Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Mark your calendars now!


Eve took this picture - not sure where else it would fit. Not that it fits here. I just figured the post needed a photo!


We have a date - April 17th - for my knee surgery. It is outpatient and I am predicting a rapid recovery - nothing could be worse than the way it is now.

Unless you are listening to our "new" dishwasher. Does it sound like a threshing machine because it is broken? Or because it was cheap? Or both?

And Dad is not doing Boston - he's staying home to pamper me and wait on my every whim.

So he may do LA.

Stay tuned!

And this is not a joke.

Monday, March 30, 2009

"Shoes, glorious shoes . . .


So, I complain a lot about how Dad lines up his shoes against the wall - in spite of the lovely shoe shelves I have gotten for him. He may do it just to spite me for hanging door hooks over doors to hang clothes on. (I also hang clothes up on curtain rods, door knobs and window ledges.)

Everyone knows this story, but when I was a girl, and we lived in the "little house" we didn't have closets - well, maybe there was one. So we used the windows and the curtain rods thereon as closets. I've always thought it was kind of efficient. And it's a habit too.


Maybe this passion to "line up" stuff is on a Terrill gene too - this is photo from 1995 - I'm guessing they are Eliza's shoes.

I guess Dad could have worse habits. But when he pokes fun at my proclivity to hang things on doors and knobs and curtain rods, he sounds pretty sincere!

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Thoughts ahead - and back!

I was looking for some suitable photos for a quote I found (these come daily in my email at work - and some of them quite impress me.)

And while looking for a service project photo, I came across these - from 2002 or maybe 1?


And I wanted a good excuse to post them - although who needs an excuse?? The one above highlights how many changes have come about in the last 6 or 7 years. And this one is one of me with my mom and all of my sisters - we don't have too many of those. Alice will be in the state in 2010, so we're hoping for a get together then.

And the quote?

"Great opportunities to help others seldom come, but small ones surround us every day."

On a Clayton Reunion note, looks like it will be August 8th, rather than the 1st to accommodate Joe and Jane - who faithfully attend every one of the reunions. If Bill and Bobby can't change their plans, maybe we'll just have a mini-Clayton reunion the weekend they are here.

And Anne and Wayne moved to Arizona, so who knows what will happen on that front.

Nothing so constant as change!

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Why family matters!


Had a voice mail from Amy when I got home today. I was on the couch all afternoon, nursing my poor, pitiful knees, so figured I had the time to call her back. She was interested in my take on a new sewing machine - and I like to think I gave her some good advice. Ask me for advice, and I will give it!

As we visited, we both re-affirmed our belief that the family blogs are a good thing. They erase distance and help us feel closer to one another.

I loved visiting with her - a bright spot in my day - and I thought about how I miss the family members I don't have much contact with.

Family does matter - a lot!

Thanks for the visit Amy - and the chance to dispense advice - makes me feel like a grown up!

(The shot is from June, 1970 - when Frances, Ernie and Amy came to SLC - and we celebrated Ernie's 30th birthday - Harry and I were thinking 30 was so old - that's pretty funny!)

Monday, March 23, 2009

"When it's springtime in Monrovia!!"


I'm not sure if moths qualify as a harbinger of spring, but we are certainly experiencing a plethora of them these days.

Maybe Dad should have been a photographer for National Geographic or something - he certainly loves to take "nature shots!"


I love to look over at Linda's yard and covet!! At least I get to look at it - so maybe it's a plus it's her yard - every morning I look out from the kitchen window and start the day with a smile!


Actually our yard looks pretty good too - the grass is green and the lilies are blooming!

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Some (more) late night thoughts


I just finished reading Love in the Time of Cholera. I'm a bit behind in my reading it seems. I will say what I'm reading and the reply is usually something along the lines of "that is so last year." At least I am finally getting to it. (I'd bought it a few months ago just because I'd heard it referred to several times and got curious.

I did enjoy it - although I thought it bogged down about 2/3 of the way through and I was hoping for the story to get resolved!! Or maybe my knees were just hurting so much I would have to close my eyes and drift!

But towards the very end, there was a passage that really resonated with me, and I was struck once again at how some themes are so universal.

Fermina Daza says, " 'We have to get rid of all these trinkets; there's no room to turn around.' And her husband laughs because he knows she will just fill the spaces up once she clears some space."

I mean, is this sounding familiar??

She tears through the house, "razing closets, emptying out trunks and tearing apart the attics" and the patio is littered and she is ready to burn everything but then says, "It is a sin to burn all this, when so many people do not even have enough to eat."

The author's little dissertation on clutter intrigued me because it is so true:

"And so the burning was postponed, it was always postponed, and things were only shifted from their places of privilege to the stables that had been transformed into storage bins for remnants, while the spaces that had been cleared, just as he predicted, began to fill up again, to overflow with things that lived for a moment and then went to die in the closets: until the next time. She would say: 'Someone should invent something to do with things you cannot use anymore but that you still cannot throw out.' That was true. She was dismayed by the voracity with which objects kept invading living spaces, displacing the humans, forcing them back into the corners, until Fermina Daza pushed the objects out of sight."

And then my favorite part, because it is so me: "For she was not as ordered as people thought, but she did have her own desperate method for appearing to be so: she hid the disorder."

The story goes on: "Death's passage through the house brought the solution. Once she had burned her husband's clothes, Fermina Daza realized that her hand had not trembled, and on the same impulse she continued to light the fire at regular intervals, throwing everything on it, old and new, not thinking about the envy of the rich or the vengeance of the poor who were dying of hunger. Finally she had the mango tree cut back at the roots until there was nothing left of that misfortune, and she gave the live parrot to the new Museum of the City. Only then did she draw a free breath in the kind of house she had always dreamed of: large, easy, and all hers."

I was so struck by how exactly the author had zeroed in on the question of clutter, excess and our vain attempts to conquer the control that things seem to exert over all of us.

I still dream of taming the beast!

(The photo has little to do with anything, except I was scrolling through photos thinking "Do any of these have anything to do with order?" And I thought how I am now doing with my classroom, what I used to do with my house. And since I got a new room last fall, I had every intention of having order that would perpetuate itself.

But alas, I too am dismayed at the "voracity with which objects keep invading living - and teaching - spaces" and some days it's pretty tough to hide the disorder!!

But my new room does have a "walk in closet" and it's a good hiding place because it has shelves and the door closes!!)


Monday, March 16, 2009

Fave Fotos From Files

I should probably spend my time and energy posting the rest of the anniversary blogs - but I seem to be avoiding that task - probably because it feels like a task now, and not a pleasure.

But I was thinking that maybe I could have a Friday Feature of Fave Fotos From Files - or maybe I just wanted to post this because we got some of the photos from Jesse and I just love this.

Probably because I love Dad. And one of the things I love about him is the way he loves his daughters.

He loves his sons too, but I don't think we'd have a photo of him dancing with them!

Why do I always think I have to make things equal?

Who knows if Harry or Noah even read my blog?

So here's a Dad and Son pic - and maybe they did dance in this one!!

And it's not Friday!!

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Heard it on NPR


Because it is the Ides of March, here's an old Ides of March photo. Maybe I should make a book of them. This must be 2000 maybe?


So, Garrison Keillor had a "joke" weekend - some were pretty lame but some were really funny - of course I was driving so I couldn't write them down.

I did remember two of them:

What's a paranoid dyslexic? Someone who thinks they are following someone.

Why did the Romans close the collesium? The lions were eating the prophets (profits).

And this one really needs a voice feature - try to imagine it:

Knock, knock? Who's there? Sam and Janet. Sam and Janet who? Sam and Janet evening, you will see a stranger.

Maybe you had to be there.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Tom Swiftie

I'm not sure who Tom Swiftie is - or if he is even someone. In the spelling book I use with my 1st period class, the review section this week had proofreading exercises that said, "Read the Tom Swiftie puns below. Find the twenty misspelled review words and circle them."

Some of them are pretty funny. What was sad was that most of my kids didn't laugh - even after I "explained" them.

But I keep working on understanding humor - especially humor that is based on words.

A few for your chuckling pleasure: (I will go ahead and correct the misspelled words!!)

"Rejoice! Our team is going to the playoffs!" said Tom winsomely.

"Tigers attack fiercely, so we have to restrain them," Tom said cagily.

"I'll always be loyal to the Navy," said Tom fleetingly.

"We need more weight on the back of the boat!" said Tom sternly.

"No earthquake will ever destroy this city, " said Tom faultlessly.

"Merely seeing that piano makes me happy," said Tom grandly.

And a particular fave:

"I'm probably going to pitch for the softball team," said Tom underhandedly.


Sunday, March 08, 2009

A place for everything, and everything in its place



My Grandma Stevens lived out her retirement years in a mobile home. It was lovely for its time, and the park they were in had some nice amenities - like a pool we always enjoyed when we went there.

We were sitting in her living room for this shot - the traditional "4 generation" shot - but you can't really get a feel for it - other than that my grandma is of course wearing an apron, an afghan is on the back of her chair, and there is a framed picture of my grandpa in the background.

What I remember about her trailer is how small but how compact it was. And it was very well-organized. She would often admonish us to put things back right where they belonged - otherwise, she told us, it would be hard to find them again.

That's when she would say, "A place for everything, and everything in its place." I realize that she didn't coin this phrase, but I don't remember hearing it before that.

I thought about this today when I got the Bosch out of the cupboard formerly holding the water heater in the room formerly known as the laundry room.

This is a great cupboard, but the shelves are deep - I can see just what is in there, but I often have to take other things out to get to the item I need. And then I have to take the time to put the stuff back just where I took it from. If I don't, nothing seems to fit very well. This can get tedious.

But it usually makes me think of my Grandma Stevens - always a fond memory.


Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Her Royal Highness


Another random photo - just to let everyone know that I had a secret life as a beauty queen!!

I've probably told this story many times - but I love to tell it anyway. One year when I was in the 11th grade - it would have been A11 - we made a rule in Student Council - I was always in Student Council - that you had to have a 3.5 or better to be on the Homecoming Court.

Homecoming was kind of a misnomer - when I started at GHS, it was the year the school started too - so there really was no one to come home!

But any excuse for a dance and a date and getting your hair done!

And after that, they did away with the GPA requirement - but for one brief shining semester, the geeks ruled the royalty!!

Don't you love the bouffant do??

We did!