Track 9 to NYC

Track 9 to NYC
dropping off "my guys" at Hamilton Train Station

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Food, Glorious Food


There are a lot of people from every era of my life who think of food when they think of me.  And rightly so.  I’ve always & forever used food to convey a sense of  “I see you, I care about you.”  

It started in elementary school, making Krazy Krunch for classroom parties, expanding into nibbles for Glenn Hall, then dinner parties for college friends, full-blown soirees as a young adult, my 30s saw Mom et moi as the "Muffin Ladies" of the college, my 40s ushered in whipping up monthly goodies for "Class of '70" dormies & adopted" classes, and now I bake for my Friday morning stint at the Bryn Athyn College alumni office (dropping by a plate of whatever to the Theological School). 

Ah, but will I ever top my crowning glory?  With the exception of the tea sandwiches & whimsical wedding cake, I baked all of the various nibblings served up to guests at our cathedral wedding reception. Still not sure how I managed it, but I did & had a swell time doing it.  

What brought all these food memories to mind?  I’m fending off a cold, loading up on liquids & sleep to elude it.  And I’m heating up one of Maddie’s cheese rolls, the cheese rolls I made sure I was well-stocked with before she hightailed it off to Singapore for almost a month.

In about 15 minutes, I will settle down with a big glass of fruit juice & tear apart the crisp crust, revealing the soft insides, laden with cheese & Maddie’s special touch.

Nothing brought home to me the power of food than realizing the pure comfort of having something to eat that was made by a friend.  My guess is that’s one of the reasons a bowl of chicken noodle soup served on a bed tray by Mom, crackers to the side of the wide bowl, always made me feel better right off the bat – the hot soup tasted wonderful, but the genuinely healing part was Mom. 

Food has a power to connect like nothing else.  For millennia, people – even enemies – have broken bread together as a way of closing a deal, settling an argument, sealing a truce.  Food has power. 

Right now, food – a piping hot cheese roll & a steaming cup of tea – will help me fend off illness as I wallow in the comfort of the couch, a kitty by my side & thoughts of Maddie all around.     

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Overrated


A treasured author mentor shares the deep wisdom, "Being practical & safe & always logical is way overrated."

I agree 100%.  Yes, there are times it's vital to be practical & logical & playing it safe, but my experience is that growth - the great BIG quantum leap sort that takes you wondrous places you never dreamed of - rarely  if ever springs out of such stolid grounding.  Such grounding goes a long way as underpinning of fantastic dreams, is utterly & completely necessary in many cases, but paired with the fantastic, the absurd, the preposterous to reach great heights.

Boys putting in countless hours putting with electronics in their family garage.  The frustrated mom of a celiac child believing it's possible to develop a recipe for a gluten-free cookie that tastes over-the-top fabulous.  The nut convinced a thread-like wire can carry sound or that pictures & print can float through air or the one who prattles on about projectiles soaring outside the earth’s clutches.  Many the skeptics scoff at what they saw as wasted energy & talents which could have been better invested in more practical pursuits.  But oh what can come out of those endeavors! 

My parents were among the most impractical, illogical people I've ever met.  In spite of being among the least financially well off of folks in my home town, they urged their children to invite dorm students down to Sunday dinner.  The Boys Scouts could count on Dad whenever they needed a contribution, even though his own boys were grown & gone from home.  As someone who owned his own fledgling business, Dad often didn’t bring home much of a paycheck, but the church treasurer wrote that if everyone tithed like Dad did, the church would never need to send out a fund-raising letter.

When Dad realized my college was skipping a college luncheon in honor of graduates - just as they had when my sister got the same junior college degree 4 years before – he & Mom put on a special supper at our house, inviting ALL of the graduates from the junior college, the senior college, the theological - and spouses - as well as all the teachers and their spouses.  It wasn't grand, but it WAS.  And they did it all on their own dime, without drawing attention to themselves as great & glorious benefactors.  It wasn't until near the end of the supper (thank goodness for the fair weather, because we never could have fit them all in our house) that the dean realized it was Mom & Dad, not the college, footing the bill.  

Impractical, illogical & (it could be argued) financially fool hardy.  But dozens of students felt honored by their college, dozens of teachers had a swell time, and one dean was stunned by the basic generosity of two parents who wanted to make sure their child had a precious experience.  

It was practical thing to cancel the luncheon, which conflicted with another event happening the same day; it was logical to leave things at regretfully explaining the situation to graduates;  it would have been financially safe for my parents to keep the hundreds of dollars they spent in the bank, to forego the many hours spent making it happen.  Compared to the precious memories & priceless lessons that came out of that unforgettable event?  Overrated!!!

Thursday, January 31, 2013

Parallel Parking


A friend wrote on Facebook the other day about giving her younger daughter one last lesson in parallel parking (I assume before that milestone-passing driver’s test).  In addition to smiling with delight at how much she was enjoying this as a special event, not an arduous duty, I smiled in memory of my own parallel parking lessons.

Unlike every other person I knew, I did NOT learn how to drive at age 16.  No idea why I missed out on having Chief Ryan teach me how to drive – we were immensely blessed in my hometown to have a chief of police who did such amazing things – but miss out I did. 

My guess is that I was none too invested in the idea of getting a driver’s license, as I was pretty sure my sister would never let me get near the car.  (A suspicion, I am glad to say, she confirmed many years later, saying, “I’m glad you understood that.”) 

Dad, on the other hand, blissfully unaware of the sibling dynamics that would have doomed my driving to only the utter dregs of opportunities, was eager for me to learn.  And he would teach me.

Even at 16, I knew this was not a good idea.

Dad decided to start me out in the parking lot at the high school field house, but quickly decided against that when he realized there were a) cars parked there for the nearby swim club which  b) adults & kids walking to & from.  He quickly recalculated next-best-place & decided on the much smaller parking lot next to Pitcairn Hall. 

Strange, but true – I was fine driving, if we were on actual roadway.  It made sense to my practical mind.  I could handle it.  Learning how to drive in a small parking lot did not make sense to me, left me feeling distinctly uncomfortable. 

Which I promptly demonstrated by running the car up a curb, then slamming it back down onto the pavement. 

Dad asked me why I had stopped. 

I asked Dad, “Don’t you hear a hissing sound?” 

He got out, looked at the left front tire – on the driver’s side – looked at me in a way I can’t describe & have no desire to, then walked around to the back of the van, opened the doors, took out the jack & one of the two spare tires he always kept back there (when you use a car commercially, as my lumberman Dad did, it pays to be over cautious), lugged them around, and replaced the ruined tire.

I was aware of the people playing tennis across the road watching all this, pausing occasional to make comments to each other.  Mortified doesn’t begin to describe my feelings.

Dad finished up, put the beyond-repair tire & the jack in the back of the van – and to my total horror, got back into the car on the passenger’s side.

Hey, I was 16 – unschooled in the ways of male thinking.  Now, I get it.  If he had been intent on teaching his youngest child how to drive before, now he was fiercely determined.

“Okay,” he said in a totally calm voice, as if it made total sense, “That wasn’t something you want to do again.  Turn the engine on, let out the clutch & make a circuit around the parking lot.”

“Can’t I drive across the road, drive around the loop in front of Benade Hall?” I asked, knowing it was roadway & that it was on school property; on a Sunday afternoon, that meant no one was in danger of being hit.

Maybe he was trying to soothe my shattered, humiliated nerves or maybe he wanted to calm his own, but Dad let me drive the van across the road, around the loop & back again.  It all went off without a hitch.

Maybe he felt like my steady driving on roadway boded well for renewed lessons in the parking lot.  “Okay, now make a circuit around the parking lot,” he instructed me.

So, I did.  Although there was no cars to worry me as I drove the circuit, across the road four pairs of upperclassmen eyes were soaking it all in from the tennis court.  And they had stopped playing & were just watching.  Me.

Which is when I went up on the curb again – this time on the passenger’s side – and slammed back down on the pavement. 

I looked at Dad, Dad looked at me, and it seemed an eternity until he cocked his head to his right, listened, leaned out the window & listened more intently, opened the door & looked down.  Then got out of the van, walked around to the back, hoisted out the second spare tire & the jack & replaced the now destroyed second tire.

To this day, I do not know who the tennis players were, but I knew they had a pretty awesome story to tell, one that would keep their friends in stitches & me offering up thanks that it happened over the summer, that by the time September rolled around it would be old news. 

After that, Dad never made so much as a peep about driving lessons.  Which was fine by me.

It wasn’t until the ripe old age of 24, after I got my first job & needed to be able to get all my teaching paraphernalia to & from the elementary school,  that I finally learned how to drive.  A backpack would not suffice.

By then, Dad had been gone for a couple years.  My best friends offered to teach me.  Using their car, brave souls, since there was no way my sister, who was bequeathed his new van, was letting me near it.  Praise be, they were patient & kind & seemed to understand that I really was not eager to be doing it. 

The one thing that I remember above everything else was how Dave was a stickler for parallel parking.  There was no way he was going to have me take the driver’s test until he was absolutely, positively sure I would nail parallel parking.  How well I remember the look in his eyes when, having parked in what I thought was a perfectly acceptable fashion, he’d eye the results, give a small yet encouraging sigh, and have me try again.   

To this day, whenever I find myself in a big city faced with the option of paying $$$ parking garage fees or maneuvering my car into a tiny parking spot, I offer up thanks for having such a darn picky teacher. 

Jenn – may Marley nail the parallel parking section of her driver’s test.  
Knowing her Mom, my bet is she will!

Sunday, January 27, 2013

Aisle Dance Forever

Remembering the time Mim & I were grocery shopping and for some utterly forgotten reason started dancing in the aisles to the piped in musak.  Very Gene Kelly, with a bit of Fred Astaire partnering with a hat rack.  Can see it still in my mind.  What delicious silliness!

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

Dueling Crazies


What’s reality?
Does money determine worth,
Your prosperity?

Which has more value –
Amassed wealth?  Creative self?
Can you have them both?

I’ve been stuck for years
Betwixt dueling messages
That were so whacked out.

“Money conveys worth.”
“Money kills the creative.”
Both are full crazy.

What are the values of my happy self?

How does this particular reflection end up under Sneezing Chickens, rather than Saving All My Best Lines?

Because my view of the values I hold dear is wrapped up in stories.  Am keenly aware that what  I hold to be my values are too often falsehoods, values I lay claim to but which I actually only want  to have.  

Until I get clarity on what are really & truly the values of my happy self, will write under "wrapped in stories" rather than "my 3rd act."


See, seems to me there's a heap of difference between something that IS a value & something I'd like to have as one. Still, the question does ask, "What are the values of your happy self?" not the more general, less defined, waiting to be sentimentalized & overstated, "What are your values?"  Makes it a tad easier to zero in on what IS rather than what is merely hoped for.


Hmmm...  To focus on what are the true values of my HAPPY self, I should get into my heart to find the wordless response that bypasses distracting, downright deceptive verbage:
1) take a deep breath - close my eyes - take another deep breath
2) drop my awareness into my heart center, focusing attention in the area of my physical heart
3) focus on creating an all-loving, all-nurturing, all-accepting, open environment there, in that place, as if I have an innocent cradled against my chest
4) place that palm of my hand over my chest, feeling my heartbeat.
5) drop into the heartbeat, as I ask - What are the values of my happy self?

Tuesday, January 1, 2013

YES!


Mantra for the year:
For all that has been, my thanks.
For what’s to come – YES!

(tip of the hat to dag h.)