as all get-out, can’t be more than nine.

Wait.  That’s impossible.  The Small One is nine.

So this guy must be seven.

Or maybe…just maybe…my perception is skewed because I am old.

I don’t often feel old, friends. Truly, I don’t.  I sauntered into the place for my preliminary fitness evaluation feeling confident and very much on the same witty wavelength as the whippersnapper that stood before me.

I didn’t feel old when we chatted about my health habits.

Or when he took my measurements with a tape measure and assessed my BMI with a sobering zap of a button.

Or when he asked me to warm up by walking on a treadmill. Dude.  I’m a runner.

Or even when we moved on to jumping jacks.  Nope, not old at all. Although I did receive a subtle reminder from Mother Nature that I had birthed three children in four years and, in so doing, had forfeited my ability to execute any kind of jumping while keeping my dignity and other stuff intact.

We then started stretching.  He began flinging his arms about.

“See? You see how I’m doing this? Swing your arms out back and forth horizontally…and then up and down vertically?  You see how I did that?  Horizontally?  And vertically?  You know…like horizontal? And vertical?”

I saw.  And I was taken back to a mental image of my childhood in the mid-1970′s, when televisions had five channels controlled by a dial affixed to the front of the set.

And I opened my mouth.  ”Yesss!  I get it!”  I swung my arms back and forth and up and down, just as he was doing.  ”Like the Horiz Hold and Vert Hold knobs on the back of the old TVs!”

He gradually slowed the swinging of his arms and gave me a quizzical look.  ”Wait…what?”

I moved my arms vigorously from side to side.  ”You know!  The Horizontal Hold knob for when the TV picture is messed up with a zig-zaggy, back-and-forthy pattern…” I ceased swinging and now flung them alternately overhead and back down to my sides.  ”…And the Vertical Hold for when the picture keeps sliding upward and you just want it to come back down and stay still!”

He now stood motionless, head cocked to one side, clearly sizing up the degree of my fleeting sanity as well as the proximity of the nearest emergency exit.

I continued:  ”Horizontal?” {back and forth arms}

“Vertical!” {up and down arms}

“Right,” he said soothingly.  He might just as well have offered me a straightjacket, an AARP card, and a Geritol. “Yeah, I get it.”

He did not get it, friends.  He had no earthly idea what I was talking about because he had been born a good fifteen years after the exodus of the Horiz Hold and Vert Hold knobs.

Heck…he had not known life in the days before remote controls.

And I felt the chasm of age between us widen to Grand Canyonic proportions.

“Yeah,” I affirmed softly.  A change of topic was desperately needed.

And so I took desperate measures.

“I’m going to loosen up with a few more jumping jacks,” I heard myself squeak.

Inspired by a prompt from Mama Kat: “You know you’re getting old when…”

 

Comments (27)

A Tale of Wisdom Teeth…and Lack Thereof

By Sue · Comments (23) · January 30th, 2014

Do you ever look back over a day in your life…or a string of several days, for that matter…and think…

Did that really just happen to me?

It occurs with me daily, friends.  But I feel especially compelled to tell you about the events of the past few weeks. And no, none of these events count as sucker punches.  I’ve listed them for you in numerical order, should you care to replicate these events.

Ahem:

1) Grow yourself an impeccably formed palate, including ample room for wisdom teeth, by the time you are eighteen years old.

2)  Snigger behind closed doors at all of your high school friends who are having their wisdom teeth yanked. Be totally gnarly (yes, that was a good thing to be in 1989) and deliver Jell-O, Hunt’s Pudding Snack Packs, and Lipton Cup a Soup to their doors.  Because you are a licensed driver with a cherry red Ford Escort station wagon to prove it.

3) Over the next 25 years, give your intact wisdom teeth the brush-off, so to speak, when conducting your oral hygiene routine.  Dude.  They’re really far back there.  And hard to reach.  Not gnarly.

4)  At age 42, get slapped with the news from your dentist that those wisdom teeth are decaying.  (See:  Not gnarly).  And guess what?  You must have them extracted.

5)  Sob uncontrollably and say a Hail Mary for every high school friend at which you sniggered behind a closed door back in the day.  To no avail.  An appointment has been set for those decaying suckers to be pulled.

6) On the morning of your appointment, pull yourself together, put on your big girl panties, drink a nutrient-packed smoothie for fortification, and wait for your girlfriend to come and pick you up for your appointment.

7)  Arrive at the oral surgeon’s office to be greeted by a receptionist who is a middle-aged dead ringer for Gilly from Saturday Night Live.  Stifle your giggles and answer her questions, including what you ate that morning.

8)  Get yourself drummed out of the office by Gilly as she snarkily looks up at you and says,

Gilly Saturday Night Live

You? Had a smoothie? NoFoodOrDrinkDayOfSurgery.

9)  Reschedule your appointment.  Leave with your tail between your legs, vowing to never drink another smoothie as long as you live.

10) Two weeks later, show up again at the oral surgeon’s office.  Tell Gilly that you haven’t eaten once since you left the office the last time.

11)  Feel a degree of smug satisfaction, as well as more than a twinge of hunger-induced light-headedness, as you get strapped into the surgeon’s chair.

12) What seems like ten seconds later, wake up crying for no apparent reason and leave with your girlfriend, who is carrying your post-operative instructions and other paraphernalia for you.  Let her drive you home and tuck you in on your couch in the family room.  Marvel at the irony of her stocking your pantry with Jell-O, Hunt’s Pudding Snack Packs, and Lipton Cup a Soup.  Fantasize about a long day of lounging on the couch while The Cherubs are in school.

13.  What seems like ten seconds later, wake up crying for two VERY apparent reasons:  1)  Your mouth is on fire and is approximately the size of an rhinoceros’ hind quarters, and  2)  The Cherubs and three of their friends are running amok, singing karaoke at the top of their lungs, and playing Nerf Gun War.  After all, you do live in Chiberia. And school has been canceled for the next two days on account of frigid temperatures.

Inspired by a prompt from Mama Kat.

Comments (23)

When Winter Punches

By Sue · Comments (31) · January 23rd, 2014

Winter in Chicagoland is magical, friends.  Just magical.

Well…to be fair, it’s a little chilly.  In a magical kind of way.

With an abundance of snow that magically blocks my driveway and impedes my finely honed carpooling abilities.

Gwen the Rescued Foxhound-Beagle Mix refuses to venture out into the frozen yard to do her business, magically transforming my back deck into a Winter Wonderland Poopdeck.

I scuttled out to the mailbox yesterday and regretted it the instant I touched the little red metal flag on its side. By the forces of what can only be described as magic, my right thumb and forefinger are still attached to that flag. Now I wave to them with my other three fingers, or sometimes just offer a one-fingered salute, through the front window.

Sigh.  Chicagoland gets punched right in the privates by winter each and every freaking year.  Is that what you wanted to hear?

Because it is the gospel truth.  As you may very well know, Chicago has earned the moniker of Chiberia in light of the fact that this winter has been particularly, throat-seizingly, breath-snatchingly cold.

Yeah.  Good times.  I can hear you folks in Florida and Hawaii and Arizona and Taiwan and Anywhere But Here laughing at me.  You can all just stop it right now.

No, really.  Quit it.

But.  Chiberia is occasionally granted a temporary reprieve from the bitterness, as was the case this past weekend. Temperatures soared to 37 degrees, and we in the City of Wind donned our swimsuits and enjoyed impromptu pool parties.

That was a lie.  But this is not:  The Cherubs and I took full advantage of the balmy weather.

Smores

Lighted Pergola in Winter

Lattice LightsLattice LightsWinter SmoresWinter SmoresWinter SmoresDog in SnowOutdoor Fireplace

 

Yessirree.  We punched Old Man Winter back.  Right in the privates.  And it was magical.

Inspired by a prompt from Mama Kat.

 

 

Comments (31)

Better off Without…

By Sue · Comments (19) · January 16th, 2014

Do you ever get the itch for change?

Of course you do. We all do.

Unless you are a statue. But then you most likely would not be reading these words today if you’re one of those.

But then again, if you were a statue, you would probably be Jonesing for change all the livelong day…you would just be rendered incapable of it.

Poor lil statue-friends.

But back to the point at hand. I was itching for change. So I made a lot of them.

Changes, not itches.

In between the sucker punches, I’ve spent the past several months  reconfiguring the first floor of my home, assisted by the brilliant mind and loyal friendship of Mindy from Styled Living. Each room has been given a new design or purpose. I’ll show you around in time.

Today? I’d like to start in the kitchen. The room in which I decided that I’d be better off without my kitchen table.

No, we’re not eating off the floors. Although The Small One did propose the idea when I announced my plans to do away with the behemoth thing.

The table, not The Small One.

Again: The point at hand. This is what my kitchen looked like prior to the redesign.

Before Kitchen Small Island

Photo courtesy of styledlivingblog.com

Distressed Cabinets

This one, too.

It was a great kitchen.  With a great table.  But I had this vision…a vision in which my Happy Hour(s) guests didn’t all stand cramped around that smallish island…a vision of a streamlined space which could accommodate meal preparation, homework, before school breakfasts, casual weeknight dinners…and yes…the occasional sizable Happy Hour(s).

And so?

We did away with the table.

Bi-Level Black Granite Island

And we did this instead. We love it to no end. The bi-level design suits our needs perfectly. 

Bi-Level Black Granite Island

Kitchen prep space on the lower section…homework and eating space on the upper…two paint cans and my yellow down jacket in the back right corner…{I will never learn to properly stage a photograph}

Large Under Counter Cabinets with Glass Doorknobs

The super-sized cabinets afford us tons of added storage. The Cherubs fit neatly under the bar, and, with the snap of a padlock? It’s a convertible time-out space.

Dirty Martini & Watermelon Martini

Serious Happy Hour(s) functionality abounds.

And…when you consider the expense of  a complete kitchen overhaul, the price tag on this project was modest by comparison.

Yet it still satisfied my itch for change.

And the kitchen table?

Oh, it’s tucked away safely in storage.  It’s a nice piece, and perhaps it will be put to use again one day.

But in the meantime?

We’re better off without it.

pssssst…itching for some more eye candy?  Follow me on Pinterest.  All of my home projects…and tons of other goodies…are organized there.

Inspired by a prompt from Mama Kat

 

 

Comments (19)

The Survivor

By Sue · Comments (37) · January 9th, 2014

I am a loyal and committed person. Really, I am.  Ask any of my friends, former colleagues, fellow PTA slaves, or Cherubs.

But this blogging thing? For some reason it doesn’t “stick” with me. Um, in case you hadn’t noticed.  I’m about as loyal to this site as I am to my brand of toothpaste.

As the Small One put it, this morning my breath “stank all cinnamon-y instead of stinking all mint-y.”

But what does he know?

And what do I know, for that matter?

I mean…what is the purpose of this site?  To make money?

Please.  The good people at BlogHer are onto me every time I put down the proverbial microphone and they revoke my meager kickback privileges quicker than you can say my dog’s full name.

Which happens to be Gwendolyn Jane Brooks Coates Dog Thing Poop Corner.

Dog Caution Tape

“Eats Caution Tape” is her lesser used middlest name.

But that is a story for another day.  A day when I have the opportunity to sing for you the song that I penned around her name.

Ahem.

So why do I do it? Blog, I mean?

I don’t have a “niche,” as they say in the blogosphere.

Folks don’t  come around here to glean Feng Shui tips. Or Paleo recipes. Or Dear Abby-esque advice. Or crocheting how-tos. I write about a little bit of this and a snippet of that, and I’m not much of an authority on anything.

I do it because I just like it. The writing. Until I publish that first novel, this little corner of cyberspace serves as my virtual calling card and a big recycling receptacle for all the oddness that flits around in my sassy little brain.

But sometimes? I don’t like it. The writing. My sassy little brain runs dry, so to speak, and the words do not flow. And so then I stop.  Not forever…more like those Black-Eyed Susans in my backyard that wither away in the fall, appear dead to the world through the winter months, and then return with renewed strength each summer.

Yeah.  Like that.  My name *is* Susan, after all.

Coincidence?

Why, yes…yes, it is.

Only my eyes are brown instead of black. I’m not one to rumble, usually.

But I did wither a bit this fall.  There was the loss of my sweet friend, followed by a series of sucker punches delivered by Life that left me almost literally gasping for air and wondering what the eff God had up His sleeve when He allowed for the blows to keep coming.

And coming.

And coming.

And I still don’t know what the eff He has up his sleeve.

But I’m still here.

Breathing.  Gasping at times…but breathing.  Each breath is a reminder that I am alive. I am a survivor.

Survivor Challenge

Oh, LAWD, no. I speak metaphorically.

I am stronger than I know thanks to this God who is stronger than any of us know.

Is that vague enough for you?

Perfect. Maybe I’ll delve into it here one day…

…and maybe not.

But in the meantime?

I’m back for awhile.

And I think I quite like it.  Thank you for coming  by today, friends. And please do drop in next Thursday, when I most certainly will have something more jovial to say. Something a bit more Feng Shui-ish or Paleo-like, perhaps. Because in between all of the sucker punches?

I’ve been a busy little bee.  And I can’t wait to show you what I’ve been up to.

 

Linking with Shell at Things I Can’t Say

Comments (37)

Doing Grief

By Sue · Comments (21) · August 29th, 2013

When I was a freshman in high school, I knew a girl named Dana.

Well…to be clear…I knew of her.  That is to say, I knew who she was…had been in classes with her since the sixth grade…and had always had a general awareness of who she was and what she was about.

She was about Forenza v-necked sweaters and big coiffed hair and iridescent lipstick and all of the things that added up to one seriously popular girl during the mid-1980′s.

Don’t jeer, friends.  I had to live through that era trying to attain all of this as the end-all-be-all.

Anyway.  Dana was always surrounded by friends and smiling and laughing, as the seriously popular are apt to do.

Until her father died midway through our freshman year in high school.  At which point she was absent for the customary couple of days for the necessary arrangements.  Though I didn’t know her well, I thought about her while she was gone.  Was she seeing a counselor?  In bed under the covers?  Too distraught to eat, let alone attend school?

And then she returned.  I watched her curiously from across the room in our shared biology class for a telltale sign of what she had endured.

And you know what I witnessed?

Laughter.

Yup.  Two days after her return, I witnessed her tossing her permanent waved hair and laughing at something or other that her seriously popular friends had said.

And I judged her.  Right then and there.

Clearly, this was no way to behave in the aftermath of the death of a close family member.  Where was the respect?  The honor?  Didn’t she know anything about how to grieve properly?  How to play the role of The Girl Whose Parent Had Died?  She obviously had not watched enough tear-jerking After School Specials on ABC.

Because I was totally and completely an expert on the subject, right?

Time passed and fate twisted as it tends to do…and less than two years later, I was thrust into the role of The Girl Whose Parent Had Died.

After a not quite year-long battle with cancer, my mother died on a Thursday.

And what did I do on Friday?

I played in a varsity volleyball game.  I will never forget the look on my teammates’ and coaches faces as I entered the gym that evening.  It was quite certainly not unlike the look that I must have flung at Dana in biology class.

However, as I slammed volleyballs onto the opponents’ side of the court and hit the floor, arms outstretched, in an effort so save points, I felt some release.

Not healing…not instant wholeness…but release.

Just as Dana must have felt two years earlier as she laughed.

And now, 25 years later, I sit in front of my keyboard and allow these memories to fill my mind.

I feel indescribable thankfulness for the indoor beach party that I attended just over a week ago.  Because my friend went back into the hospital for the last time the very next day.

And in writing about the goings-on of the past few weeks, I have felt some release.  And I have witnessed others doing what they need to do in order to get by.

Gathering with friends to remember.

Providing home-cooked meals for our friend’s family.

Shopping trips with her teenagers to ensure that they will be properly outfitted for the services to come.

And yes…even some laughing.

Another’s grief, and the way they choose to get through it, is not mine to judge.

It’s something that each of us needs to do in our own way.

And you know what else?  After posting this, I’ve decided that I want to step away for awhile.

To think…to reflect…to write…but not for an audience.

Those of you who have been with me awhile know that I have done this before.

I’ll let you know if and when I return…

And I  trust that there will be no judgment.

Tell me…How do you do grief?

 

Comments (21)

The Beach Party

By Sue · Comments (32) · August 22nd, 2013

My girlfriend wanted to go to the dunes this summer.

To walk the beach with family, to watch the gentle waves lap at the shore, to sip cocktails with the rest of the girlfriends while perched upon a striped beach towel with her toes digging into the sand, to laugh and reminisce and savor the dwindling summer hours before back-to-school consumed us all.

Like she does every summer.

A simple enough wish, yes?

But it was not to be this year.  For now, cancer is having its way with her lungs.  The wheelchair doesn’t traverse well over sandy shoals, the oxygen tank would be cumbersome to roll along the shores of Lake Michigan,  and the physicians frowned upon the idea of her being too far from home…or from a hospital, for that matter.

One of the girlfriends helped make light of the situation by pointing out that the Michigan Dunes were temporarily closed anyway due to a gaping sink hole.  We laughed half-heartedly at this strange twist of fate before once again furrowing our brows at the larger problem at hand.  The struggle that is wearing our dear friend out. The battle that has consumed our hearts and prayers for the past eighteen months.

But.

This is a creative group that I run with.

And sometimes a spark of creativity

Sand Bags

is all you need

Candle Centerpieces in Sand

 to turn hopelessless into a smile…

Tropical Fruit Salad

Flip Flop Nutter Butter Cookies

…or even into a laugh.

Sink Hole

Beach Party Decor

And so we brought the dunes to our dear friend a few days ago.  We laughed and reminisced and savored the dwindling hours of summer.

IMG_8054

And in my eyes?  It was every bit as lovely as the shores of Lake Michigan.

Linking with Shell and with Angie.

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