Pier 39

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Our second day we headed out to the famous Pier 39.  My favorite hands down was watching the lounging sea lions sunbathing on barges, bellies up, whiskers out and sometimes barking at an occasional wanna be interloper.  I loved that they were FREE and just chose to congregate there.  I’ve never been a huge people watching fan, but I could have observed them for hours.  I chose this picture because of my website and blog:  a carousel with seashells.  It had two stories and was absolutely magical.  I adored the ones in Paris, but this one was so unique with all the sea creatures painted on it.  I have a fond memory of riding this with my husband despite the fact that we had no children.  We had a wonderful time shopping and even saw a Zoltar fortune teller machine.  It was absolutely FREEZING — in June! — and Burk bought me a beautiful red wool Peruvian cape which I literally lived in for the rest of the trip.  American writer Mark Twain did NOT say, “The coldest winter I ever spent was a summer in San Francisco”, but I can certainly believe someone did!  It was even colder here at this time of year than in Quebec City!  But it made for a wonderful respite against the brutal Texas heat and humidity so I did not mind at all.  I remember joking the next time I would be able to wear my cape was at Christmas — and it was!  Even then Dallas still was not as cold.  We visited the Ghiradelli Chocolate Company and walked along the boardwalk.  It was an unstructured, leisurely day and we had a lovely time … on Pier 39.

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I Left My Heart …

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Having run out of French-speaking places to visit for our wedding anniversary (within reason; we hadn’t been to Bora Bora) my husband asked where I would like to go to celebrate our third which was in 2010.  Since I love St. Francis of Assisi I thought it would be cool to visit the city who bears his namesake.  On our first day Burk really wanted to visit Alcatraz.  Oh the DREAD; I would have truly — and I mean this — rather have had a root canal than go to some horrible old prison; I could not think of anything worse!  But in a marriage one compromises.  I want him to go places with me with a CHEERFUL heart — not just begrudgingly go just to be going — and so I resolved to do the same for him.  Alcatraz:  WHO KNEW?!  I had so many beautiful pictures I could not choose one for this blog.  The first thing in the morning we went down to the docks, got our tickets, and boarded the ferry that would take us to the island.  As we approached I saw all these Native American signs and symbols.  Graffiti was scrawled in greeting saying, “Indians welcome” and “Free” was written into the stripes of the American flag painted underneath the wings of an eagle.  I was confused and intrigued.  When we landed, I found myself anxious to look around.  The small island was developed with facilities for a lighthouse, military fortification, military prison and eventually a federal prison (the only thing of which I knew).  But beginning in November of 1969, for more than 19 triumphant months, the abandoned island was occupied by a group of Native Americans who were part of a wave of Indian activism across the nation, with public protests throughout the 1970’s.  Now managed by the National Park Service, it is the site of the oldest operating lighthouse on the West Coast and has, to my utter amazement, become a protected sanctuary for seabird colonies of western gulls, cormorants, and egrets!  And therein I found my joy.  My husband thought the tour inside interesting but I chose to stay outside with the tangy sea air blowing my hair, white waves crashing against the rocks, and the sounds of all kinds of seabirds creating a sort of soothing cacophony.  Rising to heights of nearly 100 feet, the cliffs provide nesting and roosting sites for pigeon guillemots, cormorants, and several different types of gulls.  I took an incredible photo of a nesting Great Black-backed Gull (the largest gull in the world!) but she did not take too kindly to the invasion so I quickly moved on.  There is also a nesting habitat of agave that provides for night herons.  Gardens planted by families of the original Army post and later by families of prison guards were discovered and are being restored to their natural state.  In clearing out the overgrowth workers found many of the original flora were growing right where they had been planted more than 100 years earlier.  Numerous heirloom rose hybrids, including a Welsh rose believed to have been extinct, have been discovered and propagated.  There were a lot of different types of roses, succulents and more growing among manicured gardens of cutting flowers as well as wild sections of native grasses with blackberry and honeysuckle.  It was a nature lover’s delight and a true treasure all out of what was once solid rock.  The world renowned German born theoretical physicist Albert Einstein once said:

“Our task must be to free ourselves by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature and its beauty.”

Little did I know at the beginning of our day I would have such a wonderful experience with the beauty of nature and Native pride all on what I assumed was a God-forsaken island in the middle of San Francisco.  I left my heart…

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Read The Writing On The Napkin

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I get a kick out of witty cocktail napkins when I’m at parties.  I enjoy discovering them and will actually keep one as a remembrance if it is truly funny; not mean.  I had fun with this one as it took me a minute to read it.  Ironically I had just been handed a drink.  My tastes have changed over the years.  I never drank in high school, and when I was over 21 (legal drinking age in the U.S.) I began enjoying Amaretto Sours.  The best one I ever had was in San Antonio at our hotel on the river, as they made theirs fresh and not from a mix.  Then I began drinking Blue Hawaiians.  I didn’t particularly even like them; I just adored the blue color and I have always loved pineapple juice.  To this day I’m not sure why that wasn’t a surefire winner with me.  Finally I discovered “my” drink: a 7 & 7 with a lime.  I do not like going to upscale parties where they try to convince me my beloved Canadian whiskey is not nearly as good as (fill in the blank with whatever they have).  Yes, there are more expensive whiskeys, but for me none compare.  I will allow for the substitution of Sprite instead of 7-Up but I also know when bartenders switch that on me, as well.  I like to say that my favorite drink is like green bean casserole at Thanksgiving:  it’s all in the chemistry.  JUST MAKE IT LIKE IT IS!  Don’t be pretentious and try to give it slivered almonds or eschew the recipe in its entirety simply because it comes out of cans.  That is snobbery and it is silly.  It’s all about the inexplicable mix of French’s french fried onions with the mushroom soup but it seems as if someone always has to try and tinker with it.  The same goes for my drink.  As American Judge Judy Sheindlin has famously said, “Don’t pee on my leg and tell me it’s raining”.  Hey, that would be a good one to have made … read the writing on the napkin.

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All Blue

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American graphic designer David Carson once said:

“Good things are associated with blue, like clear days, more than singing the blues.  Just the word ‘blue’ in the singular is full of optimism and positive connotation to most people.”

I’m not certain everyone feels that way but for me blue is my happy color; dark blue in particular.  I work from my office at home and it is truly my sanctuary.  Recently I added this blue tree and words cannot convey how good it makes me feel.  It is uplifting and soothing all at once.  My whole office is bathed in its beautiful blue light and my only regret is not putting my tree together sooner.  It has been in a box and I have just now gotten around to it.  My husband and my little one both love it and my blue neon clock on the opposite wall compliments it well.  So now when I’m working and I see it I am happy indeed … it makes me feel all blue.

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An Act Of God

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When I was growing up I remember the unbridled joy of stringing Christmas lights around our apartment window.  Oh it made me so happy!  When I got married and we bought our house I was so excited to have lights on our roof.  I have discovered as I have gotten older that anytime I have been silently judgy it has come back to bite me.  In this case it was about people leaving their Christmas lights up year round.  I was NEVER going to do that!  Well, the Christmas lights people seemed eager to put them up but then became mysteriously unavailable to come and take them down.  My husband, who is a wonderful man, certainly would not do it (he avoids any type of manual labor) and so they just sort of stayed.  Epiphany passed, then Easter came followed by Pentecost, I broke my shoulder, then suddenly it was summer.  And still the lights remained on our roof.  I began to get used to feeling embarrassed and found myself thinking at least we’d save money not having to have someone hang them this coming Christmas.  Recently we switched back to satellite for our TV.  It has better reception than it did in its infancy and it has made our internet faster since it frees up the line.  So there I was standing outside the front of our home signing a waver about “an act of God” on this satellite dish when an unexplained mighty gust of wind came through — in JULY — and took our all lights down one by one from the left to the right of our house.  It was as if a giant hand had simply peeled them all off and laid them delicately upon the flagstones.  Not one was broken.  I gaped in astonishment and frankly the cable guy freaked.  He kept saying, “I wasn’t anywhere NEAR them!” and I knew that he wasn’t.  The English poet Philip James Bailey wrote:

“Let each man think himself an act of God, His mind a thought, his life a breath of God; And let each try, by great thoughts and good deeds, To show the most of Heaven he hath in him.”

I know I should go out there, retrieve our lights, and put them away properly in a box; I just keep hoping my husband will do it.  Now THAT would be a real act of God!  😉

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A Tipi With The Eiffel Tower

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When I was in college I was asked to anchor the news for a tiny local cable broadcast station in Austin.  The show was called “First Nations of Turtle Island.”  I jumped at the chance because it married both of my loves:  journalism/writing and Native culture.  I wanted to be behind the camera because of my looks (white) but the guys didn’t want to do it and they really needed someone.  So I reluctantly but happily agreed.  In those days cell phones were not prevalent and I remember my Daddy would give me two quarters — one to call when I got there and one to let him know I was on my way home.  Our crew was interesting and took me right in.  There was “Parts Is Parts”, Karankawa, who had a penchant for fishing the dead turtles out of the UT campus’ ponds and turning them into rattles, a Navajo getting his masters in library sciences with a dream of linking all the tribal nations together electronically, and a couple more great guys whom I wish so badly I could remember.  During my time there I had the privilege of interviewing an elder who was a member of the elite and little known to non-natives Zuni Eagle Catching Society.  I also interviewed a man named Homer Buffalo who was a member of the honored Kiowa Black Leggings Society.  He made tipis for a living and I thought about him with renewed respect as I put together my little one’s small pink tipi.  As incongruous as it may seem, it is perfect for us, since it reflects on my side our distant descent from French Royals as well as our Choctaw heritage (despite the fact that they never lived in tipis.)  I think I will teach her The Lord’s Prayer in Choctaw in there and maybe it will be our special place to speak French together as well.  Interestingly, the French and the Choctaw have long been allies, dating back to before the American Revolution.  It was a French missionary who first wrote the Choctaw language on paper after it had been orally passed down for centuries.  The great American animation pioneer Walt Disney once said:

“Our heritage and ideals, our code and standards – the things we live by and teach our children – are preserved or diminished by how freely we exchange ideas and feelings.”

I want my little one to know and embrace all of her heritage — and to stand proud in it.  Even in a pink tipi with the Eiffel Tower on it.  Achukma Hoke.

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George

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My father was born in 1932 but reared by his maternal grandparents in the remote Texas country.  He did not have running water or electricity until he was about ten!  My father told me about one room school houses and out houses and things that hearkened back to a much earlier time like something on my favorite TV show “Little House on the Prairie”.  In his youth he witnessed incredible, almost unbelievable things like crosses burning on lawns, bootleggers, and the preacher’s wife fighting with his grandmother at the feed store over the last sack of flour.  It was not because they needed the flour; it was that the companies printed designs on them and women made Sunday dresses out of them.  Apparently there was only one of this particular design left and both women were in a tug-of-war over it.  He said his grandmother wanted/needed it to make a bonnet.  As a kid I’d listen to his stories with an incredulous sort of disbelief but knowing they were true.  It was like he’d grown up a century earlier than my mother who was reared in Dallas.  A couple of years ago a hardware store opened up close to us and urban farmers were thrilled.  They carried organic, were “mom and pop” and even had chickens.  Pictured here is George.  George is a prize winning rooster who is very vain and KNOWS he’s good looking.  He has sired as many offspring as he has won awards.  I love patronizing small businesses, as I have one myself, and the little one and I always enjoy it when we can hear George and watch him strut his stuff in all his glory.  I promise every time I tell him how handsome he is he puffs his chest out out even more.  When we go inside I cannot help but be reminded of my father.  Things do not seem so different, with feed sacks and chickens and fertilizer.  Every Native person knows time is cyclical; for me there is a comfort in that.  So when I take my father’s only grandchild into the store I am reminded of his childhood and hope I am imparting the best of it to her.  American boxer Muhammad Ali once said,

“A rooster crows only when it sees the light.  Put him in the dark and he’ll never crow.  I have seen the light and I’m crowing.”

He sort of reminds me of George; what he lacks in humility he makes up for in braggadocio.  My Daddy was a humble man and taught me to be the same.  I want that for my girl as well.  One should never consider themselves “better than” … unless of course they’re George.

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In A Huf

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The ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle once said, “The secret to humor is surprise.”  I bought my husband this pair of glow in the dark socks trying to get a jump on our little one’s birthday.  Feeling good that I had ONE thing off my mountainous list, I noticed my friend’s eyes widen in shock as I showed them to her.  Then she started to sort of sputter and cough.  Furrowing my brow, I asked if she was OK.  “Um, you see this?” she asked as she traced her finger over the faint lines barely visible on the socks.  Upon closer inspection I noted they seemed to be forming some type of pattern.  So I leaned in closer, squinted, and discovered just what those barely discernible shapes were.  I felt my own eyes bulge out of their sockets with a sort of disbelief.  Printed indelibly all over the darn socks were marijuana leaves.  THAT was what glowed in the dark.  A vision flashed before me of tons of little five year olds jumping up and down under a black light pointing and hollering, “What’s that?!” with their folks thinking we were some type of pot heads.  Covert chortling gave way to outright laughter from my friend.  At first I was too stunned to do anything but stare at them slightly slack-jawed.  And here I had been so proud of myself for finding it.  Then I realized I should thank my lucky stars it was discovered before he went up and down in them at our child’s birthday party.  I guess I wasn’t hip enough at first — but now that I know I’m in a huff.

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Horsefeathers

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When I was growing up I loved the mythological Greek Pegasus.  Regular horses and the fabled unicorn were fantastic, but to be able to take flight on a great winged stallion was the stuff of which dreams were made.  My little one recently went to an indoor play place.  In order to keep kiddos from melting down when they close they offer (bribe them with) a mini cupcake.  When my little one asked if they were gluten free the girl looked surprised and said they were not.  Dropping her head in disappointment, my Baby Doll began to leave.  I was about to say something consoling when the girl exclaimed, “WAIT!” and turned around with a little bin full of plastic toys.  She told me I had a very well behaved little girl who offered to help her clean up and for that she deserved a special prize.  As the girl was holding out the bin, I think my little one and I must have seen it at the same time — this beautiful, sparkly mare who stood out like a beacon in the middle of those other toys.  I felt like I had chosen it myself when she picked her out.  All my childhood joy came rushing back and, to my surprise, I discovered she was a Pegasus!  Showing my little one her prize had wings, she squealed with delight and promptly announced she would call her Amaya.  I actually looked that up wondering if it had any significance and apparently in Arabic it means “Night Rain”.  I have no idea where she got that but I think it is a great name.  So instead of a fleeting treat she got to have this lasting childhood treasure and I pointed out how being gluten intolerant can be a blessing.  One of my favorite American actresses, Melissa Gilbert, said, “Don’t like small talk, love rainy days.”  That is what I want for my little one; not to seek the exchange of banal pleasantries (horsefeathers), but rather to let her imagination be free to take flight and soar like her Pegasus.  Everyone knows something good always comes from night rain.

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Frozen

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Dallas is not known for having lots of snow.  On the rare occasions Dallas HAS gotten some of the beautiful precipitation our city has literally shut down.  Northerners scoff and guffaw but the truth is we are ill equipped to deal with ice and snow as we do not receive it on any type of regular basis.  A few years ago Dallas had an actual, true “snow storm”.  It was the kind that felled 100 year old trees, knocking down power lines and yes, grinding the city to a halt.  We personally had no power for almost four days.  Logs in the fire weren’t cutting it and <gasp> our electronic devices were running out of juice.  The two survivalists in the neighborhood went on the grid long enough to crow about having generated power.  We could not even get out of our driveway.  The hill our house is on is steep and, under several sheets of ice, treacherous.  Snow blanketed all that had fallen within its path in a quiet that was almost deafening in its silence.  It was eerie … no humming, no buzzing, no white noise we’ve all become accustomed to; just white.  One by one neighbors began ambling out like baby hatchlings from their eggs:  wobbly and uncertain.  But no one had a better time than our wolfies.  To see them running over 30 mph through the snow was a thing of beauty to behold.  Everyone who watched was awestruck.  Our koi pond iced completely over and pictured here is our girl Cheyenne nosing around it.  The fish were schooling at the bottom and I think she was just as intrigued as we were.  English author J. B. Priestley once said:

“The first fall of snow is not only an event, it is a magical event.  You go to bed in one kind of a world and wake up in another quite different, and if this is not enchantment then where is it to be found?”

So as we are in the dog days of summer I thought it might be fun to revisit a time when everything was frozen.

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