Thursday, August 28, 2008




Not that I am counting, but in only FOUR days school starts and I am looking forward to total peace and quiet from the time I get up until at least 4pm. I am overwhelmed with thoughts of how to spend that first day. Then I start projecting forward to the next day and the next....I have 4 days of QUIET coming up in only 4 days!

I love my little darlings, but they keep a different schedule during the summer and I am frankly, tired. They don't get up until late in the morning (or afternoon) since they stay up ALL night. The microwave door slams at 2am and it sounds like a sonic boom when you are sleeping, but they have to have a snack since they usually were not home for dinner. As each cupboard door slams, I jump and head down the stairs to see who is up NOW.

Often I find an assortment of teenagers making peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, pizza or warming every leftover in sight. When we go to bed, the population is usually reasonably, however kids sneak INTO my house, not out (usually). If they don't see me up when passing the front window, they head for Andy or MIke's bedroom windows where they find easy access. Mike sometimes complains about the dirty footprints on his bed from Justin jumping in. They all know the Chihuahuas bark at any sound of a door opening, so it is easier to use a window.

Football and Cheerleading practice has started, the first official game is Friday night and the school supplies are waiting on the kitchen table. All that is left is that first blessed morning. I am really torn between doing everything I have put off forever and just sitting all day and enjoying the peace. My knitting and the TV sound great for the first day!

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

"I have been driven many times upon my knees by the overwhelming conviction that I had nowhere else to go.



To this day, I find Lincoln quotes to be profound and applicable to today's life. This man with so little education and such a great mind, simply devoted his life to making a difference in the world he touched.



My lifelong fascination with Lincoln began in the 3rd grade when I began checking out every book in the library about this Civil War President. He was a very odd and colorful character.
I began with the stories written for children about his early years in the log cabin, learned of his poverty and his strugle for education. Those books read a bit like something from Little House on the Prarie.

As I grew older and understood the Civil War, I continued to try to understand his politics and applaud them. I traveled to Washington DC and the highlight for me was to visit the sites of his life, ending in the boarding house where he lay dying after his assasination. Karen shared this interest and she and I chose to go to Ford Theater, while Joe and Cat moved on to the Pentagon and the Mint. We both loved Lincoln.

One day I found a photo of him with an inscription that motivated me beyond all else. It described the countless failures in his life and ended with his ultimate victory of becoming President and the Emancipation. As usual, I passed it up because I could find countless other ways to spend my cash with 5 kids to feed and educate. I was so moved when I opened my Christmas gift from Dave and Maryann and found the coveted artwork. It hung in my office for years and I am searching for the right place to put it now at home.

I happened upon a book called simply, Mary. It qualifies as historic ficion, although the book was written by taking the letters that Mary Lincoln wrote during her lifetime. When she was finally committed to a mental institution by her son, she began writing her life story in letter form. She was not mad, but grief stricken, after losing 3 sons and her husband. I can so totally relate to this woman's anguish and only pray that my 3 sons choose not to commit me any time soon.



Through this book, I grew to understand not only the power of a wife who believes in her husband, but came to know Lincoln, again on a deeper level. They were a fascinating couple, who changed American history. I highly recommend this book. Wouldn't it be nice if an intelligent person, with good morals and deep love of country could be elected today?

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Blogs


I added a list of my favorite blogs to make it easy for us all. As I scrolled through my list, I stopped as I saw Karen's blog address. Of course, it pulled at my heart, just as her cell phone number, still logged in my phone and her email address in my contacts list. I just can't hit "delete", not now and maybe never.

As I compiled the blog list, I tried to move on, but I could not. This whole "blog thing" pulled us closer together, silly as it may sound. She and I were in the midst of one of our regular spats and not speaking, unless necessary. She began to sneak in to read my blog and finally couldn't resist leaving anonymous comments. Karen's humor was unique and it was pretty obvious who had left them. Of course, they were sarcastic, funny and each time I posted, I waited for her comments. Soon the spat was forgotten and she began to post her own blog, making us all laugh daily. Soon we were all blogging and reading daily.

She was so very present in her own eulogy, as Fr Ben quoted from some of her blog postings. We had taken some of her comments and published them in a memorial. Karen always told it from her heart. Good or bad....she told it like she saw it.


Fr Ben read it and told me he needed a copy to write the eulogy. He looked at me and said, "We always knew Karen was very bright, however I never knew she was absolutely profound." What a nice way to be remembered. She would have giggled, but she would have liked hearing that, espcially from Fr Ben, who she loved very much.

So, Karen's blog is here for us to enjoy, to shed a tear and to laugh with her...forever.

Monday, August 25, 2008

FOOTBALL SEASON BEGINS!



Fall was never my favorite season, nor was I ever a football fan, but over the past week I have had more fun watching Andy play football and Catie cheer than I ever thought possible.

I have learned that football players, MUST be crazy. They practice for hours on end, run until they ache and then knock each other down to finish the job. It is not a sport for sissies!

I have learned what a "cradle" is (not the kind you put the baby in), watched Catie work on doing the splits until her muscles ache and listened to countless cheers. It really is hard work. I have also learned to have ice packs on hand and ready daily. Heating pads also come in handy with a full supply of Tylenol.


It all began with a huge rush to find doctors to provide sports physicals with absolutely no notice. They went to the first yearly practice and returned with orders to get the physicals done ASAP. Not an easy task, when every place I called was booked up for weeks. You would think I would get this figured out by now.....August means PHYSICALS for these 2 kids.

Somehow we did it and Andy was in the starting lineup and Catie is the "Flyer" (or for those of you who don't understand Cheerleading....the one on top).




We went to the first scrimmage last Tuesday morning and the Greyhounds were on top until the last minutes of the game and missed the win by one point. Not bad, considering their history. However, I have to admit I hold my breath every time Andy goes in and pray that he walks back off the field. I hold my breath again as I watch Catie fly up into the air, held only by tiny little girls, clap proudly when she looks just like her Mom did so many years ago when she was the flyer. THEN I say a silent prayer of thanks that she safely returns to the ground.

Being a Sports Mom is no job for sissies either.

On Thursday night, the Varsity team played in a 4 team scrimmage in Allegan and came out on top. Could this be their winning year? It is looking pretty good. No matter who wins, we are having a good time watching.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Happy Birthday Jim!

We all gathered, young (Daniel age 3) and OLD (JIM!!!) and everyone in between, to celebrate Jim's 60th birthday on Saturday night.
As usual, the food was great (thanks, Deb) and Jim was a riot! It was great to see lots of old friends and celebrate with Jim.




Daniel made Jim cut his own cake because he couldn't wait any longer to eat cake!

Saturday, August 16, 2008


Why Do I Knit?



I used to think only grandmothers knit and until I realized I AM a grandmother. Then I met all of the wonderful young women who have taken the time to teach me, as I struggled through the intricate instructions and skills required to be fully proficient. I even bought a book called "You're Never Too Old To Knit!" Hmmmm....

I started trying to teach myself when was still working and seeking a way to completely relax during the evenings. However, it really began long ago, when I was a little girl. I would watch my Nana knitting, first while she watched her afternoon "stories" and then again after dinner as she sat in her rocking chair on the porch at her cottage, with a cup of tea at her side. I can still hear the waves lapping at the shore and the clicking of with her needles.

With 5 married children to visit, it seemed as if Nana and Pop were on a rotation. On Sunday after church, it it was our lucky week, the Ford sedan pulled up and my favorite grandparents would spend the afternoon with us. While we waited for the Sunday roast to finish, the knitting needles began to click. It was part of the sound of family.

I loved to watch as the garment took shape and wonder who the lucky recipient was going to be when the mysterious object was finished. I watched, fascinated, but was too busy being a little Tom-boy to stop and learn to knit. The lake called and I was off to play in the waves.

If it looked delicate and was knit in a soft pastel green or yellow, it was the first clue that another baby was on the way to someone in our family. It was long before the days of ultrasound that ruined the long awaited surprise. Nothing was knit in pink or blue, which was too risky, until after the baby was born. However, every new grandchild and great-grandchild wore Nana's creations and it was a love filled moment at the baby shower when her gift was open. I can still remember seeing those tiny booties and soft little sweaters. They became treasured heirlooms.

I still remember when it was my turn to receive a beautiful dark green pair of mittens with red trim. I felt so special, considering she had 17 grandchildren to knit for. I loved those mittens so much!

Long ago, in 1973 when I found I was expecting Cat, I found a yarn shop and recruited the elderly ladies to teach me to make booties. It didn't come easy,but she wore those little white booties, filled with her mother's love. Of course, she also wore Nana's knits and her other great grandmother's booties.

On her Baptism day, she wore a creme colored handknit sweater that had been knit by a long deceased aunt. That sweater has been worn by every baby in our family since 1912 on Baptism day, asit was made to match the beautiful long gown that every baby wore.

Nana used to say, "New baby....new baby clothes." She told me stories about how as she learned that each of her babies was on it's way, she would begin to knit. She would spend 9 months creating for the new baby. She would sew and make her own diapers and blankets, knit every sweater and bootie until there was a wardrobe waiting for the new little one.
She thought every baby deserved soft, special things made just to celebrate the new life.

My aunts all learned from Nana and through the years turned out some masterpieces. My own 5 chilren still hang the pretty red and green Christmas stockings that Aunt Mona knit for them. They became a tradition and just another reminder of family.

After I spent years doing cross stitch, quilting and scrapbooking, I still felt the tradition of knitting calling to me. Crafts and skills passed down from woman to woman just seemed important. My mother had taught me to embroider, my friend Carol taught me to quilt and my daughter taught me to scrapbook.

Now I was faced with a disability that made all of those things difficult. I loved documenting family history in my scrapbooks, but it was becoming harder and harder for me to spend any amount of time sitting in a hard chair. My eyes tired easily when I tried to embroider and making quilts, again required sitting at the sewing machine.

I was grieving hard and really needed peace and solitude. Yes, I would try to knit again. I began by visiting the yarn stores and got lost in the world of color and texture. If it wasn't soft, I didn't like it. The softer it was, the more I had to own it. I needed softness in my life.

The first few endeavors produced a scarf for a number of family members. It began to get easier, although it made my arms and hands ache. I began to prop my arms with pillows. It was time to challenge my brain. I missed working so much that my mind either felt dead or on the few days it was alive, it was filled with pain to match my heart. Maybe concentration would help chase away the painful thoughts.

I took the first class and I was on my way to an addition. It was certainly harmless and a bit like yoga. No room for painful thoughts when you are counting and calculating, reading and trying to understand what you read.

The family began to joke about the stash of yarn accumulating, the unfinished projects in baskets, but I didn't mind. It was better to hear the laughter, than to experience the silence. I didn't knit for a product. I knit for peace.

One of my fondest memories, is the day that Karen danced around the living room, laughing and shouting because SHE got the first finished pair of socks. She had gone to the yarn shop and picked the yarn and was so touched that I made them for HER. I still can't bear to part with those socks. As I reach into my knitting basket, I often stop to fondle them and remember.

I am now finishing sweaters (Cat is wearing some love to keep the damp cold away in London), Joe has a new vest waiting for winter and Alexis is sporting my first hat. Oh sure, there are plenty of Unfinished Objects.....I am the Queen of UFO's. It's okay....I enjoy the process and the peace it brings as I quietly knit the blues.

When my arms and hands ache too badly to knit, I just read and learn a little more. Maybe someday they won't hurt and I can finish everything I have started. Doubt it, but it's all good.

Sunday, August 10, 2008

Saugatuck

Today we visited Saugatuck, since a much needed break from "same old, same old" was needed. What a wonderful break it was! It makes you stop and wonder why we spend day after day in Eaton Rapids, when it is so easy to get in the car and be somewhere totally different so easily.

The shops are wonderful, unique and plentiful. The scenery can't be beat. Just what is more beautiful than Lake Michigan or any little town that is on the shore?




Catie saw the bungee jumping trampoline attraction and just HAD to try it! I love her spitit of adventure. Wonder where she got it?


Friday, August 8, 2008

It seems that my ideas about tatoos are "old fashioned". Karen started it off (and of course, she did it BIG), Joey was next (in Karen's honor) and Justin went the same week. Then Laura and Andy went last winter. Even my cousin Kathi, (who in her 50's) showed up with a butterfly on her ankle.

Hmmm....When Andy begged for his, I had to admit that tatoos were no longer reserved for big Harley Riding animals, rough looking women or ex-Marines. Soooo....my turn!




Saturday, August 2, 2008

Another Week of Summer Gone

They say time flies when you are having fun and summer is flying by fast. My fun these days is so different from what it once was. I enjoy just being home with my family and making it feel like home.

What does home feel like?

It is fresh laundry folded on the table, waiting for kids to take it away.

It is something baking in the oven (by Catie, of course)

Home is noise, often lasting till the wee hours, courtesy of teens

Home is Mom, sitting on the couch knitting another UFO (unfinished object)

Home is Grandma helping in the kitchen.

Home is a place where lots of friendly dogs live (and a cat that bites)

Home is where dinner is served to anyone who happens to be here

Home is Dad's BarBq, Mom's Shepherd's Pie and lots of Tacos & Chin Spaghetti

Home is a guitar playing softly from the basement

Home is filled with girly giggles, jumping grandchildren and puppies

Home is a million neighbor kids jumping on the trampoline

Home is wrestling & football equipment and lots of cologne


Home is NEVER finding a completely clean bathroom



Life has changed. Change is good. This has been a blessed summer. I thought I was cursed with chronic pain, but realize I was blessed with the gift of time with my children. As my Dad used to say, "When life gives you lemons....make lemonade."