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~ walking through life on life's terms

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Category Archives: That’s Life

The Squash Garden Patio Project

18 Sunday Sep 2016

Posted by kathyd65 in Gardening, Photographs, That's Life

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Tags

Challenge, Garden, Health, Life, Personal experience, Vegetable

The Squash Garden Patio Project

dscn3139

June 21, 2016: Future Patio cordoned off

I had this grand plan over the summer – I wanted a patio area, so we could entertain. We live in a small house of maybe 900 square feet on a large lot of around 6,000 square feet – all the comforts without any extra interior space. Literally, the office, the living room, the dining room and the den are all in one room – about 16 feet by 18 feet. Having folks over for dinner or a visit is a bit of a challenge. So, the Grand Plan: cordon off some outside space, have a patio installed, build a cover and voila – Space to entertain!

dscn3140

June 21, 2016: Facing North. The Grand Patio Plan (15 feet by 17 feet)

But time was against it – another project held higher priority – and it didn’t get done. And because I had watered the area in anticipation of obtaining bids and going forward with that installation, some kind of squash volunteered to take up space.

dscn3227

August 7, 2016: Volunteers and Recruits

Seeing an alternative opportunity, my husband decided to supplement the volunteers with some recruits – having started seedlings without borders – and planted some corn, some pumpkins, some butternut squash, some acorn squash, some spaghetti squash, some zucchini and some yellow squash, and some watermelon. A seemingly innocent plan for some winter vegetables…

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August 19, 2016: Volunteers are the larger plants, Recruits are smaller but catching up, Corn rises in the North.

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September 9, 2016: Baby Pumpkin, one of many

Then we went out of town for 10 days during which time my son came by to water the plants so they wouldn’t die off. We came home to a small field of green leaves.

The garden just keeps growing…

dscn3573

September 13, 2o16: There are many immature fruit under all that leaf cover: butternut, acorn, spaghetti and pumpkin. Watermelon volunteer sports leaves in the foreground. (Can you spot the baby watermelon?)

This is the squash garden, with corn accompaniment, today:

dscn3574

September 18, 2016: Around 9:00 am this morning… and still it grows.

I’m not clear on how we are going to get the squash out of the garden – I picked two zucchini last night, found after a ten-minute search. Horticulture Professor Husband says that the winter squash plants die off when the fruit is ready, so that will make those easier to find, if the plants don’t cover the entire property first. We can walk behind. The watermelon and the zucchini squash … that’s a different story.

I am truly grateful that we have a place to grow such an abundance of food, that the soil is happy and healthy, and that the plants seem bountiful. I hope you enjoyed this snapshot of the fall garden. Patio project on hold until next Spring.

Writing, Just to Write

14 Wednesday Sep 2016

Posted by kathyd65 in That's Life

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Tags

Challenge, Life, Personal experience, truth

Writing, Just to Write

I haven’t written since July. The last thing I posted was the Door Knob. I was inspired to write about the door knob. It came to me, I got it down as soon as I could, and I really liked it. Write, just to write.

Often, when I want to post something, I’m nowhere near a pen and a pad of paper, or a computer, or cell phone. When I sit down in front of the computer and open up the Post page, I can’t remember the profound, amazing thought I was having earlier.

I was in self-pity last night: that my youth, my potential for future success was stolen – by circumstances beyond my control, by poor choices that were in my control. That lasted about 10-15 minutes. Then I put it away and went to sleep.

Last night’s pity party began in fear: “I only have so much time left”, “I spent so much of the time between 1979 and 2008 just getting by, and I feel like I’m getting closer every day to my purpose and WHAT IF I run out of time before I realize it?” I am afraid of running out of time before I ‘make my mark,’ leave behind a worthy legacy, prove (to who? to me? to the committee?) that I have value, and I DIDN’T waste so many years of my life. So, there’s where some of the fear lies.

I finished reading Walt Disney: An American Original a couple of weeks ago, and I cried during the part where he dies. (I knew he had died, but to read about his entire life and then get to that… well, read it. You’ll get it.)

See, early on in Walt’s life, he was concerned that he didn’t have enough time to do all the things he imagined, and some of the things he hadn’t imagined yet. And when he died, he wasn’t done yet (Walt Disney World was still on the drawing board, and a ski resort was in the works, too). He pushed himself hard every day, and never settled for second best (and had a nervous breakdown), and he still had so much to give. It seems, from what I read, that Walt knew very early in his life what he wanted to do, he followed that dream, and no one ever knocked him off that path. And his legacy – the people he touched, and who carried his vision – continued long after he passed. It’s still going. And his story resonated deeply in me.

Last night, I felt robbed. And I felt like the thief.

I don’t have a degree – yet. Heck, I don’t have a high school diploma. I’ve rarely had a single direction. (Think pinball) But I didn’t let that stop me from making a good living, having a family, doing enjoyable things and living my life.

And today – right now – I realize that: 1) I have enough time, b) I’ve already left a legacy, and iii) I will do what is in front of me today, and trust the outcome will be exactly what it is suppose to be. No more spending energy feeling like I missed something – like the boat or the call. No more wondering where I fit in, and what I am suppose to be doing. (Okay, realistically, there may be a little of that – of both those things – occasionally, but I’m going to keep it to a minimum and let it go the minute I recognize that I’m sliding back into self-pity.)

I’m in my final semester of community college, I’ve almost finished the bathroom counter top mosaic, and the garden is healthy. My romantic relationship is strong, as are my friendships and my family relationships. I am healthy, I have a washer and dryer right outside the backdoor and I am grateful every day for the life that I have been given. I do the best I can each day with what I’ve got, and every day I’m a little better than I was the day before.

As for my purpose, maybe I’ve already realized it and I just haven’t recognized it – yet.

The Pity Party

22 Monday Feb 2016

Posted by kathyd65 in That's Life

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Tags

acceptance, Life, Personal experience, Poetry, truth

The Pity Party

there was a plan.

i made a date.

i scheduled it.

i waited

for so long

(an entire week)

and then

life

(responsibility)

got

in the way.

self-care of one kind

replaced

self-care of another.

its not fair!

its not fair!

its not fair.

i want it!

i want it!

i want it.

NOW

really do not like it

when i don’t get

what i want.

so i have a party.

an itty

bitty

pity

party.

it lasts only

briefly

and then,

i resume

life.

 

Photo Story: Arizona Rest Stop

13 Saturday Feb 2016

Posted by kathyd65 in Photographs, That's Life

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

Life, Personal experience, photography, Travel

Photo Story: the plan is to post a photo every couple of weeks and give a brief description to go with the photo. Where did I take it, why did I take it, what emotions did I feel, why am I sharing it with you. Cool? Okay then. Here we go.

Arizona Rest StopDSCN2734 Arizona Rest Stop January 2016 BW

This photo was taken near Lupton, Arizona at the rest stop located about 1 mile West of the border between New Mexico and Arizona. Heading toward home on day 12 of a 14 day road trip to visit my daughter’s family in Louisiana. Albuquerque, New Mexico was the point of origin and Flagstaff, Arizona was the day’s destination.

We stopped for the same reasons most people stop – to stretch and use the facilities. It was snowing as we pulled in and parked the 22 foot Ford F250 that had taken us to there and back.

Please understand that I was born and raised in Southern California. I’ve been in snow about six times in a 50 year life span. Day trips to Big Bear, a church trip to Fresno once when I was young, an off year in Amarillo, Texas, and a strange flurry during a weekend trip to Flagstaff last year in May. I act like a child – joyful, giggly, playful – when I am in and around the cold, white stuff as it falls from the sky.

2016-01-07 15.31.21-1

I built a snowman. It was cold, so Frosty is only about 12 inches high, but adorable, and the camera perspective provides more substance.

I jumped up and down in fresh snow fall, I took photos of the tress, flocked in the natural beauty that tree lot flocking just can’t match. I felt gratitude and childish delight in experiencing something that causes folks who live in it a feeling of eventual weariness, dread and sometimes terror.

Snow brings a muffled serenity when it covers the earth. It mutes the highway sounds. It is bright and glaring and peacefully present. It is so much white.

I look at this photo and am reminded of the distance we covered, and of the adventure that had yet to come on that trip. I remember the complete abandon of reserved adult-like behavior.

I prefer black and white to color and photo above is a favorite for its simplicity and reality. Also for the subtle photobombing of the Arizona Welcomes You sign.

Here it is in color, though:

DSCN2734 Arizona Rest Stop January 2016

Why am I sharing it with you? Because I can.  Thanks for sticking with me to the end.

Grief: First Hand, 16 months later

28 Thursday Jan 2016

Posted by kathyd65 in That's Life

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Tags

acceptance, Life, Personal experience

NOTE: This post recounts a bit of my experience during the last few years of my mother’s life, and feelings that were triggered the other day while watching a scene in the 1942 movie Yankee Doodle Dandy. My mother died of ovarian cancer on September 3, 2014, after entering hospice on August 1, 2014.

Grief: First Hand, 16 months later

I started writing this a couple of weeks ago and I had to stop. It was too much to share.  I wasn’t even sure I wanted to. But I think it might be helpful to me, and maybe to you. I’m just going to run with this and publish. Maybe I’ll read it later and do that whole editing thing, but for now – raw.

This briefly recounts a bit of my experience during the last few years of my mother’s life, and feelings that were triggered the other day while watching a scene in the 1942 movie Yankee Doodle Dandy. In the scene, near the end of the movie, George Cohen is called to his father’s deathbed, to comfort him. Cohen senior is hallucinating, speaking to and about his dead wife and daughter, as if they were present. George sits beside his father, holding his hand, nodding, responding and agreeing. A good son, a good man. Doing the hardest thing a person can do: being present and loving in the face of death, at the impending loss of a parent.

My mother was diagnosed just after Thanksgiving 2011. Literally, the Friday after the holiday. She called to tell me about the possibility of cancer as my then-husband and I drove to Phoenix to spend the holiday with his family. We hadn’t gotten very far and there was a lot of time to think about what my mother told me.

The diagnosis was positive. There was a surgery just before Christmas. A recovery period that was filled with complications. We almost lost her to those complications on January 16, 2012. She pulled through. Following a grueling 18-week bout of chemotherapy, which my brother and I alternately attended along with some of her closer friends, she eventually entered that blessed period: REMISSION.

Her hair grew back, her sense of humor returned, she became almost as she was before the diagnosis. She got a dog, one of her life long desires. A sweet little fluffy white, hypoallergenic dog. In June 2013 she moved into a home she purchased. Living life, borrowed time when surviving cancer.

During her time fighting the cancer, she and I took the opportunity to heal many old wounds. We had a new, better relationship following the cancer. We were closer, fearless, honest and real. From tragedy comes some amazing things. I am forever grateful for those days of pain and growth.

October 2013. Another phone call. Cancer markers were increasing again. Doctor was keeping an eye on it. Thanksgiving was at her house that year. One of my best Thanksgiving memories. Later, in 2014, after agreeing to one chemotherapy treatment and completing it, she decided to end the treatments.

During the last week of July 2014, she complained of abdominal pains that the doctor could not explain, so tests were ordered and run. We all waited. On Friday, August 1, 2014 my mother entered hospice. On Wednesday, August 6, I moved in with my mother to care for her. My brother and I were by her side, for five days after a thorough in-service with the hospice nurses.  See, once the nurses effectively balance a patient’s pain medication, they leave and the family takes over. My brother and I each spent 12 hours with her, administering medications, changing her, washing her, making her comfortable, keeping her comfortable. We finally called in nurses to help us, because it was too much. (that is another tale for another day, or never) The lack of sleep, my emotional attachment, it was a very difficult time.

And that brings us up to speed, doesn’t it. T0 the movie, the deathbed scene, the trigger. Because my mother didn’t have those hallucinations just before her death.  She had them for a few weeks, because of the medications and the cancer. She would talk to people who weren’t there, she sometimes thought she was in an airplane (the sound of the oxygen concentrator motor confused her), or in a moving vehicle. She was angry that she wasn’t permitted to get out of bed, she was sad and took the blame for “burdening us”, she accused us and the nurses of awful things, she would hug me and love me and cry with me. The worst of it was because she wasn’t like that the whole time.  She would be her normal, ill but present self, and then – suddenly – she wouldn’t be. She was someone else.

There were several funny times as well. On a particularly good day, she had an appetite and wanted something to eat. I’d come into the room with a cup of coffee. She sniffed the air and smiled and said, “I’d love a cup of coffee.” She’d taken her coffee black for years, so I replied, “Sure” and turned to leave when she stopped me cold: “I’m not done with my order.” I turned back, smiled and said, “Forgive me, what else can I get for you, ma’am?” We laughed. I brought her coffee. She’d forgotten she wanted it. Sigh.

My mother died peacefully, at 4:22 p.m. on September 3, 2014, while my brother and I held her hands, stroked her back and whispered terms of endearment into her ear.

When I saw that scene at the end of the movie, those emotions, those few weeks at the end of my mother’s life loomed up as if they’d happened just moments before. I experienced sorrow and loss and love and I was a mess for a time.

I miss her a lot. I move on in my life, because that’s how she’d want it. I don’t forget her, and I don’t dwell either. It’s not healthy for me. She lives on, in my heart and on my face. And every once in a while something will come up that will remind me of those final days, and I believe that will be true until I pass from this plane to hers.

after note: I was watching an interview with John Kirby, Jack Kirby‘s son the other night, and when John spoke of his father, he had to pause – to regain his composure – because talking about his father brought tears, and the feelings of loss.  He said, “Forgive me. This still happens on occasion.” His father died in 1994. We may handle it better but, I’m guessing, we never ‘get over’ the loss of a parent.

 

Anonymity

21 Thursday Jan 2016

Posted by kathyd65 in That's Life

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

acceptance, Blogging101, Life, Personal experience, truth

Anonymity

This is the first word that popped into my head after reading the Daily Prompt. Does it apply here? Let’s see.

Is doing something scary or stressful easier when surrounded by friends, or surrounded by strangers?

Define scary or stressful? One man’s (or woman’s) fear is another man’s challenge. Sometimes those are the same. When speaking in front of a group, both friends and strangers, the room gets warmer, armpits begin to perspire and less eye contact is made. Am I afraid? A little. There is a time limit, a need to convey a thought as clearly and concisely possible, and sometimes the words evaporate. Also, the ego wants a pat on the back for all that wisdom [insert laughter].

Does not knowing a person or a group of people make it easier to face a challenge like public speaking or wearing a new outfit (style) or writing the truth in a blog? Maybe.

Anonymity certainly makes it easier to bare the soul, on the page and in public. As personal growth more firmly asserts itself, I find that I feel less and less fear. Over time I’ve noticed that fear of what people think of me – should I happen to stumble over my words, or my feet, or if someone makes a negative comment about my appearance or my writing – is slowly diminishing.

Friends. I’d prefer to do anything scary or stressful with the presence of my friends and/or family. Why? The presence of trust, love, honesty, support. A real friend or a loving family member, from experience, will gently share the truth, and love me even with my perceived shortcomings.

It’s not so much about where and in front of whom – it is more about being comfortable being me. Walking through fear. Nothing in my life has ever been SO scary or stressful that I couldn’t look back and see the lesson.

Anonymous is good, and loving friends works, too.

Witness Protection

Inspired to Share

18 Monday Jan 2016

Posted by kathyd65 in Blog Newbie, That's Life

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Blogging101, Life, Personal experience, truth

Inspired to Share

One of the actions suggested by the Blogging 101 moderator was to read a few posts, comment on four of them, and from those comments, elaborate.

There is one post I feel especially drawn toward. She writes. I read and feel a connection. This particular post – the inspiration for my post – reminded me of those days when I wake up restless, irritable and discontent without any connection as to why.

This feeling, thankfully, hasn’t come over me in a while, and it took some time to recognize it when it did. That feeling of a heavy weight, of a sorrow, on the heart. In the past the answer was to wallow, to call in sick, to isolate and avoid other people, to ignore the phone when it rang and to generally check out. Eventually it was identified as depression.

When I was young, I checked out with television, reading or playing pretend. When I got older, alcohol then marijuana did the trick. Eventually, those didn’t work anymore. But there was an abundant supply of movies on DVD, and video streaming to keep my mind occupied when it didn’t feel like dealing with life.

A major breakthrough occurred when I realized the depression usually followed a bout of anger kept to myself, unacknowledged and unresolved.  It took several years to discover that the way out of that low, lonely, morose feeling was to take Action – to MOVE. Laying in bed, under the covers, all day while watching movie after movie, or an entire season of a television series while eating a bag of potato chips with onion dip was feeding the depression. Nothing was getting done, I didn’t feel any better (hell, I didn’t FEEL), and I was stuck. I learned some things from listening to people who had gone through the same kind of thing and the main thing was Get Up, Suit Up and Show Up. Take Action and MOVE.

Getting out of bed (dragging my butt from the mattress to the toilet) was the first step. Turning on the shower was next. Getting IN the shower. Washing. Toweling dry. You get the picture.  Doing simple things like that slowly replaced the need to wallow, to succumb to the low feelings.  Some days it took longer – Making it to the parking lot of the office was huge progress. Other days, it lasted until an evening meeting of like-minded folks.

I’ve been through some experiences since the solution of Action that could have been great excuses to check out.  The choice to end my marriage and following through.  The death of my mother and spending the last 33 days of her life by her side. Instead, those experiences made me stronger, more confident in the person I’m becoming. I moved forward through the pain, felt the feelings, and lived through it.

It sounds easier than it is, but with each contrary action – going against the desire to hide from the world – it gets easier.

Thanks, you, for the reminder and the inspiration.

Being Sick Sucks

16 Saturday Jan 2016

Posted by kathyd65 in That's Life

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Tags

Blogging101, Health, Life, Personal experience

Being Sick Sucks

Heavy weight on the chest, difficulty taking a complete deep breath, coughing until the eyes water, muscles aching from the effort.

How I wish I was better. This is so inconvenient.

We returned from a two-week road trip  last Friday that included a visit to Louisiana to visit my daughter’s family, including two young grand-daughters.  A cold returned with us. In me.

Daughter called while we were driving toward San Antonio, Texas on Highway 10.

“I know you’re going to make it here for sure.  Youngest has a fever.”

When I visited last year, my daughter and I spent the entire visit in the house with one trip to the Pediatrician because both girls were sick.  It was actually a great visit because there was no running around sight-seeing – just us and the grandkids: all babies, all the time. And no cold came back with me.

This year, chasing a storm (that’s kind of an exaggeration – we couldn’t have caught that storm if we’d tried… it was moving fast up the Gulf, through the southeast up to the northeast, leaving broken homes, ice and snow in its wake), we managed to end up at our destination and spent three days with the family, and the sick baby.

The headcold didn’t surface until the day after we left, and it wasn’t a big deal, not really.  A little congestion, a little fatigue, but nothing to worry about. Hot tea, rest, and all will be well. And it was. But the feeling that something wasn’t quite right lingered.

After a visit to the Urgent Care clinic this past Wednesday to rule out bronchitis, pneumonia or strep (and it did),  the doctor prescribed Mucinex, Advil and bed rest, to heal.  So I did. Wednesday evening.

Thursday we made a trip to Disneyland and spent all afternoon and part of the evening there.  Friday it felt like there was a weight on my chest all afternoon.  Today is a little better.

Taking a shower leaves me winded, sitting up for too long wears me out.  Standing in the sun is nirvana.  This little set back reminds me to take it easy.  A cold like this reminds me how I take my health for granted.  This is the first real cold I’ve had in years though and for that I am grateful.

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A Memoir of the Road Unknown

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Insta @onechancetoseetheworld

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Tales from the mouth of a wolf

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I am more of a story teller than anything and, I will throw in and sprinkle some motivational personal experiences.... & Every Little Thing.

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Ryan Lanz

Fantasy Author

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If you want to be a hero well just follow me

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The short fiction of j hardy carroll

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Novelist, Poet, Wordsmith

Once uPUN a time...

Finding novel ways of engaging students and exploring content.

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Growing older is inevitable. Growing up is optional.

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