December Roses

December roses are special!

December roses are special!

When we arrived at my sister’s for Thanksgiving in Tennessee, her roses were still blooming. A few hardy blossoms hung on for several frosts and one 19-degree night. It was remarkable to see all the autumn reds, golds & russets in the Smoky Mountain sunshine with flowers blooming in the foreground.

     Flying home, I saw clear blue skies in every direction out the plane window. Puffy clouds drifted by as we edged into a cold front over Mississippi. Within a few minutes, my view of the ground was completely obstructed by a mantle of lumpy white quilt batting. The clouds had formed a beautiful, solid comforter.

A blanket of cloud

A blanket of cloud

     Here and there an updraft caused an irregularity in the blanket illusion. A singular cloud would be lifted and strung out from a stratocumulus to a stringy cirrus, indicating wind. I thought that was a lot like life, looking all warm and cozy but containing a few updrafts. Sure enough, as the plane descended through the mantle of white, it was anything but soft.

     At the Dallas airport, we were greeted by a cold north wind, flash flood warnings and temporary Internet disruption. At home, we found a damp carpet and stopped up sewer. Talk about bumpy clouds!

     Mostly I think my life has been a picture postcard of blessed peace. I get lazy; I get bored; I forget. The parts I remember best are the bumps in the cloud cover when I was in the emergency room or a loved one died. It’s not easy to forget backed up sewers, either.

     When experiencing an “updraft,” about all I can do is hang on and get through it. Turbulence in life makes me strong and helps me appreciate the times of calm.

     Last week a friend in Texas sent photos of her rose blossoms and said, “Probably the last of the year.”

     December roses are a smooth part of the quilt batting. What a wonderful winter perk–one I’ll try to remember when there’s ice on the windshield and the car won’t start.

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Knowing God

Seven-year-old Michael is falling behind his first-grade classmates in reading. The school asked our church to help and I am excited to be a part.

It has been a long time since I worked with a sweet little boy. (My last reading student was twenty-something.) Now and then I speak of things outside Michael’s understanding. His innocent,“Huh?” sets me back and makes me rethink my sentence structure or even my subject.

Two weeks ago I mentioned that school would be closed for Thanksgiving.

“Huh? What’s that?”

“Thanksgiving. You don’t know about Thanksgiving?”

He shook his head so I explained, “In America (because his family is from Haiti) we have a holiday when we give thanks to God for all he has done for us.”

“Will he be there?”

Whoa, that set me back! “Who, God? Well, no, not in person. But we will pray to him and he will hear us.”

I’ve been thinking about this all week. As a Christian, I surely should give a better answer. Feeling like a teacher, I wanted to delve into the pilgrim story. Pressed for time, I simply let it go.

“We’ll have a special meal to celebrate. Families get together and eat turkey…”

“Turkey! I know about turkey! It’s in November.”Turkey fruit

We looked at my calendar and counted the days. Then we read our story about the duck trying to give a bug a hug before he hid under the rug.

Mulling this over, I took Michael a Thanksgiving greeting card this week. The school hallways were decked with paper trees and students’ paper leaves of thanks. By now he was better versed on the holiday.

This incident really sharpened my awareness of how important our words are to young minds. We might inadvertently be teaching them that Thanksgiving Day is about beer and snacks and football, or turkey and sweet potatoes, or Pilgrims and Indians sharing corn for that matter. I’m glad Michael’s school is teaching them about gratitude but I realize their focus is on being grateful to parents and teachers. Not God.

As parents and grandparents, aunts and uncles, friends and in-laws, that’s our responsibility to the little ones. We can help them understand that food comes from mom and dad’s hard work but that God’s grace is ultimately behind it. Freedom comes from the soldiers’ sacrifice but victory is given by a greater power than bravery and a big gun.

I’ve never met Michael’s family and I’m really guessing at his background. When I gave him his Thanksgiving card, he read the words he knew, sounded out what he could and I filled in the blanks. I was delighted that God was one of the words he already knew.

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The Yellow Month

AutumnyelloIt is autumn in Texas at last. The calendar is only a specious prophet, guessing the date a month ago, and the hummingbirds left while it was still hot, called away to Mexico by the receding sun.

But last week it rained and the Gulf wind was beaten back by a strong front from the north. Today the leaves on our maple started jumping off the tree, turning the ground yellow. The cypress is dumping blankets of rusty brown and the oaks in the front yard are thump-thumping the roof with acorns and making a mess of the driveway because the squirrels can’t keep up.

Sumac at the cabin

Sumac at a Ouachita Mountain cabin in SE Oklahoma copyright 2014 Janet Short

I can’t keep up with Daniel. He’s busy as…a squirrel in autumn? Since the weather cooled off, he has torn the deck apart so the foundation repair guys could get to the house, taken down his summer shade tarps, repaired some of our cedar siding, redone the roof over the Jack-and-Jill bath, tracked Sheetrock dust all over the carpet and kept me busy sweeping cypress needles out of the kitchen and atrium.

Is it practicality that causes my husband to start fixing things? Or is it survival instinct?

Cool weather makes me want to cook soups. And bake. I’m not sure what makes me want to turn the oven on. Maybe gray skies and yellow leaves trigger some hormone production that says, “Make heat.”

There’s also this weird urge to scribble poetry. Not that I’m very accomplished at it, but my best pieces have all been written from October through December. Is that hormonal too, I wonder?

Gray autumn sky

Gray skies over White River in Arkansas Photo courtesy Traci Barnes

Perhaps this is something our Creator put in us. The planting and harvesting is winding down, wild game is plentiful, wood is cut and stacked, preserved food is put away and now it’s time to settle down in our snug rugs, sip hot cider and read a book. Or write one.

Maybe I’ll write some lyrics for a Kenny G song. That would be like poetry plus!

Ah, thank you, Lord, for music that transcends language and for this yellow month of warm fires, falling leaves and poetic thought.

http://www.kennyg.com/media

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Fire on the Deck!

“Daniel! Daniel! Something’s on fire!”

That brought my husband running. By then I had a pitcher of water in hand, thought better of it and traded it for the kitchen fire extinguisher. And by then the flame was only three or four inches high.

A couple of pfffts of chemical and our little emergency was over.

“What is that thing? Is it plugged in?” I stared through the sliding glass door at the offending 9” long rectangle of char on the deck.

burnt battery

What is it?

“It’s a battery!” we said simultaneously.

Dan’s big quad-copter drone battery had made a popping sound while he was charging it earlier and he put it outside just to be safe.

Spontaneous combustion of lithium batteries is not unheard of. They can burn up a cell phone. They have been known to cause fires in the bellies of aircraft.

Ashes

Nothing left but ash! A little burnt place on the table top.

There is a little burnt place on our butcher block top kitchen cart we use on the deck. No big deal. Had the cart combusted and burned a hole in our wood deck, we have insurance. We take precautions, keep fire extinguishers, set popping things outside…but stuff happens.

We have insurance on our cars in case of accident. We even have insurance on our business that covers us if Dan ever crashes through someone’s attic.

The one area where we aren’t covered is health insurance. It’s too stinkin’ expensive!

Last week we paid the piper. My doctor sent me to the ER when I visited him with a pain in my gut. It was “just diverticulitis,” a very painful infection in my colon, but he wanted me safe. Oh, did that hurt the pocket book!

What really hurt was spending four hours in the hospital thinking, What if I have to have surgery? What if they admit me? Will it wipe out our savings? So we came home and called our insurance agent. We had the paper work turned in within 24 hours.

Remembering how I made a wrong turn in the hospital corridor, trying to keep the gown closed over my behind as I made my way back to the room carrying a cup of pee, I’m still laughing.

I’m still learning life lessons: take precautions, set popping things outside, buy insurance! And try to pay attention when the nurse takes you to the toilet. You might be on your own when it comes to finding your way back.

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The Picnic from Earth

Life’s special events require planning, whether it’s a wedding for a helpless, giddy bride or a simple birthday get-together. But even when we plan carefully, things sometimes go awry and we jokingly call it “the party from hell.”

Our church picnic was thoughtfully planned…three times. Postponed for various reasons, it finally came together last weekend. The group leaders sent an email with suggested menu items, the date, time, place and some very specific instructions. Everyone attending was asked to choose an item or two from the list and repondez s’il vous plait.

This small group from our big church does dinner every week, only in members’ homes, so we’re all familiar with the menu list and RSVP. This time special instructions were included in the body of the email: bring chairs; it starts at 4:00(not the usual 5:00). And so forth. We didn’t all read all those parts.

Dan and I offered to help set up, so we arrived early. We were surprised there was no fire going. We were even more surprised when our group leader said he expected us to bring charcoal.

Reviewing what he and Dan had written to one another a few days before, where Dan had texted, “Can I help? Need more charcoal?” and Joel had replied, “Yes and yes,” it was pretty clear my husband had dropped the ball. Another person was also bringing charcoal, so we waited on her about ten minutes before rushing off to buy some.

While Dan was out shopping, a member of the group brought in 2 big jugs of ice tea. He hadn’t read the part about bringing individual cans or bottles. We texted Dan, “Get cups also.” He didn’t read it because he was driving.

Joel and Dan started the fire, using lots of lighter fluid and an entire bag of charcoal. It was windy and the flames danced in the south wind, then the east.

More people arrived, bringing 2-litre bottles of soda and juice. Dan hurried off to the store for cups.

Watermelon arrived uncut

Do you think we can cut it with a plastic knife?

While he was gone the watermelon arrived, uncut because someone didn’t read “cut up watermelon.”

“Do you think we could cut this with a plastic knife?” asked the group leader. I had a pocket knife but it was in my purse…in Dan’s car. We laughed at the thought.

One couple was planning to arrive late. A quick text saved the day by advising them to bring a large knife. I was relieved because I couldn’t remember when I last sharpened that pocket knife.

Joel always puts aluminum foil over the grill but in the rush to get the fire going, he forgot. Now he stood to one side trying to lay foil over the dancing flames, fighting the wind with a spatula on the left and tongs on the right. It was futile. “The flames will kill all the nasty germs,” we reasoned. And we laughed.

There were ants. Ants are tolerated at picnics, right? Ummm, not in Texas! Texas ants sting people who get in their path. And they don’t just sting; they make an itchy blister on the skin. For some of us, that’s a three-week ordeal.

We played musical chairs because many of the group didn’t read the part about bringing chairs. And because of the ants. We laughed.

Our disposable plates were Styrofoam. I weighted the stack with a bag of hot dog buns. One of the kids picked it up and a plate flew across the group. When he ran to catch it, another plate flew, and another. We laughed.

Another gust blew all the potato chips off one guest’s plate. I watched, giggling, as they landed on my husband and he sat perplexed as if it were a deliberate act.

We forgot things we needed; we brought things we didn’t use. Some of us stood up to eat. Some of us got blistered by ants. The kids had a great time.

Our picnic was scheduled to be over by 6:30. Even with our late start, at 6:10 over half the group had gone home and the rest were packing to follow.

It wasn’t the “picnic from hell” but it was definitely the picnic from earth: one of those times you laugh at the foibles and purpose to do it better next time. I hope we do it soon!

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I See Ants!

For a few weeks this spring, we had ants invading our kitchen sink. We were squashing and washing, spraying and praying. It was perfectly awful. And then company came, which made it perfectly embarrassing.

Every time I walked into our kitchen, I inspected the area around the sink. Sometimes there were ants, sometimes not, but I always saw movement. I finally realized it was a combination of me wearing trifocal lenses and having a speckled granite counter top. And ants.

Is that an ant or a granite speckle?

Is that an ant or a granite speckle?

This went on for weeks. I diligently kept all the dishes washed and dried the sink thoroughly with a towel. We put the cookies in the refrigerator. Dan sprayed under the sink and outside with toxic stuff known to kill birds. I bought ant bait, which worked on one colony, the ones coming in from behind the switch plate, but not on the other four or five ant clans.

We used mint leaves and soap film and when our house guests suggested boric acid powder, we sprinkled that around too.

Gradually, we saw fewer and fewer ants in our home. The weather became typically Texas h-o-t and dry and we noticed there were fewer chiggers and mosquitoes in the garden. One day I announced, “Today I saw no ants in the kitchen!”

But then I did see one. No, it was my eyes. And then another. No, it was a gnat. And there! No, just a granite speck that appeared to move as my eyes switched from close-up lens to mid-distance. I learned to stand still.

I also learned, or was reminded, that we see what we expect to see. I had seen ants in my kitchen so long, I didn’t think I was ever going to have a bug-free counter top again. So I simply kept seeing them for a couple of weeks after they left.

We do that with people, too. After we’ve been hurt and slandered, we anticipate more and assign motive to innocent remarks. If we get robbed, we look for robbers. It takes time to stop looking for trouble and mischief where none is intended. It makes us jaded.

I don’t like cynics or curmudgeons and I don’t want to become one. Today I am no longer looking for ants!

 

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Sisters Tell All

While running errands with my sister, I parked the car and took my time gathering my phone, purse & umbrella.

“I wonder if that’s a good movie,” she said. “Have you seen it?”

I looked up to see what she was talking about. Across the parking lot was a Redbox movie kiosk. “Fifty Shades of Grey” was advertised across the top. I looked at my sister with incredulity. I must have missed something.

"Fifty Shades" was advertised across the top

“Fifty Shades” was advertised across the top

“What movie?”

She pointed at the kiosk. “That one. That ‘Shades of Grey’ movie.”

“Are you kidding?”

“No. I’m just asking. Denise said something about it on Facebook so I thought it must be a good movie.”

“I would never go see that movie. Neither would Denise. What did she say about it?”

“I don’t know.” Her voice had taken on a bit of a defensive whine. “Something funny. I think it had something to do with old folks, you know, with gray hair. Isn’t that what it’s about?”

My gray-haired sister is almost sixteen years older than I. She has always been the one in the know and I the one asking questions. I did not like explaining S&M to big sister!

We laughed about her silly misunderstanding several times during our visit. Our cousins got to enjoy the funny too.

Reflecting on it, I’m really glad she asked me and the question didn’t pop up over lunch with the pastor!

Every woman needs a sister, a confidant. So does every man, for that matter. We all need a friend we can trust to tell us stuff.

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The Un-Umbrella

My husband shows great concern for me when I travel alone. He explains the route to me repeatedly, ad nauseam. (I still get lost.) He reminds me to take an extra car key. He worries about me and checks on me often. I love it.

As I prepared for a recent road trip to Oklahoma, I checked the weather forecast and decided to take an umbrella and a wind breaker. I packed my little fold-up umbrella in the front seat and found a full-size striped umbrella already in the trunk. When Dan asked, I told him I had my polka-dot portable and the blue and red striped one.

We have two similar umbrellas

We have two similar umbrellas

It sprinkled off and on and I used my portable umbrella several times on the trip. When my sister and I made a trek into Tulsa, I felt smugly well-prepared when we both had to duck under my little rain shield. I let it dry in our hostess’s utility room and then, so I wouldn’t forget it, I carried the handy pocket-size umbrella to the bedroom and left it there.

When I drove us to our family reunion site, it suddenly poured rain. I fretted, telling my sis that at least the big umbrella was in the trunk but one of us was going to have to get soaked. (She didn’t bring one at all.)

Then our cousin, Jack, came to greet us with a huge golfer’s umbrella. What a gentleman! I asked him to walk me to the trunk, opened it and took out my big back up protection.

What I thought was in the trunk

What I thought was in the trunk

The wind was blowing, rain was pouring, driveway was standing in water and we were getting wet despite the overhead, so I hastily popped open the second umbrella.

“Ka—whoosh!” the big nylon thing popped up…and kept on popping until it was inside out, ribs pointing at the sky. Some little clear plastic thingy went flying over our heads and onto the lawn as Jack and I went slack-jawed in amazement.

I giggled in frustration and embarrassment as I tugged on the fabric to try to make it form a more helpful umbrella shape. I think Jack said something light, maybe, “Well, that’s quite an umbrella! I don’t think I’ve ever seen one like it. Is it a trick umbrella?”

Our cousin helped my sister out of the car and rushed her under the patio. I ran, holding one rib of my broken umbrella down the best I could, but I felt a stream of cold water down my back. Safe under the patio, I tried to figure out what had befallen the un-umbrella. At least four ribs had come unloose from the fabric. It would no longer close properly so I dumped it shamefully behind a potted palm.

Indoors, the guests who had arrived before the deluge all wanted an introduction and a hug. I was wet: my hair was quickly becoming an explosive frizz (on one side only) and my leather sandals were soaked. After enduring all I could, I asked my cousin’s wife, Malinda, if I could please have a towel.

“A towel?”

“A bath towel. I’m really wet. My umbrella turned itself inside out.”

If my curly hair had gotten wet all over, I might have come out okay. If all the guests had gotten as wet, I might have fit in. As it was, the sun came out and I’m the one in the group photos with the part frizz, part string hairdo and the half grin, half grimace expression.

My sad Un-Umbrella!

My sad Un-Umbrella!

That evening I told my hubby all about it over the  phone. “I knew that old umbrella wasn’t in the best of shape but you didn’t tell me it was broken!” He had no clue what I was talking about. I brought it home to illustrate before I threw it away.

Did I learn anything?

  1. I already knew that no matter how much a person prepares, there are always unexpected circumstances.
  2. I’m going to personally check the function of umbrellas before I put my faith in them.
  3. Jack and Malinda are great at hosting a party.

I also learned that even though I often make myself the martyr–the one who eats the burnt piece, sits on the wobbly chair, volunteers to get the umbrella out of the trunk–I’m not very good at it.

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Life’s Undo Button

I remember when there was no “undo button,” there was no Windows Operating System and “word processing” meant a person was thinking about what to write. Then came the PC with DOS to run it and a blinking cursor on a green or black screen to indicate the operator was word processing. When we upgraded to Windows and Word, we thought the magic undo button was the greatest thing since sliced bread.

The magic undo button

The magic undo button

Did you type a word in the wrong place? Undo with a single click of a button. Did you accidentally delete the paragraph? Undo. Ruin a photograph? Undo. How convenient!

I’ve often thought, when I’ve misspoken or sent careless words in an email, that I wish life had a handy undo button. The other day I realized maybe some of it does and maybe it’s not all we wished for.

I might spend a few days mopping tile, vacuuming carpet, polishing furniture, cleaning glass shelves, laundering towels, sanitizing sinks and baking cookies for company. It can all be undone in a couple of hours. A child with a glass of lemonade can undo a lot in a split second.

My husband can sweat for a week on a rooftop to make enough money installing refrigeration equipment so I can write a check for his liability insurance. Undo only takes a minute.

My niece underwent a surgery to repair her broken ankle, enduring the pain and trauma for weeks, the inconvenience of a knee walker, the daily maintenance of her wounds. Then she fell and undid it in a flash. Oh, if only there was a “redo button”!

If only!

If only!

There may be a negative aspect to the conveniences of word processors–we rely on them too much. We type hastily and without enough thought, knowing we can undo our mistakes. The result often is less than our best.

Spell checkers have ruined me more than once. One memorable incident involved an article I wrote for the newspaper, a poetic rambling about dust motes floating up and down a ray of sunshine. The young woman assigned to prepare it for print substituted the word “mite” for “mote,” changing the entire tenor of the work.

Perhaps there is a good reason life is designed to give us no “do-over’s,” no quick undo’s or redo’s. We learn from having to do tasks slowly and methodically, over and over. We appreciate what someone else does for us when we’ve painstakingly done for others. We don’t take relationships for granted. We take good health seriously. We spend our money carefully.

Maybe that’s why older people typically express gratitude, pinch pennies, walk carefully and deliberately and obsess over healthy foods. They’ve learned from all their undo’s, without buttons.

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Mousetrap Mechanics

The last time I drove my cute little sports car, it left ominous drips on the garage floor. Since the coolant has had a slow leak that our mechanic can’t find, I thought perhaps it was getting worse and I asked Dan to take a look at it.

When my husband tried to move the car to work on it, he discovered the brakes were completely out!

I was sure the drips weren’t brake fluid but, whatever the cause, the car was not drivable. I was ever so grateful the brakes had worked fine on my last outing.

We then pondered how to safely get the car to the mechanic sixteen busy road miles away. Dan decided to check the brake fluid.

After much frustrating removal of several seemingly unnecessary covers, he found a vacuum hose off. When he slipped it in place, the brakes worked fine.

Off to the parts house to get a replacement hose and clamp, my mechanically minded husband was sure he could save us a tow charge and mechanic’s bill.

He brought home the parts and set up a fan in the garage. Because everything in the little Audi TT is crammed together and tightly engineered to fit in a miniature space, this was going to be a sweaty endeavor.

My sweetheart got the old hose off and the new hose on but tightening the bolt on the clamp was proving difficult. He dropped the ratchet. Instead of falling to the floor, it landed on the Audi’s protective bottom plate.

Wow! I had no idea my engine was so well protected from the elements. I was assigned a flashlight.

Dan got tools for retrieving dropped screws. They were long enough to reach the ratchet but not sturdy enough to hold it. My brain went to the things I know and I tried the mop handle, which lifted the ratchet but couldn’t pick it up. Then I fetched the barbecue tongs.

The tongs weren’t long enough but I thought maybe I could squeeze my forearm between the car’s frame and the radiator cowling. I did. The tongs captured the tool, lifted it and…my arm was stuck.

I felt like the monkey who has reached into a jar for a peanut. I stubbornly kept my grip on the tongs, used my left hand to bend the radiator guard ever so slightly and pulled my squished arm out a half inch at a time—scrape, bend, scrape, bend—for the critical fattest four inches. The ratchet fell out of the tongs but my arm was saved.

We both stared dismally at the elusive ratchet. We couldn’t be driving around with that thing under the engine. It might damage something. It might rattle.

Dan picked up the mop. “Think of something really, really sticky,” he said.

“Mousetraps!” I said and ran to the utility room to fetch a sticky glue board we use to trap bugs. Before we learned to put these incredibly sticky things safely under furniture and appliances, we both experienced being stuck to them. They are unbelievably strong and will almost pull the sole off your shoe.

Dan cut a piece of mousetrap board, taped it to the end of the mop and it worked perfectly to lift the heavy ratchet out of the engine compartment.

We are adding glue boards to our list of mechanical necessities, along with duct tape and baling wire.

She's zipping around town again

She’s zipping around town again

My car is safely zipping around town again. My arm is bruised but recovering nicely. I suspect the Audi may be indignant at having her innards probed by a mousetrap on the end of a mop handle. She’ll get over it. I’m proud of our ingenuity and have dubbed us The Mousetrap Mechanics. We’re quite a team!

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