• Two Things

    Wednesday, April 1, 2015 No tags Permalink

    Today I know two things to be true:

    stop wearing black

    I love wearing black. Looks good in the winter (and spring, and fall) when I’m pale white, and looks good in the summer when I’m (somewhat) tan. My mother does not like me to wear black and often says that I’d look so pretty, if only I’d wear a color sometimes. 😉

    Beauty-Quotes-35552-statusmind.com

    Shakira may have said hips don’t lie, but Edith was right about the hands. My eyes are always drawn to a beautiful pair of hands.

    When I was young I remember one of my friends asking me what was wrong with my dad’s hand. I told her that nothing was wrong. Years before I was even born, 3 of the fingers on his right hand were blown off in an accident. Of course, I consciously knew that he only had a pinky and ring finger, but I never gave it much thought. He could do everything that someone with ten fingers could do, and then some. If I had a knot in a delicate gold chain or a splinter in my foot, I’d go right to daddy. Without ever saying a word, he showed me everyday that through persistence, effort, and a lot of hard work, you can overcome just about anything. As an adult, that has served me so well.

  • Sartorial Swoon

    Monday, March 30, 2015 No tags Permalink

    well-tailored-suit

    Holly Golightly may have favored Tiffany & Co. when she had the mean reds, but I favor the mens’ department at Nordstrom. I realized the other day that if I were a man running my hands over women’s clothes I’d be a pervert. But I’m a woman, so I can fondle the ties and dress shirts to my heart’s content. 😉 And don’t even get me started on cuff links and shoes.
    shoesJust look at these beauties.  Double monk strap in brown, and with good old-fashioned cedar shoe trees.  I love the smell of cedar…and leather…and shoe polish. I know I’m weird.

    moonlighting

    This was one of my all-time favorite shows. (I’m not sure which one of the stars I had a bigger crush on at the time!) I recently re-watched a few episodes and realized that it was on the air 30 years ago.  What?!  The suits Bruce Willis wore were very nicely done and his shirts even better.  But I am glad that we no long do pleated pants for men or big shoulder pads for women.  I’m laughing at the idea of me in shoulder pads!

     

  • The Present Moment

    Friday, March 13, 2015 No tags Permalink

    present moment

    “This moment is not life waiting to happen, goals waiting to be achieved, words waiting to be spoken, connections waiting to be made, regrets waiting to evaporate, aliveness waiting to be felt, enlightenment waiting to be gained. No. Nothing is waiting. This is it. This moment is life.”

    “Why does it often take extreme life situations to bring back an awareness of the magic and mystery of life? Why do we often wait until we’re about to die before discovering a deep gratitude for life as it is? Why do we exhaust ourselves seeking love, acceptance, fame, success, or spiritual enlightenment in the future? Why do we work or meditate ourselves into the grave? Why do we postpone life? Why do we hold back from it? What are we looking for exactly? What are we waiting for? What are we afraid of? Will the life we long for really come in the future? Or is it always closer than that?”
    ― Jeff Foster, The Deepest Acceptance

     

    What’s here and now is all there is . For years, I’ve struggled with this fact. Most of us know this to be true in our heads, but integrating it into our daily living is another thing. It’s a practice, one that must stay a part of our awareness if we hope to be released from suffering. Anger, resentment, fear, jealously, worry, doubt—these are all things that can feel very real to us when we are experiencing them. However, they are of the mind, and just excuses to hang on to yesterday or to live in tomorrow.

    I’ve made some mistakes in the past, some huge ones at that. “If only I had done things differently” used to play in my head over and over. I finally realized that way of thinking was taking me away from my present experience. When I live in the past or future, I miss out on the freedom and peace in the now. The Vacuum Law of Prosperity states that “two things cannot take up the same space, so we must let something go before the new can enter.” That is to say there must be a space for the incoming blessings of the here and now before you’re able to receive them. Clear out all the old junk, make peace with it and let it go. The more I’m able to do that, the more I’m enjoying my life now. Simple everyday things bring me immense joy when I’m actually present and fulling experiencing them.

  • Little Darling

    Friday, March 6, 2015 No tags Permalink

    Little darling

    Beatles art history:

    Late Afternoon, New York, Winter by Frederick Childe Hassam // “Here Comes the Sun” by The Beatles

    I really enjoyed the above-linked mashup of art and  Beatles music, because those are two of my favorite things.  I became a fan at a young age because I had my aunt’s and uncle’s old records.  I used to have every Beatles album on CD, but in my great purge of possessions, I gave them all away.  I have them on my iPod, but it just isn’t the same.  So, as a birthday gift to myself, I bought a record player.  I’m usually against acquiring more material possessions, but I’ll make an exception when it comes to music.  I’m looking forward to hunting for vinyl treasure in used bookstores and record shops.  The sound of the needle scratching and the mesmerizing spin of the record on the turntable takes me back to many happy hours spent as a child.  My grandmother had one of those huge console stereo record players.  I loved that thing, and the way the stack of records would drop, one after the other.  She had a whole collection of swing and big band music that she’d play for us.  I can’t hear a Glenn Miller or a Benny Goodman song without smiling and thinking of her.

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  • Every Day You Play {Poetry}

    cerezos

    Every Day You Play

    Every day you play with the light of the universe.
    Subtle visitor, you arrive in the flower and the water.
    You are more than this white head that I hold tightly
    as a cluster of fruit, every day, between my hands.

    You are like nobody since I love you.
    Let me spread you out among yellow garlands.
    Who writes your name in letters of smoke among the stars of the south?
    Oh let me remember you as you were before you existed.

    Suddenly the wind howls and bangs at my shut window.
    The sky is a net crammed with shadowy fish.
    Here all the winds let go sooner or later, all of them.
    The rain takes off her clothes.

    The birds go by, fleeing.
    The wind. The wind.
    I can contend only against the power of men.
    The storm whirls dark leaves
    and turns loose all the boats that were moored last night to the sky.

    You are here. Oh, you do not run away.
    You will answer me to the last cry.
    Cling to me as though you were frightened.
    Even so, at one time a strange shadow ran through your eyes.

    Now, now too, little one, you bring me honeysuckle,
    and even your breasts smell of it.
    While the sad wind goes slaughtering butterflies
    I love you, and my happiness bites the plum of your mouth.

    How you must have suffered getting accustomed to me,
    my savage, solitary soul, my name that sends them all running.
    So many times we have seen the morning star burn, kissing our eyes,
    and over our heads the gray light unwind in turning fans.

    My words rained over you, stroking you.
    A long time I have loved the sunned mother-of-pearl of your body.
    I go so far as to think that you own the universe.
    I will bring you happy flowers from the mountains, bluebells,
    dark hazels, and rustic baskets of kisses.
    I want to do with you what spring does with the cherry trees.

    Pablo Neruda

    1

    It’s no secret that I love Pablo Neruda’s poetry. The official start of spring is still over a month away and it certainly doesn’t feel very spring-like around here. However, my mind has been on spring.  I’m trying to think warm.  So far, it hasn’t worked, but I’ll keep trying.  🙂

    That last line of the poem gets me every time.  I want to do with you what spring does with the cherry trees. I have always read that line as the most extraordinary metaphor for sensuality, awakening, and the magic of transformation. It is always very dark and gray outside in the months preceding the cherry blossoms. When they finally arrive — as they do, unfailingly each year — I feel reborn, fresh, invigorated. The world is once again full of hope, magic, and promise again after a long, cold, damp, dark season.

  • Peaches {Poetry}

    Tuesday, February 3, 2015 No tags Permalink

    tumblr_mg9povU7yn1rwadubo1_500

    You’ve ruined peaches for me.

    I can’t eat one without thinking of your hands
    dipping into my soft flesh, mouth dripping,
    teeth skimming across skin, tongue lapping
    at the excess:

    greedy, greedy, greedy.

    I am all rush and blush at a summer picnic lunch,
    hands shaking at the farmer’s market.”

    -Trista Mateer

    I love this piece of art, Efêmero,  by Juliano Lopes. It’s almost as it’s unfinished, but the detail is striking.  Just look at the vein that runs along the biceps brachii of the subject’s right arm.  My eye is drawn to that every time I look at it.  I love coming across artwork that speaks to me.

    Today I am thinking of summer, so I chose this poem.  I’ve always loved peaches, but not that junk that comes in a car or you buy at most stores.  Fresh, juicy peaches, right off the tree.  When I was a girl, I would go peach picking with my grandparents.  Because I was the smallest and the lightest, I would shimmy up the trees and get the best peaches that no one else could reach.  As I picked, I’d stop to eat a peach that I deemed as perfect, juice running down my skinny little wrists and I savored each bite.  Pure, unadulterated bliss.  I try to keep simple joys like that in my life today.  Give me blue skies, a picnic basket (with ripe peaches and a cold bottle of Sancerre), a  blanket, and my bare feet in the grass, and I’m near to heaven.  I may even blush a little bit as I eat the peach.

     

     

  • The Cure

    Monday, October 20, 2014 No tags Permalink

    As I’ve mentioned before, the name of this blog comes from a quote by one of my favorite authors: The cure for anything is salt water: sweat, tears or the sea.

    This weekend I worked out hard- sweat, and cried over a movie (quite appropriately, Out of Africa)-tears. I’m only missing the sea. I suppose that’s why I’m yearning for the ocean today. It must be synchronicity that I came across this post on Colossal:

     

    Underwater Atlas

    “Ocean Atlas” is the latest underwater sculpture by artist Jason deCaires Taylor. I snorkeled every week when I lived in Hawaii, and I’d love to visit some of his underwater sculpture installations. Add that to my bucket list. Snorkeling feels like a combination of floating and flying. It’s a complete sensory experience, the silky warm water enveloping your entire body, the rhythmic sound of your breath moving in and out of the snorkel, and the amazing sights that lie just hidden below the ocean’s surface.

    Also found while browsing Colosal- a beach made entirely of sea glass, near Fort Bragg, California

    image
    At one time I had a large amount of sea glass that I’d collected from beaches where I lived and visited. The green is my favorite, because someone once told me that I had sea glass-green eyes. Blue sea glass may be rarer, but when it comes to eyes, only 2% of the world population has green eyes.

    I’ll leave you with one of the best scenes from Out of Africa:

  • Hello, October!

    Wednesday, October 1, 2014 No tags Permalink

     

    It was like autumn, looking at her. It was like driving up north to see the colors.
    — Jeffrey Eugenides, Middlesex

    Oh how I loved Anne of Green Gables when I was a little girl. I love October because it’s my son’s birth month. I suppose that means I should also love February, because that’s my birthday month. By the time February rolls around, I’m desperate for spring. I always wanted my birthday to be in May or June, when it’s warm and lovely.  But as it is with many things in life, I had no say in the matter.

    While I’m never happy to see summer go, there are a few things I do like about autumn:

     

    • tall leather boots
    • homemade apple crisp
    • cups of tea
    • cashmere turtleneck sweaters
    • feather beds and down comforters
    • Scotch

     

    Yesterday was the first “boot day” of the season. My black riding boots are old and perfectly broken in, the leather supple and buttery soft. I made sure to polish them first. Polishing your shoes seems like a lost art.  Personally, I love it; the smell of the shoe polish, the brushes, the polishing cloth. It’s a soothing ritual. I can do a mean spit shine too. The secret is softening the polish up a bit with a flame first, and sprinkling with water (not spit) after the second coat of polish.  I learned these tricks from the Marine Corps, so you know they’re good. 😉

    Yes, I have my shoes on in the house, and worse yet, my feet up on the furniture. My son is an adult now, but he still never wears shoes in the house. Anyone’s house. The moment he walks in, they’re off his feet. What can I say, I raised him well.

    Tomorrow I’m taking a planned “mental health” day off work. I am going to sleep in a bit, make myself a big breakfast, and then walk to the market to buy apples to make apple crisp. Photos and recipe to follow.

    O hushed October morning mild,
    Thy leaves have ripened to the fall;
    Tomorrow’s wind, if it be wild,
    Should waste them all.
    — Robert Frost, “October”

  • Weekend Update

    Sunday, September 28, 2014 No tags Permalink

    I think I  need another weekend to recuperate from my weekend.  I was a volunteer at the 10th annual Broad Ripple Historic Home Tour.  I enjoy the sense of community and history that area of town has, and my company was a co-sponsor of the home (which happens to belong to a co-worker and friend of mine).

    Friday night was a kickoff party, and somehow I got roped into working the wine-selling booth.  It was fun, but I was on my feet for about 6 hours.  I am getting too old for that kind of stuff.

    Saturday was the actual home tour, and it was decided that I should be the front door greeter and ticket taker because I’m so good at talking to people.  Ironic, because I am an introvert at heart.  Not shy, not by a long shot, but definitely an introvert.  I figured that if I had the last shift of the day, it wouldn’t be as busy.  Wrong!  In the four hours that I was the greeter, nearly 350 people came through the house.  That is a lot of talking on my part.  The funny thing was that many, many people thought that I was the homeowner.  There was a photo of my friend and her husband hanging up on the wall behind me, and at least 75 people asked me questions like, “how long have you two been married,” or “is that a picture of your wedding?”.  At first I explained that I’m not the homeowner, etc.  Honestly, my friend and I don’t look very much alike, except the blonde hair.  All blondes look alike, right?  😉  Eventually, I figured out that people don’t want to hear the truth, the want to hear what they want to hear.  I let my friends in on what was going on, and we decided to go with it.  I kept saying to her husband, “oh, honey, can you be a sweet husband and get me another drink?”  He’s even more mischievous than I am, so he really took it and ran with it, coming up to me and giving me a big kiss.  Overall, it was a really fun day, but I spent another 6 hours on my feet.  And that much small talk with 350 strangers is almost enough to kill an introvert.  My “batteries” were depleted.

    Today I slept in, cancelled all my plans, turned off my phone and didn’t leave the house, outside from walking to get some frozen yogurt with my son.  I very much needed to spend some alone time recharging.  I love these lines from the article 11 Things Introverts Want You to Know:

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  • These Are the Days

    Sunday, September 7, 2014 No tags Permalink

    I don’t think that I could conjure up a finer day in my imagination, even if I tried. Truly beautiful. One of those days that makes you oh-so-thankful to be alive.  Hot coffee on a cool morning in the crisp, clean air. A good, long ride that makes me grateful for a nice bicycle and a strong body. Surprising my son with breakfast that is “that omelette thing that isn’t an omelette”. (It’s a torta.) An afternoon spent reading tranquilly in the sunshine, not too hot, not too cold.  Great music playing in the background. Everything from Fleetwood Mac to Louis Armstrong. Homemade marrow broth slowly simmering  on the stove.  The glorious ache of tired muscles, sore and worn out from using them in a myriad of ways in the past few days. The promise of a long soak in a hot bath, filled with muscle-soothing Epsom salts and scented with eucalyptus.  A good glass of red wine.

    Simplicity is best. It doesn’t take much to make me happy.  These are the days that I hope to remember when I am an old woman, if I’m so lucky to live so long.

  • Now O’clock

    Friday, August 29, 2014 Permalink

    (Via ZenHappinessProject.com  If you’ve never heard of the Zen Happiness Project, I highly recommend checking it out. Anthony runs a great newsletter and holds free meditation workshops.)

     

    Living fully in this moment is not always easy, but when you do, you can completely feel the difference. It really is the only place we can experience our lives.

    As I write this, I’m sitting outside on my patio. Two colibri just flew up and hovered next to me. As they flew off, I looked in their direction and saw 6 more colibri flying around, silhouetted against the puffy white clouds. It made me smile. I hope they’ve been enjoying my flowers as much as I have this summer.  At first I felt saddened by the idea that this is the first time I’ve seen them all summer, and summer is almost over. Then I remembered that they’re here now, and that I shouldn’t waste the experience. I stayed in the here and now.

    I’ve accomplished absolutely nothing today, and at one point in my life that would’ve make me crazy. No, that’s wrong. I’ve done everything that I needed to do by being fully present in this day. I am alive and each and every molecule in my body is thoroughly aware of that fact. Today, I did not let my life slip by.

  • C’est Si Bon

    Wednesday, August 27, 2014 No tags Permalink

    Good things about today:

    • Iced coffee first thing in the morning
    • A big bowl of ripe cantaloupe for breakfast (okay, first breakfast. I had second breakfast when I got to work.)
    • The coolness that comes with wearing a dress on a hot summer day
    • The Klondike bar that my boss brought me this afternoon. I haven’t eaten one of those in years. My God, was it ever delicious. I may have moaned in ecstasy once or twice while eating it.
    • Heirloom tomatoes fresh from my friend’s garden. (I had them for dinner, drizzled with balsamic. Pure heaven!)Heirloom tomatoes
    • The wise foresight that included putting a bottle of white to chill in the ‘fridge for tonight.image
    • The fact that Wednesday is my Thursday this week because I have a 4 day holiday weekend.
    • An evening with a breeze that’s cool enough to allow me to enjoy my patio. It’s the kind of breeze that caresses your skin and makes you happy to be alive.
    •  The air is scented with geraniums, basil, rosemary, and tarragon.
    • A stack of good books to read.
    • Having enough wisdom to know that life isn’t perfect, but it’s pretty damn good. I have enormous gratitude for all the good things in my life, and for the not-so-good things that teach me lessons and make me appreciate the good even more.
  • A Sunday Well Spent

    Sunday, August 3, 2014 No tags Permalink

    image

    I love peaceful and relaxing Sundays and I do my best to spend every Sunday that way. This morning I got up and took a nice, easy 24 mile bike ride. The trail that I ride on runs right next to the state fairgrounds and it’s state fair time. It always amuses me to see cows and a Ferris wheel in the middle of the city, in an area where there’s usually nothing and no one.

    The rest of the day was spent baking bread from scratch (no bread machine for me as I love to knead the dough by hand), reading in the sunshine, taking a much-needed nap, and attending a cookout. All in all, a perfect way to end my weekend. I’m content and sleepy in the best sort of way.

    What was the best part of your weekend?

    A little DMB for your listening pleasure:

  • Want

    Monday, July 7, 2014 No tags Permalink

    First off, I want to marry Tyler Knott Gregson.  Oh, the things that man writes!  But I’m sure he’s married.  Or a homosexual.  Or a unicorn.  (I’ll explain the unicorn part in a later post.)  Most likely, he’s a married homosexual unicorn, because that’s pretty much these way things work.  😉

    Yes, I know this is long.  Read it anyhow.  You will be glad you did.  And then, perhaps you’ll read it again.  I have.  Each time finding something new.   Honestly, he had me at pancakes.  I love me some good pancakes.  From scratch.  None of that box mix stuff for me.  Don’t tell me that men don’t know how to make pancakes.  My dad makes some of the best in the world.  Yes, I know how to make them too, but that isn’t the point.  Surprise pancakes, pancakes that someone else makes for you, they taste better.

    There’s so much good here, I’m not going to go through and point it all out.  Read it for yourself and see what speaks to your soul.

     

    755 I Want This I Want That I Want Photos Of Us I Want To Be Proud Out Loud Typewriter Poem

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  • Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night

    Tuesday, June 24, 2014 No tags Permalink

    The light was so beautiful this evening.  Storms strong enough to spawn a tornado passed through town today, but late in the evening the clouds broke and the quality of the light became rich and golden. Earlier today the tornado sirens blared and we moved to a safe area of the office.  I could tell that one of my co-workers was afraid.  I thought about what it was that she’s afraid of.  Death?  I’ve looked death in the eyes before and it looked nothing like a tornado.

    white

    I had worked late and when I came home I kicked off my heels and sat cross-legged on my bed, still in my dress.  My bedroom window faces west and I watched  as the light faded from this day.

    trigueñas u r r e n d e r

     

  • Hygge

    Friday, June 20, 2014 No tags Permalink

    VejleThis is in the fjord town of Vejle, Denmark. It’s near the UNESCO World Heritage Viking rune stones at Jelling.  I’d love to see the rune stones, then head north to Grenå and visit my grandfather’s hometown.  Sigh.  Maybe someday.  Although I’m not a big believer in “someday” because “someday” never comes.

    I love the Danish concept of hygge. In essence, hygge means creating a nice, warm atmosphere and enjoying the good things in life with good people around you. Danes are often considered the happiest people on Earth.  It’s because they know that happiness is so much more than money.  It’s being healthy, being able to take care of yourself, and having good times with those that you love.  Sounds simple enough, right?  Somehow, it’s taken me years as an adult to get to that point.  Or closer to that point.  Some days are better than others, but the general trend is in the right direction.

    So until I make it to see the rune stones, I carry my own rune around with me every day.  Earlier this spring, I decided to get a tattoo.  OK, another tattoo.  Not many people have seen my fleur de lis tattoo.

    inguz2 It’s the Viking rune Inguz (Ing) and it concerns new beginnings. It is also a rune of transitions  calls for us to leave the past and matters of previous situations behind us. This powerful rune implies mental and emotional strength – the strength needed to achieve completion of a task or phase. They symbol is also associated with the Norse goddess Freya. She is the goddess of love, beauty, sexuality, fertility, wealth, divination and magic.

    I love it and I Iove the symbolism behind it.  What’s funny is that my mother is going to flip out once she sees it.  When I told her that I had gotten the fleur de lis tattoo she said, “What would you want to do that for?”  That’s code in her lingo that means “I think that is incredibly stupid and I am upset with you but I”m not going to say that I’m upset with you.”  Usually she reserves such things as when I told her that I was getting a divorce ( a big no-no in my family) or that I probably never getting married again (even worse in her book).   I just smile and remind her than I’m an adult, with an adult child of my own.  I’ve got a good job, good health, and I take care of myself.  I know that it’s just her own way of worrying about me and really a projection of her own fears.

  • Thursday Afternoon

    Thursday, June 19, 2014 No tags Permalink

    My son came home from work this afternoon and found me sitting on the sofa.  He said to me, “You’re home early.  Did you kill all your co-workers?”   You have to know his sense of humor and mine as well to get why that’s so funny.  Also, I’m never home early.

    For me, it’s a rare decadent, lazy, afternoon.  A Thursday afternoon.  I’m drinking a glass of wine at 4 o’clock in the afternoon. Why?  Because there was an open bottle in my refrigerator left over from the weekend   Why not?

    There’s a wonderful thunderstorm going on.  I love a good storm.  The power behind is is life-affirming.  Dare I say, sexy.  If it isn’t going to be sunny, it should be storming.

    Vicky, Christina, Barcelona is playing in the background.  Oh, Javier Bardem.  Those eyes, those dimples, that voice.  😉

    I’m perusing an external hard drive full of old photos that I’ve taken.  There are literally thousands of photos on here.  What’s really interesting is that what I thought was crap at the time is actually pretty good.

    a

  • Thank you

    Sunday, June 8, 2014 No tags Permalink

    When life is sweet say thank you and celebrate. And when life is bitter say thank you and grow.

    That’s most excellent advice. Lately I’ve been celebrating and growing.  Above all, I have been saying thank you. Every. Single. Day. Thank you for the blessings. Thank you for the lessons.

    “I have faced many challenges in my life. Some, a little more recent than those which have gone before them.

    Nevertheless, with each new day—and, no matter how I may feel—I smile in the biggest and most special sort of ways. For you see, these days, I am smiling because I am grateful—grateful to simply greet and embrace each and every single one of my days.

    And though, my mobility may be just a bit wobbly at times…like the bird, my wings are formed each time I leap from ‘life’s cliff’ and always before my feet hit the ground.

    I take great comfort in this, most gentle ‘knowing’—this understanding, that no matter what, I’ll be, always, okay.” -Ray Bradbury

    I just read an article about Ray Bradbury. I had no idea he was a Zen Buddhist. I remember finding one of my older brother’s Ray Bradbury books when I was about 8 or 9. I was desperate for something to read. Anything. I’d already read every single thing in the house including the dictionary, the phone book, and the deed to my parents house that went back to the time of the Indians. I decided to read whatever this stupid book was, because it was better than nothing. In my mind it had to be a stupid book because it was my big brother’s book. I can’t say for certain, but I think it was Farenheit 451 that I read first. I had an expansive vocabulary for an 8 year-old, but I’m sure some of the book went over my head at the time.  When I read it again as an adult, I was shocked at the subtleties that I’d missed the first time around. Life experiences can teach you things that an extensive vocabulary cannot. 

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  • Hello, June!

    Sunday, June 1, 2014 No tags Permalink

    image

    Welcome to my favorite month of the year. June. Even the word June is beautiful.

    Long, sunny days and balmy nights that call for midnight walks, star-gazing, and ice cream. Sandal season.  Toenails painted the same vivid pink shade as my favorite peonies.

    Midsummer’s eve, welcoming the summer solstice. Picnics.  Even better, picnics on midsummer night’s eve. Thanks to a beautiful bit of synchronicity,  one of my favorite events of summer, Symphony on the Prairie, opens the weekend of the summer solstice. The orchestra will be playing Gershwin’s Rhapsody in Blue and I can’t think of a better way to start summer. I’m already planning what to pack in my picnic basket, and the special bottle of Champagne for that night is sitting on my kitchen counter as a reminder of good things to come.

    Every June I re-read Anne Morrow Lindbergh’s Gift from the Sea. This wonderful book explores the necessity of not only looking inward, but of focusing on one’s development in order to fully live. Lindberg (the wife of Charles Lindberg)is especially potent when discussing the necessity of occasional moments of solitude in order to realign one’s priorities and give freedom to creative expression, rather than running oneself ragged with the million fragmented responsibilities of most women.

    Gift from the sea

    A new addition to my June line up is going to be the N.I.T.E. (Navigate Indy This Evening)Ride. The N.I.T.E. Ride starts at 11:00 pm from IUPUI’s Carroll Stadium on New York Street, travels along well-lit roads through Downtown Indianapolis, the Indiana Statehouse, Monument Circle, Butler University, Indianapolis Museum of Art, wanders along the White River and through the IUPUI Campus. I’ve never ridden through any of these places at night, because I value my life. This event makes it safe, and I’m already looking forward to the new experience.

    “Green was the silence, wet was the light,
    the month of June trembled like a butterfly.”
    – Pablo Neruda

  • Good Things

    Monday, May 19, 2014 No tags Permalink

    I have an on-going compilation of life’s little pleasures over on my page Good Things.  I’ll keep adding more things as I think of them. I want to keep it as a separate page so I can easily pull it up when I’m having a bad day. What would you add?

     

    • sleeping in just a little bit on a week day
    • the smell of damp earth in the morning after it’s rained all night
    • lunch dates
    • the feeling of warm sand between my toes at the beach
    • getting a package in the mail
    • pedicures
    • Thai food so spicy that it makes my eyes water
    • kisses
    • little surprise gifts for no reason at all
    • sipping Lillet in the sunshine
    • the feeling of a warm breeze blowing my hair against my bare shoulders
    • handwritten notes
    • driving home with the car windows rolled down and the music turned up
    • hearing birds chirp for the first time each spring
    • listening to thunderstorms while under the covers
    • new ink
    • a cashmere sweater on a cold day
    • being read to out loud
    • bubble baths
    • great smelling men’s cologne
    • picnics
    • that “new book” smell
    • that “old book” smell of a good used bookstore
    • crisp, clean, fresh sheets against bare skin
    • a spoonful of peanut butter straight from the jar in the ‘fridge
    • Champagne (and the accompanying giggles I get from drinking it)
    • flying a kite
    • spending the afternoon at a great museum
    • a fresh box of crayons
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