Saturday, March 2, 2013

Healing and Thawing

Today, Chris brought my keys back and drove the car over to the mechanics.  Tisha was laughing about my self-diagnosis of Alzheimer disease when I thought he took my keys on purpose a week ago. I envisioned being thrown into a nursing home. No such thoughts today because that was February and today we are in March.

Today, after two long walks in the sunlight, I was healing.

Once a week, I put my vitamins for the week in a pill holder. In December, I was taking a St. John's wort capsule a day. In January it was two and a Vitamin D3 capsule. In February, it was three St. John's wort, a Vitamin D3 and dark chocolate and I still wasn't making it.

Today I rejoiced in a sunny day that was eleven hours and fourteen minutes long. This evening, I dropped only one St. John's wort per day in the pill holder.  That and some dark chocolate should be enough. By the end of March the remedies go into the cabinet until December.

The big snowdrifts are still out there but today was a thawing day, a good thing.  Thirteen tulips and two daffodils are in bloom on my windowsills, but by tomorrow, the petals will begin to wither and finally die. That is OK, because some time in the next one or two weeks, snowdrops will push through the snow. They won't make a big show, they are too tiny, but they will be the whisper of spring.  A week later, the crocuses will start and then there is no going back.

When the car is repaired I will drive over to the Freedom area. I hope to be in time to say good-bye to the snowy owls before they fly back to the arctic. They will leave and by the end of the month the tundra swans will be back.

Oh March, you blessed month!




Friday, March 1, 2013

Short Stories

I grew up in the heyday of the short story. Every magazine my parents took contained at least one story. I pored over them from the time I learned to read.

Over the year, those stories disappeared and in time, so did most of the magazines. Only a handful of national magazines like the New Yorker and The Atlantic print short stories. Literary magazines continue that genre and now those have their own Internet sites.  Most of them pay their writers absolutely nothing except for a handful of issues. To me it is insulting to have to submit a story to a magazine that would not pay me anything and then have it rejected anyhow.

Wade Peterson, Bettyann Moore, and I have our own blog, Black Coffee Fiction http://blackcoffeefiction.blogspot.com to send our work out to readers around the world.  We make a little money on our ads and our book sales. We are never rejected.  Today when Wade's short story went onto our blog it was immediately being read by sixteen people who must have been waiting for it. 

This past few weeks I've been reading short stories by other authors like Sherman, Alexie, Junot Diaz, and Eudora Welty.  Then I got a copy of The Best American Short Stories for 2012.  These stories came from literary journals. What I found out that the editor considered the best were not exactly short stories.  They were depressing little sketches of miserable people. I am not against a depressing story, I write them all the time, but these were not my idea of what the genre should be. There was no beginning, no middle, no ending, no real tale. Metaphors and some clever writing yes, but no stories. I struggle to get through them.

The short stories I've admired over my life were written by people like Dorothy Parker, Eudora Welty, William Faulkner, and Ray Bradbury.  Those are the writers I try to emulate.  I may be out of style but I think I am readable.

*****
Tomorrow I join Susan Manzke and Colette Bezio at Sissy's in Seymour to set up a display of local writers' works.  Our books will be there in March and April.

I continue to look for places where we can sell our fiction.  





Thursday, February 28, 2013

February is Over!

I've managed to survive another depressing February. It amazes me that that is even possible to get to March and all its possibilities. Tomorrow there will be eleven hours and nine minutes of daylight and on a sunny day at that.  Oh the bliss.  It will be cold of course, but not cold enough to keep me holed up in the house.  By the end of March, there will be over twelve hours of daylight. I will go from depression to an elation that lasts for months.

It looks to be a chillier March than last year's when Gary and I canoed the Wolf River on the 11th. Still the swans should be returning to the Shiocton marshes along with many other migratory birds and I will be there to watch their arrival, checking them off on my Great Wisconsin Birding and Nature Trail list.

By April 1st we may be guarding Sturgeon along the Wolf River.  Soon after that is the annual Midwest Crane Count.

One event I will miss in March is Bill Staines' concert at Mosquito Hill on March 2.  Gary will still be in Illinois and my car will be in the shop.  Bill has a new CD out, too, but I guess I will have to wait until 2014 to get that one. Meanwhile, I will listen to his songs on Spotify.

Gary says he will be going to Canoecopia a week from tomorrow, since the drive from Dixon to Madison is the same length as the drive from Seymour to Madison. He says he might find a kayak there he likes.  I don't mind not going, I hate crowds, but I am asking him to pick up some good Ontario maps I can use in July. I will be leaving on the trip directly after attending a summer solstice party.

February is gone.  Spring and summer beckon me.



Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Malady of the Season

No matter what anyone says, February is the longest month in the year. The gray skies, the snow, the cold, what's to like?

Gary laughs when I come up with the imaginary illness that comes with Seasonal Affective Disorder. Last year, I thought I had a brain tumor.  One year I convinced myself I had ovarian cancer even when I knew that after the hysterectomy, I had no ovaries.

I know it's all in my mind, but my mind doesn't function in February. This year, I came up with Alzheimers so I've gone to the all time best brain malfunction.

On Sunday, after diagnosing what's wrong with my car, Chris went home with my car keys, leaving the Mercury Sable sitting on the driveway.  He'll be back next weekend to take the car to the mechanic.

So here I am thinking he took the keys on purpose because he no longer trusts his aging Mum on the road.  Paranoia is part of SAD.  I know that, but it doesn't help.  But by the time Chris comes here on Saturday, we'll be in March, which makes all the difference in the world. There will be warmer days,  my birthday, the equinox and Easter.  

Now that's a month I can celebrate.


Tuesday, February 26, 2013

The Final Trip

I got a notice from the veterinarian that Rascal is due for his shots but we won't be taking him for a while. 


As I type this, Rascal is sleeping in the cat bed next to this computer. He hasn't moved in an hour.

This is how he spends his days. Sometimes he gets up, stretches, goes into another room and finds another sleeping spot. He particularly likes sleeping at the foot of my bed but that means climbing stairs so it doesn't happen as much as it used to. When he shows up in the middle of the night I know he needs to be there, so I am careful to not bump into him.

Rascal is now in his last days. I can feel his bones through his fur, which when it isn't thinning, mats up. He isn't eating all that much. He isn't cleaning himself the way he should. I've had old cats before. I see the signs.

He was born in July of 1993, which means he will be twenty years old if he makes it that far.  He'll continue sleeping and eating, but the time is coming soon when he can't make the litter box, when his bones hurt so much he can't climb steps anymore. Then he'll finally take that trip to the veterinarian.  

Monday, February 25, 2013

Tulip and Banana Bread Therapy


Seasonal Affective Disorder is an on again, off again syndrome.  Last night I was near tears.  This morning I woke up to a warm sunny day.  I was able to walk three miles around town, get into the back yard to fill a couple of bird feeders and clean up some of the miscellanous stuff in the garage.  For today I was happy. Tomorrow it might snow and I start all over.

Even in my worst state I need only look at my indoor spring garden..  As of this morning eleven tulips were in bloom in my living room window. Tisha told me yesterday that when she first saw them through the window she thought they were fake flowers. When I took this photo I saw what she meant.

They will wither of course, but by then there will be snowdrop and crocus shoots outside and the gardening season will be on.

In the meantime I am turning to cooking to keep my spirits up.  Tonight it was banana bread, made from my favorite recipe. I sliced up some strawberries because strawberries in their own juice on a slice of banana bread topped with whipped cream is one of the best treats on earth.

I'll let tomorrow take care of itself. 

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Photography, Video Games and Brake Lining

Chris, Tisha and Evan were here this afternoon.

The first thing I had to do was admire Evan's hand held tablet computer. He could play video games but better than that, he could draw pictures and take photos, even videos. I think I was fourteen when I first got a camera, a little box job, and here is my seven year old grandson taking photos digitally.  He had taken a photo of himself and superimposed a Mario Brother on top, which was amusing.  Then he did the same with Rascal Cat who looked very interesting with a big black mustache. Evan called the picture Meow-io.  He has inherited his father's love of puns.



Then he wanted to show me how to play Skylander but honestly, one video game looks like another, with a lot of shooting and banging. Apparently he is very good at it. I wouldn't be so I just watched. This summer, perhaps we can go on a photo shoot together.

While this was going on, Chris took a look at my car, found there was no longer any brake fluid. He went out and got some, poured it in the car and watched it leak out.  Sure enough, the problem was the brake line. Only a twenty dollar replacement part, he said, but he didn't know about labor.  He suggested I call tomorrow and make inquiries of the mechanics about labor costs.

Then we had supper at Kary's Restaurant. Evan gobbled down his meal and went back to his photography. Yes, that is something we can enjoy together.

Then they were gone.

I called Gary who said I should get the car to the mechanics right away tomorrow but that is not to be. Chris inadvertently took my car keys home with him.  It will be a day or two before I get them back.  For the time being it doesn't make much difference.  I have no plans to leave town for the next week or two. Nothing in Seymour is more than a mile from here so I can walk where I need to go. If it snows, I stay here.

See, isn't life simple?