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Tuesday, December 24, 2013

A little joy

Merry Christmas!


Homemade ornaments are my favorite.

I am ready for the holiday hustle to wind down now and the actual celebrating - the joy - to commence. What's done is done ... and if it isn't by now, then it's just not getting done. It's been fun getting it all together; really, it has. But that's been the prep and now is launch.

And I hope your Christmas is a blast.


I am looking forward to a little more focus in the coming hours and days: on family, friends, blessings. I've been trying to multitask lately and it has not gone well.

Not at all.

For example, a couple of weeks ago, I accidentally parked in a handicap-designated spot at the local pharmacy. There was no sign and snow still covered the ground, hiding the symbol painted on the blacktop. I didn't even notice until I came out of the store and realized the spacing seemed too generous for a regular spot. There were plenty of other designated spots, but I felt terrible for the mistake, made in my hurried state while running errands.

A couple of days later, I dropped my keys while walking in the parking lot of another retailer. I was rifling through my purse for the next stop's list and not paying attention when my keys went flying out of hand. I bent over to pick them up and bashed my head on the bumper of a car ... parked in a handicap spot.

Karma - 1; Lorri - 0.

Last week, I had a mean case of a 24-hour virus that was probably the result of hurried hand washing while out shopping. Ug. That warning light that flashed in the car and I hoped was just, you know, nothing serious, because I didn't have time to deal with it? It wasn't nothing. It was $613 worth of something.

The other day, I accidentally sent a "luv u" text meant for my husband to someone who was, in fact, not my husband. I had multiple messages in play and was also making homemade caramel. The result? Awkward, with a side of unintentionally creepy.

Today, I was sitting in the drive-thru at McDonald's waiting for the prompt to take my order, while counting out exact change (I'm an exact-change kind of girl) and messing with the car's clock. The prompt came and I ordered my usual, a large Diet Coke ... only I didn't say Coke. I said a word that begins with C and rhymes with clock.

[I'll give you a moment]

Yep, that's what I said: a large Diet ----.

So anyway ...

I hope you are able to savor the best moments of Christmas, with your focus on the greatest gift of all: love.



Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Merry and bright

White shirt boxes ... can they breed? 



Yes, I mean breed - as in, make more white shirt boxes. Chicka-waa-waa. As in, when a mommy white shirt box and a daddy white shirt box love each other very much ... and they are stowed away in a super secret hiding place (aka my bedroom closet) ... and I thought I had already wrapped all gifts in the white shirt boxes ...

Then I found more. Like a small litter of white shirt boxes containing gifts that still needed to be wrapped.

I had overlooked a stash of gifts. I'm glad I found them, but was disappointed to realize I didn't quite have this whole Christmas thing managed as well as I should.

It's times like this when Christmas can feel like it's getting out of hand.

Don't judge me, ribbon-stalking cat.
One of the reasons I've not been able to keep up with the more task-centered aspects of the holiday is that I have been getting out and experiencing the holiday: enjoying festive parties and laughter with friends; reveling in glorious musical performances; spending quiet time admiring the tree lights; focusing on the true meaning and origin of it all during Advent services and through community outreach.

So I may have let the task-centered side slide a bit more this year than usual. But hey - if something gets shoved in a gift bag instead of beautifully wrapped and packaged (I shudder at the thought of it as I type), then so be it.

Many times, our traditions become chores. Our invitations turn to obligations. We try to do too much and, in a blur of activity, fail to stop and truly feel the magic. Or, conversely, we take in the holiday from a spectator's seat through TV movies and DVDs (all of which I love, by the way), but there comes a point where you have to turn off the Hallmark Channel, get off the couch and be the star of your own memories.

The season serves up a lot. And maybe we try to do too much because a lot of it is so fun - or at least we think it should be fun. Truth is, it can be overwhelming and suck the wonderful right out of this time of year.

And let's face it: Christmas doesn't come easily to all. Hearts are broken; bodies need mending; hope is fleeting; worries mount. These things don't take a Christmas break.

Christmas? It comes anyway. At its core - without radio stations blasting 24/7, glitzy commercials, cookies, packages, cards, glitter, parties, plays, the last freaking piece of tape, ornaments, unwrapped fertile white shirt boxes - it is a reminder of  something simple, yet profound: hope; a fresh start. Renewal.

But the angel said to them, 'Do not be afraid. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. Today in the town of David, a savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord.' - Luke 2:10-11.


And so I will tackle what I can this season and enjoy all that I choose. I will strive to be a help to those who need me. I will open my heart to the spirit of hope offered freely this time of year.

In doing so, I know I am truly making these precious days merry and bright.

Sunday, December 8, 2013

A snow day

"When I no longer thrill to the first snow of the season, I'll know I'm growing old." Lady Bird Johnson


With Lady Bird's logic, I can declare myself still of a youthful spirit.

It snowed here Friday, beginning first as freezing rain - dreadful, dangerous ice - and ending as a soft blanket of white. Huge, billowy flakes swirled like tufts of cotton, plucked and tossed from Heaven.


Remember snow days when you were a kid? I would sit with rapt attention, listening to the local AM radio station's mix of tinny-sounding hits from the likes of Sonny and Cher interspersed with rather poorly produced commercials for Main Street businesses ... just waiting for - oh, wait, did the DJ just say it? Yes! No school today!

And back to bed I would go.

Nowadays, it's less dramatic: the automated call came shortly after 5 a.m. Friday from the assistant superintendent. I was awake anyway, doing my own assessment of the weather and deciding whether I would venture out into it for the day. No school, he said. I didn't even bother to wake my son. Instead, I logged in and worked from home. My husband was off work that day and so we were settled in for whatever Mother Nature dished out.

It wasn't officially a snow day for me, but I still enjoyed watching the weather take its turn from the comfort of my warm home, with everyone safely under the same roof.

I had picked up a few groceries the night before amid the utter madness at the grocery store. Empty shelves and long lines. What is this magical concoction people make out of bread and milk in the face of a snowstorm?

Me? I went in for beer and toilet paper, the true necessities if you are snowed in.

When the snow came Friday afternoon and into the evening, I cooked a big pasta meal and made sweet snacks. Content with full bellies, we watched the snow come down and lend a lustrous glow to the outside Christmas lights.


Saturday, we slept in and shook off any cabin fever by running errands once the roads had cleared. Early this morning, we were reminded to take it slow again, thanks to a round of freezing rain and sleet. A lazy Sunday of napping and football viewing ensued. Tonight, a cozy fire crackles.


Tomorrow will bring us back to reality: the hum and rhythm of work and school will resume, while the fevered countdown to Christmas buzzes about.

For the rest of the evening, however, I will savor the slowed pace the last few days have brought me ... all thanks to that first magical snow day.

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Late November



Is your Christmas tree up yet? 


Wait, don't tell me. I know it is and I'm jelly.

[My niece uses "jelly" in her Facebook posts and I think it means jealous, but I'm not sure. That's what I mean - jealous - but if I got it wrong and "jelly" is literal, it's still applicable. After the way I have eaten the last two days, I am jelly in a gelatin-like sense too.]

Anyway, my trees are not up yet. I can't remember the last time we said good-bye to sweet November in this house and not had a Christmas tree (or three) up. There's just been no time. The last few days have been packed with family, fun, friends.

And that's ok. I'm so thankful for all those wonderful people in my life and the good times we've had over this little holiday break, I just haven't had time to rush into prepping for the next season. Oh sure, I've listened to cheery holiday music while hitting the stores with my girlfriends to do lunch and some Christmas shopping. Even my husband and I had a before-sunrise Black Friday shopping date. [By the way, he kicked Black Friday in the tail feathers, my friends, with his keen bargain-hunting skills. Who knew?]

I am definitely in a Christmas frame of mind, even if there's still corn on my door and pumpkins on my porch. Soon - the next couple of days - there will be ribbon, lights and wreaths adorning our little cottage. But today, we will send November into the memory book with the glowing remnants of autumn.

November is, after all, the middle child of the memorable trio of months that close out the year. She's not the alluring mischief maker like elder October or the gloriously adored darling that is December. She shrinks from the spotlight, overshadowed by those surrounding her.

But November is beautiful in her own way, without sparkle or magic. She brings us thanks amid chaos; serves up transition as the seasons shift again; trades tradition as history. November offers a holiday centered around gratitude.

So I end this November on a thankful note, glad for all the goodness around me and the hope of the season to come.

I wish the same to you!

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Pretzels, pretzels everywhere

I am happy to report that this, a Tuesday, is actually my Friday. I have the rest of the holiday week off and I plan to relax as much as I can in between visits and feasting.

One thing I do not want to do is have to throw elbows with all the last-minute shoppers at the grocery store tomorrow. And I definitely don't want to spend tons of time in the kitchen fretting over what to take to the family potluck.

Luckily, I have a go-to food that makes for quick and easy deliciousness.


Yep. Pretzels.

Full disclosure: I'm not much of a plain pretzel fan. They taste kind of burnt and I don't like salty foods. I do, however, like salty foods that are also sweet. That just knocks my socks off. And there are a million things you can do with a simple bag of pretzels, like that $1 beauty pictured above.

So, if you are stumped on what to take to the potluck Thursday ... or a week from Saturday ... or on Christmas Eve ... or New Year's Day ... I'm here on the eve of Thanksgiving Eve to offer three easy (so, so very easy) snacks - dare I say desserts - that will take you and your co-diners to salty/sweet heaven.

And did I mention how easy they are?

Oh, and inexpensive ... did I tell you that?

And great gifts, too? Yes, they are.

Let's take a look.

Idea 1: Dipped pretzel rods.


This is the easiest.

White choc with milk choc drizzle.
White choc with sprinkles.
White choc with crushed M&Ms sprinkled.

Just buy a $1 store brand bag of pretzel rods (it's okay if they are broken) and melt some cheap (store brand works great) white (almond or vanilla) or chocolate bark according to package directions. Grab your pretzel by one end and dip it in the melted chocolate and then place on wax paper. Let them "set" at room temp and store in an airtight container. Total time: maybe 20 minutes. If even that long.

They taste great plain, but if you want to get festive, just add sprinkles (before the chocolate sets), or drizzles. A fun way to display them is upright in a little bucket of M&Ms (red and green for Christmas, perhaps) or Robin's Eggs candies at Easter, like below.


This is an easy grab-and-go treat that kids and adults love. Stretch your portions even further by breaking them in half and dipping the broken end.

Idea 2: Cinnamon pretzels


That's cinnamon and sugar sticking to that pretzel-y goodness, baby.
Oh, these are yum. And they make great gifts for friends, neighbors, teachers, me.

Super easy and it makes a huge batch. I got the recipe from Midwest Living years ago and I am going to send you there for it. You might notice there's one review for the recipe. Yep - that's me; I wrote it. Just spreading the word.

Perfect snack for curling up in front of the TV on movie night.

Idea 3: Salted caramel chocolate pretzel bark

Oh my.



I cannot even explain how good this is. Shannan Martin of Flower Patch Farmgirl turned me on to this and I will love her with undying devotion forever.

And ever.

Here's her recipe. Do this. Don't be afraid. It's crazy easy and utterly addictive in the worst of all the best ways.

And read her blog. I love her for more than just her crack bark recipe ... though we've never met, which makes me creepy, I know.

Pretty sure she'd love me too. If she knew me.

Anyway ...

I hope you enjoy these salty sweet deals, and please let me know of any super easy pretzel recipes of yours.

After all, good food is even better when shared with friends.

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Wardrobe functions


In case you are wondering what that is pictured above, I can confirm that it is in fact, not the world's saddest hand puppet.  It's a dingy, hole-y sock. With my hand in it.

The saddest thing about that sock?

It's on my foot right now.

In the lottery of late-in-the-week clean clothes, this guy and its mate (equally hole-y, by the way) are the winners.

They are the king and queen of the sock drawer prom.


I would like to mention in my defense that the gross dinginess of these socks may be attributed to the fact that I have worn these outdoors without shoes already this morning ... and not solely due to my lackadaisical housekeeping.

A little bleach and they will be good as ... well, they will be bright and clean.

Before you tell me to go get some new socks, for Pete's sake, let me tell you about another incident this week: 

I was speaking at a work-related gig to an audience of about 30 or so professionals when I felt the slightly distracting creep of my pants' zipper heading south. My part at the podium was brief and so I discreetly tugged at my sweater set (of course!) to cover any possible offending revelations and stepped away. But make no mistake: the barn door was open.

You see, my fly had been inexplicably doing that all morning. A check in the ladies room revealed that one of my two trouser buttons had gone missing, thus making way for the repeated opening of said barn door. These were my favorite black slacks; the ones that go with everything and look great on me. They fit great (loose at the waist!) and so I would be determined to save them. Thankfully, I still had the other button to hold my dignity in its proper place.

Until I didn't.

That remaining button flew to destinations unknown as I stepped out of the car at lunchtime. The only things holding my pants up at that point were my child-bearing hips.

... Which brings me to my next point ...

My teenage son has grown about 10 inches in the last two years. He's pushing 6' 2" and still moving upward. Last Saturday evening, his dad and I raced out to buy him a new pair of black slacks to wear to honor band the next day when we saw the ones he was wearing to a church function that night had popped up to the top of his (new, larger) shoes. Just two weeks earlier, those pants had fit him just fine.

At some point this weekend, father and son will go tux shopping for the kid's required concert band attire.  That nice suit I bought him last year? Ridiculously small now. That goes along with a steady stream of jeans, shoes, and socks right now flowing through our house.

And so, Mom (and Dad) will make do in the wardrobe department in order to make room in the budget for more urgent needs. 

That's what parents do.

Back to my black pants ... I got through the remainder of my day thanks to a safety pin. The zipper was actually broken and so they had to be retired, and other black pants I already owned called into active service.

As for my sock situation ... I was at the doctor's office recently in socked feet and mentioned that I was embarrassed by the worn condition of my footwear (though not nearly as bad as the ones pictured above). The doctor laughed, kicked her right shoe off to reveal her big toe peeking through a hole.

"I have kids too," she said.

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Giving

"Remember that the happiest people are not those getting more, but those giving more," - H. Jackson Brown.


It's the season of giving thanks and my heart is full, dear friends.

And my yard is full ... of leaves.

Mother Nature? She's a giver too.

From here ...
... to here, in less than 24 hours.

Leaf raking aside, we really should take time to be grateful for the blessings of our lives - friends, family, pets, home, church, talents, careers, school, maples trees - all the things, big and small, that provide us with joy, comfort and happiness.

It would be great to reflect on these things all year long and give a shout-out as they occur, but life tends to buzz about and redirect our thoughts and actions to practical matters. We get caught up in just getting by and time jets on.

November to the rescue!


This is the month when we tend to pause to ponder the gifts we've received over the year. Moreover, I personally tend to reflect on ways I can be a gift to others. What do I have to give - time, talent and treasure - to the world (or at least the things I care about within it) so it is a better place? 

Choosing where and how to give can be overwhelming. If you've felt that tug, that call to service, then you know it's important to steer your passion in the right direction. A bad fit can leave you uninterested, feeling unappreciated or taken for granted. Resentment sets in and no one benefits from that.

Plus it's important to avoid overextending yourself. For example, if you cannot commit treasure - you know, real paper money - then limit your financial stewardship to what really resonates with you. And tell everybody else no.

When you do find something - a cause, a charity, a life in need - that speaks to your heart, then giving of yourself is its own reward. It's a great feeling, like falling in love ...

... the kind of love that has possible tax benefits ...


So as we head toward Thanksgiving (and immediately slam into Christmas), please remember:

Count your blessings and be a blessing.


Each one must give as he has decided in his heart, not reluctantly or under compulsion, for God loves the cheerful giver. - 2 Corinthians 9:7.



Thursday, October 31, 2013

Halloween

Happy Halloween!


It is a dark and stormy afternoon at my house ... no, really. There's stormy weather moving through. The rain is blasting and the wind is howling. Leaves are falling like orange- and red-hued snowflakes.

Hoping my chimes make it though the afternoon.
I've had the day off and have spent it with my husband dining, running errands and napping. We were curled up on the couch a few minutes ago watching a terrible 1968 movie, Dracula Has Risen from the Grave, on TCM. It's not scary at all and the acting is just ridiculous ... save for Dracula himself, the mighty Christopher Lee. I am unable to resist him.

Swoon.
Outdoor trick-or-treating would be hazardous in this weather and what's predicted to come this evening, and that would be a real bummer for the kids; they get so very excited about their costumes. Happily, our county switched the official trick-or-treating from the 31st to to last night, the 30th, in anticipation of the rough Halloween ahead.

Good thinking.
 
Except I totally wasn't ready.

That meant this witch had to grab her broom and start working some Halloween magic.


Yes, that's me. Yes, it's a costume.

Halloween is a big deal at our house. For the last six years or so, we have set up a fun - not gory, not scary - display in our side yard that faces back into the rest of the neighborhood. My husband made "tombstones" and sets up a graveyard scene, complete with arched "entrance." It's a simple set up - put together on Halloween and taken down that night as soon as the last candy-grabber leaves - but it really draws in the kids.

By the way: My husband? Awesome.



My girlfriends and I dress up as witches and then cackle and beckon trick-or-treaters to join us at our cauldrons (full of candy) for treats ... and jokes, songs and laughter.

Me and my witchy "sisters" from last night. Short notice meant our numbers were down, as other witchy friends couldn't change their schedules to accommodate the trick-or-treating change. Still, we brought the scary.

It's a fun tradition and every year our neighbors tell us how much they love it. The children love it and the parents do too. I am photographed repeatedly with kids: "Let's get your picture with the witches," and parents pose their kids in our yard for photos too.

All in all, we probably treated about 200 kids last night. That's down from previous years, but still about 35+ pounds of candy.

And countless memories.



We also host a potluck for those who don't care to witch with us, and so there are a few festive embellishments inside the house as well.

With little time to clean, there are some pretty authentic cobwebs happening in this house.

I am so glad that my son, a freshman in high school, and many of his friends still get in the spirit. My rules about older kids trick-or-treating are: 1. Wear a costume (a teenage boy pushing 6' 1" with a deep voice and no costume is not trick-or-treating - he's trespassing, as far as I'm concerned); 2. Be polite; and 3. No pranks (falls under rule 2, but worth mentioning).

As Sheldon from The Big Bang Theory.

And so with another most excellent Halloween celebration in the history books, we will spend the actual Halloween evening relaxing, eating leftovers (and candy) and perhaps catching a creepy flick with some special effects directly from Mother Nature rumbling about outside.

I wish you a most magical night!










Sunday, October 27, 2013

Ready, set ... Fall

"Autumn is a second Spring, when every leaf is a flower." - Albert Camus





Fall is my very own personal gift, wrapped in glorious hues and opened after patiently waiting out the suppression of summer. Its glory is brief: Despite what the calendar tells us, Fall in our neck of the woods tends to shake off the heat of summer later than we'd like and then seemingly turn right around and plunge us into coat-wearing season. You gotta grab on to it while it's here, because it doesn't last long.


While it is here, however, it is like magic ... utterly alluring.



The cool air invigorates me like a sleeping beauty finally getting that princely kiss, awakening my humidity-dulled energy and beckoning me outdoors for hikes and long evening walks.






Fall is also the height of high school marching band season, and so I spend many Saturdays admiring the leaves' transformation along the Interstate as I drive to a host school hours away. I spend my afternoon and evening sitting outside on chilly bleachers, cheering for my son and all those talented kids in the band, slipping off my gloves so the applause is louder and they know I care, support them and am moved by the music they make.

And, on cold, brisk days like yesterday at Semi State, I wrangle those gloves right back on as soon as they leave the field ... before numbness sets in. 



(PS: They are going on to State Finals next week - yay!)

Autumn also pulls me indoors, right to the kitchen. I especially love to cook this time of year, conjuring comfort food of rich flavor. I've been making meatloaf, turkey, pumpkin muffins, banana bread ... filling the house with savory scents. My guys walk in the door and stop to breathe in the redolent aroma of warmed cinnamon. Oh sure, they knew they were at the right house when they pulled in the driveway, but now they know they are home.




My favorite fun holiday is later this week. We go all-out for Halloween. We are that family in the neighborhood, though our creepy-fun decorations are not out yet. We set those up right before the festivities on the 31st because, as much as I love a gorgeous gargoyle, I don't want to look at it on the mantel - and it look back at me - the whole month. I'll share more about our Halloween fun later.




I realize not everyone feels the same way about Fall that I do. It's okay; we can still be friends. I know I cannot convince the Summer lovers to come around to my way of thinking. They get cold. They are sad when the leaves fall. They hate the shorter days. I hear you; really, I do.

Still, I encourage you to take a look around and give Mother Nature her due.

She does amazing work.




Wednesday, October 23, 2013

20 years

Note: If you've landed here from Pinterest, welcome! You'll find the 20 Things I Love About You pin info here. For newer blog postings, check out the Home tab. Thanks for visiting! - LM


"Grow old along with me! The best is yet to be ..."


That's from the poem Rabbi Ben Ezra by Robert Browning. I had that printed on my wedding program. Today is the 20th anniversary of that wedding. As I mentioned in a previous post, this year is kind of a big deal for us.

And it kind of isn't.

We celebrate a lot of silly, fun things (yes, Christmas in July is one of those things), but we generally don't make a fuss about our wedding anniversary. Usually it's just dinner out and sometimes, it's all three of us, kid included - not even a proper date. He brings me flowers. We exchange cards.

We would just rather hang out together than go to a lot of fuss. We are happy to just be together.

After 20 years, that's pretty good.

In fact, we decided this year we wouldn't even exchange gifts. Hubs would be working in the evening, so there wouldn't even be a date. He'd meet me at my office and we'd have lunch. That would be it.

I assumed he'd bring me flowers - he always does - and so I thought I would break the no-gifts agreement just a little and surprise him with a gesture of some sort. It had to be simple and inexpensive.

Here's what I came up with:

A bucket.


More specifically, a bucket filled with 20 Things I Love About You.

20 Things I Love About You 20th anniversary gift bucket.

Instead of a card, I wrote him a letter, explaining that I loved him in a million ways (true), but that, in observance of our 20th wedding anniversary, I would list only 20. I really thought about who he is and how much I appreciate him - and the things he does for me and for us as a family. And then, I hit the dollar bins and picked up little items he would actually use. I tagged them based on the list and put them all in a bucket (simply because it's another thing he will use).

Here's my list (in no particular order):
  • You're a good kisser - Chapstick (he steals mine)
  • Your face still lights up when I walk in the room - flashlight
  • You wipe my tears - travel pack of tissues for his car
  • You always know when the cookies are done - spatula (he never, ever burns cookies)
  • You make things brighter - paint brushes
  • You're smart - Smarties candies
  • You stuck with it, even when we were just scraping by - electrical tape and ice scraper
  • Your love keeps me going - batteries (for the flashlight)
  • You do your share - cleaning sponge
  • You're handy - work gloves
  • You sew on my buttons - mini sewing kit
  • You're handsome - a hand mirror (he was using what was basically a jagged shard of glass as mirror)
  • You're kind to animals - treats for our pets
  • You have a nice smile - floss (again, steals mine)
  • You're nutty - peanuts
  • Your faith holds the family together - Super Glue
  • You're level-headed - a level
  • You're a good dad - wallet-sized photo of our son and him
  • You're sweet - mint M&Ms (his favorite)
  • We're a good match - box of matches

You get the idea.

He was genuinely moved by the gesture and just loved the surprise, cracking up at the bucket stuff and the correlation to the list.  He admired my creativity and appreciated the thought, time and effort I put into it. Plus, he really dug all the goodies. (Another level? Yes, please!)

Let's face it, folks: I rock.


He gave me roses, as expected. There were 20 red ones, representing the 20 years of our marriage, plus five white ones for the years we dated. Just gorgeous and they made my office smell incredible.


And then he handed me a simple, dainty diamond anniversary band.

That? Not expected.

So let's recap: 


  • He gave me diamonds.
  • And I gave him ... a bucket.

Look, marriage is like that: it's give and take - and not always an even give and take. Still, it really is the thought that counts. A thoughtful gesture can let the person we care about know he or she is understood, special and loved.

And another thing about marriage: just when you think you've got a person all figured out, he can surprise you in the biggest way, and make you wonder what other tricks he has up his sleeve.

"The best is yet to be ..."


Indeed.

Sunday, October 20, 2013

A ghost story

It's almost Halloween and so I thought I would share a true story of something that happened to me when I was in 7th grade. 'Tis the season.

Things go bump in the night.


The ice maker deposits its product with a crash. Heating and air systems whoosh comfort to us, causing drapes to dance and blinds to rattle above the vents. Cats pitter patter along the baseboards, casting shadows on the wall. The dog, stretched out long on the sofa, snores and twitches, eventually uttering a "whup, whup, whup" as he dreams of chasing rabbits.

Yes, things definitely go bump in the night. They wake us, sometimes with a start, but we are easily eased back to sleep with the comfort that everything is all right. Every noise has a logical explanation - a source that is of no harm. We surrender to the darkness of night, our bodies craving - demanding - the release of the day for the sake of restoration. What happens around us in that darkness becomes a matter of faith that we will be safe.

... that we will not be jolted awake by the sound of our own name whispered in our ear by a disembodied voice.


What? That never happened to you? Well, it did to me. Here's my story, as I recall it.

As I've mentioned before, I grew up in a family of renters who moved around a lot. My mom would browse the newspaper for ads and we'd take drives to check the place out, peeking in windows of an empty house and walking around the yard, scouting for a garden. She'd schedule a showing and begin decorating the house in her mind. We'd gather discarded cardboard boxes from a local grocery store and begin packing, waiting for the month to end, as a courtesy to the existing landlord.

Such was the case of the little house on Boerste (pronounced burst-ee) Road. It was an absolutely charming little cottage with a garage (we'd never had a garage), a big side porch, basement and attic. It was located just outside of town, which my mother considered rural. It wasn't - there were houses all around and the road was paved - but there was a horse barn and horses, and several acres of wooded property behind it that now belong to the previous owners' son. He had inherited it at is parents' passing and didn't want to part with his childhood home, which was just across the road from his own beautiful home.

We would be the caretakers of his beloved parents' home and we would have an attentive landlord. Win-win.

We moved in at the beginning of November of my 7th grade year. My mother's husband was a truck driver and gone most of the time on the road, so it was just Mom and me to tend to the little house. She forfeited the larger of the three bedrooms - the master bedroom - so I would have more personal space, which was very important to an almost teen.

Almost immediately after moving in, I started to have experiences.

For example, I was in the basement fetching a laundry basket. As I walked up the steps, I felt the claustrophobic press of a presence immediately behind me on the steps. I glanced over my shoulder and caught a glimpse of ... something. Panicked, I dashed to the top of the steps with an "eeeee" squeal that was gaining volume with each step, and looked back to see ... nothing. Just shadows in a poorly lit basement.

Still? Creepy. And very real.

Full disclosure: I have always had a very active imagination, especially when I was a young child. I was also an insomniac and the only way I could sleep was with my mom in her bed. Her husband was not a fan of this arrangement and it caused a lot of conflict (gross understatement). Though by my tween years this condition had subsided, there was no way I was going to tell anyone in my family that I was chased up the steps by Nobody and reintroduce that level of family stress and drama again.

I told myself, as I'd so often been told by others in my youth, "It's just your imagination."

On another occasion, I was to pack a box to the attic. I flipped on the light and, at the top of steps for briefest moment, stood a figure - which immediately shot out of sight. No noise, no features ... just a  dark shape, really. I dropped the box on the step and shut the attic door. Good enough.

Despite the odd spikes of my over-active imagination, I liked the property and wanted to explore it. It was cool that we had horses in our backyard and my friends and I would visit the horses and venture for an explore in the woods with our family Spaniel, Brent, tagging along.

One afternoon, I was looking for Brent, who had the run of the property and could not be found, and I cut through the horse barn. One of the horses was still as a statue, staring toward the house. Not wanting to spook him, I stepped in front of him and he suddenly insinuated himself  between me and the fence. I stepped to the right and so did he. I dove past him and then up and over the fence, hitting the ground on the other side with a thud.

The horse was staring in my direction, but just past me, at the house again - frozen - as though he had never moved. He was staring at the window to my bedroom.

Stupid, creepy horse.

That night, I was awakened by a scratching noise outside my window ... no, wait, I realized, it was in the wall behind my bed. I also heard a low, guttural growl outside the window. I scrambled for the nightstand light and as the bulb flashed on, a shadow at my side disappeared.

Woke mom up for that one.

It was probably Brent outside having cornered a critter. Go back to bed, she groggily insisted. I did ... with her ... in her bed.

Sure enough, Brent cheerily greeted me the next morning, excited to show me he had dragged a rotting animal carcass of some sort from the woods and placed it on display in the breezeway. Yuck.

Stupid, creepy dog.

The next night, I awoke to the scratching in the wall again and this time when the light came on, the shadow was above me, hovering, as though looking down on me - all for a split second and then gone.

And thus began the nightly ritual of sleeping with the light on.

Another night I shot up with jolt to, "Lorri" - my name, in a hoarse whisper that was neither male nor female, spoken directly in my ear. There was no shadow, no movement in the lighted room. But I knew what I heard and I was chilled to the bone.

Things were getting personal.


And thus began the nightly ritual of "sleeping" - there was less and less actual sleep involved - with the light and the TV on.

Things continued - I'd catch a glimpse of shadow in the bedroom as I passed it, in the basement, by the window, etc., but I dismissed or ignored them as best I could, blaming lighting casts or my notorious imagination.

It all came to a head for me, however, one morning as I was getting ready for school. I was home alone  (mom worked breakfast shift at a restaurant) and I was standing in the bathroom, brushing my long auburn hair, when I caught sight of a shadow passing in the reflection behind me.

This time, I was genuinely afraid: Had someone - an intruder - broken into the house?

I was shaking with utter fear, frozen in my place, but my mind was racing with escape scenarios: to the phone to call for help or straight out the door into the dark morning. I grabbed my Aqua Net to use as makeshift mace.

Just then I caught another glimpse of the shadow down the hall, flashing into the living room, and felt the familiar shiver. And relief: there was no person in my home.

And that's when I had an epiphany: I was truly afraid of the living, but basically just annoyed - startled - by the entity that seemed so curious about me. And that's when I decided to do something about it.

Maybe it was the lack of sleep or the early teen hormones, but I'd had enough. I stomped into the living room and declared at the top of my lungs, "I do not fear you! Do you hear me? I do not fear you! You cannot hurt me! So leave me alone!  LEAVE ME ALONE!"

Pretty dramatic, huh?


And the thing is, I was left alone after that. No more shadows, no more chills. The light and the TV stayed on at night, but sleep returned.

A few weeks later, I got off the school bus and passed my mom talking to the landlord at the end of the driveway. I didn't know what they were talking about until I stepped in the house and encountered piles of empty boxes.

We were moving again.

The next day.

We'd only been in the little cottage about three months. It was February and spitting snow outside. She'd never mentioned house hunting, but she'd found a rental in town that was much larger and in a nice neighborhood ... and also for sale. So basically, we'd be renting a house that, by summer, would be sold out from underneath us, forcing us to move again.  She didn't seem to care.

It was a while before I asked my mom why she decided to move so suddenly. I had assumed she didn't like country living, the smell of the horses, the small house or basement laundry room.

"That house was haunted," she said, lighting a cigarette. "I saw shadows, like just a glimpse of someone passing by. I saw it in the basement and down the hall sometimes."

I didn't say a word, but just sat there in disbelief.

She continued, "One night when I was sleeping, I swore I heard somebody whisper my name right in my ear."

She took a drag from her cigarette and matter-of-factly declared as the smoke billowed around her:

"And I ain't putting up with that shit."




Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Distracted drivers

Got into the car this afternoon to head home from the office. Running through the usual pre-commute checklist:
  • Seatbelt ... check. 
  • Plenty of gas in car ... check. 
  • Bladder empty in case there's traffic ... check. 
  • Vampire Weekend in CD player ... check. 
  • Adjust rearview mirror ... check. 
  • Notice dead gnat on lip in reflection of said mirror ... gah! ... check. 

I wonder how long that was there.

Damn you, sticky lip gloss.

The only thing from Victoria's Secret that I can wear also kills bugs.

Hey, at least I discovered the ick on my lip before I hit the road. That would have been a major distraction for this driver and possible hazard for everybody else trying to make it home safely as I scrambled to dig out tissues from the center console to carefully wipe the dead insect off my mouth without smashing it in.

<cringe all over again>

And then wiped my mouth with hand sanitizer that was located a seemingly longer-than-usual stretch across the seat in the glovebox. I got caught by the snap of the seatbelt and hung there for a second before releasing the seatbelt and diving for the glovebox. Pretty sure that second of hang time allowed the dead gnat gut remnants to be effectively absorbed by my body.

Pretty sure.

Side note: hand sanitizer is not intended for your mouth.

<cringe again>

I took care of this unsavory business while the car was still in park. Too often, however, I see other drivers zooming along the roadways living life as though they weren't actually wielding a 3,500-pound death machine. They are distracted: eating, digging in a purse, reading, fidgeting with the radio, gabbing on the cell, reaching front seat to backseat to referee kids, holding a dog, speeding, shaving, applying lipstick, etc.

For example, I saw Miss Lady texting and driving in the lane next to me yesterday morning. On the Interstate. Doing 70+ mph. Next to me. Pretty sure she didn't see me.

And that's scary.

She was immersed in a text-versation, swerving and glancing up briefly, then back to tapping, swerving, glancing. It was obvious what she was doing, so I passed her - using my signal, checking my blindspot, neither honking nor flipping her off as I passed.

Sometimes I am too classy for my own good.

And then there's The Guy - the one with his finger jammed up his nose - who came to a screeching halt at the stoplight.

He's just another distracted dumbass. With a nosebleed.

Don't pick and drive
.

I drive 60 miles a day round trip just to work and back, plus all the other hauling of kids, pets, groceries and life that I do outside of the daily work commute. I see a lot of stuff going on while on the road: rage, rudeness, hazards, road kill. I have sat for countless hours in traffic snarls, irritated for the delay and thankful I am not the cause of it.

I also wave to friends as we travel the same roads. I stop behind the school bus as it collects excited little ones in backpacks and then kicks up fallen leaves on the road in front of me as it saunters on toward school. I watch the seasons change like scenes from a movie from one of the best seats in the house.


I do a lot of singing and play steering wheel drums. I try to make the most of my commute time; my alone time. I give myself a pep talk, decompress, plan, daydream, pray, cry. And yet I also try to stay focused and drive safely for the sake of my family and me.

And for you, too ... 

... just in case you are in the lane next to me.