Archives for category: Reflections

When I was a little girl, I read all the time.  I read stacks of books from the library…fairy tales, mythology, mysteries, the OZ books (yes, there is an entire series).   If you’re old enough to remember the little orange bound biographies for kids in the library, you’ll remember checking those out to read the stories of Davy Crockett, George Washington, Paul Revere, Betsy Ross, et al.  We had the My Book House set, and I read those over and over and over.  I lived in a magical world of make-believe.

Among my favorites were the Mary Poppins books.  The Disney movie was released when I was in high school and I absolutely adored it.  Last night, I took my 11 year old granddaughter, Caroline, to see the musical based on the book and the movie.  It was charming, but it made me think.  I related to the story from the books and then the movie.  My granddaughter had only seen the movie.  I’m going to get her the books because she needs to know those stories, but what a difference in our lives and our reading.

When I was doing all my reading as a child, we had movies and very little television at first.  Today’s kids have so many ways to get a story with 24/7 television, 3D movies, iPads and, yes, books, electronic and paper.  I’m not against the new ways, I love my iBooks, but there is something so innocent about children with books.  Actually, I guess that Harry Potter and the Hunger Games series aren’t any more frightening than the things I read, especially with the other things kids see on the news.  I’d like to think it would be nicer if we didn’t have to subject them to the real world at such early ages, but I’m not sure it did us much good to be so protected.

Life is life and we are all nostalgic for what we think was the innocence of our childhood.  Actually, there were bad things happening back then, too.  We try to shelter our children as much as we can from the harsher aspects of life, but there will always be ugliness and evil as long as there are people.  Reading is one way to escape and/or prepare yourself for dealing with the dragons and ogres in the real world.

But, oh my, wouldn’t it be nice if we all had a Mary Poppins to come bring order to our lives?  Spit, spot!

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There’s not much that can be said about aging that makes you feel better about it.  We all do it everyday…it beats the alternative…you look good for your age.  I don’t care how reconciled you are to it, it’s still a shock when you have to check the box that says “over 60,” which implies that everyone over 60 is the same or is lumped in the same group with all your new age companions who may be 80 or 100.  Up until then, you were in your teens, 20s, 30s, 40s or 50s and now you’re one of those old ones.  I just saw a series of pictures of women titled “Beautiful at Any Age” in People magazine that ended when they got to 59.  Really?

I’m in some denial – maybe more than some.  It’s not like I haven’t had to deal with life and death and don’t know it’s coming to me, too.  It’s that the time between now and then is shorter.  I know that any of us could be gone at any minute, but that’s even a harder concept to accept.  So, I’m trying to live healthier so that no matter how long I live, it’s a better quality.  My wonderful young doctor has given me terrific books to read…Younger Next Year and The Program…that explain how our bodies change and how we can program our brains to change our habits.  Today, I heard Dr. Andrew Weil speak on healthy aging.  I loved his idea that what we should aspire to is healthy living with compressed morbidity.  In other words, live well until we die.  I love his thoughts on our society’s lack of respect for the aging.  I can only hope that my children will act like the people of Okinawa when I get old old (I’m just old now) and fight to see who gets to take care of me.  I really know they love me, but that’s asking a lot.

Today, I was inspired.  I’ve been walking a lot, eating well…or at least better than I had been…reducing stress, thinking healthy thoughts, taking my vitamins, breathing deep.  Today, I was going to immediately start buying exotic organic foods and preparing them beautifully for myself and not ever have a sweetened drink again.  I got sidelined when I had to run to Target.  On my way out, I strolled down the Christmas candy aisles and almost drooled at the pre-programmed memories of all those candies and cookies.  I’m not fooling myself that I can write them out of my life easily or completely.  I don’t know if I’m that tough or programmable.  Or want to be.

But…I didn’t buy anything.  I came home and ate edamame for dinner.  That candy still sounds good….

One of my favorite walks is across the Pedestrian Bridge over the Arkansas River in Tulsa.  I love the feel of the aged wood planks under my feet and I love meeting the walkers, joggers, bikers, strollers, skaters, and fishermen who inhabit the tunnel.

I like the views of the city…

I like every side of the bridge…

I like the flag that greets me coming and going….

I like the continual discovery of patterns and designs along the bridge and in the river…

Mostly, I’m mesmerized by the shadows and angles of the bridge itself.

I have a hard time walking fast because there are so many things I want to take pictures of or stop and enjoy.  It’s always a beautiful walk over the river with more to see on the other side and then another beautiful walk back.  Such a treat…

When I was little, I wanted to write.  I can remember sitting under the big Elm in our front yard with a notebook writing a play.  I wrote a few poems.  I kept a diary.  I wrote a lot of letters in those days.  I wrote to my boyfriend, later husband, every day while he was in the  Navy.  I have a degree in English, more in reading than writing, but I went back to school when the kids were little and took journalism classes.  I wanted a column.  I edited a volunteer magazine for a year, wrote some articles.  When I started working, I was doing more copywriting than anything else.  When my husband died, I filled a boxful of journals.  I emailed a friend some deep writings a few years later.  I wrote at work.  I wrote a book, a short story, lots of essays.  Nothing published – just wrote to see if I could write.  Now I have this blog and it’s all opening up again…it comes easily since I have a head full of thoughts to get on paper, confetti thoughts, wisdom of my age, silly thoughts.

But, I digress.  I was really thinking about typing.  I love to hear about writers who still write longhand.  My handwriting has deteriorated to the place where that would be impossible for anything longer than a note.  I love writers who type on vintage typewriters.  There’s something about the click of the keys, the slamming of the return lever, the inability to correct easily… it’s charming…not practical…but charming.  I learned to type in high school…about 10th grade.  It was what you learned if you were going to be a secretary or go to college.  We learned the keyboard, a bunch of formats for business letters and memos, and how to write a term paper, inserting footnotes and doing a bibliography.  We were tested for speed and accuracy.  I think I typed over 70 words per minute with no errors and made an A in the class.  If there was ever a course I’ve used, it was typing.

I really like to type and have embraced all of the new technology from typewriters to electric typewriters to word processors to computers to iPads.  My mother sat down at my computer when she was in her 80s.  She had been an excellent typist when she was young, but hadn’t typed in years.  She couldn’t get the hang of it because the slightest touch produced a line of letters…aaaaaa…she was used to having to press hard and the speed startled her.

My grandkids tell me they learn typing in 3rd grade.  I’m trying to imagine what that is like.  My 3 year old granddaughter knows how to use the iPad, iPhone and computer without even thinking.  She’s had access since she was a baby.  She can’t type, but she’ll learn.  Obviously, they don’t have to learn business letter format because there are templates for that or everyone emails.  They don’t care too much about speed or accuracy since everything is easily correctible.  No more carbon paper, cleaning up mistakes with a razor blade, using whiteout or correcting tape, trying to roll back the page to the exact spot.  I’m pretty sure they do footnotes differently than I did on the mass of term papers I produced from high school on.  No more staying up all night to retype a paper several times so you could turn it in with no corrections showing.  So, little kids learn the keyboard, which has only changed in the addition of computer shortcut symbols and keys.  I suppose someday they won’t even have to touch a keyboard…voice recognition is here now.  They’ll just think it and the word will appear maybe.

I’m feeling slightly nostalgic for how I learned…slightly, I said.  It was kind of fun to learn a skill that opened up so many things through the years.  It doesn’t really matter as long as we have people who want to write in whatever form they choose.  Just get the words on paper!

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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!

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 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!

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!

 

Watching the devastation of Hurricane Sandy unfold is one of the few reasons that 24/7 news is a good thing.  Trying to understand the enormity of the impact is going to take awhile to process.  I’ve lived through tornadoes, high winds, floods, ice storms, and watched a hurricane approach my location.  I both volunteered and worked for the American Red Cross and took disaster training in such things as damage assessment, shelter management, disaster communications and so many other things I’ve forgotten.  I actually was on the job during ice storms, 9/11, fires, and small floods.  I worked with VOAD (Volunteer Organizations Active in Disaster) and first responders in disaster training.  It brings me some sense of calm to know that the people who know what to do are in place to assist storm victims in putting their lives back together.

Two things I always remember from all my training is that shelters are opened with the hope of closing as soon as possible.  That is the goal.  Nobody wants to stay long in a shelter.  The other is that the size of the disaster doesn’t matter to the person affected.  A single home house fire is a disaster to that family.  Disasters come in all sizes.

While vacationing in Florida, my friends and I found ourselves in the path of Hurricane Wilma.  We sat for days watching it slowly stall and then make its way in our direction.  The news is different in hurricane areas, showing maps of evacuation routes, directions for protecting your family and friends and your property.  I noticed that people who go through it a lot had a system.  Many had plastic tubs that they packed methodically and packed in their cars, seeming to know what to select to take with them.  Making the decision was the hardest part.  Many decided to stay, which I can understand.  Why try to leave in a long line of cars when you don’t have a place to go, don’t know if there will be gas or rooms?  Take your chances and protect your property?  Which decision to make.  In a tourist area like Florida, there is the problem of those tourists.  Restaurants stayed open longer than they wanted to accommodate the visitors.  I understand from a business standpoint.  When you close for the storm, you are automatically going to lose business, your employees are going to lose income.  Tough decisions.  For the tourists, there is the issue of getting out of there.  What if the flights are full?  What if the airports close and all the cars are rented and where do you go anyway?

Cleaning up is the worst after flooding.  I’ve been in homes where the mud and debris is soaked into furniture, walls, floors, books, appliances.  The smells, the critters, the filth…   The good news is that there is a resilience in people that comes out in these times.  Even though there are some who take advantage with clean up scams, looting, and other despicable acts, the majority rise up and reach out to each other.  Those volunteers I spoke about will be activated and there to lend a hand to help clean up or just to hold.  Hugs will abound. Neighbors will bond.  Families and friends will be tested and most will realize that they are grateful to have survived.  The most haunting image I have of any disaster is of a woman in India after an earthquake.  She had lost her home, her business, and 12 members of her family.  She was just sitting there.  How do you even get the strength to stand up?

My heart goes out to the people affected by this storm.  To help them rebuild, give to a reputable charity.  Give to the general fund so that surplus funds can be used for other disasters. There will be more disasters, natural and man-made. There always are because that is the way of nature and the world.

I leave you with an image of Hurricane Wilma approaching the Florida coast…how deceptively beautiful it looked before it slammed the area…  

Take care.

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Is there anything more American than college Game Day?  There’s something so unique and fun about the games…the band, the fans, the cheerleaders, the colors, the sounds…

Today, I did something different.  A friend and I drove to Stillwater in the morning.  The first amazing thing was that we found a free parking space – on campus about a block from the stadium.  Wow!  That was $20-$30 saved.  Then we walked all around the OSU campus, weaving through the tailgaters.  Tailgating has skyrocketed from a few people with coolers in the trunk of their cars in the parking lot to full fledged portable kitchens hauled to the tents staked out throughout the buildings and parking lots.  It’s the ultimate cookout, potluck dinner, picnic…an industry in itself to buy the team tents, chairs, coolers, games, flags.  How do they get cable in those tents to watch the game?

We walked to Eskimo Joe’s in time to walk in while part of the OSU Marching band was playing the Alma Mater, walked back to the Student Union, walked around, grabbed a hamburger in the Union and back in time to watch the OSU Walk as Pistol Pete, the band, cheerleaders and pom squad led the team through a fan-lined street to the stadium.  Awesome!  I got teary hearing the fight song in the flood of orange and black, sprinkled with fans costumed for Halloween and the game…perfect school colors for the holiday.  Once we got the team into the stadium, we made our way through the crowd going into the stadium, walked back to the car and drove home with no crowds, arriving in time to light a fire and watch the entire game on television with the feel of fall and the stadium sounds still fresh in our ears.  I love going to the actual games, but this was kind of fun.  We got all the vibes with no traffic.

And they won!  Good job, Cowboys!  Go Pokes!!!

OSU Band at Eskimo Joe's

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