I noticed yesterday...
...that there were no idling diesel trucks or muffler-problematic vehicles revving up and roaring down the street outside my window between 5 and 6:30 a.m.
And the constant drone and twice-daily Rush Hour roar of nearby Hwy 10 couldn't be heard from my house.
An actual bird woke me! And it wasn't my screaming cockatiels or my little roo 'Dash'....
Today was the same.
And I woke and was immediately grateful for it.
...
....being the occasional postings of a creative soul left alone too long with her thoughts....
Showing posts with label Tumbledown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tumbledown. Show all posts
Friday, March 20, 2020
Tuesday, March 17, 2020
Day the Twoth (Tooth?)... (Tuesday, 3/17)
Happy St. Patrick's Day. Let's just get started, and I'll keep my rambling thoughts until the end of this post, 'k?
Here we go:
THREE THINGS TO BE HAPPY ABOUT:
1.) A bright red geranium blooming in a sunny, lace-curtain-covered window.
2.) Rainbows on the ceiling courtesy of a crystal suncatcher.
3.) The song of a spring robin as it sings from a nearby tree.
QUOTE OF THE DAY:
"Every hand that we don't shake must become a phone call that we place. Every embrace that we avoid must become a verbal expression of warmth and concern. Every inch and every foot that we physically place between ourselves and another, must become a thought as to how we might be of help to that other, should the need arise... Let's stay safe. And let's draw one another closer in a way that we've never done before." ~Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky
A LITTLE SOMETHING:
Your kiddos who are home from school during these Interesting Times might enjoy keeping tabs on the Leprechaun Watch site. Leprechaun Watch is a webcam hidden in a location in Ireland that straddles the border of a 'fairy ring' that is linked to an oak and a fairy tree on the Coogan family's ancestral farm. According to the site (and, I'm guessing, as quoted from a Coogan family member),
You may have to refresh the screen occasionally. And there are even directions for how to capture an image if you think you've spotted an elusive leprechaun. Fun!
Another fun activity? Have them make a homemade leprechaun trap. Creative ideas are all OVER the internet, of course, and a trap can be made from anything from shoeboxes to LEGOs, sky's the limit.
Also, I just watched a gorgeous and charming animated film called "Song of the Sea." You can stream it and "The Secret of Kells" (another animated favorite) right now for under ten bucks. The visuals are stunning, as are the soundtracks. (The links will bring you to the trailers only, so you can see if they're something you're interested in before making the purchase....)
LET'S CELEBRATE:
Of course, it's St. Paddy's Day. And DaysoftheYear.com has this to say about it:
So you know what to do!
Here at Tumbledown I've yet to begin any festivities. Both James and I are online and things are moving SLOW there, so I've not begun streaming any jigs or reels. (My stereo is ancient and the speaker connections are shot, so all my wonder-filled CDs are pouting right now, tapping their little feet in the wings....).
Past celebrations have included facepainting and green wearing and hair dyeing, but I'm not sure if I'll go that far today. I do have a corned beef, though. And my beloved cabbage and potatoes (or as chef Rory O'Connell calls them, "bidet-toes"). And there's a list online on IMDB called "Shamrock and Ginger" that includes, I swear, a bagillion Irish movies that I've never heard of before. Here on Coronavirus lockdown, I think St. Paddy's Day will become St. Paddy's MONTH as I make my movie list and hunker down.
LIFE HERE AT TUMBLEDOWN:
I was preoccupied yesterday with creating social media posts and keeping my spirits up, and it's only taken less than 24 hours for me to backslide a bit....
The TV was off all day until evening when the state Governor pre-empted the scheduled National News. And for some reason, hearing his voice just made me realize how 'more-serious-than-I-ever-imagined' this whole thing is. It stunned me at a time when I was all proud of myself for being on top of my anxiety.
And today began oddly anyway, as I'm still finding my feet having James here working from home. But I checked on my adult daughters and their families and found one happily enjoying audiobooks and mountainbiking and the other outdoors hunting for treasure with metal detectors. (IS THAT NOT COOL??) So that was soothing.... Granted, it's still early days, but my hope is that familial bonds everywhere will be strengthened right now.
Because everything's in a big old state of change. I pray every day that we come out of this (because we will) stronger and better and kinder and wiser as human beings.
Magick is afoot. And today I'll celebrate it. Slainte.
Love you,
...me.
...
Here we go:
THREE THINGS TO BE HAPPY ABOUT:
1.) A bright red geranium blooming in a sunny, lace-curtain-covered window.
2.) Rainbows on the ceiling courtesy of a crystal suncatcher.
3.) The song of a spring robin as it sings from a nearby tree.
QUOTE OF THE DAY:
"Every hand that we don't shake must become a phone call that we place. Every embrace that we avoid must become a verbal expression of warmth and concern. Every inch and every foot that we physically place between ourselves and another, must become a thought as to how we might be of help to that other, should the need arise... Let's stay safe. And let's draw one another closer in a way that we've never done before." ~Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky
A LITTLE SOMETHING:
Best mind the dust and cobwebs up there... |
"The fairy tree is the last link the Fair Folk have to the larger range they once enjoyed when they ruled the land - their anger at this loss is understandable. We are monitoring the area in front of the oak because of leprechaun activity there in recent weeks and months."Hmmm. Angry leprechauns? Do we want to be monitoring them?
You may have to refresh the screen occasionally. And there are even directions for how to capture an image if you think you've spotted an elusive leprechaun. Fun!
Another fun activity? Have them make a homemade leprechaun trap. Creative ideas are all OVER the internet, of course, and a trap can be made from anything from shoeboxes to LEGOs, sky's the limit.
Also, I just watched a gorgeous and charming animated film called "Song of the Sea." You can stream it and "The Secret of Kells" (another animated favorite) right now for under ten bucks. The visuals are stunning, as are the soundtracks. (The links will bring you to the trailers only, so you can see if they're something you're interested in before making the purchase....)
Of course, it's St. Paddy's Day. And DaysoftheYear.com has this to say about it:
"[St. Patrick's Day] celebrations are generally themed around all things Irish and, by association, the colour green. Both Christians and non-Christians celebrate the secular version of the holiday by wearing green, eating Irish food and/or green foods, imbibing Irish drink and attending parades, which have a particularly long history in the United States and in Canada."
THIS. Absolutely amazing! I cannot recommend it enough. |
Here at Tumbledown I've yet to begin any festivities. Both James and I are online and things are moving SLOW there, so I've not begun streaming any jigs or reels. (My stereo is ancient and the speaker connections are shot, so all my wonder-filled CDs are pouting right now, tapping their little feet in the wings....).
Past celebrations have included facepainting and green wearing and hair dyeing, but I'm not sure if I'll go that far today. I do have a corned beef, though. And my beloved cabbage and potatoes (or as chef Rory O'Connell calls them, "bidet-toes"). And there's a list online on IMDB called "Shamrock and Ginger" that includes, I swear, a bagillion Irish movies that I've never heard of before. Here on Coronavirus lockdown, I think St. Paddy's Day will become St. Paddy's MONTH as I make my movie list and hunker down.
LIFE HERE AT TUMBLEDOWN:
I was preoccupied yesterday with creating social media posts and keeping my spirits up, and it's only taken less than 24 hours for me to backslide a bit....
The TV was off all day until evening when the state Governor pre-empted the scheduled National News. And for some reason, hearing his voice just made me realize how 'more-serious-than-I-ever-imagined' this whole thing is. It stunned me at a time when I was all proud of myself for being on top of my anxiety.
And today began oddly anyway, as I'm still finding my feet having James here working from home. But I checked on my adult daughters and their families and found one happily enjoying audiobooks and mountainbiking and the other outdoors hunting for treasure with metal detectors. (IS THAT NOT COOL??) So that was soothing.... Granted, it's still early days, but my hope is that familial bonds everywhere will be strengthened right now.
Because everything's in a big old state of change. I pray every day that we come out of this (because we will) stronger and better and kinder and wiser as human beings.
Magick is afoot. And today I'll celebrate it. Slainte.
Love you,
...me.
...
Friday, May 3, 2019
I Think the Fairies Danced
May Eve came and went and my tired old self didn't observe it, sadly.
It wasn't that long ago that I would have at least lit a candle in its honor or something....
So when I left the house on May Day morning to set off for my studio and saw this cheerful gumdrop displayed front and center in my garden, I had to smile.
The fairies partied, apparently.
Or maybe it was just a mouseling. Or a squirrel. Dancing and feasting under the starry sky.
Either way, I wish I'd joined them.
...
It wasn't that long ago that I would have at least lit a candle in its honor or something....
So when I left the house on May Day morning to set off for my studio and saw this cheerful gumdrop displayed front and center in my garden, I had to smile.
The fairies partied, apparently.
Or maybe it was just a mouseling. Or a squirrel. Dancing and feasting under the starry sky.
Either way, I wish I'd joined them.
...
Friday, January 4, 2019
Friday, January 29, 2016
Weekend Eve Thoughts for 1/29
It’s
after noon, I’ve been up for hours, and I’m still not awake. Still
groggy from all the Dreamtime activity! This is the week for familiar dreams, I
guess; I must have some unfinished subconscious biz that needs addressing or a
lesson that needs learning….
Anyway,
here are some Weekend Eve thoughts:
FIVE
THINGS TO BE HAPPY ABOUT (from The Happy Book by Barbara Ann Kipfer):
- Dimmers for lights.
- Onion domes and stained-glass windows against a forest setting.
- Pails of first-run sap
- Quilted kitchen appliance covers.
- Raisin sauce.
My
FIVE THINGS TO BE HAPPY ABOUT:
- Good customer service.
- Homemade ‘stone soup.’
- The mail-order catalog from The Vermont Country Store ~ “Purveyors of the Practical and Hard-to-Find.” (In which you can still buy Evening of Paris perfume in the little blue bottle. Remember seeing that on the shelves at Woolworth’s? You can get a catalog mailed to you, too!)
- Miniature yellow Legal pads. (They are as much fun to write lists on as thin-lined steno pads. I get goosebumps just thinking about it.)
- Drawing a pretend tattoo with a Sharpie™ marker.
Your FIVE THINGS TO BE
HAPPY ABOUT:
(Because I’d love to know.)
SOMETHING
(I think is) COOL:
‘Stone
soup’ you say? Here’s the story, courtesy of Stone Soup Magazine. (There is a BUNCH of interesting info about the tale on the magazine's site. Check it out!)
The
Original Stone Soup Story from 1808,
“To Make Stone Soup”
“To Make Stone Soup”
A
traveler, apparently wearied, arrived one morning at a small village that lies
to the north of Schauffhausen, on the road toe Zurich, in Switzerland. A good
woman sat spinning and singing at the door of her cottage; he came up to her;
talked first about the roughness of the roads, and then of the prospect of a
luxuriant vintage along the banks of the Rhine: at last he asked her if she had
any fire?
“To
be sure I have! How should I dress my dinner else?”
“Oh,
then,” said the Traveler, “as your pot is on, you can give me a little warm
water.”
“To
be sure I can! But what do you want with warm-water?”
“If you will lend me a
small pot,” said the Traveler, “I’ll show you.”
“Well!
you shall have a pot. There, now what do you want with it?”
“I
want, said the Traveler, “to make a mess of stone soup!”
“Stone soup!” cried
the woman, “I never heard of that before. Of what will you make it?”
“I
will show you in an instant,” said the man. So untying his wallet, he produced
a large smooth pebble. “Here,” he cried “is the principal ingredient. Now toast
me a large slice of bread, hard and brown. Well, now attend to me.”
The
stone was infused in warm water; the bread was toasted, and put into the pot
with it. “Now,” said the Traveler, “let me have a bit of bacon, a small
quantity of sauerkraut, pepper, and salt, onions, celery, thyme.” In short, he
demanded all the necessary materials.
The
good woman had a store cupboard and a well cropped garden; so that these were
procured in an instant, and the cookery proceeded with great success. When it
was finished, the kind hostess, who had watched the operation with some
anxiety, and from time to time longed to taste the soup, was indulged. She
found it excellent. She had never before tasted any that was so good. She
produced all the edibles that her cottage afforded; and spreading her table,
she, with the Traveler, made a hearty meal, of which the stone soup formed a
principal part.
When
he took his leave, he told the good woman, who had carefully washed the stone,
that as she has been so benevolent to him, he would, in return, make her a
present of it.
“Where
did you get it?” said she.
“Oh,”
he replied, “I have brought it a considerable way; and it is a stone of that
nature, that if be kept clean, its virtue will never be exhausted, but, with
the same ingredients, it will always make as good a soup as that which we have
this day eaten.”
The
poor woman could hardly set any bounds on her gratitude; and she and the
Traveler parted highly satisfied with each other. Proud of this discovery, she,
in general terms, mentioned it to her neighbors. By this means the recipe was
promulgated; and it was in the course of many experiments at length found, that
other pebbles would make as good soup as that in her possession. The viand now
became fashionable through the Canton, and was indeed so generally approved, as
to find its way to most of the peasants’ tables, where stone stoup used
frequently be served as the first dish.
Wikipedia has this to add: “Stone Soup is an old folk story in
which hungry strangers compel the local people of a town into sharing their
food. In varying traditions, the stone has been replaced with other common
inedible objects, and therefore the fable is also known as button soup, wood
soup, nail soup, and axe soup.” I DID NOT KNOW THIS.
Stone Soup is a fun recipe
to make with kids. My own Girlz and I used to make it
together on occasion. And you’d be surprised how relatively easy it is to get
young picky-eaters to eat some veggies if you let them have a hand in their
preparation.
LIFE
AT TUMBLEDOWN:
I
walked in to the Village yesterday to buy some local honey at the co-op. On the
way home I passed a Goldfish
cracker in the road (message: “Today you may feel like a fish out of water, but
smile anyway and just keep swimming”). Not once did I slip on any ice, and the brisk breeze and bright sunshine did me a world of good. It reminded me
that my favorite thing about working full-time at an office was the walk to and
from the Metro Transit bus stop. The world and the weather were a comfort to me on my way to and from that stressful environment. Yes, some days it
could be horrid outside, but it was always interesting. And there was the
sunrise. And in winter, the sunset. And, of course, that moment or two to connect with The
Meaningful.
CLOSING
THOUGHTS:
Happy
Weekend Eve. And may your weekend have some dipped-in-gold moments in it. And a
book! And a comfy couch, a warm afghan, a hot beverage, maybe a jigsaw puzzle,
and a beloved film or TV show. Mmmmmm. Thinking now.... What would you choose? A cup of tea with some Jane Austen? Hot chocolate with ‘Bonanza?’ For me, I’m on a kick right now with hot turmeric milk and back-to-back episodes of Big Bang Theory. What would be your favorite combination?
Have
fun. And get outside for a moment! :)
…me.
...
Friday, January 8, 2016
Friday Thoughts for 1/8/16

The weather here is supposed to be cold and possibly snowy for the next couple days (it is Minnesota in January, after all), and that just makes me think about hunkering down in front of the TV (like normal) and eating my way through the weekend (like normal). If someone doesn't pay me to stop putting food in my mouth, I'm afraid I'll explode here....
Last weekend it was Downton Abbey reruns leading up to the first episode of this year's final season. This weekend? Not sure, exactly, but there are so many possibilities! And I'm open to suggestions for anyone who cares to share.
That being said, here we go with today's musings. And have a happy Weekend Eve!
FIVE
THINGS TO BE HAPPY ABOUT (from The HappyBook by Barbara Ann Kipfer):
1.
Old
political cartoons. (And old favorite comic strips.)
2.
Grandmothers.
(YES! They are so important, aren’t they? Dear God/dess, please make me an
important one. Thank you.)
3.
Flash
Gordon. (I’ll admit I’m not at all familiar with him, Buck Rogers, or any of
the other space adventurers. Except ‘Spaceman Spiff.’ LOVE Spaceman Spiff….)
4.
Talking
to yourself. (If this were an Olympic event, I’d be its record-holding gold
medalist. Forever.)
5.
Baby
bunting. (I can’t see the word ‘bunting’ now without immediately thinking of
the delightful swags I saw in every cute English shop in Derbyshire. So ‘baby
bunting’, to me, paints pictures of a fairytown with garlands of little
triangles arching from one tiny mushroom tea shop to the next.)
My
FIVE THINGS TO BE HAPPY ABOUT:
1.
A
snack of seasoned almonds.
2.
ModPodge™
and the ideas it sparks….
3.
A
robe so soft it must be made of clouds and angel hair.
4.
Pigeon
tracks in the new-fallen snow.
5.
A
package in the mail.
Your
FIVE THINGS TO BE HAPPY ABOUT:
(Don’t hold back. Knock yourself
out!)
SOMETHING
(I think is) COOL:
Today’s
cool item is courtesy of online free spirit Rob Brezsny:
Slate has created a compendium of the best things
that happened each day in 2015. Here are ten of the best:
1. Nigeria bans female genital mutilation.
2. HIV protection is effective in African women.
3. Hunger has become much less severe in the past 15 years.
4. States' juvenile prison populations drop.
5. Homelessness declined 11 percent in the U.S. from 2010 to 2015.
6. Reforestation effort in Ecuador breaks world record.
7. Africa has its first polio-free year.
8. New Ebola vaccine is highly effective.
9. Energy storage technology, which is crucial for solar power, is making great progress.
10. People taking pre-exposure prophylaxis are staying HIV-free.
2. HIV protection is effective in African women.
3. Hunger has become much less severe in the past 15 years.
4. States' juvenile prison populations drop.
5. Homelessness declined 11 percent in the U.S. from 2010 to 2015.
6. Reforestation effort in Ecuador breaks world record.
7. Africa has its first polio-free year.
8. New Ebola vaccine is highly effective.
9. Energy storage technology, which is crucial for solar power, is making great progress.
10. People taking pre-exposure prophylaxis are staying HIV-free.
(See
the best events of the other 355 days at this link.)
Because
sometimes we need some good news, right?
A
LITTLE SOMETHING:
I
noticed that some ‘interesting’ books have been left recently in my Little Free
Library. Books with covers featuring glowering women in tight corsets and
shirtless men with sculpted abs…. James and I checked them out and determined
that even though they feature some suggestive art on the covers they are
written for high-school aged kids. What the heck?? My library gets frequent
visitors, and on New Year’s Eve alone we noticed children checking it out no
less than half-a-dozen times. Were they there because of these suggestive
books? Has one teen taken it upon themselves to teach me the lesson that young
people nowadays aren’t at all interested in National
Velvet or Where the Red Fern Grows
or A Wrinkle in Time? Hmmmmm. Well!
The little monkeys SHOULD be because they have no idea what they're missing. So there....
LIFE
AT TUMBLEDOWN:
I
finished my first ever decoupage project recently and I like it. And yesterday
was tea and talk with the recipient of the decoupage project. She
likes it, too. Whew!
CLOSING
THOUGHTS:
Enjoy
your weekend, my friend. Mix up a batch of garlicky hummus, or
oniony salmon dip, or creamy guacamole. Then open the crackers and binge-watch
something fun. What will you be queuing up? Please tell me all about it. :)
See
you Moonday,
…me.
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