Archives for the month of: November, 2012

We have family and we have friends and then we have in-laws.  In-laws are relatives we acquire by law by that definition.  The crazy in-laws, the beloved in-laws, the dreaded in-laws.  When you marry, you get a set of them, like it or not.  When your kids marry, you get some more.  Some people get the roll your eyes kind, some get the avoid as much as possible kind, and some get the love them like family kind.  Most people get a humorous mixture of all…just like our families.  In-laws are family with all the quirks and personal history and personalities of our biological families but we’re tied to them through another person rather than through DNA.

I got lucky.  I’ve had good in-laws all the way around.  Oh, my sweet mother-in-law was a case, but I handled her better than my husband did most of the time.  I reminded myself that she produced him and I was grateful for the things in him that I knew came from her.  And those were some of my favorite things about him.  Eye roll here.

Marriage is not the easiest thing in the world and don’t argue that point with me.  I’ve watched couples who were married for more than 50 years and it was never easy.  No matter how much they loved each other at the beginning and at the end, I could see the rolling road that marriage had taken them on.  Some had financial problems or job problems, some lost children, some had illness to deal with, some had affairs, some had to deal with problems with the kids or taking care of parents or families that caused problems, some just got bored along the line, and almost all had a combination of these things to varying degrees…but they stuck it out.  Some couples are there because they think they should be.  I think the ones who are the happiest are the ones who laughed together along the way, with laughed and together being the key elements.  You can love someone and not laugh together?  Maybe that works…I can’t imagine.

My kids did really well.  I love their spouses and I like their spouses’ families, which makes it easy since we share grandkids.  I have three sons-in-law and a daughter-in-law.  They are all terrific and get along with each other and I can’t imagine anyone else for my kids.  I can’t tell you how much I love them for what they have added to our lives.  But…a big but… they made me a mother-in-law.  Ugh!  That’s a term that bears a lot of responsibility.  Father-in-law doesn’t even begin to match the connotation of mother-in-law.  I try very hard to be a good mother-in-law, trying to learn from my own observations and experiences.  I don’t meddle in their marriages, I don’t tell them how to raise their kids, I don’t try to push myself into every family event, I don’t demand they be at my house rather than the other in-laws, and I keep my mouth shut at appropriate times.  At least I hope I do.

I laugh with my in-laws a lot.  I love and respect each of them tremendously.  Some days I like them better than I like my kids…that must be the ultimate compliment I can give.  And I never have to roll my eyes…hope they aren’t rolling their eyes about me.  That makes me laugh!

Sometimes I feel like getting out of the city and driving around the countryside.  I get that from my mother.  And my father.  And my husband.

Yesterday was one of those days that I couldn’t sit inside and I’d already walked and it was probably the last day of fall color with the windy & rainy weekend predicted.  All the beautiful leaves will be in piles on the ground in a few days.  So, I took off looking for the hills of color.  I sat a a stop light deciding which way to go and headed east, towards Arkansas, navigating the horrible construction on I-244 to get to Hwy 412, one of the nicest drives anywhere.  At first I thought I’d missed the color, but then I hit the hills and all the colors shining in the glorious sunshine.  Looking at the map, I realized it wasn’t that much further to Bentonville and Crystal Bridges, so I headed that way.  I’d been wanting to do this anyway.

There is something about driving on a beautiful day that clears everything out of your head and floods your brain with fresh thoughts.  That’s easier now that I’m retired and don’t have to push all the work responsibilities aside in order to enjoy what I’m seeing.  Hwy 412 meanders around hills in a leisurely way, even on the turnpike route.

I had seen the pictures of Crystal Bridges, but it still doesn’t prepare you for the first view.  It’s in a neighborhood, a lovely neighborhood built up by the WalMart influence on the community.  It doesn’t have a big entrance and you could miss it if you weren’t looking for it.  You’re in town and in the woods at the same time on this 140 acre gift to the people.  On another note, after doing fundraising for a museum for the past 7 years, it’s a dream to start out with an $800 million endowment.  Admission is free, thanks to WalMart.

I’ll summarize my views quickly with photos, but you can get details at http://www.crystalbridges.org.

Coming up to the main entrance, I was stunned by the silver tree, “Yield,” shining in the sun.  Incredibly mesmerizing…

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I was on the top level, so my first view of the museum was looking down and I wasn’t prepared for how beautifully it is situated in the location, down in the valley.  The building itself is a work of art that is appreciated from every angle.

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Inside museum

The collection is a fabulous selection of American art from Revolutionary times through today.  I found works by many of my favorites and some new ones that I will be glad to revisit at any time.  You’re sure to love many, many pieces and find your own favorites.  Moran, Norman Rockwell, Mary Cassatt, Calder, Warhol, Gilbert Stuart, Thomas Hart Benton, Bierstadt, John Singer Sargent, George Innes, Rothko, and so many others.

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CALDER SCULPTURE

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I loved the little reading rooms sprinkled in the galleries with stacks and shelves of books so you could sit down and read more as your curiosity made you want to learn more now!

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The restaurant is lovely and bar area is beautiful and a nice place to take a rest.  The museum shop is a gem…spoken by someone who owned a gift shop and worked around a museum shop.

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But, I was there to enjoy the fall day and took to the Rock Ledge Trail that wound above the museum and the lawn.  There are six trails for over 3 miles.  I didn’t get as far as I would have like because I was losing daylight to get home, but it is stunning.  I would walk there every day if I lived in the area.  You could do a different trail and see something new all the time.  I can’t wait to see it in the other seasons.  Lovely…

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Cardinal in the woods

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My favorite thing was the frame on the trail.  Isn’t this a simple, great idea?  I bet a million people have posed in that frame, but I love the scene itself.  You feel like you are a painter…or a real photographer…beautiful!

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I didn’t get enough time for all I wanted to do, but I’ll be back many times for sure.  Thank you, Alice Walton!  What an incredible gift you have given for all to enjoy.

The great flag that flies by the river was limp in the windless sky as I walked.  I stopped to watch as a slight breeze unfurled it in lazy morning slow motion.  The sun was shining brightly through the stars and stripes and it made me proud.  It seems appropriate this morning to share the unfurling.

America…land of the free and home of the brave.

Peace…

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My maternal grandmother would be 114 today.  Her birth name was Artiemisha Lucille Holt.  I never heard Artiemisha, which must have been after her grandmother, Artimissa. I found that doing genealogy or I would have always thought her name was just Artie.  She grew up on a farm in southern Oklahoma, near Durant, where she was one of a bunch of kids.  I knew Nat and Clint and Lilly and the others, but there were more half brothers and sisters from her father’s first marriage.  I don’t know much about her life before, but I think she was 18 when she married Benjamin Newton West, who was 21 years older than she.  Before my mother died, she told me that my grandfather came to pick my grandmother up to get married in a cart with a brown horse and a brown blanket.  Her parents handed her a bouquet and they left.  My grandfather’s best friend was with him and asked, “Where did you find this pretty little thing?”  I don’t know much about their marriage other than the precious story of my grandfather building a fire in the morning and then carrying my grandmother down to get warm.  They had three children, two boys and a girl, and he worked for his father at the West Wagon Yard in Ardmore and then for the telephone company, stringing lines, I believe.  I know my mother was born at her grandmother’s home in the country, so they must have lived there for awhile.  When he was fifty-one, he died of Bright’s Disease, a kidney disease that could be easily cured today.  My grandmother was 29 years old with three small children, widowed in the depression.  My mother was five.

I guess my grandfather knew he was going to die because he left a small neighborhood grocery for my grandmother for income.  She ran that for years, supporting the kids through times when their gas was turned off because they didn’t have a nickel for the bill.  But my mother remembers they laughed a lot.  My mother was a serious and proud child, who loved her mother dearly and always recognized the debt she owed her.  My grandfather’s parents were among the founders of Ardmore, OK and had operated the West Wagon Yard.  They owned property and my grandmother did own her home, which was the only reason they survived, according to my mother.  By the time I was born, the grocery store was long gone and my grandmother’s income came from renting out rooms in her house and another property from my great-grandmother.

I was the oldest grandchild on that side of my family.  I was born several months early and my mother didn’t know much about babies, so my grandmother came and got me when I was a few weeks old.  I don’t think it warped my relationship with my mother, but I was always close to my grandmother.  She was a prissy little girl, so her brothers called her Dude, as did most of her close friends and family.  I called her Mommie Dude.  She was such an innocent in so many ways and so wise in others.  I don’t think she had more than a 9th grade education but she raised three very smart children, mostly on her own.  She packed parachutes at the Ardmore Air Base during the war.

My visits with Mommie Dude were among the most precious memories of my childhood.  I spent time at her house in Ardmore in the summers, swinging on the front porch swing for hours, picking pears off the trees in the back yard, rummaging through her drawer of photos or the garage full of stuff.  I chased horny toads and lightning bugs and walked to the ice plant for chips of ice and downtown to the dime store and to visit my uncle at the bank.  She finally got a car, but was never a good driver.  There was once an article in the Daily Ardmoreite with the news that Artie West had her grandchildren at the ice cream place.  I still have her cedar chest where she kept her fur coat and a hunk of her hair (don’t ask me why people kept their hair in those days).  It was all mysterious.  I played her records and she sang me old, old songs that I try to remember today.  Those songs were old folk songs and I’ve tried to find the history of some.  She made us “squares” when she knew we were coming.  “Squares” were koolaid, frozen in ice trays.  We would get a bowl of squares and eat it while swinging on the front porch.  It made the hot summers without air conditioning more bearable and fun.  There are so many other stories to write about my times with her…and I will.

Mommie Dude always wrote me and I have her letters somewhere in my garage, boxed with letters from my parents and grandparents.  Often she would put in a dollar, telling me to go get a Pepsi.  A dollar was a lot to her.  I loved getting those in the mail, even through college.  I have a photo of my grandmother with my three girls, holding 9 month old Kerry as they all stood on her porch in Ardmore.  Shortly after that, she was crippled with arthritis, almost overnight, and had to move to a nursing home.  My mother finally brought her to Tulsa, where she lived in pain until her death.  I was at the nursing home the night she died and sat beside her, singing the old songs that I hold so dear.  This sweet woman loved me so unconditionally all my life and taught me so many lessons without even knowing it.  Today, I’m thinking of her with love in my heart and a smile on my face.

 

My mother used to always tell us the story of our birth on our birthdays.  She would call or I would see her and she would start off with “Twenty-one years (or whatever our age was) ago today, I had a baby girl.”  Then she would tell us the details of that day.  And we laughed…but, we always waited for the story.  I’ve done the same with my kids.  It’s just a funny tribute to my mother and a sweet remembrance of those special days when I gave birth to my incredible children.

Thirty-seven years ago today, I had a beautiful baby boy.  He was my fourth child, following three girls.  He wasn’t planned, which turned out to be appropriate.  Who could have planned for Clayton?  That day, I felt like I was having labor pains, so I called the doctor and he had me go to the hospital.  I had the girls very quickly and he knew that I didn’t need to wait around.  The girls were all born early and this one was late by about a week.  Of course, we didn’t know he was a boy.  This had been an interesting pregnancy anyway.  I didn’t know I was pregnant and they did some tests and decided it was an etopic pregnancy.  I had surgery and they cut me open to find out that everything was ok.  I must have had an MRI  and they had just gotten the machine and nobody was very proficient in reading the tests.  I remember the doctor opening me up and then cursing.  He realized I was awake and apologized, but I understood that he was frustrated that he had just done surgery on someone who didn’t need it.  From then on, the pregnancy was easy.  I remember diving in the pool all summer, feeling great.  I also remember being at the mall where there was a fountain.  I was very pregnant with three little girls with me and one of them tried to climb in the fountain.  The thought went through my mind that I must look like a mother duck waddling along with little ones trailing behind me.  Another friend told me I just looked like a knocked-up 14 year old.

Anyway, on that day, I went to the hospital and waited.  The doctor wouldn’t let me go home because of the other quick births.  Finally, they sent me out to the fathers’ waiting room to sit with my husband.  You can’t imagine how strange that was.  Dads didn’t get to go in while you were in labor or giving birth back then…nobody did.  The fathers’ waiting room was full of about to be Daddys who couldn’t figure out why I was there.  I read magazines with them and read the comments book that the fathers wrote in while they waited.  Alan was frustrated and nervous.  This was too odd.  When I went back into the labor rooms, they tried to check the baby’s heartbeat.  The nurse said they were having a problem because the baby was dancing around in there…”doing the hustle.”  Well, it was 1975…what an inkling of things to come.  At some point during the evening, after we had been there all day, the doctor came in to tell me that the baby was stuck and they needed to do a c-section.  I guess the head was pressing on my pelvic bone and couldn’t get over to the way out.  He had a dent in his head for a long time that made me laugh.  Tears rolled down my cheek, not from fear, but because I could just see another scar on my stomach next to the one from the earlier surgery that had stretched to about an inch or more wide as my abdomen expanded.  It turned out that they took that one out & made another one.

When they wheeled me into the operating room, it was later that night.  They painted my hugely expanded abdomen with iodine so it was oddly orange.  They put a curtain across me so I wouldn’t be able to see the operation, but I turned my head and saw the reflection in the window just as they began to cut.  I turned back and listened to the conversation.  The anesthesiologist was holding my hand & sitting by my head…his name was Dr. Love.  When they pulled out Clayton, Dr. McShane almost shouted “it’s a boy!”  Dr. Love kissed me on the forehead.  Dr. McShane couldn’t wait to get out of there and run to tell Alan.  They all knew I had three girls by this point.  I just laid there and smiled.  Unbelievable!

We named him Clayton Alan Fraser.  Clayton was for all the men in my family (my grandfather, father and brother) who were named James Clay.  My grandfather went by Clayton.  Alan was after my husband, Alan, and his father, who was Ralph Allan.  We covered all the bases.  Alan went immediately to buy him a pair of jeans and found a size one.  They didn’t have baby jeans back then.

That is the story.  Clay was unique in all good ways.  He spent the next 35 years teaching me, teaching us all, to enjoy life.  He was the cutest, sweetest, kindest little active boy who was determined to be different from his sisters.  He didn’t need to try, but try he did to the point of trying us all.  Keeping up with him as a job for everyone.  He was always a character, always funny.  From as early as possible, he and his father would sit and trade puns.  He knew he was funny and it kept him out of the trouble he should have been in.  He was smart enough to know that he would learn the way he was going to learn and the teachers had just better figure that out.  He hated timed tests, preferring to work on his time.  He wiggled and squirmed through classrooms all the way through college but probably remembered more than I did being the perfect student.  He charmed his way past many a teacher.  The typical summary of a kid like this is that his sisters and I were driving to Westminster College for his graduation and got a call from him saying that he was going to go through the ceremony but wouldn’t get the degree.  I think he flunked bowling or something ridiculous.  We watched him walk in his cap and gown, taking another Clayton moment in stride.  He finally got that degree years later, taking two classes and getting As so that he could get into culinary school.  He promptly handed me the diploma as it meant little to him.  You have to shake your head and roll your eyes.

This is a long blog and my heart is full of memories today, so I’ll give the shortened version.  Clay grieved when his father died of cancer.  He went into a state of depression that we didn’t realize since he was away at college.  He came home, fell in love and the wonderful girl was killed in a tragic fire.  He picked himself up and went back to school, started a comedy improv group, and began living again.  He then went through the graduation I mentioned before, came home and started teaching English as a second language and waiting tables with his friends at BBD.  He complained of problems and pains in his jaw and nothing could be found.  One day he announced to me that he wanted to have his tonsils out.  I told him I didn’t know if you could just ask to do that, but he did.  When the doctor came out after that simple surgery, he told me they had found cancer behind the tonsil.  I had to wait the weekend to let the doctor explain it to Clay in his office.  A horrible weekend that makes me cry to remember…watching him and knowing I couldn’t tell him because I didn’t know enough myself.  When we left the office, a tear ran down his cheek.  “Why do we always have to get the rare cancers?”  Clay had Adenoid Cystic Carcinoma and his dad had died of cancer of the esophagus (rare at the time).  A friend told me it was the scream he couldn’t get out.  A doctor nodded when I told him that.

From the time he found out he had cancer, Clay was adamant with me that this was his cancer.  He would be the one to fight it.  We all know it takes everyone you have to fight cancer, but he was trying to make me not worry.  I look at a statue he gave me one Mother’s Day.  It’s of a buddha like figure, bent over with worry.  He told me it was to keep me from worrying.  That was even before the cancer.  The treatment – neutron and electron radiation – that Clay received in Seattle was new in 2001.  It gave him 10 more years and it killed him in the end.  The cancer did come back, as it does in this kind, and he was able to beat it with natural means.  His death was from the residual effects of the radiation.  But those last ten years were incredible.  As the radiation effects took hold, he lost his ability to talk and eat.  But along that journey, he met and fell in love with Whitney, finished school, went to culinary school and became an incredible baker (it didn’t take much talking), and produced Eliza May Fraser.  Many people don’t do all that with well bodies.

I look back on the 35 years we had with my incredible son and think of all that he gave us.  He lived his life on his terms, he loved and was loved by so many people, he made us laugh and he taught us bravery.  He lived with incredible pain and touched lives everywhere he went.  He had a full life in 35 years and taught me that we never know how much time we have on this earth.  This weekend, I was with his daughter Eliza, who is now 3.  She knew we were getting together later to celebrate her daddy.  We went to the park and she started calling out to him…”where are you, Daddy?  Daddy, where are you?”  She does this with a smile on her face as she seems to talk to him often.  She wanted him to be at the party.  It doesn’t make me sad because she seems to have a relationship with him that we all wish we were innocent enough to have.  I told her he was there…he is all around us.  She understands and that is the blessing.

I love you, Clayton Alan Fraser!

We have a drought going on in Oklahoma, which made it a question of whether we would have fall colors.  Sometimes, in droughts, the leaves just dry up and fall off.  Or we have wind that blows the leaves from the trees just as they have turned.  This year, summer seemed to not want to leave.  The temperatures were warm and the leaves stayed green.  Then the calendar turned to November and the leaves had just had it.  Overnight, the colors came out.  When I went walking yesterday morning, the sun was shining through the leaves on a cloudless, still day and the colors were just incredible.  Here are some phone shots I took.  Look for the mistletoe in one of the trees.  My husband used to shoot it down for me when he was out bird hunting and loved bringing it home from his treks in the fields on those crisp fall mornings.

Tulsa…Oklahoma…

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Get out and enjoy it!

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Once a month, I get together with a group of friends for breakfast.  We meet at Caroline’s condo and take turns bringing the food.  This is about more than breakfast, as most gatherings of friends are more about being together.  We started this when my son died and they wanted to be there for me.  We hadn’t been getting together on a regular basis and found we were missing each other, so we made it a regular event.  This is our safe place where we can laugh and cry together.  Sometimes we spend the whole morning on one person’s life crisis, another time we gossip the morning away.  There is always too much to talk about and the rule is that this is a place where you can say anything and it won’t go anywhere else. We laugh until we cry, we cry and hug each other, we pray together, we say horrible things, we worry for each other, and we look forward to the next time.

And, the food is always delicious!  We try recipes, we pamper ourselves with food we wouldn’t fix otherwise.  Even the most routine breakfast is special…maybe because of the company.

I’ve known Caroline since kindergarten, when I was four and she was five.  We were in school all the way through college together – my only friend who shares that distinction.

Tucky and I met when I was 9…we were playing in a golf tournament.

Jeanne was in my 7th grade class (I was 11 at the start of that year) and we went all the way through high school together.

I met Susan when she was in 7th grade and I was in 8th.

Debby was in Susan’s class, but I didn’t get to know her until high school.

Jody and I became friends our sophomore year in college and ended up rooming together our senior year until I got married.

That is a lot of shared history.  We have all married, raised kids, and some of us have grandkids.  Some of us still work.  Only one of us is still married.  Three of us are widows and three are divorced.  One of us has had cancer and I’ve lost my husband and son to that horrible disease.  We’ve helped each other through surgeries, worked together as volunteers, carpooled, partied, and know way too much about each other.

Friends who are your age are different than friends who are younger or older.  You share the same place in the history of the world, you remember the same historical events or events in pop culture from the same age.  You are going through the same body changes.  When you have grown up together, you know the same people, you went to the same events, you listened to the same music, you know each other’s families.  We all need friends from a diversity of ages, but there is something about friends you have known forever that is extremely special.  You know the child in each other that is still underneath the aging skin and the graying (or blonding) hair.  You forgive all the idiosyncrasies and you know where they are coming from.

“Friends are the family we choose.”  I have many groups of friends from different times in my life and all are special.  My Breakfast Club holds a special place in my life, my heart.  Love you girls!

 

El Mirage, California, was a place I’d always heard about but didn’t really understand.  It’s basically a 6 mile long dry lake used by by fans of off-road vehicles and seen in movies, car commercials and ad shots.

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What I really wasn’t prepared for was how much fun it was.  When you drive up, it looks like…well, it looks like a flat desert.  You can see dusters forming in the distance, fascinating twisters of dirt rising up from the ground to create funnels that race across the landscape. They’re not like the tornadoes of Oklahoma that form in the sky and drop down to scoop up everything in their path.

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When you drive at El Mirage, you can literally chase the lake…or the mirage of the lake.  You can drive as fast as you can and never catch it. It’s always up ahead of you.  I’m not the greatest thrill seeker…I hate heights…but I do like to go fast.  At El Mirage, you can drive as fast as you want to because there is nothing to run into unless there are other drivers out there.  You can go in circles, drive straight ahead, anything you can imagine.  As fast as you can…  We saw a couple of motorcycle drivers, but it was quiet on the day we were there.  It was a beautiful California sunshine day with a wide open desert, mountains in the background, dusters forming and all you had to do was press the accelerator and go!  Awesome fun!

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