It’s time for our Sunday morning chat. On Sundays, I ramble about what’s been going on, whatthe rest of the familyand I have been reading and watching, andwhat I’ve been writing. Some weeks I share what I am listening to.
Yesterday Little Miss and I visited my parents to have some dinner and make chocolate chip cookies with them.
We did that on a very windy, rainy day after traveling to drop The Boy off at a friend’s house 40 minutes away. On the way back from dropping him off, we stopped at a local library that was having a used book sale. It wasn’t a very exciting sale for us, sadly, but we did get a few books. There were no cozy mysteries. So sad. Yet, not really because I have so many to read right now.
The cooking making was interesting. We whipped up a batch but my mom said it didn’t look like there would be enough for her grandson, who loves chocolate chip cookies, so Little Miss and I added some more flour. But then we realized we would need more butter and another egg and then we tried to remember what we’d put in and what we hadn’t so the conversation started going like this:
Me: “We should put some more flour in.”
Her: “I don’t know about that.”
Mom/Grandma: “Did you even put the baking powder in?”
Her and me: “oops.”
Me: “I’d better put another half a cup of butter.”
Her: “This isn’t looking right.”
Me: “It looks super sticky and sort of runny.”
Mom/Grandma: “Add more flour.”
Dad/Grandpa, taking photos of it all and snickering: “I don’t know how these cookies are going to turn out.”
Me: “Well, we will eat them somehow.”
The cookies:
The cookies tasted great, by the way. Somehow I forgot to add this when I originally shared this post so if you see comments about that below — that is why. *snort* I am such an airhead sometimes.
While cooking the cookies we also had an incident where Zooma The Wonder Dog ran into a mud puddle twice trying to corner a cat at my parents’ neighbor’s house. I had to lock her in the bathroom, pull out the cookies, and then hose her down so she wouldn’t get the house all muddy.
She didn’t want to get in my parent’s walk-in shower but I finally managed to coax her in and pull the shower head off and wash the mud off.
We left not long after that and came home to enjoy some quiet time at home.
What I/we’ve been Reading/will be reading:
Currently:
I plan to finish The Divine Proverb of Streusel by Sara Brunsvold this week.
I am also reading The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett and started Priscilla by Jenny Knipfer.
Just Finished:
A Troubling Case of Murder on the Menu by Donna Doyle. This was a cute little, simple cozy mystery.
Soon to be read:
The Mystery at Lilac Inn by Carolyn Keene
Murder Always Barks Twice by Jennifer Hawkins
Death At A Scottish Christmas by Lucy Connelly
Little Miss and I finished The Middle Moffat by Eleanor Estes this week.
The Boy and I are looking for a new book to read for English for school and he is finishing a Warhammer book.
The Husband is reading Skinwalkers by Tony Hillerman.
What We watched/are Watching
This week I watched an episode of Lark Rise to Candleford, Bluey (because of course), and Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman.
I also watched a show called The Repair Shop on Britbox or Acorn or Masterpiece or some British channel on Amazon. I really enjoyed it. They are repair experts who repair special heirlooms for people and there are usually sweet stories behind the items.
This vlog by The Cottage Fairy about how she needed to take a break from social media to help quiet her mind. I could really relate to this because I felt the same way.
What I’m Writing
This past week I started book three in the Gladwynn Grant Mysteries. I’m excited to see where it goes and how it turns out.
I’m going to try my best to finish A Tale of Two Cities but I will also be starting Watership Down on Audio, read by Peter Capaldi.
Photos from Last Week
Here are some photos from the play of War of the Worlds that my husband was in last week. I wrote about that yesterday in my Saturday Afternoon Chat post.
Now it’s your turn. What have you been doing, watching, reading, listening to or writing? Let me know in the comments or leave a blog post link if you also write a weekly update like this.
We begin our retrospect of my week last week with last Sunday.
Why am I writing like I am a script writer for the Twilight Zone? I have no idea.
Maybe I’m just going a little squirrely because our area is still experiencing rain, cold, and wind instead of sun and warm days that I can spend on my front porch reading.
I was able to do that one day this past week and it was lovely.
We were, however, immediately plunged into cold again.
But I am jumping ahead. Let me go back to last Sunday when my family went to see The Husband in a play in a town near us.
He played a couple of different parts in a play based on the radio show War of the Worlds by Orson Wells.
It was a small cast of five very talented people who pulled the play off in brilliant fashion. It was a play within a play so it was a radio program telling the story of the original radio production of A War of the Worlds in 1938 and the aftermath. The director of the local play then tacked on a very interesting ending about how radio was a major source of news before that broadcast and then became even more of one in the subsequent years. The ending also touched on how news has become a 24/7 business now with it constantly at our fingertips, which isn’t always a good thing.
The Husband, in blue, and the man playing Orson Wells.There is tea in the glass, not actual alcohol. This kid is very talented.Another very talented young woman.The cigarettes weren’t real.
My parents were able to attend the play with us and it was the first time my mom had been out of the house since before Christmas because of her health issues and the weather.
She looked great and had a lot of fun. Dad did as well.
He found a vintage-style hat to wear for the occasion and afterward, I grabbed a photo of him and The Husband in their hats and a few photographs with Mom and Dad as well.
I also recorded a small “review” video from them afterward which was a lot of fun to make.
I’m, of course, sharing it here for you:
Dessert and drinks were offered during the play held in a large room in a community building in a town used for various events.
The Husband played an announcer and then a newspaper reporter, which was pretty much up his alley considering that’s his actual job. A former newspaper editor, a former boss of mine, portrayed Orson Wells and a couple of other parts.
When we first got there and my mom saw the program, she thought they had left The Husband’s name off and she was very indignant until I showed her where his name was.
She’s very defensive of her son-in-law, obviously.
On Monday we hoped to see some of the eclipse, even though I was nervous it might blind my children, but right when it was supposed to start, dark clouds moved in. We watched it on the TV instead and watched it get very dark outside. We were in the about 95 percent totality range where we are in Pennsylvania.
It was a very interesting experience, but would have been more interesting if we could have seen it live, I think.
The weather we could have used on Monday came Tuesday when warm, sunny weather set in. Little Miss and I spent much of the afternoon and evening outside doing schoolwork, reading, and for her, making a blanket fort on the porch swing.
By Wednesday it was raining and cold again and stayed that way the rest of the week, including today.
Luckily, we didn’t really have anywhere to go so we mostly stayed inside and did some schoolwork.
There was one creature who didn’t stay inside, however.
Wednesday night our neighbor sent us this photo:
It was taken from their doorbell camera and shows their backsteps and yard, which is about 15 feet, maybe, from our back porch.
Our neighbor told me what time the photo was taken and it was about the same time I had let our dog out the night before. She was sort of growling at something (the dog, not the neighbor) and now I know it was the bear.
So that was unsettling to find out. I now make sure to lock our outside screen door, the hinge of which was broken in some high winds a month or so ago and has been blowing open in the wind and the last thing I want is to open the inside door to look out to see if the bear is on the porch and be face-to-face with it.
While this past week was boring, next week should be a little more interesting since The Husband is on vacation and we plan to take a couple of day trips and simply spend some time together as a family. One trip will be to Reptile Land, which my daughter absolutely loved going to in the fall. She’s been waiting for months to go again.
So far, the weather is looking like it will be much warmer next week and less rainy. We will see, though, since Pennsylvania is always throwing us curve balls when it comes to weather.
Today we will be baking cookies with my mom and dad in the afternoon, after The Husband takes The Boy to see a friend who recently moved 45 minutes away.
The Boy will be spending the night and will be back tomorrow afternoon sometime.
I hope to spend my evening sipping tea and watching Lark Rise to Candleford or Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman with Little Miss since The Husband will be working.
How was your week last week?
If you are in the U.S., were you able to see the eclipse?
A new Christian Fiction series kicked off in January. With eleven books written by eleven authors, the Apron Strings book series follows eleven different women in eleven decades who are connected by one cookbook. That’s right the word for today is eleven. Each book can be read independently. One book will be released each month of 2024.
The series includes the following books (the first four are now out):
Today I have an interview with Patti Wolf, the author of the fourth book, Beatrice.
First, here is a description of Beatrice:
It’s 1950. WWII has been over for almost five years but Beatrice is experiencing her own personal conflict. Ten-hour working days at the hair salon have taken its toll on her, physically and spiritually. War years may have ended with daily life transitioning into a new normal, but normal can be a struggle for a 35-year-old single working girl.
Her sisters are married and have started families of their own. It’s the “baby boom” years and Beatrice longs for a family of her own. Instead, Beatrice lives with her aging parents and younger brother, Raymond, who carries scars from his time at war in France. Turning toward the kitchen for solitude and joy, Beatrice finds relief from her frustrations. It’s there Mama gives practical advice for life.
During a visit to her local bakery, a neighbor gifts her with a lovely cookbook. This gem opens a new world of baking to Beatrice. As she begins her cooking journey, anticipation fills her heart. Maybe, just maybe, marriage might be an ingredient for her future.
While things are cooking up in the kitchen, Beatrice’s heart is divided between two handsome suitors. Will she find a recipe for true love with advice from Mama? Or will she seek Godly direction in prayer?
Now, some questions for Patti.
Can you tell us a little bit about yourself?
I was raised in Milwaukee, WI but have always loved the country. I now live on 11 acres in the country. Much of my inspiration comes from all the creation around me. I started writing as a teen. My heart’s desire, in my twenties, was to publish a children’s book.
That didn’t happen until 40 years later. During the decades I’ve written curriculum, children’s and women’s devotions, Bible studies, more poetry than anyone can imagine, and organized two Christian Writer’s Conferences.
It is only in the last 3 1/2 years that I’ve finally been published with 8 books of fiction and 1 book of poetry. All are published through KDP, Kindle Publishing, and are available on Amazon under Patti Wolf. As for family, I am married, raised three boys and two stepchildren.
I am blessed with seven grandchildren. I attend a wonderful Bible Church and head up the Ladies’ Events. My best buddy is my dog, Teddy, who walks with me daily.
What is your latest book about? Who are the main characters and when and where does it take place?
I’ve published two books this year: Abigail’s 40 Days part of the “When Pages Turn” series. It is a story of the early church. Abigail befriends some of Jesus’s followers. She is searching for answers to the question of why her brother died. In the process, she gets to know more about the risen Savior.
Beatrice is the fourth book in the “Apron Strings” series and is a story that takes place in 1950. The inspiration for this book was created after my mother’s life.
Beatrice struggles with a deep desire to marry one day, trying to reach her damaged brother, and is adjusting to her elderly parent’s ever-changing situation. She lives in a Polish neighborhood on the south side of Milwaukee.
What is the overarching message of your latest books?
Both books contain characters who have a deep need for spiritual growth, to place their trust in God, and to overcome personal struggles.
Where can readers find out more about you and your projects?
Who of you had a chance to see the eclipse this week?
It was too cloudy for us so we watched it online.
Then we had one day of sun and the rest of the week was gloomy and depressing. That one day was glorious though. We sat on our front porch and read books and did our schoolwork.
Let’s get right to the most clicked posts for the week.
Now it is your turn to link up your favorite posts. They can be fashion, lifestyle, DIY, food, etc. All we ask is that they be family-friendly. You can link up posts from last week or even from years ago.
Also, please take the time to visit the other blogs on the link-up and meet some new bloggers!
When I was in elementary school, and probably a bit beyond, I would walk down the long driveway toward my home, knowing what waited for me there.
My mom would be in the kitchen, the smell of whatever she was cooking drifting to me as soon as I opened the door. That door opened into a dining room with one of the ugliest green carpets you have ever seen but I didn’t know it was ugly back then. In that room was a large dining room table to my left and in front of me was a dresser with a mirror.
To my right was the living room where our old black and white TV (later it was a color one our grandmother gave us when she got a new one) sat, ready to be turned on so I could flop down in front of it and eat a snack and watch Little House on the Prairie, which would come on around 4 on our local PBS channel. The show was based on the book series of the same name by Laura Ingalls Wilder.
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the show’s premiere so there has been a lot of talk about it. There was even a three-day festival recently held on the ranch where the show was filmed.
By the time I was watching the show in the mid-1980s, the show had been off the air for about three years so these were all reruns. I found it relaxing to watch a show about people living life in the later 1800s, experiencing life as pioneers on the prairie. I didn’t realize or comprehend some of the harsh conditions and darker storylines until I was older.
I was probably reading the books around the same time I was watching the show, but I can’t remember for sure. I do remember reading the books late into the night, sometimes pulling the covers over my head and using a flashlight to finish a chapter or two or three. They were paperback books that had a paper and ink smell that I credit for igniting my interest in all things printed – including the print media I would work in for almost 15 years.
Sadly we lost my set during our move four years ago and it still breaks my heart. I truly hope we find them packed away in some box somewhere in the house.
I remember Mom standing in my doorway one night on her way to bed saying, “Lisa, I love that you are reading but you’ll have to continue tomorrow because at this rate you’re going to have a very hard time getting up for school in the morning.”
I’m sure that the next morning was rough for me but I was not allowed to stay home because I’d been up late reading. Books later became an escape for me during school, which my introverted self was not a fan of. I read historical fiction throughout most of high school and I’d imagine that was because my first introduction into literature was through Laura’s historically-based books.
The Little House show wasn’t exactly like the books and that was fine with me. It was still fun seeing the characters come to life in a way through Melissa Gilbert and Michael Landon and all the other actors.
Watching clips of the recent 50th-anniversary festival on various social media outlets made me feel a type of connection with others who grew up watching the show. I did not, however, know as much about the show or remember as many of the episodes as some of those fans did. I was also not as obsessed as some of them, but, hey, they were having good, clean fun by dressing up as characters and waiting in long lines to get autographs from the actors who played the characters so more power to them.
I remember the earlier episodes the most, maybe because our PBS station only ran certain seasons before starting over again. I watched the rest of the seasons when I got older but remember them not being as magical to me as the earlier seasons.
Once Mary (spoiler alert) lost her eyesight and Laura lost her son in infancy, I started to get depressed and turn it off. It was all based on the true stories of the women, of course, but I still found it heartbreaking to watch. It was no longer the escape I thought I needed.
In real life, as detailed in the books and other historical sources, Mary Ingalls did lose her eyesight. Carolyn and Laura Ingalls both gave birth to baby boys that did not survive and, in fact, none of the Ingalls women could carry boys to term and in some cases they had no children at all.
Dean Butler, who played Almonzo Wilder, Laura’s husband, on the show spearheaded the effort for the festival, along with Alison Arngrim who played the easy-to-hate Nellie Olson.
It was nice to hear that, for the most part, the time filming that show was pleasant for the cast. While the woman who played Carolyn, Karen Grassle, has made some unpleasant accusations against show creator Michael Landon, the cast has still said that their experience filming the show and in the years afterward have been pleasant. Of course, Grassel didn’t have to make accusations about some things – many people know that Landon had an affair with a makeup artist while filming, something that destroyed his marriage. That affair resulted in his third marriage.
Grassel recently said in an interview that she was never able to clear the air, so to speak, with Landon about the issues between them (one large one having to do with Grassel’s lack of a pay raise while filming and another one having to do with jokes Landon would sometimes make on set) but she was able to talk to him before he passed away from pancreatic cancer in 1991 and they were able to get along well without bringing up the past.
What I learned from watching the retrospect of the cast members during the festival held a couple of weeks ago was that even with some of Landon’s failings many in the cast look back on their time on the set as a simpler time in their lives. They look to Landon as a father figure, who was not perfect, but who was still special and important to them.
Even with some hard moments between herself and Landon, I think even Grassel saw her life during those years as somewhat simpler, at least based on some of the memories she shared.
The set was relaxed and joyful and there was a lot of free time for the children to explore and simply be children. They played in the creeks and learned old-fashioned games and values that they carried with them throughout their lives.
Melissa Gilbert and I would not see eye-to-eye these days on some political or social issues, but we would see eye-to-eye on the idea of simple living. She spent many years in Hollywood working her way up the acting ladder, falling prey to the idea that to be happy in life you needed to work hard all of the time and look the way Hollywood said you should look. Now Melissa is in her 60s and she is embracing the simple pleasures of life. She’s let go of looking like a Hollywood starlet and she’s enjoying cooking on her own having a home in the country and just simply stepping away from the hustle and bustle of the rest of the world.
She co-runs a company called Modern Prairie and has fully embraced her past identity as the TV version of Laura Ingalls Wilder, even as some in the world want to criticize Wilder for the topics they feel she didn’t handle sensitively enough in her books.
Melissa’s brother Jonathan Gilbert played Willie Olson on the show and for years he didn’t attend fan events or even talk about his time on the show. He walked away from acting and became a stock broker for a few years. Now, though, as he moves through his 50s, he said at the festival that he sees his time on Little House as one of the times when he really feels like he was home.
There was a definite spiritual component to the show, spearheaded by Michael Landon’s faith. Some of you may remember he also developed and produced a show called Highway to Heaven starring himself as an angel who came to earth to help people. Victor French, who played Mr. Edwards on Little House, co-starred on Highway to Heaven with him.
Christianity was the main focus of the spiritual element, which could be seen in many of the episodes but especially the Christmas episodes and a two-parter called The Lord is My Shepherd. This is interesting because Landon was raised Jewish. His father was Jewish and his mother was Christian, but in interviews, he said the Christian holidays he celebrated were mainly for family time and not out of religious devotion. Michael was born Eugene Maurice Orowitz, by the way. He changed his name for acting purposes.
Ironically, after the divorce, his ex-wife, Lynn, did become a Christian and Michael’s son Michael Jr., became one as well and has since helped make some Christian movies and entertainment.
A couple of weeks ago I read a very interesting comment on social from someone who watched the show and picked up on the Christian undertones when they watched the show as a child, which led to an eventual life-changing experience.
“I had a realization as I was watching the Church service [at the festival] that I wanted to share,” Meryl Heilberg Jefferson wrote. “I was raised Jewish. My grandfather was actually a Rabbi. I was at my grandparents’ house every weekend from Friday until Sunday from the beginning of my memory. That being said, I was a voracious reader from a young age. Not to mention an AVID LHOTP reader and series watcher. I used to play LHOTP in the schoolyard, (It was vast like a prairie) across from my house. I had a SUNBONNET and prairie-style clothing. I was hard-core living the prairie life in the 1970’s. “
“In 2010 I became a Christian,” Jefferson continued. “(I had actually been attending churches long before, but afraid to say anything to anyone for fear of my family’s rejection.) I truly believe that one of my mustard seeds, God put MANY in my path, was my love for anything and everything that had to do with Laura Ingalls Wilder. Hearing Wendi Lou Lee (Hester Sue in the show) speak tonight really spoke to my heart and reminded me of some of the memories I had suppressed from my childhood. I think Michael Landon shared the Gospel with me. I wish he was here so I could thank him personally. It is one of the first things I will do when I see him in Heaven! I now wonder if that was his intent. Or, was he looking to put wholesome television in front of families.”
It may not have been Landon’s intention to bring a generation to Christ but in some cases, it was what he did.
I’ve seen people react in anger when someone says that the past was simpler, easier or more pleasant. People often shoot back with, “There was crime and war and horrors back then too. The time you lived in wasn’t so special.”
Yes, there was war, crime, sadness, heartache, and tragedy back when I was a child. The difference was that I didn’t have it shoved in my face all day long on my phone or computer, in the store, on TV, and anywhere else that I turn.
My parents didn’t shelter me but they also didn’t talk as openly about the sadness in the world, partially because it wasn’t something they could constantly learn about through computers, smartphones, or 24/7 news services.
So for me, it was a simpler time. It was a calmer time.
It was a time when I had a routine. I went to school and then no matter what kind of day I had I could count on coming home and my mom being there cooking dinner and me eating a snack (usually peanut butter on toast) while watching Little House on the Prairie reruns. Later the PBS station would switch between Little House and The Waltons so I also watched The Waltons. At 6 they would air either The Dick VanDyke Show or Burns and Allen.
These shows were comfort watches for me back then. Now that I am older, caught up in a world that seems to be spinning faster than ever, they have become even more important to me. They are now touching points for me — a point in my life I can reconnect with, find those simpler moments again, and escape, even if only briefly, from a world that makes less and less sense each day.
Here is an interview with Melissa Gilbert about the show three years ago.
And here is an interview with Alison Arngrim from the 50th-anniversary festival in California:
And here is one of my favorite scenes from the show:
It’s time for our Sunday morning chat. On Sundays, I ramble about what’s been going on, whatthe rest of the familyand I have been reading and watching, andwhat I’ve been writing. Some weeks I share what I am listening to.
My husband has been running every day this week for either work or a play he was rehearsing for but he still wanted to go to lunch and a used book sale 45 minutes away from us. We spent the morning and part of the afternoon doing that and I came home with a large stack of books, some children’s books, and some cozy mysteries. Today they had a $ 5-a-bag sale so we filled up two bags.
Little Miss picked out four for me but I rejected the one because I am not a huge fan of the author.
I told her I liked the cover very much though and thanked her.
Little Miss picked out several books with animals on them.
The Husband picked out a number of books, including two he had been looking for other places.
Today we will go see The Husband in his play. They are performing The War of The Worlds radio drama.
What I/we’ve been Reading
Currently:
Right now I am reading The Secret Garden by Frances Hodges Burnett, The Proverb of the Divine Streusel by Sara Brunsvold, and at night I’m reading a cute, short cozy mystery called A Troubling Case of Murder on the Menu by Donna Doyle.
Just Finished:
This past week I finished Murder in an Irish Village by Carlene O’Connor and Nightfall on Predicament Avenue by Jaime Jo Wright.
I hated Wright’s book by the end and will not be endorsing it in the future.
I liked Murder in an Irish Village and purchased a couple of other books in the series on the Kindle.
Soon/eventually to be read:
The Mystery at Lilac Inn by Carolyn Keene
Death At A Scottish Christmas by Lucy Connelly
Murder Always Barks Twice by Jennifer Hawkins
What everyone else is reading:
Little Miss and I are reading The Middle Moffat at bedtime.
The Boy is reading Horus Rising and The Pearl by John Steinbeck.
The Husband is reading … well, I have no idea. He’s been so busy this week I don’t think he’s even had time to read.
What We watched/are Watching
This past week I watched Dr. Quinn Medicine Women, To The Manor Born, and yesterday I watched a marathon of As Time Goes By and then a couple episodes of Mary Berry.
What I’m Writing
I finished Cassie and this week I hope to write some blog posts and then start Gladwynn Grant’s third book.
Now it’s your turn. What have you been doing, watching, reading, listening to or writing? Let me know in the comments or leave a blog post link if you also write a weekly update like this.
On Fridays I drive 20 minutes to pick up my groceries through a grocery order pick up. Most weeks I leave the kids home or take our daughter to my parents and leave my son home to hang out by himself, something he doesn’t get to do very often.
This gives me almost an hour to myself to listen to music or an audio book while I drive. I usually listen to an audio book and lately that book has been dramatizations of Jane Austen novels. Right now I am on Mansfield Park.
Listening to the book led me talking back to the characters and then talking to other cars around me when I reached the “city” (slightly larger town than our town) in a very posh British accent.
Life is depressing at times and I guess being goofy provides a nice distraction. The only thing is, my doors and windows are closed when I’m doing this craziness so no one can hear me. As I left Aldi after my pickup, though, I suddenly wondered if I had been speaking in a British accent to the girl who was loading my groceries into the trunk. I don’t know if we are supposed to or not, but I always get out to help.
When I did, I remarked on how lovely the weather was that we were having. I was joking because we’d been having sleet, then clouds, then sun, then sleet all day long. Oh and it was only 37 degrees and the wind was blowing. She laughed when I made the comment about the weather but a few minutes later when I was driving down the road to go home, I couldn’t remember if I’d asked her about the weather in my normal accent or my British one.
She may have been nervously laughing at me. Like how you would laugh at a crazy person and hope that appeases them and they don’t go over the edge any further than they already have.
Hopefully she just thought I was being silly if I did use the accent. She’s waited on me long enough now to know I am a little crazy, but mostly harmless.
I sent some voice messages to my friend Erin to show her how I was talking to the drivers around me and I have to be honest – I think Erin probably starting searching online for the symptoms of a split personality.
The poor woman has got to think I am crazy.
Erin and I connected through our blogs and she’s mentioned more than once she would love to meet me in person. I truly feel she might run for the hills if she met me in person because I’m not only crazy but I look a bit like a cross between a hobbit and a troll – well, at least on the days my hair doesn’t want to cooperate like today when it was all puffed out and windblown and not windblown in a sexy model kind of way. Wind blown in a crazy woman talking in a posh British accent in small town USA way.
I played my son the voice messages I had sent to Erin in Instagram and told him I might need therapy.
“Might?” he asked.
Using the silly accents is one way I deal with stress at times and I usually only do it front of family.
I do need therapy but being silly is a type of therapy for me and this week I needed it after realizing I have a lot more trauma from my former job as a newspaper reporter than I like to admit.
A book I was reading for a blog tour triggered some of that trauma and sent me into a weird head space for a couple of days this week.
I sank further into that weird headspace when I found out that the woman who was my roommate when I was in the hospital with Covid in 2021 had passed away in November and I didn’t even know it.
She lived about an hour from me and I didn’t stay in contact with her like I should. I saw her account on Facebook and thought I’d see if she had added anything that might indicate to me she was still alive and kicking.
I’d texted her a couple of times and she’d say she was doing well.
We weren’t friends on Facebook since I’d only really known her for four days in the hospital -where I listened to her almost die a couple of times.
We weren’t really friends in real life but I should have kept up on her. I should have visited her when I visited the area where she lives.
I’m very disappointed in myself for not checking in on her more and for it taking me this long to even know she died.
I spent most of my week trying to avoid ruminating on my sadness and that probably wasn’t healthy.
As I dealt with that, my son was dealing with the fact that the woman he rescued last summer had passed away a couple of weeks ago and yesterday he ran into the woman’s daughter in the local store.
We tried to see her a couple of times but she either wasn’t home or the last time she was in the hospital and we didn’t know it.
The daughter told my son how often the family thinks of him and appreciates how he saved their mom so she could have more time with them before she passed.
That was an emotionally heavy thing for him as well.
We will try to lift some of the heaviness today by taking a family trip to a town 45 minutes away for lunch and to visit a used book sale at the library in that town.
Tomorrow we are going to watch The Husband in a play he is in. It is a reenactment of the War of the Worlds radio show and The Husband is playing a couple of different parts in the play. It should be fun.
We are also glad this weekend that my sister-in-law is recovering well after her weeklong hospital stay and is celebrating her birthday today.
The whole week wasn’t heavy, thankfully, and I was able to get some reading done and plan for some blog posts I want to write, including:
One on The Little House on the Prairie show
One on what spiedies are and their history
One on foods exclusive to Pennsylvania or our region of the state at least
One on mystery shows I recommend in addition to the ones I’ve mentioned before
One on YouTube channels I enjoy
One on the history of Nancy Drew books.
I have a lot of blog post ideas but now I need some time to write them, which will be hard since I plan to start writing the third book in the Gladwynn Grant Mystery series soon.
That was a bit about my week this past week. How was your week last week? I would love to know. Let me know in the comments.
I hope everyone who is in the right location for spring is having a nice spring. If you’re entering into another season, I hope that it is going well for you too.
Let’s get right to our most clicked post for this week and some of the posts I decided to highlight.
The most clicked this week were three from Thrifting Wonderland:
Now it is your turn to link up your favorite posts. They can be fashion, lifestyle, DIY, food, etc. All we ask is that they be family-friendly. You can link up posts from last week or even from years ago.
Also, please take the time to visit the other blogs on the link-up and meet some new bloggers!
I am joining Jennifer at All 4 Boys for Currently for April after seeing this on Erin’s blog at Still Life, With Cracker Crumbs. This is a feature held the first Wednesday of the month where you share what you are currently …well, whatever the themes are for that month. This month the theme is what we are currently loving, looking forward to, buying, planting, and cleaning.
Currently Loving
I am currently loving reading The Middle Moffat by Eleanor Estes to Little Miss, who is 9. I read this book in March for Middle Grade March and really enjoyed it but it is even more fun sharing it with my daughter. It is old fashioned, sure, since it was written in the 1940s but that doesn’t bother me at all. It has some super cute stories in it.
I am currently reading Little Miss the chapter where the main character Janey (she’s about 10) is trying to keep the “oldest inhabitant” safe. The oldest inhabitant is a 99-year-old Civil War veteran whom the town is anxious to celebrate the 100th birthday of and Janey makes friends with him in the beginning of the book. Throughout the book she works hard to protect him from any harm and the friendship grows. It is super sweet and adorable.
I am looking forward to reading the other books in the series soon.
Looking Forward To
I guess I could have used the above sentence for this. However, in addition to looking forward to reading the other Moffat books, I am also looking forward to warmer weather.
The last couple of weeks have been very cold, rainy, snowy, and dreary in our neck of the woods and I really need some sun.
Life has been a little down lately and I’m hopeful the sun might cheer me up a bit. That and the blooming flowers which will be pretty to look at even if they trigger my spring allergies. The neighbor has a few daffodils in their yard so that’s been nice to look at.
Buying
A new planner. I don’t know how I got into buying planners that go from July of one year to July of the next but I have and now I can’t seem to get myself unstuck so I am buying another planner this week so I can plan further out than July of this year. I used to buy these huge planners, but now I buy smaller ones that I can slide into my purse and carry around. Not so I can look at it and remember what I have to do, mind you. Just carry around and look like I’m organized, when I am totally not.
Planting
I should be planting plants or vegetables this month, but I’m not. Gardens, flowers, plants – they’re all failures for me usually. I kill them and sometimes they even toss themselves off shelves instead of letting me take them home with me where they know they will die anyhow.
Instead of living things, I am trying to plant some more faith this month. Faith and gratitude. I have been horribly depressed, bitter, and sad about the state of the world this week and I don’t want to be that person so I am taking advice from a book I am reading and doing the things I want the future me to do and that includes being more positive than negative. I have failed this week so pray I get better for the rest of the month.
Cleaning
I’m not cleaning the way I should be cleaning. I always seem to get wrapped up in other things – like writing blog posts or dealing with my daughter’s friend dramas.
It seems like I clean my living room and an hour later I clutter it again. Since our dishwasher died several months ago, I have been cleaning a lot of dishes and I will be doing that again today. I will also do my best to finish cleaning my daughter’s room and sliding a new sheet on her bed.
How about you? What are you loving, looking forward to, buying, planting, or cleaning currently?