Reflections, thoughts, semantics

its all just words

Grandma Lucille Makes Her Way Back Home June 17, 2008

Filed under: Big Deals, Family Life, Home, Small Things, life — dlarz @ 2:59 am
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Being 2000 miles away from loved ones has its ups and downs. I was not around Grandma when she became ill, and so my memories of her are when she was healthy and vibrant.  I know her health declined in these past few years, and even though I did see her after her leg was amputated, I still remember her as the spunky Grandma of my childhood. I will always remember her this way, and I think that is an “up.”

I have been thinking about her a lot over these past few days. Some of the best memories of my life are memories with my Grandmother and I feel so blessed to have and to hold these memories so dear in my heart. I’ll be gliding along in my day, going about my chores and I’ll suddenly remember another good time with Grandma. I’ll giggle out of sheer joy at the stories she’s told me about her life and I feel grateful to have had her in my life.

So it’s a bit surreal that I will never see her again. This is the “down.” It’s hard to process the fact that she has passed away when, in my mind, she is still healthy and full of spitfire. I know she passed away on Thursday. It is just now sinking in that she is, in fact, gone.

Last night, just as I was about to fall heavily into a blissful slumber, I heard my Grandmother’s laughter. The sound was so real, it was as if she was in the room with me. It woke me from my (almost) sleep, and more memories of her flooded my mind. It was about midnight and I got up from bed and sat in the kitchen, looking out the window at the moon and stars, just thinking about her. And I cried.

One of my favorite memories of Grandma is when she shared details about her life as a little girl. About six years ago, my Grandma Champine and her sister Barbara visited us in Idaho during the holidays. Over breakfast one morning, the stories of her life started to pour out of her like the syrup we used on our pancakes.They were warm and sweet and flowed slowly and some stories were sticky and…oh, I only wish I had a tape recorder!

She laughed as she shared the story about the time her father decided to pack up the family and move them to Hollywood, CA. Her mother (whom I learned was very gullible) reluctantly obliged. Three days later, they found themselves broken down in Pennsylvania. What’s more, as fate would have it, the gentleman who stopped to help them with their car just happened to be her father’s cousin.

Because I grew up so far away from my Grandmother, I never had the chance to sit and listen to these stories before. As we sat at the breakfast table, I begged her to continue and I learned so much about her in that little two hour chunk of time; more than I ever could imagine I’d ever know about my Grandmother.

She talked about her father’s wanderlust, how he kept the family constantly moving, strapping a matress to the car and just up and leaving. And if they had no place to sleep at night, Grandpa would pull off to the side of the road where they’d sleep under the stars, the entire family sharing the matress .

She talked about living in a little shack in PA, just down the hillside from the railroad tracks.

She mentioned how she met my Grandfather and how he’d pull the car over to the side of the road and kiss her passionately when they were first married.

She talked about her Grandmother Hooper, and how she got the name ”Hooper.” (From hooping bushels and barrels, of course…) I learned about her family namesakes…the Fowlers, the Hoopers, the Reeses, the Hadds.

After my visit with her, I rushed to write down all I could remember about our conversation and as I wrote, my mind filled in the blanks. It’s funny; before this day I never thought of my Grandma as having a past. Prior to our breakfast, she was just Grandma who had always been here and would always be here. Grandma who had wet, juicy kisses for me whenever I came over to her house, who made jello fluff and always had Hostess treats for us grandkids~even if we were grown who had kids of our own. After that day I viewed her in a different light. Now she was a woman with a history and feelings and stories to share and a lot of spitfire still in her. This multidimensional woman caught my imagination and I wanted to know more, more, more!

Last Wednesday, My Aunt told me she was ready to go, that Grandma said she wanted to go “home and see Ma & Dad and her sister.”  She left us on Thursday.

As I was trailing off to sleep last night, I imagined her journey to heaven. She was seven again. Her dad had packed up the family and they were camping along the roadside under the brightly shining stars and moon. It was her family’s penultimate road trip together.

And I could hear Grandma laugh out loud.

 

 

 

 

Bedtime for Mommy! November 19, 2007

I am beginning to believe this phase my daughter is going through is going to last a lifetime. I have yet to get Amelie to sleep in her “big girl bed” for a full night’s sleep. When she shows up at my bedside at two in the morning, I am so groggy that half the time I don’t even realize I have put her into my bed with me until we both wake up in the morning.So I have been buckling down lately, working on the bedtime routine. After last night, though, I am thinking that having her sleep with me is better for both of us, if not at least for my own safety.

Amelie and Hannah share a room, which has its drawbacks for both of them. Hannah, being the ‘tween that she is, is into top 40-music and fashion and clothes that never find their way into the dresser drawers . Her idea of bedtime routine is to toss the pile of clothes off of her bed and onto her floor and turn on her music to “lull” her to sleep. I’d be okay with the music if it were Brahams or Mozart. But no. It’s Chingy, Fitty Cent, Fergie.  The kind of music my mother warned me about back in the day…(oh, those were the days.) The kind of music I (used to) exercise to at Body Pump class.

So, I go to lay Mimi down in her bed and I have to step over the land mines of clothing to reach the stereo just to turn it down. As Amelie crawls into her bed, a sleeping Hannah rolls over and half snorts-half snores her discontent with me turning down the music.

The door is opened just a crack. Light from the living room spills in and I can tell it is keeping her from closing her eyes. I get up and close the door all the way amid her protests to me leaving. “I’m right here, baby. Momma’s not leaving.” Back at her bedside I can see her big brown eyes in the darkness of the room. They pierce through me, challenging me not to leave, as if to say, “If you leave me, I will hunt you down and make your nighttime a miserable and sleepless one. I will find you in your soft cozy bed and when I crawl in there, I will prop my elbow into your shoulder blade and when you wake up in the morning, you’ll have a kink in your neck the likes of which you have never experienced before.”

I’m taken aback, though, when she says in her sweet, angelic voice, “Mommy, I love you.” and she smiles. At first skeptical, I answer back with my own whispered, “I love you too, baby.” And I lean in to give her a kiss. “Now its time for sleep, okay?” She strokes the side of my face and says, “Mommy, will you tickle my back?”

It’s a trick! I think to myself. She wants me to tickle her back because she knows that if I am tickling her back, I am right there by her side!I can’t say no, though. “Okay, baby. Roll over and I’ll tickle your back.”

I can see the whites of Amelie’s eyes, still wide open in the very dim light and she is watching me to make sure I do not leave the room. I stroke her hair and I can see her mind racing. She is grasping for anything and any excuse not to have to close those eyes and drift off. She grabs her stuffed animal, a soft plush cat, and holds it close to her. She wiggles under her blankets. She rolls over twice. She snuggles into her bed, letting out a soft sigh. Finally, she starts drifting off. 

“Only a few more minutes and I’ll leave,” I think to myself. Her breath becomes steady and soft and her eye lids become heavy. I see her lashes, long and beautiful, against the pale white of her cheeks. Although her eyes have closed, I wait silent and still by her bedside. Her soft snores assure me she has drifted off to sleep, but I can’t take any chances. I swear, she has a built in body-thermo-detector and knows instinctively that I have moved from her side. So, I must move slowly and swiftly.

An eternity later, I stood slowly, stopping after each bend of each joint in my body so as not to make any noise. I step over a doll. I move to the left to avoid the  creak in that floorboard. I step silently on a pile of Hannah’s clothes. I am making my way out the door when…

In the meantime, Barry is upstairs using the bathroom. He flushes the toilet and the noise is akin to a tidal wave crashing down and around the house. I have never in my life heard a “waterfall” as loud as this! Yes, her room is located directly under the upstairs bath, but lordy bee! The builder of this house took no measures what-so-ever to insulate between the walls so we could avoid this kind of indoor noise pollution!

In my mind I am screaming, “OH SH*&!!!” but I stand motionless, frozen like a deer caught in headlights hoping to God that Mimi did not hear this raucous!  No luck. The crashing water rushing through the pipes between the walls startled her out of her slumber. She rolls over and sees that I’ve made it only half way out the room. “Mommy!” she whimpers.

I jump, rushing back to her bedside, tripping over a pile of clothes. I landed on my knee, on the clip portion of a clip board (A CLIPBOARD!). My immediate gut reaction was to scream obscenities, but I stifled it by biting the back of my hand really, really hard.

Half whimpering myself, I told her, “it’s okay, baby. Momma’s right here.” I brushed her hair back from her forehead with my now almost bleeding hand and rubbed my banged up knee with my other one.I try to console her, but now she is wide awake. Again.

Mommy,” she says in her soft and sweet angelic voice. “Mommy, I love you.” and she smiles. “Mommy, will you tickle my back?”

“Yes, honey.” I try to fight back the tears of pain and all I can think is that I’d like to go to bed myself! “But let’s go lay down in my bed.”

So, tonight we’ll give it another go around with the “routine.” We’ll make sure potty breaks are all taken care of before Mimi’s bedtime. I have packed my knee with ice and my hand will survive.

And we’ll get Amelie to sleep in her own bed, even if it kills me.  

 

Fon-Do’s: How To Make Your Fondue Party A Success! November 6, 2007

Filed under: Big Deals, Food, Friends, Home, aging, cooking, life — dlarz @ 10:51 pm
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1) Screw the skewers! Civilized utensils are the way to go. And with an electric grill (see tip #2), use a spatula!

2) Using an electric grill, as opposed to sterno flamed grill, is a much better option when feeding ravished masses.

3) Don’t come hungry to a fondue party; the tiny morsels won’t fill you up! Eat a steak before you leave your house! Think of fondue as appetizers or nibbles to go along with your wine!

4) Make sure your sterno is the right size for your fondue pan. An oversized sterno will burn your molten mixture of cheese, chocolate or whatever…Nothing like the smell of scolded cheese permeating your home! MMMMmmm.

Okay, I do jest. Slightly. Fondue is fun. I much rather prefer fondue at home as opposed to going out and spending over $100 on a meal I could have easily (and cheaply!) prepared in no time at all. What’s it take? Broccoli and cheese? Torn up pieces of angel food cake and chocolate? Lots of wine! The point is to get creative and to enjoy your company.

We celebrated Wendi’s and Anne’s birthdays with a fondue party. These tips come from experience. With seating for everyone spread between two tables, it became a race to see who could finish first. At table one, they cheated with an electric grill and Anne actually got up to get a spatula! We at table two had to wait for a very, very, very long time fot the sterno-powered grill to cook our scallops and steak.

A good time was had, though, by all as evidenced by the photos. 

barrydawn.jpg  2.jpg  2chriss.jpg  fondont.jpg  wendi.jpg  mike.jpg huntingwidowandherdate.jpg the2jenns.jpg princessanne.jpg  jennisbutt.jpg  silly.jpg  wendidawn.jpg

 

Birthday and Halloween Pictures November 5, 2007

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Amelie celebrated her 3rd birthday last week and I wanted to share the pics. She and Griffin decorated her cake.

Also, there’s Becca and Barry on Halloween and Hannah and Mimi jumping for joy. I’ll have more photos to share later, as soon as I figure out how to download them from Barry’s camera. Oooo he got some good ones, too.

Enjoy!

 

It’s The Little Things That Make Life A Big Deal October 20, 2007

Gosh, I hope my last post hasn’t come off as all depressing and sad. I am really happy. Really. And today has been a real interesting day in terms of gratitude. I think the more you are thankful for what you have, the more you are blessed …and continue to be blessed.

What has happened so far today is proof that there is a God and that He does love unconditionally! And those events are nothing huge, mind you…little things like waking up in a comfortable home that is heated while outside, the skies are dark and gray and it’s beating down rain. Having coffe klatch with my neighbors before going off and starting our days. Little things like having only $75 to spend on groceries and getting everything I needed for $74.86. Like having Stephanie, the gal I rent from, stop by just to say hello and I happened to have had a money order for her for next month’s rent. (Whew, six more weeks of not worrying about house payments! YES!)

I have been so giddy all day long, I am like the school child kicking her feet under the sheets the night before Christmas just to release some nervous energy.

And tonight, I am spending the evening with my girlfriends watching chick flicks and gabbing it up.

Life is good!

P.S. And just as I finished this post, I looked out the window at my car. There on the windsheild was a CostPlus bag, something from World Market. I went out to see what it was, and inside was a jumbo-sized package of Flake (Irish chocolate bars.) Hmmm…..God is Great!