Posted in Sunday Report

Get the Party Started

It is a beautiful Imbolc Week-end here at the Acres, sunny and mild; I definitely saw my shadow, so we can look forward to six more weeks of winter. These next four weeks promise fun for all, filled with birthdays, rollicking comedy with cousins, and lunches at fancy places.

I have a new sink in the upstairs bathroom, thank-you, Casey! As usual, I forgot to get the “before” picture, but we are quite a ways from the finished project, so these photos will have to do.

I completed January’s dopamine menu with the exception of visiting the Zoo and the Museum. Let’s just start the February Menu with those:

Visit Zoo

Visit Museum

Finish up the bathroom project.

U of E Theatre is presenting “Clydes”, a “riotous” comedy this month, so Lana and I (and flat Ronna) will go on the 16th.

Grandie #4 will move into double digits (10) on the 22nd. She’s going to have an ice-skating party with her friends on 3/1, but celebrate with me on the 23rd.

Also on the 22nd, Cousin Lana’s grandie, Haley, will marry her fella, Logan; we’re invited to the dinner/dance following the civil ceremony! There will be at least five cousins there at the Carmi VFW, so look out!

The 23rd is my Actual Date of Birth, and the Jrs. will be around to help me celebrate.

Currently, I only have one lunch planned, so I can fit a lot more people on my lunch card. Seriously, if you live nearby, DM me and let’s meet up. We could walk at the mall, too, if you’re interested; I’ll be there a couple of times a week.

These next couple of weeks, the weather forecast is as good as it gets for February. Fingers crossed that the mild trend continues.

Keep on the Sunny Side…

Peace

Posted in Sunday Report

Just the usual…

I wrote some really preachy stuff and somehow lost the best part and decided it was a sign from Beyond that I should not preach. Lucky you, huh? Well, I do hope you’re all doing well after a rocky week in America. My On-This-Day photos were kind of sad: January 20, 2017…

The group that assembled that day wasn’t large, but it was hopeful.

My sign said “We are All One”…. I stand by that.


Here at Sonnystone, I’ve been a little under-the-weather. Seems like January and February bring out the worst in my health, so I’m sure we’ll have a nice go-round with our healthcare system and be ok by Spring… Hope.

To keep myself entertained, I’ve been propagating the my coleus, which had been first propagated last October. I got a pretty good stand of dill from my countertop hydroponic garden, and the chive is almost ready to come out of there; the lonely cilantro needs just a little longer, too.


I’m verry late to the game, but I am listening to a 90s jam-band, Widespread Panic. Their song, “Ain’t Life Grand?” became my theme song about four years ago and since I got down the old stereo, I bought their best CD “Panic in the Streets” and have been listening to it and their CD “Another Joyous Occasion” on a loop. Their keyboardist, John “JoJo” Hermann, is as good as Bill Payne and Roy Bittan, who are the best. Music doth soothe the troubled soul. It can also make you dance…

Just one quick preach…this excerpt from “Desiderata”

Whether or not it is clear to you, no doubt the Universe is unfolding as it should. Therefore be at Peace…

Have a good week, fellow Children of the Universe…

Posted in Sunday Report

Birthdays

Last week was uneventful here at Sonnystone Acres, spent watching the snow melt… Casey tried to outsmart Twitch, the flying squirrel, and the jury is still out on who won the skirmish.

Upcoming this week: Eliza Belle Mayne Jose’ will turn 14 on the 21st and Emma Magnolia Mayne Jose’ will be 19 on the 24th. Eliza is in the 8th grade at Avenues and continues her Irish Dance instruction at Doherty-Petri. Emma is starting her second semester at Colgate University and she, too, has continued her Irish dancing. Both girls are consistently at the top of their competitions and are World qualifiers. More than just dancers, they are good students and decent people, and I’m so proud of them.

In their honor, here’s a recycle of last year’s tribute.

The Wheel of the Year

Posted on  

The wheel is turning and we can’t slow down… My New York Irish Dancer grand-daughters both had birthdays last week. Eliza, my #3 grandie, turned 13 on the 21st; Emma, my #1 grandie, turned 18 on the 24th. I am a little dizzy thinking about how the time has flown. They are gems in my crown and their futures look so bright that I gotta wear shades…

My #1 and #3 grandies,

Eliza and Emma, 2024

Emma Magnolia Mayne Jose: 


Eliza Belle Mayne Jose: 


Three more days of cold and we’ll moderate into “normal” winter temperatures around 40–it will feel tropical! Hope it’s thawing in your neck of the woods.

Peace

Posted in Sunday Report

What day is it?

Well, hasn’t this been a real wing-dinger of a week? We ended up with an inch or so of ice followed by five inches of snow from Sunday to Monday, then picked up another four inches of snow on Friday to Saturday.

I got caught low on groceries and had to venture out to the store between storms, where I was accosted by a lady for stepping in front of her at the milk shelves… She berated me so hard that I put back half my groceries just to get through the express lane and away from her, so my cooking has not been the gourmet extravaganza I had planned. Chili is just fine and cozy for snow days anyway.

That ice storm was brutal to our trees, and a medium-size limb became a spear as it fell on our garage roof, leaving a small hole that Casey temporarily patched up between storms.


Since the whole town is littered with downed limbs and trees, and so many folks have been without power that there were emergency shelters set up by the Red Cross, I’m grateful we’ve been warm all week. The schools were all closed, so many a Mom is on edge and my heart goes out to them. Today we’re supposed to get above freezing, so I expect the stores will be full and I’m sending strength to the hospitality and retail workers.

Casey’s in his element in this weather and has manned the snowblower like a champ, keeping our driveway passable and the birdfeeders full and out of the ice. He added a third sunflower seed feeder and got out walnuts for the squirrels to fight over. There are at least three dozen birds at the buffet constantly, sunrise to sunset, on the ground, in the magnolia tree, at the water bowl, just trying to stay alive.


While the days have been bright and beautiful and the birds and squirrels have kept us busy and entertained, today is the first day we’ve actually seen Ol’ Sol breaking through the clouds and it’s a great way to start the day!



I am planning a whole week of Getting Out of the House! Hope I see you there!

Peaee

Posted in Sunday Report

Snowbound

Gazing out of my windows, I watch the birds fighting for a spot at the feeders and queuing up for a drink at the water bowl. The black birds want to hog the food, so we occasionally bang on the windows and clear them out, giving the smaller birds an brief opening to get into the troughs. Tough to get pictures from inside…

Intermittently, the snow will change over to ice or sleet, then revert back to innocent, puffy flakes. It’s all very pretty, a blank slate, ready for a new Dopamine Menu.

After a week of inner whining, this fresh view is just what I needed to regain my peace. We’ve put away the Christmas decorations, and I’ve taken this opportunity to move furniture, rearrange shelves, and re-think where it all goes- or should it be displayed at all? This has extended to our upstairs, where I’ve stashed the heirlooms that my brother recently brought over, and there’s a good deal of work that needs to be done. It probably seems odd to put this task on my Menu for January, but once I get started, I really enjoy organizing and the added nostalgia will trigger heap big emotion.

January Dopamine Menu


  • Try two new recipes
  • Learn Handel’s Water Suite
  • Organize heirlooms and photos
  • Read four books, one from each of these genres: biography, mystery, science fiction, and historical fiction.
  • Lunch with friends x2
  • Willard Library, Zoo, Museum
  • Creative Writing Class (starts January 7) (more on that next week)

While we were in NYC, we watched all the current episodes of “Shrinking” and I loved it. I’m looking for something that will grab me like that series did. We don’t have any paid channels, but free stuff like Pluto gives us access to a lot of old shows that we can watch in order — Casey’s working his way through Gunsmoke– but I can’t decide what I’ll stick with. Any suggestions?

Jojo’s Academy of Music will resume classes next week! Samantha and I were at the Mall yesterday, where she got me all caught up with her Christmas fun and we tried on hats…



Since Casey retired, I don’t mind our winters so much, but ask me again in about 6 weeks. I doubt I’ll be calling this snow “pretty” next week, but today it’s gorgeous and the fire is warm.

Hope it’s cozy in your neck of the woods!

Peace

Posted in Sunday Report

A jolly week…

Ah, the joy of rising before the sun comes up! – Put that in the category of “things I never thought I would say”, but waking up at 5am several days this week to transport the Jr girls to their appointed destinations was kinda fun. Of course, I made up for the loss of my beauty sleep with a beauty nap, so don’t worry about me..


Last Sunday, Samantha and I attended the Eville Philharmonic Peppermint Pops concert and it was a real Winner! It’s been a while since I was able to sing-a-long with the Hallelujah Chorus and I gave it my all, singing all parts but in baritone range…I’m sure the folks in front of me were impressed!



Yesterday evening, we were treated to the Evansville Music Academy Winter recital, where Nova sang, “The Challenge”. She did a wonderful job and looked lovely.



Samantha came over today to lend a hand with cutting out some sugar cookies, and to play some Christmas duets with me. She was uncharacteristically not hungry, so I’ve had to bear the brunt of eating the cookies with little help…alas!


Next week, we’ll be having our Christmas with the Jrs–that’s right just Six More Days.! Time to pick up the pace, but maintain the Calm and Bright.

Peace

Posted in Sunday Report

17 more days

The decorating is done! Well, we still don’t have the ornaments on our main tree, just waiting for some grandie-type help with that, but the rest is in place.

We have added a tree this year, a $1 rummage-sale find. bought it for the lights, which we removed and put in Goldie, and because I have this box of vintage bulb ornaments that I knew would look great on an aluminum tree.

We had an aluminum tree when I was a youngster, from age 8 to probably 18! It was a full silver with the four-color lamp projecting red, green, gold, and blue on to it like a screen. I would spend hours staring at the tree, listening to the Goodyear Christmas Albums. I still listen to those albums, and still turn out all the lights except the Christmas tree and stare.


Our Mr&Mrs Claus collection is displayed in the diner this year. We’re always on the prowl for more, but it’s been a while since we found any.



After updating the decorations at the Eaton gravesite, we met up with cousins Lana and Charley for lunch yesterday. We’d hoped cousin Jeff would be able to tag along, but he was out of town. I forgot to get a selfie inside, so here we are grabbing a last-minute pic, saying, I can’t see a thing as we peer into the phone.



Today Samantha and I are off to hear the Evansville Philarmonic Orchestra’s Peppermint Pops! This will be her first encounter with Mayne tradition, taught well by my Dad, to arrive way too early, sit in your seat with a clear view of the stage until the last five minutes when Big & Tall guy with a large cranium supported by a thick neck sits directly in front of you and that’s all you see for the rest of the event. It’s a fact…

Next week we are running the Jojo and Grandpa Taxi service for the Jr. girls while their Mama is on a business trip to Maryland. Though we have to get up ungodly early, I’m pretty excited to be needed.

Peace

Posted in Sunday Report

December dopamine menu

We had a nice Thanksgiving with this crew, for whom I am eternally grateful.

We woke up to a couple of inches of fluffy snow this morning — nice touch, Cosmo, and very conducive to our ongoing (and on) hanging of the Greens.

Three more weeks of waning light until Earth’s wobble will turn us back toward the Sun and these incredible shrinking days will slowly begin to expand. Until then, it’s time to make the best of those 5 or so hours of daylight!

I’ve been writing out a monthly dopamine menu, which is a list of activities to do that trigger the release of dopamine, our homemade pleasure chemical, in the brain. December’s menu pretty much writes itself: Do All Things Christmas-y: Play the Music! Bake cookies! Buy Presents! Watch the sappy TV movies! Deck the Fa-la-la out of the Halls! I’ll be working in a trip to Grayville for a cousin luncheon, a visit to the Zoo and the Eville Museum, and Nova has a Vocal recital on the 14th. We’re planning a Winter Solstice Celebration on the 21st, hopefully lighting a Yule Log outside in my circle. Did I mention that my daughter has a birthday on the 20th? It’s going to be a lovely month, full of love and family.

Since Emma is not home from Colgate until 12/18, we have had to change up our 20-year-old Rockettes tradition–We will be going to a 5pm performance on Boxing Day (12/26). Casey and I will fly out of Nashville on Christmas morning and stay with the Joses until the 29th. We should have time this trip to visit the Met and the MOMA, something we’ve missed doing.

Our Christmas with the Jrs. will be December 22 and will include “Moana 2” — I can hardly wait. We have more plans with my Local girls in the next weeks, so I’ll keep you informed. I know you’ll be waiting with bated breath…

Tis the Season…

Peace

Posted in Sunday Report

Ready, set…

It’s a short Holiday Season this year, thanks to a “late” Thanksgiving. The “4th Thursday in November” makes our American Turkey Day a moveable feast that often intrudes on the Christmas season and this year is about as intruding as it gets.

Our current Thanksgiving Tradition is having the Jr. Family over in the morning to watch the Macy’s Parade. They arrive just before the parade starts, Dunkin’ Donuts in hand. In NYC, the Jose’ Fam are also watching, but Santa and the Mrs. appear on their screen an hour before they fly into our broadcast, a feat of time travel that I do not understand, but it’s true. We lay out a spread of sandwich-makings, some salads, veggies, and chips, and throw in pumpkin and dutch apple pies for dessert. We talk. We laugh. We play a game of some sort.

Our tradition is nothing at all like the Norman Rockwell tradition I grew up with, and I don’t deny that I miss the crowded tables and loud rooms of people of those days, but all those fine cooks have passed on and their grandchildren have children (and grandchildren) of their own.

After the games, the Jrs. have an evening Thanksgiving dinner to attend, and the NYers are either already in Philadelphia or on their way, so by 3pm, we’re alone with the leftovers…and the Christmas decorating begins! I really enjoy decking the halls with fa-la-la and a lot of buffalo plaid…

Casey’s #70 birthday month has been a good one, filled with weekly presents and trips. We’ll sing a rousing rendition of HB on Thanksgiving Day, put a candle in his pie, and wish him well. The actual b-day-date is Saturday, the 30th, and we’ll probably go out for dinner or something.

Celebrating at Loco Burro, Gatlinburg

While we were in Gatlinburg, we went to a hard cider tasting at Smokin’ Banjo. These fruit-based samplings were right up my alley; I really wanted to love the Banjo Blue, made from blueberries, but my favorite was Sweet Heat, a raspberry concoction with a hint of jalapeno. We were persuaded to buy two bottles so they would give us a free bottle of Peach, which was pretty good. Since Michael and Jess are teetotalers, I may have to enlist outside help with drinking these fermentations…

With each sunrise I am granted, I give Thanks for Everything and All — for my Loved Ones (that’s You), for the sun and the moon and the stars and the wise trees, for my home and its gardens and all that grows here, for the many critters and winged ones who feast at my buffet, for the gifts of music and books, for the comradery of marriage, for the wisdom of my ancestors, for the Peace and Joy in my heart.

Sunrise at Sonnystone Acres, November 24, 2024

The composer Aaron Copland left us the beautiful song, “The Promise of Living” from the opera “The Tender Land”, reminding us that Thanksgiving Day was originally a harvest celebration.

The promise of living with hope and thanksgiving
Is born of our loving our friends and our labor.

The promise of growing with faith and with knowing
Is born of our sharing our love with our neighbor.

The promise of loving, the promise of growing
Is born of our singing in joy and thanksgiving.

For many a year we’ve know these fields
And know all the work that makes them yield.
We’re ready to work, we’re ready to lend a hand.
By working together we’ll bring in the blessings of harvest.

We plant each row with seeds of grain,
And Providence sends us the sun and the rain.
By lending a hand, by lending an arm
Bring out the blessings of harvest.

Give thanks there was sunshine, give thanks there was rain,
Give thanks we have hands to deliver the grain.

O let us be joyful, O let us be grateful to the Lord for his blessing.



Hope you’ll be having a grand Thanksgiving week-end!

Peace

Posted in Sunday Report

There and Back

On Monday morning we drove to Gatlinburg. Our hotel was perfectly located for walking to our main attraction, Anakeesta, and just across the street from the parkway strip of tacky souvenir shops interspersed with moonshine tastings, wine and cider tastings, and restaurants. The Trump Superstore, loaded with fightfightfight shirts and hats, with its storefront a giant thumbs-up Trump, looms over the nearby jason aldean bar…

I began to regret my choice of get-away destinations…

But we learned how to avoid that area and found the best bloody marys in town with a real good hamburger at the Italian place, I don’t know its name.

The weather was beautiful 70degrees and there was little wind, so our gondola rides to the top of Anakeesta were enjoyable, but not sure I’d do this experience in cold weather. I’d been sold on the rope walk in the treetops and we strolled to the back, stopping to shop some.

The place is smaller than I expected, but the rope bridge went on and on and I did not like it — why did I think I would??? Hey, it’s all about birthday boy, and he enjoyed watching me almost-freak-out on the swinging bridges…


We came back down the mountain for lunch and then went back toward sunset and opted to travel up in their truck. About halfway up we stopped to watch a bear slouching alongside us.

We had a drink and got the birthday-guy a new hat, took some pictures…


The next morning, we drove the familiar Little River Road through Smoky Mt. Natl Park toward Cades Cove and Townsend, the peaceful side of the Smokies. This is our usual destination, where we have stayed dozens of times over the last 35 years. The Air and Light are different over there, but I notice it’s growing, with several new galleries and restaurants. I want it to stay quiet! We resisted the urge to drive Cades Cove Loop and headed home.



The mountains helped to clear my mind, but I’m still not okay. I am to S in my CD collection, just past Santana, Bob Seger, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, to Paul Simon. Lord help me, I broke down listening to American Tune…

” I don’t know a soul who’s not been battered
I don’t have a friend who feels at ease
I don’t know a dream that’s not been shattered
Or driven to its knees
Oh, but it’s all right, it’s all right
For we lived so well so long
Still, when I think of the road
We’re traveling on
I wonder what went wrong
I can’t help it, I wonder what’s gone wrong”



I’m ready to haul out the holly, but waiting until Santa and the Mrs. arrive in the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade. I need a little Christmas…

Peace