May 22 2019

Promise (Five Minute Friday)

Has anyone ever told you that you have promise? Maybe as a way of describing some moderate amount of talent or skill? Have you ever promised to do a favor for a friend? Of course, you have. Promises are all around us. They are part of wedding vows and contracts. If you have bought a house or car on credit you likely signed a promissory note. That is a fancy word that means you promise to pay it back with interest.

You may be wondering if any of our promises can be believed in the world we live in today. If you have been lied to before, and honestly who among us hasn’t at one time or another, then you may well have trouble trusting anyone at their word. Your word is your promise. If you break your promise, your honor is at stake. We were raised to believe that honesty is always the best policy. While I still believe that with all my heart, I can also make a case for those little white lies we tell when someone asks if the pants or skirt they have on makes their read end look big, for example. We were taught to be nice, and that if you can’t say anything nice, you shouldn’t say anything at all. It is tough to be nice and yet never tell those little fibs that avoid hurting someone else’s feelings. When you go to court and get sworn in, you swear/promise to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God, all while your hand is on The Bible.

I do my best to keep my word no matter what and I try to avoid telling fibs just to avoid hurting someone’s feeling. It isn’t too difficult. You can usually think of something positive to save that is true, and thus avoid telling even the tiniest of lies. Once someone has been caught in a lie, it is very hard to trust that person at their word the next time. Let your word be your bond that guarantees you will do what you have promised. It makes life so much easier when you don’t have to remember which stories you told to which friends or family. Just tell the truth and the truth shall set you free. Mom was right, honesty still is the best policy.

This post is part of the weekly Five Minute Friday link-up!
The prompt this week is: Promise
The assignment: Write for five minutes on the word of the week. This is meant to be a free write, which means: no editing, no over-thinking, no worrying about perfect grammar or punctuation. Just write.

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May 16 2019

Practice (Five Minute Friday)

As I sit here writing this on my front porch, I practice feeding the little squirrel we have dubbed “Buddy”. He nervously comes to grab peanuts in the shell from my outstretched hand. Yes, this takes practice. I have to steady my nerves so my hand won’t shake while I wait for him to grab the peanut between his teeth. It takes practice trusting me to feed him and not harm him. It is a relationship that has built up slowly over time. It began with a sweet little squirrel we dubbed Suzy, but we haven’t seen her around for a few weeks. Buddy is definitely NOT Suzy. He doesn’t quite trust us as fully as Suzy did yet. Suzy would come running when Hubby or I walked out of the house and called, while the other squirrels would run away in fear. For a while we had both Buddy and Suzy visiting us on the porch at the same time.

The storm really whipped up quickly to the point that the rain was blowing in on my turquoise table as I sat writing. Because I didn’t want my computer getting wet, I had to take cover in the house instead, but not to worry I left a big hand full of peanuts on the porch for Buddy. We can practice again another day.

In case you are curious here are some videos of either my Hubby or I feeding our squirrels.

This is the first time I caught a video of me feeding Suzy. I’ve been touched by a squirrel!

Here is My Son feeding Buddy. My Son is the one that named him Buddy and Suzy was on the porch that day too. As you can see, it takes practice, patience and most of all trust on both the feeder and the squirrel’s part to make this work.

This is me feeding some of the backyard squirrels we call them the fake Suzys. They are way too skittish to be the real Suzy.

Here is Hubby feeding Buddy. He is getting a little more comfortable around us every day.

Many things in life take practice, and of those almost all take patience as well. What have you decided to practice lately? Care to share? If you want to share, please do so in the comments below.

This post is part of the weekly Five Minute Friday link-up!
The prompt this week is: Practice
The assignment: Write for five minutes on the word of the week. This is meant to be a free write, which means: no editing, no over-thinking, no worrying about perfect grammar or punctuation. Just write.

Category: Animals, Family, Fearless, Five Minute Friday | Comments Off on Practice (Five Minute Friday)
May 7 2019

Opportunity (Five Minute Friday)

This week, I am determined to get the Five Minute Friday post written before the last minute to post it on Thursday. I have been mulling over the prompt for the week since Friday night trying to figure out what I had to say about it. What I came up with is that opportunity is what you make of it.

I am forever telling anyone who will listen what a wonderful thing our local public library is. I have also said for many years that ANYone can learn with a library card in a cardboard box. You don’t need a computer, a fancy place to live and a top-notch school. If you want to learn, you will find a way to do it. There is a free education waiting at the local library and all you need is a library card. Well, that and the ability to read, I suppose. When I think of the thousands of books I have devoured over the years by using my library card and all the money those books would have cost if I had to buy them, I likely could have bought a new car with the money I had saved by checking them out.

It isn’t just books that the library has offered up over the years. When the kids were little, they loved the VHS tape of “Corduroy” the little bear who was found in the department store and taken home by the little girl who loved him. There was also the oh, so useful cassette tape, “Slumberland”, that would put the kids to sleep if they were still awake after their first choice of tape was over. There were music CDs and then movies and whole seasons of tv shows to binge watch on DVDs. Now they offer up free courses online, audiobooks, ebooks, streaming video and so much more. They regularly offer the ability to read entire articles from Consumer Reports to help me do the research needed to decide which major appliance brand and model is the best fit for our home. They offer free classes on more subjects than I could study in a lifetime. They even offer language courses. So you see with something as small as a library card, even if you lived in a cardboard box in an alley somewhere, you have the opportunity to learn as much as you want. They even offer a place to learn to read if that isn’t a skill you already possess. So the opportunity is there, I hope you will take the time to take advantage of all your local library has to offer.

This post is part of the weekly Five Minute Friday link-up!
The prompt this week is: Opportunity
The assignment: Write for five minutes on the word of the week. This is meant to be a free write, which means: no editing, no over-thinking, no worrying about perfect grammar or punctuation. Just write.

Category: Five Minute Friday, Learning, Reading | Comments Off on Opportunity (Five Minute Friday)
April 26 2019

Touch (Five Minute Friday)

Of my four grandparents, the only one I recall meeting was my paternal grandmother. She did not have what I would call the grandma touch. I have at least two vivid memories that stand out to me when I think of her. It might be important to note that she was a widow for a few years by the time these memories took place.

When we were teens my uncle and aunt would bring my grandma down to visit with us for the day while they drove to a different town to visit with my aunt’s family for Christmas. Our city was on the way between where they started out and where they needed to end up so it worked out pretty well.

On this particular day, my mother was preparing a turkey dinner with all the fixings. This may well have been more of a meal than we normally would have been able to afford, but because grandma was coming it needed to be special. And to us it was. I distinctly remember my grandma asking my mother what we were having for dinner. My mom told her we were having the turkey dinner with all the fixings that normally went with it. Grandma rudely answered that she couldn’t stand turkey. Well, mom being the person she was and trying to make everyone happy, quickly pulled a foil-wrapped ham out of the freezer. Now mind you, this was well before the microwave was a common household appliance, so the only way to thaw it was to bake it in the oven in the hope that it would thaw enough to cut a few slices and serve them along with everything else as though it had been planned that way all along.

This might not sound so bad to you, but it probably messed up the family food budget for the next while. You see, we were poor. There were six of us in the family and at least three of us four kids were in our early teens by then. We were likely scheduled to make several meals from that turkey and the ham was probably being saved for some week well into the future. We didn’t eat ham dinners very often. So the fact that once meat had thawed it couldn’t be frozen again meant we would be eating a lot of meat in the next few days before it could spoil. Once the meat was cooked, it could be frozen, but it might well end up getting freezer burn and wouldn’t be the same as it should have been, to begin with.

The second memory was after I was married and had my first born who was about eighteen months at the time. My older sister and I had taken my son and my brother’s son who were just 18 days apart in age up to visit my grandmother in the old-age home she lived in. When we walked through the door, she took one look at me and said, “Karen, how did you get so fat?” I’m pretty sure I said, “Gee grandma, I don’t know. I guess I ate one too many desserts and, poof!” The entire time we were there she was nervous about the boys getting into things. Now we had my sister and I to divide and conquer so to speak, so they weren’t going to be causing any trouble. Besides, they were very well behaved.

I also remember that when mom would send her the 5×7 photos we had taken each fall at school for Christmas, that she would send us back the ones from the year before, simply switching them out of the same frames. Now that I am older, I understand this was likely her way of not having to deal with clutter, but it always set wrong with me. As I said, she just didn’t have the grandma touch.

Once I dug a little deeper into her genealogy, I began to understand a little more about why she may have been the way she was. It seems that when her Irish father and English mother got married, her mother’s family disowned their daughter and later left her only $1 in their will so she couldn’t contest it. So she never really got to know her maternal grandparents.

Then, her Irish grandparents listed themselves as widowed in the 1900 census although they were clearly both still alive and even living in the same county, though in different townships. In her grandfather’s will, he mentioned that he did not want his wife to get the customary one-third widow’s right as she had kept all the money the children had earned while growing up. He also didn’t want his oldest daughter to have anything either because she was mean to him. Family stories say he was a drinker and she was not a nice person. This might or might not be the case, but after learning all this it was much easier to forgive my grandmother for not having the touch. How could she? She never had the example of what a kind caring grandmother was supposed to be like. I figure she did the best she could with the hand she was dealt. By the time we came along, she had already been a grandmother to my uncle’s three kids for about ten years or so and maybe they got a different sort of grandmother out of the deal, who knows? My dad was so obviously not her favorite child, but that is a story for another post.

This post is part of the weekly Five Minute Friday link-up!
The prompt this week is: Touch
The assignment: Write for five minutes on the word of the week. This is meant to be a free write, which means: no editing, no over-thinking, no worrying about perfect grammar or punctuation. Just write.

April 18 2019

Lack (Five Minute Friday)

I have struggled for years with lack. I lack the trim and toned body I’d like. I lack the will power to stick to lifestyle changes needed to get said body. I lack the self-esteem and confidence I have envied in others. I lack the ability to spell that I had back in grade school. I lack patience sometimes. I lack the funds needed to retire anytime soon. I lack adequate sleep most days and I lack a good reason for staying up late most nights. I often lack inspiration when I sit down to write. I lack energy and enthusiasm for serious exercise.

Ok, enough negativity already. Let’s talk about what I don’t lack. I never lack the desire for love and friendship. I never lack an opinion although sometimes I wisely keep it to myself. I don’t lack the constant love of reading and books, or learning in general. I don’t lack curiosity, though again, I don’t always ask the questions I’d like to know the answers to. Most of all, I never lack faith. That is what gets me through all the other times when I am lacking in one thing or another.

What do you lack? How do you deal with that lack in your life? Feel free to let us know in the comments below.

This post is part of the weekly Five Minute Friday link-up!
The prompt this week is: Lack
The assignment: Write for five minutes on the word of the week. This is meant to be a free write, which means: no editing, no over-thinking, no worrying about perfect grammar or punctuation. Just write.

Category: Five Minute Friday | Comments Off on Lack (Five Minute Friday)