I searched the Internet for appropriate attire of the MoB (mother of the bride).
Wednesday, August 22, 2012
transitions
Can I interest you in admiring some more humming birds? This
time I didn’t even leave the porch. Hence the quality of the photos.
(I mean, you need only compare that to a photo of breakfast -- taken inside the screened space...)
One more time, though. The feisty humming bird:
It was a silly day, actually. Ed and I both stayed on the
porch for a very long while. I had purchased something many, many weeks ago, to wear for my daughter’s
wedding and I never bothered taking it out of the box, let
alone trying it on for size. Today I did both and it’s fair to say that it was
very difficult to breathe with that thing zipped up to the top. So suddenly I
have the classic complaint – I have nothing to wear.
I searched the Internet for appropriate attire of the MoB (mother of the bride).
I searched the Internet for appropriate attire of the MoB (mother of the bride).
Ed suggested a t-shirt with a handpainted sign – something
to the effect of “I am the happy mother.” I said no. And I dared ask if he
maybe wanted me to rent him a suit for the occasion. I got a clear and very
unambiguous answer to that one. I would not be surprised if he himself wore a t-shirt that said
“I am the happy mother.” He does not much pay attention to the lettering on
t-shirts.
In the late afternoon we finally made our way to Woodman’s,
Madison’s most unpleasant grocery hangar and Walmart’s, the world’s most
unpleasant store of any kind. It had to be done. I tried to speed through both, but
that’s not easy. Ed gets distracted by such things as pink tennis balls. They
support cancer research, I tell him. At 2 cents per container of balls? Very
generous. We buy them anyway.
At Walmart’s, we also look for the free blood pressure
measuring device. We each take turns measuring our blood pressure. The trick is
to do it enough times until you get a result you really can be proud of. It took Ed only three
times and it took me four. I attribute it to my recently poor lifestyle habits – the ones that
have accompanied me through out this writing frenzy. I am not surprised that
writers never look especially healthy.
At home, I reheat the chili and I make a fresh salad and Ed
bikes (because it’s Wednesday) and I think -- even in this holding pattern,
where it’s not quiet yet time to work, but it’s no longer a free summer, where
the weather is still very warm, but the mornings are cool, fall-like almost,
where I’m one foot here and the other there -- even in this time, life remains
very, very good.
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
cornbread
I’m downsizing again. Not at the farmhouse. In my office. I
want to offload a chair, a desk, a mini refrigerator where I once kept milk for
coffee. I want the feel of emptiness. To do away with clutter.
One odd thing about my office is that it is filled with a
hodgepodge collection of my own furniture. I’d come to the Law School from a
nonprofit and that nonprofit had so few resources that many of us purchased our
own furnishings when working there. It was all second hand and a tad dated, even two
dozen years ago. Today, it’s downright retro.
I could have done what everyone else does when they accept
work at UW – filled my office with whatever the school had to offer. But I hated
to see my old pieces go to waste and so I brought them with me and moved them in.
But here’s a reality: my office is small and the furniture
is clunky. You know how desks were once massive and heavy? That’s my desk. And another important point: I never use that desk. I remain in a corner, at a tiny
table where my computer sits and the big wooden desk is just a showpiece, nothing
more. Since I no longer have sentimental attachment to such things as ancient heavy desks -- out it goes. And the old chair and the refrigerator for the milk that
I haven’t stored for years.
Ed, ever the entrepreneur, asks – how much did you get for
it?
Nothing.
Nothing?
I gave it all away. To my colleagues. I’m not going to
charge my colleagues for my old stuff.
I see pity in his eyes. He’s thinking that I truly do not
know how to be a capitalist. We are different in this way.
So this is what I did today: I remotely cleaned out my
office. It was significantly less satisfying than writing my book, but it had
to be done.
Earlier, I watered...
...and then we eat a late breakfast on the porch, followed
rather quickly by a lunch on the porch...
Writing, by the way, is terribly unhealthy and I watch
myself deteriorate into a state of atrophy and physical lethargy that is quite unusual for me. The best that I can
say for myself these days is that we occasionally play tennis. As compared to our usual
activities, that’s rather pathetic.
So now that the school year is almost upon us and I am indeed writing/editing my book less, I think I should return to moving more. We
don’t bike to Paul’s (you have to understand – it’s really tough to get to his
café now, as the roads between us an his place are all torn up because,
well, because people believe in highways and expensive and irrelevant exit
ramps more than they believe in trains... harrump). We bike to Lake Waubesa.
And lo, there is a tennis court right by it! Not a great
tennis court – it’s riddled with cracks through which weeds grow, but it’s
empty (who would want to use it, given the proximity of very excellent courts to
the west of us) and so we play.
And after, I sit Ed down on a chair out front...
...and I trim his beard.
I'll be doing this on the 20th of each month (okay, I’m a day late).
Because it’s a pleasant reminder of the day we first hung out together.
Ocotober 20th. Seven years ago.
Dinner? Well, one has to do something with Farmer Lee’s
cucumbers and all those tomatoes. I make a salad out of the both and then a
huge pot of turkey chili – with
multiple tomatoes from the
garden. And because I miss putting things in the oven, I bake a cornbread.
The first time I ever came to Ed’s farmette, he had baked cornbread for me. Probably he'll have liked his own better. It was out of a mix and very very cheap.
The first time I ever came to Ed’s farmette, he had baked cornbread for me. Probably he'll have liked his own better. It was out of a mix and very very cheap.
Monday, August 20, 2012
so beautiful
The tail end of the painting of the farmhouse is getting to
be a tail without a visible end.
Are you finishing the trim today? It’s just one more of the
series of brilliantly sunny days we’ve been having.
I’m stuck. I know he has a rotting board to replace and
there isn’t a good way of doing it except lying flat on the sloping roof over
it. I can understand why he would postpone that step. But there’s more to it:
I’m not sure if I can get the wasps out from where they’re hiding.
Can’t you just for that one bit of wasp nest spray them out
of there?
It would kill them. I may have to wait until fall, when the
cold air pushes them out.
Ah.
And the front entrance. That same front entrance, for which I had
drawn elaborate designs last year. Will you get to that this year?
Oh, I don’t know.
Oh, I don’t know.
On the other hand, as we sit over breakfast on the porch, he looks up and once again throws out the idea of
painting the ceiling white. We’ve left the wood naked and plain and we think a coat of
white paint would considerably spruce things up.
Such a project though. I suggest doing two beams and
sections a day. We’d be done in ten days.
Maybe...
That’s Ed’s operative word. Maybe. And since most of the work that accompanies these projects
is done by him, I can’t say that I am in a good position to nudge things
forward. And so I take care of the flowers and we talk about projects and the days
pass and they’re good days and really, everything else is less important.
Okay, let me walk you through the pics for today:
Breakfast on the porch. No surprise there. Yawn...
Then, as we pluck beetles off the rose bushes, I
look up and see yet again (and I’m sure it wont be the last time) how lovely
the farmhouse is right now, framed by roses and coreopsis and nasturtium and
yes, still the lilies and cone flowers and and and... all of it.
But back to the ongoing competition between the two of us:
who can spot the most beetles to pluck. In doing this, we pay close attention
to the bees – today we find a new friend – the brown bee that I
generally associate with hives in Poland or France, not one we’ve seen here in
recent years and so we are jubilant. Every new type of bee is a friend.
And I check my little Yellow Rose of Texas (well, she’s
probably not from Texas, but it recalls that song) and noted that she’s putting
on that final burst of bloom before retreating for the season. So, here’s one
for you, girl. You stuck it out in your new home this difficult year. I’m
proud.
...while Isis watches...
...and Ed tempts me with melted curds on garden tomato.
As for my big writing project – well, I’m pretty much done
for now. I need to do a big rewrite (it’s not the first, not even the
second, more like the third and in some section, the fourth or fifth) and I want to take my time with that. By
this time next year, I’ll surely be finished.
The last paragraphs were crafted while humming birds darted
ever so quickly in and out of my flowers (Look carefully -- they're there!). I’ll always remember that.
So, I should celebrate, no? In my own way, I do. We go to Paul’s and Ed
dozes and I drink a blueberry tea and after, we play a spirited game of tennis
and he tells me – you’re getting better...
In the evening, I toss a salad, steam corn cobs and sautee
Oyster mushrooms, eggs and garden chives. Our resident farmer’s sister comes to
our door and gives us many many cucumbers. The day ends with the fresh and honest. Life is so beautiful.
Sunday, August 19, 2012
from the porch
Well now, if you don’t call this a tough, tougher than nails
posting day, I don’t know what would qualify. First of all, to give myself time, more time to write and also to align myself a tad more with the person at home who scorns neatness, I have switched to a
biweekly (rather than weekly) farmhouse cleaning schedule (with spot checks for
cat hairs and such in between). That bi-weekly cleaning moment fell on today. The still sore back made scrubbing the shower stall to a shine a challenge.
But wait, it gets more boring than that. I put on a
ridiculous outfit of tight sweats and a petticoat type thing (because it was
there, okay?) and set about to listen to hours of tapes. I had to do it and I
had the time today to do it and so I listened and took notes. These tapes are only somewhat
useful in that they let me do some fact checking in the text of my writing
project, but I would be negligent not to listen to them (again – I’d already
heard them some years back). So I listened. From the porch.
In between there are the usual computer skirmishes and
searches. (It’s very easy to misplace tapes when they’re actually not tapes at
all but files on a computer and who knew which computer – turns out not this
one, nor that one and not on the
back-up hardrive and if you haven’t searched for stuff on your back-up hardrive
lately, you haven’t lived!)
And Isis came and went and the sun came and went and
sometimes Isis and the sun came and went together...
And then I wrote some more.
And then I wrote some more.
In the evening, we had a pleasurable hour with my daughter
and her fiancée and that’s always a sweet way to interrupt a Sunday. They're tired, but don't let that fool you. They are happy.
We eat out on the porch and it storms, briefly but violently and that makes me want
to put down the (eek! metal!) fork and go right back inside, but I am surrounded by
braver (and more realistic) types and so we persevere and here I am alive to
tell you about it.
Eventually the sun does shine again.
After, he and I are settling in to an evening of writing, watching,
reading and listening to the animal upstairs (in the attic?) move around.
Can it chew through a wall? I ask.
I don’t know, Ed tells me.
I sometimes think that he’d like these things to happen, just so he can learn how to fix the damage.
It's a beautiful night out there on the porch. Inside as well.
I sometimes think that he’d like these things to happen, just so he can learn how to fix the damage.
It's a beautiful night out there on the porch. Inside as well.
Saturday, August 18, 2012
fizzy
You got twelve little plants staring at you for several days
now, twelve orphan plants and you’re gonna say – sorry, my back is out? Of
course not. You’re going to get off your high writing horse and pick up that hand
spade and start digging.
But not right away.
I wake up and I say to Ed – today I have bills to pay, a
farmhouse to clean, stuff to plant and a book to write. Which should I do
first?
He says – you’re on a roll. Get writing.
But breakfast is back in the game plan. I’m at my best if we
have a few minutes over a morning meal. So we have the morning meal.
And a quick walk through the flower beds.
And then -- back to my text.
Later, I do break. For an hour. My daughter and I shop the market on Saturdays and this is a routine I wont put aside.
She’s radiant, my girl is. One month to a wedding, the sun’s
shining, market flowers are cheap
and plentiful – she is in that wonderful frame where every color is even more brilliant than it seems.
I can understand that. I visit that frame now and then myself.
She’s off...
...and I return home.
...For a hefty dose of writing. No
Paul’s, no tennis, no bike ride. Just me on the porch with my laptop. No
interruptions.
...Until evening and then the guilt about the little orphan
roses seeps in and back pain or no back pain I decide to give it a go. I’m good
for ten out of twelve little roses. May they thrive.
And now I turn to dinner. It has to include
tomatoes. We’re brimming with them and both Ed and I brought in a new haul this
evening, so tomatoes it is: a salad with five very different types of tomatoes, and, too, eggs, and capers, and blue cheese, and
because I want to make it just a notch special, I open my precious tin of sardines
(yes, sardines) from France. Why anyone would bring back a tin of sardines from
France may puzzle you, but when you're at a market there and vendors are showing off their sardines and they're cheap and in olive oil, you say -- why not. [Question for you: do you know how many sardines there are in this French can of sardines? Answer: Two. Sardine class indeed!]
So life is good. No, better than that: effervescent. And the
sun continues to shine and I’m on an edit now and I already know what my next
book project will be.
Friday, August 17, 2012
bright and beautiful
Perhaps I’ve neglected to say this and so if you’re not from
these parts, you wouldn’t know – we are in a spin of the most beautiful days
you could imagine. For this reason alone, I’m glad we did not go to South
Dakota (though I suspect that there, too, the weather has been tremendously
great... we tend to imitate what South Dakota has already done).
You dream about days like this – where the night is cool and
the day starts out cool, so that you wear a sweater and wait for the magic
moment when you can let it go. The sun is brilliant, the sky is brilliant –
it’s all brilliant. There are no bugs, the breeze is potent but not
overbearing, I mean, it’s what we crave the 364 days of the year that are
not this.

Of course, it hardly matters. I am on a writing roll. I wake
up at night and think of ways to improve sentences and when I get up, I don’t
even bother with the delightful little breakfast on the porch thing, I slop the
cereal and the fruit into the bowl and I sit down on the couch and get to it.
With pillows to support my aching back, because – did I tell you? I threw out
my back a couple of days ago and things haven’t been the same since. Especially
things that require me to be still and in an upright position.
I took (lackadaisically) a handful of photos today, knowing
damn well that the moment would come where I have to post and if there are no
photos and no great events or thoughts of events then it all gets mighty dicey
at 11 pm, when the Cinderella hour is nearing and Ocean draws a blank.
I was helped by a short venture to town (for groceries: I
know things are bad when there’s no milk for Isis, or for my morning coffee and
there is only one egg for the bailout dinner should we be needing a bailout
dinner). Once downtown, it’s easy to zip to the Union by the lake and to look
out at the boats and admire it all and there you have it – a photo that, at the
very least, shows off this most exhilarating day.
You’ll think that there should be some dinner photos too?
Well, alright, but it’s nothing to hold your breath for. Take-out Chinese.
We did play tennis (as I said – no day shall pass without
some movement in it) and after dinner, Ed climbed the ladder and painted a few
more inches of trim...
...and I think I’ll end with that. Because I can think of those pedantic types
who would just up and paint the whole house in one season. Bu Ed didn’t do that. We left the last bit for this year and he’s dragging it out ‘til
the last minute. As if it weren’t a chore at all. As if painting trim (or
snipping beetles off of rose bushes, or any number of things we do here, at the
farmette) is the very best way to spend the very best evening of this summer
season. And maybe it is. Maybe it is.
Thursday, August 16, 2012
writing, continued
Can you make do with a photo of an apple? From our “old
orchard?” The one that typically delivers very many unappealing, untasty apples? But today, for a change, delivered this exceptional beaut?
No? Well, too bad. It was a gorgeous apple.
I so wanted to write that I
put my computer out on the porch even before I readied our breakfast fruits and cereals.
Nothing will stand in my way!
I worked. With breaks for the beetle hunt. (That's where Ed and I compete as to how many nasty beetles we can find and shake off into our soapy water solution, so that the roses can bloom and the bees can collect pollen and life can continue as we know it.)
And yeah, Ed brought over to the porch where I was working warmed tomato slices with cheese curds,
damn it, too many, too many. I reminded him that when I write I hardly move and
perhaps cheese curds are not well matched to those moments.
In the afternoon we motor biked to Paul’s and I worked there
as well, except Paul cut his finger severely while chopping cilantro and so that
was quite the distraction. Ed turned all solicitous which probably freaked Paul
out as Ed is never the solicitous type when shit happens. (He just tallies
forth, because, you know, it’s life and shit happens.)
We went to the Fitchburg market and the corn was good, so
good that we bought a dozen ears and so now I have to shuck and trim and freeze
all that corn. It will be worth it, come wintertime. Now, it’s just a thing to
add to my list.
At the market, we also bought our weekly supply of cheese
curds. It’s cool to watch kids come up and sample cheese curds. Imagine her
sampling the first one, with that squeek that only a fresh curd can provide.
I admired the tomatoes. You can’t get me to get excited
about tomatoes these days and yet...
We also bought a melon. Why not.
And on our way back, we played tennis because I cannot become
sedentary, no matter what. And then – home. To our gardens, our foods, my writing.
Wednesday, August 15, 2012
life, as I know it
I’m sorry to be so... content, but I had such a good writing
day today that everything else seems only marginally important.
In fact it was so excellent (hour wise) that in a burst of
optimism I predicted (to myself and now to you) that I would have a credible
draft to work with at the end of next summer. One year ahead of schedule.
So... what do I say here on Ocean, when I am completely in
love with writing elsewhere? Here’s the thing: Ocean is at least (if not more)
as important. So I present to you my day. On a terribly wonderfully busy writing day.
There are the pauses, as Ed and I hunt for beetles.
And we take a whole half hour break to go over to Shopko. We want to buy out (nearly all) their remaining miniature roses. There are only about a dozen
left and, at about a buck a piece (90% off!) they are a steal. Mostly though, we
feel bad that nobody wants them.
Too, in the evening, I had to water again. The new acquisitions,
not yet planted...
...and the stuff already in the ground. Isis watched. He’s
quite adept at avoiding the spray from the hose.
In the evening, Ed biked and I cooked. We’re beyond the easy
path, where I freeze garden tomatoes and use the remains for salad. We have too
much. Time to get cooking. Big pot items like chili. And tomato soup. And tomato
anything.
Today, it was time for tomatoes and lentils. Good for the
next two days. In case I have another splendid writing day and can't think about cooking.
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