Archive for May, 2008

chicks in the city

May 28, 2008

If Carrie was a hen, what kind of hen would she be?

A more difficult question to answer — perhaps — than one might initially think.

How bout we start with broodiness.  How broody would you say she is?

I mean, think about it.   

Writing a column — laying an egg.   Not really too far apart.

Both are introspective, moody, contemplative business.  

Carrie, then — probably what you would call a great brooder.

And, hardiness?

Well, maybe that’s Miranda’s department. 

Or — well — where rooster response is concerned — Samantha’s.

Dutiful, protective mother?  Gotta give that one to Charlotte.

And then we’re on to feathers.  

Fancy feathered without a doubt.   All of ‘em.

But in a New York City lookin good even in foul weather kinda way.  

Finally — what about these chicks’ behavior?

Go on — take your peck.

Suited for close confinement?   Easily handled?  A flier?  Prefers the free range?  A good forager?

Jaunty.  Sprightly.  Aggressive.  Friendly.  Haughty.  Noisy.  Docile.

Yep, sex in the city chicks got it covered.

Definitely make for one helluva good hen party.

 

bon appetit

May 27, 2008

“What’s this stuff on the plate?  You got it too.”

“I — don’t — know.”

“I finally get a salad and now it’s filled with hard boiled eggs.”

“Pick ’em out.”

“Can’t.  Too many.  And they’re broken up.” 

“Maybe they thought they were doin you a favor —” 

 ”I’m not even supposed to be here! — I’m supposed to be downstairs getting a permanent!!”

“Come and help me.”

“Will you come and help me?”

“Nurse.  Nurse!”

“This has hard boiled eggs.  I don’t like hard boiled eggs.  I want plain lettuce.”

“Dressing?”

“Roquefort.”

“Just a few more sips, grandma.”

“Let’s go now.  Put me back to bed.”

“Drink a little more of your milk and we’ll go.”

“Italian, french and ranch are your choices.”

“I’ll take ranch.”

“I want my permanent.  Now!”

“Come and help me.”

“That’s good.  You’re doin good grandma.”

“They’re out of lettuce — will you take a bologna sandwich?”

“— oh for cryin out loud.”

When grandma was asked if she’d like to get up for dinner on May 1, her response was, “should we try it?  Let’s try it.”

She wasn’t referring to the cuisine.

In the remarkable way she had of never giving up she always found a way to make something good out of  whatever she had left. 

And that’s why it should come as no surprise that she used every last molecule of herself in her remaining days to put the finishing touches on the everlasting bond she created between the people she loved. 

When she took her last breath on May 11 and her body went flat beneath the sheet, my first thought was “there’s absolutely nothing left.  She’s left nothing on the table.”

But in the weeks that followed, I’ve found I couldn’t be more wrong.

She left us the most incredible feast of memories, relationships, and values imaginable. 

Bon appetit. 

simple getaway

May 23, 2008

There was a time when a vacation was a trike ride away.

When refreshment was at the end of a hose.

And your best friend was your sister.

 

Here’s to the happy start of another Minnesota summer.

beneath the ha-ha

May 21, 2008

Let’s face it.  Most people do not relish the prospect of being blindsided. 

I am one of those people.  But I’m ready to make an exception for the ha-ha.

I stumbled upon this 18th century landscape gardener’s creation while reading a few days ago and I’ve been dreaming of sweeping views that include a ha-ha ever since.

The ha-ha is just so romantic.  So thoughtfully planned and constructed. 

In a totally take-you-by-surprise kind of way. 

For those that are unfamiliar, the ha-ha  is a sunken fence — a type of boundary to a garden or a pleasure-ground designed not to interrupt the view and to be invisible until closely approached.

It is surmised that the name is derived from the response of ordinary folk encountering them while hiking about the English countryside. 

They were “…then deemed so astonishing, that the common people called them Ha! Ha’s! to express their surprise at finding a sudden and unperceived check to their walk.”

The ha-ha’s mission also strikes me as very sexy, the element of surprise notwithstanding:  

The contiguous ground of the park without the sunk fence was to be harmonized with the lawn within; and the garden in its turn was to be set free from its prim regularity, that it might assort with the wilder country without.”

Freedom from prim regularity —

Assorting with the wilder country without —

Oh yeah.

What’s spring without a little ha-ha?

 

ramblin rose

May 14, 2008

It’s 1960 something.  The windows in the tiny second floor apartment above the office are wide open.  Sheets and undergarments dangle from the clothesline in the parking lot below.

The hi-fi blares.  A cigarette burns in an ashtray. 

“Mother never really smoked a cigarette.  She just lit it and let it burn,” my aunt recalls.

I remember.

The ash grows and curls precariously.   We watch and wait for the ash snake to drop so the next act can begin. 

Grandpa flies across the room with an ashtray.  Catches it in the nick of time, saving the carpet from another burn mark. 

“Mark my words, this is how we’re gonna go,” he’d say. 

Mark my words, that’s not how she went.

The hi-fi blares.  Her highball is gettin low. 

But she keeps going  — and going — and going.

It’s May 2, 2008. 

The hard brown candy shells on the buds are about to burst.  Tiny rivers of green are visible in the crackles.  I know spring is coming, but I can’t tell you when. 

I sit and wait.  And I hear that snow is on the way.  Again. 

My beautiful grandma lays awake, eyes shut, body transparent and breaking down with every breath.  “What part of me is disappearing?” she asks.

The part that doesn’t matter, I want to say.  And it’s what I believe.  But as long as she’s physically present, I will cling to her vine — however diminished. 

“Ramblin rose, ramblin rose/

why you ramble, no one knows/

wild and wind blown/

that’s how you’ve grown/

who can cling to/

a ramblin rose?”

Oh, you bet I can.  Because she planted herself inside me.  Inside of all of us.

The hi-fi blares.  Her patience flares.

She struggles, but does not give up.  We keep watch and remember her feisty ways — 

“Hi Tony, is your mother there?”

“No grandma, she’s not home.  I’ll tell her to call you when she gets in.”

Click.  Grandma hangs up.  And then redials. 

Tony picks up the phone.  For the third time in 10 minutes.

This time Grandma is silent.

“Grandma, I know it’s you.  I can hear your music.”

“Ok, ” she admits, “it’s me!  Have her call me when she gets home.”

It’s May 8, 2008.

The rhythm of Mother Angelica reciting the rosary controls our breathing.  She is turned on her side facing me in the bed next to her.  My head is on her pillow touching hers.  She holds one of my hands.  Her other hand is draped over my back. 

I drift off.

She sits up in my dream.  Gets up to walk.

I startle awake.  Hold her closer.

“Help me,” she says.

“How can I help you?  Please tell me.”

“Stay close to me.”

“I’m here.  I won’t leave you.”

It’s May 11, 2008. 

The clock in my parents’ living room where I am sleeping on the sofa strikes twelve times.  It’s Mother’s Day Grandma.  You made it.  I get up to kiss her. 

The buds on the trees are about to burst.  But I still can’t tell you when. 

It’s two o’clock in the morning on May 11. 

The hi-fi blares.  She raises her hand to let us know. 

We stay close to her and hold her hands when she goes.

Yes, Grandma I know —

I will always know it’s you —

I can hear your music.

harbor lights

May 12, 2008

Harbor Lights

Oh glorious day

you shine upon us like her smile

we float and glide

with the melody in the wind today

held closely in eachother’s arms

where you put us.

 

© May 12, 2008 Julie Stevens

Dear Jesus, the vision of your face brings us exquisite joy. 

with you

May 2, 2008

Mother Mary

We come to your garden

to remember Him.

At your feet we lay our gratitude

for your grace.

We surrender our earthly burdens

and accept the mystery of your miracle.

Mary, with your image in our hearts,

we possess everlasting calm.

We worry not if or when

our gardens will bloom,

trusting by His hand

all beauty meant for us

will be perfectly timed.

 

Ó Julie Stevens 1999