Many good meals from Farm Fresh To You! (Please check this co-op out! They are incredible. Excellent produce delivered to your door. And if you want to order from them, let me know. I have a discount code!)
I seriously love cooking good, fresh food. There is something satisfying about cooking and sitting down and enjoying food on a real plate.
Here was lunch (I should have snapped a photo):
Butter lettuce and radicchio salad with French dressing (dijon mustard, a dash of olive oil, white balsamic vinegar, salt, black pepper) and a cranberry stilton crumble (would have loved a few sliced almonds or walnuts...but no nuts in the pantry...)
Roasted golden beets with goat cheese
Bartlett pear
Hot green tea
Yeah. I feel pretty great and very fortunate right about now.
And almost ready to tackle that pile of clothes I've been telling myself to organize.
Back to cleaning...
Friday, November 19, 2010
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Terrorfying
The tragedy of 9/11 had just passed; churches are full, a nation in mourning.
A charismatic man is the guest speaker for a youth group. An over-protective dad, like many over-protective dads, and he is trying to teach a group of high school students about the "religions of the world," namely about Mormonism and Islam.
He knows a lot and appears to know a lot, shiny and red with excitement. He talks about mountains and virgins in heaven and multiple wives. And then he says this, "You know, Muslims and Christians, we're not that different. And you know those radical extreme Muslims, they would do so much good if they were that radical for Christ. We should all be that radical for Christ."
A room full of high school students nods its collective head. How can we bring them to Christ to be radical Christians?
And a girl on leadership who is taking notes stops. Did he really just say that? She wants a second opinion and glances around to catch some other confused stare. All she sees are nods. But something about that man's statement, the theory and urgency behind those statements, doesn't make sense. At least, she hopes it doesn't make sense. Because if it does, if that room nodded its collective nod of approval for that ideology, then that was the terror. It is the terror bred from terror. And as the room around her gears up for a spiritual war mis-waged, she knows that some will sign up to fight with guns in a war misunderstood. And so instead of nodding with the rest of that room, she bows her head to pray.
A charismatic man is the guest speaker for a youth group. An over-protective dad, like many over-protective dads, and he is trying to teach a group of high school students about the "religions of the world," namely about Mormonism and Islam.
He knows a lot and appears to know a lot, shiny and red with excitement. He talks about mountains and virgins in heaven and multiple wives. And then he says this, "You know, Muslims and Christians, we're not that different. And you know those radical extreme Muslims, they would do so much good if they were that radical for Christ. We should all be that radical for Christ."
A room full of high school students nods its collective head. How can we bring them to Christ to be radical Christians?
And a girl on leadership who is taking notes stops. Did he really just say that? She wants a second opinion and glances around to catch some other confused stare. All she sees are nods. But something about that man's statement, the theory and urgency behind those statements, doesn't make sense. At least, she hopes it doesn't make sense. Because if it does, if that room nodded its collective nod of approval for that ideology, then that was the terror. It is the terror bred from terror. And as the room around her gears up for a spiritual war mis-waged, she knows that some will sign up to fight with guns in a war misunderstood. And so instead of nodding with the rest of that room, she bows her head to pray.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
On the Wall
When you don't have any projects
And the layers peel away and you are left with the heart of it all.
Is it terrifying to realize that it's not enough?
"Finding out who you are apart from everyone else is the hardest work of all."
--A quote from my sister's childhood bedroom mirror.
And the layers peel away and you are left with the heart of it all.
Is it terrifying to realize that it's not enough?
"Finding out who you are apart from everyone else is the hardest work of all."
--A quote from my sister's childhood bedroom mirror.
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Teeth-lettes Express Themselves
I had another crazy dream.
My teeth were falling out. Well, a little more than that. It went something like this:
One of the teeth on the left side of my mouth sort of loosened and crumbled into sharp teeth pieces in my mouth. Oh my gosh! My teeth are falling out! Not AGAIN! So I run to the restroom (which happens to be a men's restroom) because I can feel blood and more and more shards of teeth-lettes in my mouth and I'm gagging and my mouth is filling up with more and more of this mess. So I get to the restroom and two guys are in there, just hanging out. And I bend over the sink and start spitting the teeth shrapnel out of my mouth but more and more fill my mouth and I can't get all of them out. It's overwhelming and I'm gagging and one of the guys is like, "Hey, are you alright?" So he comes over and the sink is FULL of water and teeth pieces. "What is this," he asks, "PVC pipe fiber glass?" And then he takes a piece (that doesn't look anything like a tooth) and bites it. I'm freaking out because this guy is eating my teeth pieces and I can't answer him because I'm using my hands now to try to empty my mouth. More and more shattered teeth until I wake up.
According to dream2live.com (I know. I just googled, "What does it mean when you dream about your teeth falling out?"), this type of dream is fairly common. Here's the analysis: A dream about one's teeth falling out usually means and symbolizes that the dreamer is having a hard time or a challenge getting their voice heard, their ideas acknowledged or feelings responded to. Now, despite the poor grammar, I'll go ahead and run with this analysis. I've had other dreams where I can't speak even though I'm really trying because of something that I can't expel from my mouth. It was a truffle once; this time, it was teeth.
So, here/hear. There are things I apparently need to say!
I want a vacation.
I miss my best friend.
Working with foster students doesn't always justify a four or five hour commute.
I miss spinning class--often.
I want to write more.
I want to art more.
I like cooking.
I miss my grandma.
People need to stop dying.
I'm tired. Very very tired.
I have clothes on my floor.
I need to make my "Big Girl List" (the list of allt he things I need to do but don't really want to do):
1. Make an appointment with the dentist...
My teeth were falling out. Well, a little more than that. It went something like this:
One of the teeth on the left side of my mouth sort of loosened and crumbled into sharp teeth pieces in my mouth. Oh my gosh! My teeth are falling out! Not AGAIN! So I run to the restroom (which happens to be a men's restroom) because I can feel blood and more and more shards of teeth-lettes in my mouth and I'm gagging and my mouth is filling up with more and more of this mess. So I get to the restroom and two guys are in there, just hanging out. And I bend over the sink and start spitting the teeth shrapnel out of my mouth but more and more fill my mouth and I can't get all of them out. It's overwhelming and I'm gagging and one of the guys is like, "Hey, are you alright?" So he comes over and the sink is FULL of water and teeth pieces. "What is this," he asks, "PVC pipe fiber glass?" And then he takes a piece (that doesn't look anything like a tooth) and bites it. I'm freaking out because this guy is eating my teeth pieces and I can't answer him because I'm using my hands now to try to empty my mouth. More and more shattered teeth until I wake up.
According to dream2live.com (I know. I just googled, "What does it mean when you dream about your teeth falling out?"), this type of dream is fairly common. Here's the analysis: A dream about one's teeth falling out usually means and symbolizes that the dreamer is having a hard time or a challenge getting their voice heard, their ideas acknowledged or feelings responded to. Now, despite the poor grammar, I'll go ahead and run with this analysis. I've had other dreams where I can't speak even though I'm really trying because of something that I can't expel from my mouth. It was a truffle once; this time, it was teeth.
So, here/hear. There are things I apparently need to say!
I want a vacation.
I miss my best friend.
Working with foster students doesn't always justify a four or five hour commute.
I miss spinning class--often.
I want to write more.
I want to art more.
I like cooking.
I miss my grandma.
People need to stop dying.
I'm tired. Very very tired.
I have clothes on my floor.
I need to make my "Big Girl List" (the list of allt he things I need to do but don't really want to do):
1. Make an appointment with the dentist...
Saturday, October 16, 2010
The Cylce, For My Father
He talked about the death penalty the way any high school student would: deserved, a life for a life type of lingo. "I mean, he didn't have to kill all those people or nothin'..."
I didn't say anything much, listening to this graduating senior football star formulate his thoughts.
Then he reminded me where he comes from. "And the prisons is so full anyhow that they don't have room for the ones don't deserve to live. I mean, kids here grow up without a daddy because they daddy in prison. So they look for father figures other places and get they selves messed up in gangs and drugs and everything. Then they go to jail and they kids grow up without a father. Don't got the room in prison for people like this serial killer in the paper." He holds up a small, rumpled newspaper clipping with an inch-by-inch picture of a man with a vacant face. "It's a cycle, Miss."
I nod. "Sounds like a rough cycle." Also sounds like my social justice classes and clubs in college. But all that talk in those classes hasn't helped this young man... "Do you believe that people can break the cycle, Marlon? Do you think that boys who grow up without fathers can be great men who raise their children right?"
"Yeah. I do. I grew up without a daddy. I don't got no plans to go to jail and no record either. But people who grow up in the hood, they don't come back when they got they selves together. They get away; they stay way."
"Sometimes that's true. My dad grew up not five minutes from here. He grew up with some of the problems we've talked about. He's done well for himself and raised his family up right in the suburbs, far away from the place he left."
Marlon nods, curt, determined, maybe even spiteful.
"He didn't come back, Marlon, but he let me come back. Does that count for anything?"
Looking from my polo to my Sperrys, Marlon seemed unsure. "But it was your choice, Miss, to come here and teach us. Not your dad's."
"Mostly mine. But partly his, too. He raised me the way I am. I heard the stories of growing up in South Central. And I see him today as a successful, caring man. Something in me was raised to believe, and to believe with action, that everyone deserves a chance. Everyone can make something of themselves. They just need the tools, the motivation, the determination. You believe that, Marlon?"
"Yeah, Miss. I do. I'mma go to college. But I'mma come back, too."
"Good, Marlon. You've already chosen to break the cycle."
The bell rung as if on cue and Marlon looked once more at the mug shot in the paper before shoving it in his folder. The rest of the team, rowdy in their exit toward practice, passed Marlon, who was still standing by my desk.
"And Miss, it does count."
"I'm sorry?"
"You comin back insteada your dad. It counts--for a lot."
I didn't say anything much, listening to this graduating senior football star formulate his thoughts.
Then he reminded me where he comes from. "And the prisons is so full anyhow that they don't have room for the ones don't deserve to live. I mean, kids here grow up without a daddy because they daddy in prison. So they look for father figures other places and get they selves messed up in gangs and drugs and everything. Then they go to jail and they kids grow up without a father. Don't got the room in prison for people like this serial killer in the paper." He holds up a small, rumpled newspaper clipping with an inch-by-inch picture of a man with a vacant face. "It's a cycle, Miss."
I nod. "Sounds like a rough cycle." Also sounds like my social justice classes and clubs in college. But all that talk in those classes hasn't helped this young man... "Do you believe that people can break the cycle, Marlon? Do you think that boys who grow up without fathers can be great men who raise their children right?"
"Yeah. I do. I grew up without a daddy. I don't got no plans to go to jail and no record either. But people who grow up in the hood, they don't come back when they got they selves together. They get away; they stay way."
"Sometimes that's true. My dad grew up not five minutes from here. He grew up with some of the problems we've talked about. He's done well for himself and raised his family up right in the suburbs, far away from the place he left."
Marlon nods, curt, determined, maybe even spiteful.
"He didn't come back, Marlon, but he let me come back. Does that count for anything?"
Looking from my polo to my Sperrys, Marlon seemed unsure. "But it was your choice, Miss, to come here and teach us. Not your dad's."
"Mostly mine. But partly his, too. He raised me the way I am. I heard the stories of growing up in South Central. And I see him today as a successful, caring man. Something in me was raised to believe, and to believe with action, that everyone deserves a chance. Everyone can make something of themselves. They just need the tools, the motivation, the determination. You believe that, Marlon?"
"Yeah, Miss. I do. I'mma go to college. But I'mma come back, too."
"Good, Marlon. You've already chosen to break the cycle."
The bell rung as if on cue and Marlon looked once more at the mug shot in the paper before shoving it in his folder. The rest of the team, rowdy in their exit toward practice, passed Marlon, who was still standing by my desk.
"And Miss, it does count."
"I'm sorry?"
"You comin back insteada your dad. It counts--for a lot."
Thursday, September 16, 2010
In an Undated Entry, I Felt Political
People are bought and sold
like opinions and News
and it doesn't matter anyway
because hotels are built underwater
for the lifestyles of the rich and infamous
as we all work to afford
the gas that will take us to work tomorrow
when it will be the same
as the day she let them eat cake.
So maybe we get back to the roots
of the nation,
roots that were ripped up with Manifest Destiny.
And maybe we hold hands,
dance a rain dance
to cultivate the garden we see
to feed the neighbors we know.
Indeed, let them eat.
like opinions and News
and it doesn't matter anyway
because hotels are built underwater
for the lifestyles of the rich and infamous
as we all work to afford
the gas that will take us to work tomorrow
when it will be the same
as the day she let them eat cake.
So maybe we get back to the roots
of the nation,
roots that were ripped up with Manifest Destiny.
And maybe we hold hands,
dance a rain dance
to cultivate the garden we see
to feed the neighbors we know.
Indeed, let them eat.
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
Semi-logical Speculation
We are a family of story-tellers. We don't even do it on purpose. Stories just come our of imagination, curiosity, nosiness, semi-logical speculation.
Sometimes we'll be driving in our car and we'll see something strange. Someone will say, "Hey! Did you guys see that (insert strange occurrence)?!"And someone else will start to make up a story about the origin of the strange thing. A typical drive can sound something like this:
Person 1: "Hey! Did you guys see that lady? She was standing waiting for the light and she only had one high-heel on."
Person 2: "Hmm. That's weird. Maybe she lost the other one."
Person 1/3/4: "Doing what?"
Person 2: "Maybe it got stuck in the mud or something."
Person 1/3/4: "Where would she be walking through the mud in high-heels?"
Person 2: "Maybe she owns some horse stables and she was just going to check on the horses before she went to work."
Person 3/4: "But one of the horses was sick...and so she had to go tell the vet but her car was broken so she had to walk. But one of her heels got stuck in the mud in the stable. But the horse is really sick, like dying, so she has to hurry to get to the vet before he closes his office."
Person 1: "Why wouldn't she just call the vet? Or why wouldn't she just call someone to give her a ride to the vet?"
By this point, we've long passed the one-shoed lady. Who really knows where she was going or what happened to her other shoe... No one really knows what her life is like, what her name is, who she loves, what she believes in...and it really doesn't matter. Because the next time we pass that corner she was standing on with only one shoe, someone in my family will un-doubtably say, "Hey. This is the place we saw that lady with the sick horse."
Sometimes we'll be driving in our car and we'll see something strange. Someone will say, "Hey! Did you guys see that (insert strange occurrence)?!"And someone else will start to make up a story about the origin of the strange thing. A typical drive can sound something like this:
Person 1: "Hey! Did you guys see that lady? She was standing waiting for the light and she only had one high-heel on."
Person 2: "Hmm. That's weird. Maybe she lost the other one."
Person 1/3/4: "Doing what?"
Person 2: "Maybe it got stuck in the mud or something."
Person 1/3/4: "Where would she be walking through the mud in high-heels?"
Person 2: "Maybe she owns some horse stables and she was just going to check on the horses before she went to work."
Person 3/4: "But one of the horses was sick...and so she had to go tell the vet but her car was broken so she had to walk. But one of her heels got stuck in the mud in the stable. But the horse is really sick, like dying, so she has to hurry to get to the vet before he closes his office."
Person 1: "Why wouldn't she just call the vet? Or why wouldn't she just call someone to give her a ride to the vet?"
By this point, we've long passed the one-shoed lady. Who really knows where she was going or what happened to her other shoe... No one really knows what her life is like, what her name is, who she loves, what she believes in...and it really doesn't matter. Because the next time we pass that corner she was standing on with only one shoe, someone in my family will un-doubtably say, "Hey. This is the place we saw that lady with the sick horse."
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