A Soupçon Of Silliness

It all started sometime last month.  We were just talking when my husband suddenly asked, “Hey Baby Doll, you know what I should ask Santa for in my stocking?  A can of tomato soup!” chuckling wryly to himself.  Our little one looked up at me for a response and I simply shook my head, rolling my eyes.  A couple of weeks later imagine his surprise:  on Christmas morning he excitedly reached for his stocking only to discover it contained a single can of tomato soup.  I could see the puzzled look on his face as he lifted his arm out while his eyes widened in shock.  So there he was in his pajamas quietly blinking in disbelief as he looked to me.  I lifted a brow, shrugged, and said, “I guess Santa gave you what you asked for.”  All of a sudden our eight year old broke into unbridled laughter.  It was infectious and I could not help but join in.  My sweet husband, being a good sport, started laughing ruefully as well.  I thought that was the end of it until I discovered the can in our mailbox on New Year’s Day.  Our little girl hooted and said Daddy must’ve put it there.  He was at work so I took the can and put it in his underwear drawer.  The next day I found it on top of my china cabinet.  Scrambling to retaliate, I put it in the box with his wallet.  I had thought our little game might have ended, but the following day our cleaning lady came up to me with a quizzical look and asked why there was a can of tomato soup on the windowsill in our laundry room.  Narrowing my eyes, I put it in his bookshelf.  He responded by placing it on top of my piano.  Someone suggested I put it in his car, so I let it ride in the passenger’s seat.  I did not even see it the next day until I had started my car.  I looked up and there it sat right on my dashboard in clear sight.  I then decided to put it in our shower caddy (pictured here) and we still had not said one word to each other about it.  The next day I noticed it was on our upstairs hallway chest near Saint Francis.  Just when I thought I was through with the Elf on the Shelf for a year I found myself looking for new places to hide the darn soup.  Currently it is nestled in a pair of his dress shoes which I trust will be found whenever he chooses to wear them to church.  The British novelist Howard Jacobson said, “You don’t remember people you love by the wise things they say but the silly things they do.”  I believe that to be true.  Daddy was always teasing Mama, and that is what I remember the most about him.  I am so glad our child is getting to see the same playful spirit my parents had with each other manifested through her father and me.  After all, what would life be without a soupçon of silliness?

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

My Friend

I have always been a lone wolf, never having a gaggle of friends despite the fact that in high school I think I was pretty popular.  Looking back, I have noticed my folks had only a tight circle of friends but a lot of acquaintances.  I suppose that is how I would describe my husband and me now.  About six years ago I asked for help on a neighborhood website with moving our sectional.  It had bitten the dust and we could not get rid of the behemoth by ourselves.  Someone responded and said that she could not move it but that her husband could help.  As we did not really know anyone well in our neighborhood I was delighted for the overture.  So this couple came over and we wound up becoming true friends.  It turned out we both had little girls who were almost three.  We all lived in the neighborhood and we also all had shared interests.  Both my husband and hers enjoyed a wide variety of topics and she and I found ourselves talking a lot.  Over these past years this couple has watched our only child — sometimes on playdates and sometimes just because my child loves them.  They have come over for pizza and movies and have had us all over for dinner on several occasions.  Jessica majored in fashion and I cannot even sew a button.  She placed a velcro strip on a shirt for our daughter when I could not close the top and, for the past several years has given us handmade soaps complete with customized essential oils as gifts for birthdays and Christmas.  She paints, she plants, she knits, and she is incredibly thoughtful.  I have jokingly referred to her as “Martha” for Martha Stewart.  She is one of those crafty people who seem to be able to do everything themselves.  She makes her family’s own shampoo, deodorant, and overall just puts me to shame.  Her step-daughter loves our little girl with a sweetness that is heartbreaking, and her husband relates to mine in a way that very few do.  Jessica has read chapters of a book to me over the phone while I have been on my exercise bike and at times I got in a better workout because neither of us could bear to stop.  They have included us in the renewal of their wedding vows and we have celebrated our girls’ birthdays together.  I was extremely close with my mother, who passed away five years ago.  I miss picking up the phone and talking with her about everything and nothing.  God was gracious in bringing Jessica into my life.  Aside from my beloved husband and our child’s Godmother, she is the only one with whom I can speak for no reason, and I know we’ll have a shared conversation.  I don’t mean hurried babbling; it’s listening and CARING about what the other has to say.  A couple of years ago I attended a speech she gave for a special event at a hotel in downtown Dallas and was stunned by her relaxed composure.  Over the course of about five years Jessica has become one of my very best friends.  The Dutch-American television personality Yolanda Hadid is quoted as having said, “I have learned that friendship isn’t about who you’ve known the longest, it’s about who came and never left your side.”  That is how I feel about my friend Jessica, her husband Luke, and little Emaleigh.  Jess always manages to make REAL time for me; I feel Luke and my husband Burk get along like brothers, and Maris and Emma love each other (and squabble) like sisters.  I have spent several years turning our dismal, horridly disgusting two car garage into my beloved dream “Blue Wolf Barcade.”  Jessica and Luke have seen it every step of the way with excited encouragement.  They are our only friends who have an open invitation to come over anytime — no matter what.  I suppose it is because I know we will always be met with love and not judgement.  They have been over when all of the neighborhood’s power went down (and we all hung out in the dark Barcade because it was literally the coolest place around.)  Our wolves adore them, and they love our cats.  After I officially completed “The Blue Wolf Barcade” I immediately called Jess to see if she’d like to come and see.  So she rolls over about twenty minutes later and I take her into my sanctuary.  We have a lit air hockey game with mallets and a puck that light up blue, my beloved antique cocktail game “Arkanoid,” a 60 games in 1 double player stand up arcade featuring classics like Centipede, Galaga, Frogger, Ms. Pac-Man and more.  We also have a modest Skee-Ball machine which I adore because I often used to enjoy that game, as well as air hockey, with my father.  I have never played darts in my life but our little one informed me they made magnetic ones so our arcade proudly contains them as well.  She is also a car enthusiast like me and proclaimed we should add a driving game.  I was able to purchase the one I could never play growing up because my folks just didn’t have the money.  It cost 50 cents and is called “Crusin’ Around the World.”  You can pick your car and drive from three different vantage points:  one) where you don’t see the car, two) where you can just see the hood, and three) where you get sort a sky view of all the cars and the road.  I prefer the lowrider view because it’s the most realistic and can actually get people who are not always prone to motion sickness queasy.  I also had it set to the highest difficulty level and the steering wheel is hair-trigger.  So there Jess was looking around and I yell, “Hey!  Do you wanna drive?!”  “Sure,” she says and nonchalantly proceeds to move her electronic wheelchair close to our driving machine seat; effortlessly transferring herself over.  Now mind you I have not been jealous of her ability to sew, or for her propensity of putting me to shame with her “Martha Stewart-esque” handmade soaps my husband loves, or even the crafty science things she has done with my child.  But now she crossed the line — I am an excellent driver and, at the risk of bragging, I always win first place.  I realize it is hard to see in this picture, but I clocked her at 104 (she went higher) and she never once used the brake.  She then proceeded to do the unthinkable by beating my high score.  Perhaps I should disclose my badass friend has had essentially the use of only four fingers since she was around one and a half years old after a bad car accident which left her nearly dead.  And yet she maintains a home, works, cares for their animals, looks after her husband and step-child, and yeah, pretty much makes Martha Stewart look like a slacker.  Some people might look at her petite size or lean in to hear her quiet voice and presume fraiIty.  I have only ever seen a strong fighter — and I am fortunate to call this extraordinary woman my friend.   

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

Our Date Night


When I was a teenager I remember Daddy telling me that no boy was EVER going to honk for me for a date.  Instead they must come in, look him in the eyes, and shake his hand.  The man was a teddy bear but I remember all the boys confessing they were terrified of him.  He was large and dark skinned, with piercing blue eyes … a testament to both his half-Choctaw/half-German heritage.  We may have lived in an inexpensive apartment but he somehow always commanded their respect.  He was referred to as “Mr. Ringler” although he offered them the use of his first name.  My father fought eight years in the “Forgotten War” (Korea) and, despite his gentle demeanor, he was incredibly skilled in the armed forces and in martial arts.  He never bragged or mentioned it unless some type of trauma for him came up.  For instance, he always sat with his back in the corner of a restaurant.  I asked him why and I remember him rubbing the back of his neck subconsciously and saying he just needed to be able to see the room.  He loved all meat and especially anything barbecued.  However he couldn’t stand barbecued chicken.  When I asked why once he said that it was almost all he ate in the MREs (meals ready-to-eat) during the war.  My mother was so innocent she had no idea why he was so easily able to win her stuffed animals at the Texas State Fair by bursting balloons with darts.  I think we all know carnival games are rigged.  But I’m guessing a man who worked his way up from a private in the army to a sharpshooter could figure it out.  One of the sweetest things my husband ever said to me was that he missed my father … and he never even knew him.  It was while we were still dating and I never forgot it.  Burk will often ask me something about “Mr. Ringler” and I am always happy and proud to tell him.  Daddy was a romantic, the kind one dreams about (if they are so inclined).  He wrote mother many love letters, bought her chocolates, and brought her an orchid on LITERALLY EVERY DATE.  Apparently at one point Grandmother Maris asked him to please stop because their refrigerator was full.  I took a quiz once and scored a 100 on being “an incurable romantic.”  My husband shows his love in different ways.  I long for love notes, but he leaves articles by my nightstand which he believes I’ll like.  As it is with daddies and daughters — my husband is completely smitten.  Interestingly enough, without me saying a word I know she has inherited my romantic streak.  It is something that can horribly disappoint or be incredibly elating.  Recently she pronounced the hubs and I needed to go out.  When I was seven I remember being awfully concerned about the romantic well-being of my parents.  I think it has to do with the stability of family.  So we decided to do something which we had never done before — we had drinks, dinner, and watched a live stand-up comedy show.  My husband and I do not share the same sense of humor and I worried he was not having a good time.  It turns out he really enjoyed himself and wants to do more.  I was a precocious reader and I started in on adult romance novels in the fourth grade.  Oh Mama made sure they were Harlequin romances (very “clean”) but I discovered I had a passion for reading them.  I CRINGE at the whole “Princess” thing, but I must confess it was always vindicating to see a good girl who just happened to be down-trodden accidentally stumble into an extraordinary life with the only man she truly loved, and she the only woman he truly loved.  It may have taken awhile, but I am a living fairy tale.  I had no family except my elderly mother and some distant cousins; yet I got to have the big church wedding I never truly thought I’d have.  I am not speaking of a huge bridal party or presents; rather a full church whose pews were lined with candles, accompanied by an excellent choir singing every song chosen by me.  There was a Latin song I’d often sung, a lesser known rendition of “Ave Maria” by Edward Elgar, and “Laudate Dominium” by Mozart.  In the fifth grade I wrote and published my first book on Christian symbols, and in the sixth I wrote and published a book on Mozart.  I chose every scripture reading, the crucifer, the thurifer, and the acolytes.  I don’t even LIKE dresses and I wore a beautiful gown complete with a cathedral length veil.  My precious third cousins (sister and brother), at the tender ages of I believe six and three bravely made their way down the long, daunting sanctuary’s aisle together carrying the flowers and our rings.  It was my greatest sorrow that my father was not there.  My husband and I have been married for twelve years now.  I do not expect him to plan my favorite thing in the world, a scavenger hunt difficult to solve and ultimately leading me to him.  However, I can expect that daily he will walk though our front door, tell me he loves me, and look for our daughter to go hug her.  The American country singer Brad Paisley once said, “Date night is important, even if it’s going to Schlotzsky’s.”  I confess I do not care for that restaurant but the sentiment remains:  I have had dates with my husband where one of us has been very sick and we have each cared for the other.  We have had deaths in our families, a change of jobs, and were blessed with our child.  We have had terrible fights, experienced tremendous sadness, and have become even more busy.  But thanks to our little one, we are once again striving to keep our date night.

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

ALL The Time


I came from a loving, highly educated family who lived below the poverty level; therefore they were not deemed “successful.”  My father worked six days a week, and often two or even three jobs.  Mama went back to substitute teaching when I was in middle school.  We had one un-airconditioned car, and my folks did not play the lottery, smoke, or drink at all (much less take drugs)!  I have learned it is very easy for someone doing well to proclaim that one who is not should not eat out, nor they should they go to Six Flags once a year (which was our family vacation.)  We did not get to go to the movies often, but my folks strived to give me every opportunity.  We visited the Dallas Museum of Art on “free” days.  We went to the Texas State Fair with canned goods as our admission.  I wore Polo shirts and Jordache jeans, but we searched for them at the Good Will.  So how come they struggled to pay their bills?  My father ran a painting business and I cannot recall how many times very wealthy people simply refused to pay him after he’d done the work, citing some imperceptible flaw, often saying it needed to be redone in a different color.  My father was a highly ethical, Christian man who prided himself upon his work.  I watched my beautiful mother wear the same three dresses to church, and she never let that impede her from attending.  I also discovered, to my great chagrin, there is a presumptive arrogance which can emanate from those wishing to “help” someone in need.  They judge everything and pronounce even the tiniest frivolity to be irresponsible.  For instance, why would one have a TV but not car insurance?  It is easy to have all types of insurance when one has the funds.  And yet there are countless people who begrudge the poor even the slightest of pleasures.  I loved a boy once.  We attended the same church.  He was so handsome and reminded me of my father in looks.  Despite his parents’ feigned graciousness, I always knew they disapproved of me.  After all, I lived in a low income apartment with my parents while he lived in a lovely, two story home in a high end part of town.  We dated the summer after high school and then we both had plans to attend college.  He was headed to Baylor while I would be attending a community college.  It was “suggested” by his mother that he date sorority girls.  I was bewildered and utterly devastated.  However, he had invited me down to visit and I brought my parents.  I guess he could not believe I actually took his offer seriously.  He seemed distracted and embarrassed.  I cried the whole way home.  Two years later when I was at SMU majoring in broadcast journalism I anchored a tiny cable news show in Austin.  From Dallas, Waco was a good stopping point.  I decided to revisit a place he’d taken me to once and, when I walked in I noticed a beautiful girl with long, curly blondish/reddish hair and remarkable green/blue eyes.  They say that everyone has a doppelgänger somewhere in the world.  We all think we’re so unique.  I was eating by myself when she approached me.  We took a few minutes to stare at each other in shock.  I remember her being so kind, but silently freaked out when she confidently said she believed my name was “Laura.”  Somehow instinctively knowing she had been hurt as well, I replied yes.  She then sat down next to me and asked if I new a certain guy.  When I said yes, that we dated the summer before our freshman year in college she told me they had dated as well — and that he’d always called her by my name.  Instead of feeling jealous, we both wound up each sorry for the other.  I was graduated from SMU and was in the Charter House of the third oldest sorority in America — Alpha Chi Omega.  I will admit I was not selected by peers; rather by a group of distinguished alumni who valued my GPA and the fact that I was in the Miss Texas USA pageant at the time.  I only went to that first rush party because of a friend, who did not wind up making it.  However, it never failed to escape my notice that quite by accident I had indeed (in theory) become someone of whom his mother would approve.  It never ceases to amaze me how many people believe someone is out for their money — even if their church bailed their parents out, saved their home, and put them through college.  My family certainly never had that benefit.  I remember Daddy once saying that the only way you could get money is if you didn’t really need it.  Just as I am neither wolf nor dog; I walk with a foot in both worlds.  It is a blessing.  All those years ago I thought God had told me no because perhaps I wasn’t good enough.  I realize now He told me no because that guy wasn’t good enough.  The American Christian author and speaker Joyce Meyer has said:

I believe that a trusting attitude and a patient attitude go hand in hand.  You see, when you let go and learn to trust God, it releases joy in your life.  And when you trust God, you’re able to be more patient.  Patience is not just about waiting for something … it’s about how you wait, or your attitude while waiting.

Out of the blue, when I least expected it, God graced me with the most handsome man I have ever seen and then He blessed us with our beautiful daughter who is genuine, caring, and kind.  All I ever had ever prayed for my whole entire life was to find love and have a family of my own that was like the one I already had.  For those of you out there reading this who may be waiting on something, I can only say that our time is not always God’s time.  However I am certain that God is good — ALL the time.

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

Summer’s Final Fling

When I was a kid, our apartment complex did not have a pool.  What was great, however, was that none of my “well off” friends with houses had pools either.  I have only recently come to realize the great impact that our somewhat local recreation center had upon my entire childhood.  Growing up in Dallas, there were public pools.  Admittedly they were horrid concrete boxes that would scrape one’s skin off, but they were still a place where everyone could go.  It was a sort of an economic equalizer.  Early on my red-haired mother burned and freckled her skin walking me to the local community college for swim lessons.  Texas was in a heat wave and polyester was in fashion; God bless my poor mama.  In the summers, around second grade, my daddy would drop us off at Harry Stone recreation center for the day and he’d pick us up after he finished work.  I was never embarrassed by my mother who also liked to swim.  Her favorite was the backstroke.  She had a daisy yellow one piece with a swim cap to match.  I can still remember the thrill of that pool — despite knowing that coming into ANY form of contact with those viciously rough edges would scour the skin off my bones or put countless irreparable snags in my good swimsuit.  They had two diving boards — a low dive and a high dive.  I hate to admit I was always too chicken for the big one.  I was one of those kids who never could flip and so even just a regular dive freaked me out.  I cannot recall how many hours, days, weeks, months, and years that pool was endlessly cool for me.  Now I can only imagine what our club pool must be like for our little one!  There’s a full service bar (OK, that’s for me) as well as a whole menu full of extras like “rocket” popsicles, cold bottled water and lemonade.  They provide chairs, tables, umbrellas, and towels.  In addition they have pool toys and floats.  And that is just on regular days!  For special events (like holidays and the beginning and end of summer) they have all sorts of cool extras:  a pool DJ taking requests, a special buffet menu, face painting, balloons, glitter tattoos, giant blow up water slides, and even a mermaid who swims in the middle pool with the kids.  The multiple pools have varying depths, fountains, and even lights which change.  I think it is nothing short of magic.  And so, on this last pool day of summer at our club, I found myself fervently hoping our little girl truly appreciated all the lovely and magical things it had to offer.  For me summer meant late nights, June bugs, cicadas, and the smell of honeysuckle in the breeze.  I have shown my little girl all the “friendly” bugs I played with as a child and I have Star Jasmine planted all along the side of our house.  The sweet smell of it hanging in the warm summers’ night air brings me back to my childhood.  I am torn; I want our daughter to be carefree and happy, with all the simple pleasures that are magical and come along with childhood.  On the other hand, I refuse to let her become an “entitled” country club child.  I am very proud that she calls EVERYone “ma’am” and “sir” — regardless of station or race.  She adores the staff and I hope I have instilled in her how to address them properly.  Just like my mother, she loves to swim.  The late, great American competitive swimmer and actress Esther Williams once said, “Somehow I kept my head above water.  I relied on the discipline, character, and strength that I had started to develop as that little girl in her first swimming pool.”  That is what I want for my child:  she is a water baby and I hope that “discipline, character, and strength” will remain with her — long after summer’s final fling.

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

Sorting Through The Past

At some point or another in our lives we all must face our past.  It does not matter if it was good or bad.  Either sights, scents, sounds, tastes, or touches will trigger memories which come back to surround us.  I had a wonderful childhood.  However having lost both of my parents, whom I loved so very much, I now find the memories extremely painful.  I realize I should be grateful to even have them, and I know that many people never get that.  Photographs have always held great power for me.  I have long admired Edward S. Curtis and his mission to document the vanishing Native American Indian tribes during the last part of the 19th century.  I own two of his pieces and hope to acquire more.  Painted portraits I have never cared for, although I am aware that before photography that’s all there was.  One has only to study historical sculptures and paintings to acknowledge they were designed to flatter — primarily because they were commissioned.  However well-intentioned, I have always believed art falls subject to its interpreter, whereas photographs cannot lie.  Pictures capture moments both contrived as well as candid.  I will concede that now anyone has the ability to alter photographs.  For me airbrushing and photoshopping hold no appeal.  Rather, I enjoy the magic of a photo that is a real moment frozen forever in time.  I find it very apt that many Native Americans did not want to have their pictures taken.  In a wide range of traditions, taking an image of oneself was to trap part of one’s soul.  Lately I have finally started sorting though my late parents’ private possessions and photos.  Mama looked extremely glamorous and Daddy very dashing.  Their pictures go from black and white, to “colorized,” to “living color.”  My daddy went home to be with the Lord in 1998 and my mother joined him just five years ago.  Opening boxes I have discovered Daddy was a bold and dedicated romantic, faithfully writing Mama passionate letters from Korea.  I have also learned my mother loved Daddy devotedly and, despite the chance to marry “up” (into great wealth) she politely eschewed it.  I chose this picture because it holds such fond memories of being with my family in Santa Fe.  It was taken in 1997; the last year we would all be together.  It is a picture of a picture, so I’m sure it’s fuzzy, which seems very much like my memories:  some are crystal clear, while others are blurred.  It is a struggle for me to tell my only child about my parents without dissolving into tears.  Most of the time I just try to live out their examples, and know she is absorbing them despite their absence from this earth.  The New York Times bestselling author Gretchen Rubin said:

“One of the best ways to make yourself happy in the present is to recall happy times from the past.  Photos are a great memory-prompt, and because we tend to take photos of happy occasions, they weight our memories to the good.”

I know my parents would want the best for me and for my own little family.  It is a very painful and lonely journey for an only child to sort through their deceased parents’ things.  I persevere because I want to share them with my husband and I need our child to know them.  There is not only power in photos, there is a power in sorting through the past.

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

No Contest

Growing up I never really got into sports … particularly team sports.  I was on the swim team and I did compete in rollerskating but those were still mostly individual.  There were two other sports I loved but my family did not have the money for me to pursue; horseback riding and tennis.  I do still have my original wooden Chris Evert tennis racket, which I was so proud to get as a little girl.  At a time when sports was still a man’s world, this American woman was ranked the world’s number one tennis player.  She won eighteen Grand Slam singles championships and three doubles titles.  Chris Evert also won a record seven championships at the French Open and Serena Williams is tied with her record of six champions at the U.S. Open.  Evert went pro in 1972, the year Title IX was enacted.  The U.S. Congress signed Title Nine into law proclaiming there could be no act of discrimination against females in any educational program or activity receiving federal financial aid of any type.  Even though it wasn’t my thing, I noticed when I was in elementary school girls’ soccer teams were beginning to form and that it was a big deal.  Three decades later I have a cousin who will be attending college next year on a soccer scholarship.  I am so proud of her and for her.  She has worked incredibly hard since her early childhood, with the tireless support of both her parents and grandparents.  It still seems wild to me that a girl could get into college for playing a sport.  When I was in community college passing a sport was required to count toward my bachelor’s degree.  I chose tennis.  I really loved that semester and didn’t dread it like I always had gym class.  I was told I was pretty good and I got an updated racket.  My husband’s paternal side is truly sports royalty and yet what has always bonded us is our shared love of reading, museums, and travel.  The travel part I have only been blessed enough to enjoy since I got married.  So I have had two rackets in my arsenal and I broke them out when I asked my husband if he’d like to play tennis with me.  I gave him my beloved Chis Evert and I played with my college one from twenty years ago that has broken strings.  It was a beautiful day and we enjoyed just hitting the ball back and forth to each other.  One of the many things I love about my husband is that he is simply not competitive.  He enjoys playing whether he wins or loses.  I, on the other hand, have an innate desire —no, need, to win.  Playing with him made me know I wanted to really be in the game.  However, it took a LOT for me to muster my courage and go try to enter tennis courts where women were hypercompetitive, had already formed their own cliques, and knew how to play.  I do not like doing things if I cannot do them well.  I didn’t want to wear the white pleated short tennis skirt and I began to get cold feet trying to play at 48.  Armed with my “newest” racket, I was good-naturedly laughed at.  The tennis rackets now are like AIR compared with my old one!  And my original wooden one is like trying to hit with a brick.  I think I have settled on a racket I like and I have learned that several factors go into choosing one:  grip, size, weight, strings, how one hits, etc.  So I have started really learning tennis and I could not be happier.  Helen Wills Moody, an American tennis player, has been said to be arguably the most dominant tennis player of the 20th century as well as the greatest female player in history.  Ranked number one in singles in 1927, she won the Grand Slam Singles at French Open in 1928, 1929, 1930 and 1932.  She won the Grand Slam at Wimbledon in 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1932, 1933, 1935, and 1938.  In the US Open, she won the the Grand Slam singles in 1923, 1924, 1925, 1927,1928, 1929, and 1931.  She was ranked highest in Doubles in 1924 and won Grand Slam Mixed Doubles in the French Open, Wimbledon, and the US Open as well.  Representing the United States, she medaled gold in Singles and Doubles at the 1924 games in Paris.  Moody said, “I love the feel of hitting the ball hard, the pleasure of a rally.  It is these things that make tennis the delightful game that it is.”  I could not agree more.  “Love” may mean “zero” in the game, but I have discovered a love “match” with tennis:  it is a no contest.

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

Picture Perfect

My mother loved taking pictures.  Thanks to her I have a wonderful pictorial timeline of my life growing up.  It is interesting to watch the evolution of people in photography — from those first formal black and white portraits with families posing stiffly to the more casual color photos we see today.  Thanks to my iPhone, I always have my camera with me, and I am able to capture completely candid moments like this.  We were waiting at the dentist’s office and my little girl struck up a conversation with another little girl near her age in the artless way that children do.  I listened to them talk for awhile, comparing where they were in school to the number of teeth they’d lost.  I glanced up at one point and saw this.  Both little girls were examining an almost life sized bronze of a little girl about their age who was reading a book.  Something about it struck me, and I was able to get the shot before the minute passed.  Life is made up of moments big and small.  In the past it was important to have the big ones photographed for posterity.  Now we have the luxury of photographing the little ones, and they can be just as meaningful.  Unlike a painting, subject to the interpretation of the artist, the lens does not lie.  The American photographer and photojournalist Dorothea Lange once said, “The camera is an instrument that teaches people how to see without a camera.”  She was best known for her work which humanized the consequences of the Great Depression and influenced the development of documentary photography.  Although my degree is in journalism I consider myself a photojournalist as well, following in the footsteps of my mother as both a writer and a photographer.  Life will not always be perfect or go the way we’d planned.  How we choose to view the blessings we have been given in this life, however, can always make it picture perfect.

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

American Girl Doll

A couple of weeks ago we went to an American Girl doll luncheon.  This was outside the official realm of the American Girl doll store and restaurant.  I have always loved plush animals of any sort but just never got into dolls; it didn’t matter if they were baby dolls, young girl dolls, or Barbie dolls.  So when my mother-in-law suggested getting my daughter her own American Girl doll for Christmas I had no idea how it would go over.  Like me, my child is in love with all types of animals.  However, she seems to be more feminine than I was and I must confess I like seeing her in dresses … which I REFUSED to wear unless it was the first day of school or for church.  My mother-in-law and I both studied the dolls at length and tried to get the one that most resembled my child.  It has my daughter’s deep, dark brown eyes and auburnish hair, although it is straight and its skin is darker.  Right before Christmas I was happy to be at the American Girl doll store where I had lunch with my grandmother-in-law and my mother-in-law, along with my daughter.  We had four generations there plus the doll, whom my child named Paris.  I could not believe all the things they sold:  high chairs, travel packs, clothes, accessories, furniture, animal companions, jewelry, and so much more.  The most jaw-dropping thing for me was the hair salon.  They had actual people braiding, straightening, curling, and cutting the dolls’ hair; of course it was by appointment.  Her grandmother bought Paris got her own special chair (which acts like a child’s high chair that attaches onto the sides of tables.)  For dining there her doll received her own miniature gift bag containing a plate, cloth napkin, cardboard table setting, and (my personal favorite) a glass of sparkling pink lemonade in a goblet.  Paris had already scored a tiny cell phone complete with an American Girl Doll “credit card,” a library card, and five very realistic looking dollars.  In addition, the cell phone has a screen that can be manually changed from weather to games or calls.  I was surprised to see a little boy eating there with his doll.  He had straight blonde hair in a cut indicative of the ’70s, as did his doll.  I covertly watched him love and nurture him and thought, wow, someone is going to be very lucky to have him as a father one day.  F.H. Bradley, the British idealist philosopher, once said, “We say that a girl with her doll anticipates the mother.  It is more true, perhaps, that most mothers are still but children with playthings.”  I would disagree.  Motherhood is very real.  It is sobering, shocking, and straining, but — in my opinion — it is also life’s greatest joy.  It is not without pain, hardship, sacrifice, doubt, and worry.  When I see my baby doll buckle her doll in the car before herself I know she will be an incredibly loving mother.  Maybe Bradley was right; I really do love playing with my very own American Girl Doll.

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail

My Mother’s Namesake

Recently a ten year picture challenge has been going around Facebook.  One is supposed to post a pic of how they looked a decade ago compared with today.  I just happened to take this picture of my little one recently and then a few days later I came across this old picture of my mother, taken by my father.  There are thirty years and two generations separating these two but I think the resemblance is striking.  My mother had redder hair but my daughter has her fair complexion.  I see brown eyes in both; my child’s being darker because she has her father’s deep, chocolate eyes.  The cheeks, pert nose, and cupid’s bow lips are all my mother’s.  Moreover, she has my mother’s firecracker yet sweet personality.  She says the EXACT SAME things my mother said, and in the same way.  While some may not find this surprising, my mother passed right after her third birthday.  I was extremely close with both of my parents for all of my life until the day they died.  I was 28 when my father passed and I took care of my mother until she passed at the age of 81.  To have lost one’s parents and truly see them in your child is perhaps the greatest gift imaginable.  From the sweep of her long, jet black eyelashes identical to my father’s, to the same obsession with rolls my mother had, she is absolutely their grandchild.  I know my husband’s side is there, too but since they are still living she receives the benefit of knowing them.  I can only provide glimpses of what my beloved parents were like through memories, stories, and pictures.  I cannot presume to suppose what adopted children and orphans may feel; I can only express what a deep sense of genetic familial connection I have always had.  I want that for my daughter.  Every time I see or hear my folks inexplicably in my child my heart is both elated and saddened.  Of course I am elated to know they live on and I am saddened because they no longer walk this earth.  The American educator and wife of the 37th President of the United States, Pat Nixon, once said, ”All lives have triumphs and tragedies, laughter and tears, and mine has been no different.  What really matters is whether, after all of that, you remain strong and a comfort to your loved ones.  I have tried to meet that test.”  I hope I am remaining strong and a comfort as well … for my mother’s namesake. 

Facebooktwitterpinterestmail