Summer solstice 2025, Taste the Season, Uncategorized

It’s Summer

If I were running I would have missed these beauties

I set the alarm. A Saturday but I’ve got to run. First feed the cats, grab a water and AirPods and I’m off. There are no Cliffs Notes you can buy to prepare for a 10k; you simply must get in your runs, and this year I’m woefully behind. My cold is mostly over but fatigue is hanging around. I can’t say I will get it done but I’m putting uncharacteristic little pressure on myself. On this morning, I’m slow and tired but steady, and I press on for two miles after which my brain convinces my body it’s had enough. Walking is right for now and a slower pace helps me notice people have been planting–daisies, mint, lavender, deep green and chartreuse hedges, all beautiful.

🎶 la, la, la 🎶

My own plants I set out yesterday to get a drink in the rain, choir children on risers belting out beautiful music as their proud mama approaches. The magnolias, hydrangeas and gardenias–summertime’s trifecta–came with the yard so I get zero credit for their blooms year after year. It’s got to feel good to be the star of a summer show, pumping your pretty colors and sweet fragrance into this broken world, appearing regardless of conditions– sickeningly hot, raining for days, or a perfectly simple summer day. I’ve wanted a magnolia bloom I could reach to bring inside but hadn’t found any, but a day later there were two. Nature, what can’t you do? 

The quiet house has been expecting my return. There is coffee to make and a deck to enjoy it on, but first the old wicker chair on the front porch (one of two I found at Goodwill years ago for $20) is calling me to sit and finish my podcast. Mel Robbins is interviewing James Patterson who is fascinating and has a new book. Minutes in, I pass out then wake to Mel’s loud voice and my mouth agape. I sit up and try and finish but head off again, mouth open, deliciously in and out of sleep. As I nap, I worry people can see me from the street but remind myself no one cares if I’m a mouth breather. 

Nothing to look at yet, but soon? 🌻

Of course I’m tired. Friday I could think of no other way to snap out of my funk. Is it my own or the world’s or the toxic combination that hangs so heavy? Moving is reliable, so I walked several hours returning home to dig a garden. It’s been five years since I’ve planted anything other than plastic pots of flowers you bring home to slide inside your planters, which isn’t planting per se. There’s been more to tend to what with chemo and Covid and construction and getting my younger son off to college. Always excuses except today, despite a never-ending punch list, I will hack through Georgia red clay and make something out of nothing. Zinnia and sunflower seeds are going in and with any luck, colorful blooms will come up.

They seem happy together

I bought a few plants too, herbs I love the best: basil, chives, mint, Italian parsley, and catnip which I pinched and brought inside, much to Bo’s delight and my own pain. Every one of his claws came out of nowhere to secure my hand which dangled a leaf above him. A different animal than the dried stuff, fresh catnip is I think for cats what crack is for its addicts. Sam isn’t having it, barely smelling it and walking away, smug and prudish, her wide innocent eyes insisting, “I don’t do drugs.” 

L-r: My mom’s twin Uncle Pete, Gammy holding me and my cousin Anne & my mom in front of the Fish House in CT.

Today I’m still at it. It’s June 21st, my grandmother Gammy’s birthday, and in her honor, I’m going to spend the bulk of it outside. The longest day of the year was technically Friday, but for me it’s always the 21st. Go start things and if there’s still daylight, finish some too. The summer bugs’ song mixes with the birds’ and the soundtrack takes me back to Vero Beach and Sandfly Lane under the live oaks in Gammy’s driveway. We are loaded up with the blue and brown beach towels neatly rolled into her worn straw beach basket. We’ve eaten our Indian River grapefruits cut in half and perfectly sectioned and toasted English muffins with orange marmalade, and now it’s time to head to the beach. Ahhh, if only. Maybe she and my mom are somewhere together continuing the tradition. 

But today, I’m on dry land in my plastic Adirondack chair on my deck, and on this morning the coffee is particularly good. I added a little sugar like my sister Anne does every day and like I do sometimes on weekends, using up the Dancing Goats bag. Early bird gets the best coffee and though we’ve got several other kinds, to me these grounds smell divine. Today I’ve started Ann Patchett’s Tom Lake, which I scored on sale in a Target end cap months ago, and as I sip on coffee in the thick silence magnificently cut by bugs and birds, I dive into Ann’s brilliant words. 

The Lux Classic Timer

By the time Joe got up, the sun was heating things up and the deck no longer held its sparkle. I made myself a second cup from an old hotel packet of instant I found because there’s lots to do and another boost might propel me further. A day full of projects means a trip to the hardware store. Joe had steel angles for a screen door on his list, and I stepped back into the heat to shop plants. A few sunflower plants on sale then it’s back inside for more zinnia seeds, a nozzle for my new garden hose, bird seed, and a Minute Minder to replace ours that dropped.

The new timer takes me to my childhood kitchen where a square glass Pyrex pan filled with brownie batter cooks in our 350-degree oven. When the timer buzzes and a toothpick comes out clean, we cut the brownies into squares and plate them with a scoop of Breyer’s vanilla on their warm backs. With dessert spoons in hand, we move quickly as the ice cream trails down the squares to lap up this sweet warm/cold slice of heaven.

Toasted pecans go with everything

Today our fridge at home offers nothing inspiring to eat, but the eight-day old strawberries could use a plan. The recipe yields 18 muffins topped with sugar and pecans, and I nibbled on extra nuts as they baked. Strawberries, zinnia seeds, magnolias blossoms, garden hose nozzles, even the annoying mosquito bites on the back of my legs, all of it, this is summer. 

Get them before the tires do

On Friday’s Ace Hardware run, I bought a magnet with a long wand. Not a metal detector, but a long stick with a round magnet on its end. The driveway is dotted with remnants from years of construction, and now that the carport is cleaned out, we need a safe path for cars to come in. After five years without cover, the cars won’t know what hit them, and I’m making sure at least it’s not piercing metal. I hover the wand close to the gravel and click! I scored something. Click click click! More still. It’s a well-stocked pond and the fish are biting like crazy. As I hunch over the driveway like an old lady stooped at the shore inspecting shells and marveling with every click, my sister calls. We agree I’ll take a video for her to see the powerful wand and treasures it can catch and she’ll call me back. Click, click, click! There’s more and I quickly text her this proof. With all the excitement, I’d forgotten she was in her car running errands. 

Nearly an hour went by, and I’d convinced myself something was wrong. I left Anne a voicemail and sent a text and nothing. Another half hour passed and now I imagined her car must have wrapped around a tree. You see, she’d been tempted to watch my video while driving and that did it. I scanned my life and all I could see were holes void of Anne. I wanted more time with her. I wanted more memories. Then minutes later by some miracle there was her text marveling at the volume and variety of metal. I began ugly crying like I sometimes do when my clean scan results pop up in MyChart like they did again in May. Emory reported my MRI showed “no evidence of cancer.” Cancer? What are you even talking about? Music to my ears and I’ve got Anne back. 

I wake up naturally caffeinated so one coffee is plenty to set me on my course for the day. Add in another and you never know what you’ll get. I think I’ve been anxious for some time. I also think that second cup put me over the edge. After the hysteria and retelling the blubbering drama to poor Joe, I dried my tears and felt grateful for it all. Grateful for June 21, the longest day and my beloved grandmother’s birthday often spent at the beach, the scent of summer now firmly planted, and possibilities galore. 

The day is still young, and I’ve got more planting to do and driveway metal to attract. When the mosquitoes find a way into my long sleeves and begin snacking on my ankles, I’ll move the day indoors. The coffee’s still fueling my get up and go, and I might tackle puttying or painting projects inside or relax with a glass of wine. Thankfully there is daylight and there is time. If I can stay awake, we might even watch another episode of The Righteous Gemstones. Hilarious, silly, stupid TV I’ve discovered. Happy Summer Solstice, y’all. ☀️ 

Leaving you with this gem of a sign I just saw near my neighborhood. The world is awfully unsettled, but right now there is this, which I think might be everything.

cooking, Covid-19, renovation, uncertainty

Is it OCD, ADD, or DT?

MONDAY: I was texting with a friend who asked, “How’s your Monday been?” and I thought to myself, I could respond with an upbeat “Pretty good” or “Ok” or “Good, you?” or just cut to the chase. I chose the latter: “The damn cat woke me up last night with his throwing up.”

Louie had a long walk earlier in the yard with the boys, walks more about munching grass than walking on it. He over-indulged again, his system expelling the remarkably intact blades at a most inconvenient 2:45 am hour. The horrible sound of a cat bellowing as his body expands and contracts instantly wakes me and no doubt my husband too, yet we both lay there just like we used to with nighttime baby cries, waiting it out to see who’s going to get up. I rose quickly hoping to avoid it underfoot, whispering the mantra in my mind, “Please don’t go on the rug, please don’t go on the rug.” Thankfully the cat found a spot in the hall on the heart pine floor in plain sight which I could clean up before someone walked on it or the dog took care of it, the more vulgar of the two possibilities. I climbed back into bed trying to convince my mind that I hadn’t just disrupted our peaceful sleep when Louie continued droning for some two hours until he either gave up or I slipped back into sleep and lost track. Can’t determine how many hours I got, but the sum total was crappy sleep, which sends one’s brain, what’s left of it, into hopeless places.

Now up, I tried doubling up on coffee thinking I could snap out of it and feel awake, but that either works well and you’re wired much of the day accomplishing loads or it has the opposite effect, like melatonin got stirred in. I got the latter. Scrolling social media didn’t help support any semblance of a new-day can-do cheerful mood. More articles shared about college openings and mask wearing. It’s worrisome. Like many others, my son’s college is not requiring masks worn in classrooms despite professors rallying together revolting, some 700 signing a letter. Will our governor budge and put in this mandate that will trickle down to the University System and the individual schools? How long is it going to take? Some states have moved their mask wearing needle from “optional” to “suggested.” I guess we should be happy for small victories, but how about we hop over the “suggested” stepping stone and just land on “required?” Seems with this pandemic we’re going to have to get there anyway, so why the snail’s pace which allows so much sickness to take hold and pushes hospitals beyond their limits?

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Sad stick.

All this together time and some days stupid stuff grates on my nerves. I went to butter my toast and there was this. Who does this? My mother never let us maul our butter. We had to cut individual pats, put them on our plates and then it was our choice how to apply it to things more complicated than toast, like corn for instance: horizontally rotate the cob with buttered knife overhead or spear the butter and apply it to a diagonally rotating cob, hoping each kernel gets some before it melts onto the plate. I wanted us to be that family that rolled our corn onto a brand spankin’ new stick of butter, the contented cob twirling like a pig reveling in mud, and then watch the stick soften and mold into a sway back. But we never did it that way which is why it’s now unsettling to find diagonal hurried jabs disfiguring what was a perfectly fine stick of butter.

And the eggs too. No one’s fault here, but on a day when I’ve gotten little sleep, the carton needs to be symmetrically organized or else I’m finding my brain resorts to arrive at a workable configuration, and when no possibility presents, a plan for that surplus egg.

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Ahhh, we’ve got balance.

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Which egg will be the extra?

 

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Sexy planks await.

It may seem like we’re standing still but things are moving. The long-awaited lumber delivery happened so our porch renovation is closer still. After weeks, make that months of delay, Carolina Lumber came through and it made me so happy I could sing! Not sure if it all actually came from Carolina, but I went there in my mind. Enormous structural beams wait for when the larger-than-what-was-earlier-expected crew arrives to hoist them into place. Maybe even as soon as tomorrow!

The porch is going to be another place to go, delivering all the benefits of outside – sights, sounds and smells – with all the comforts of inside – no mosquitos, roof overhead, adjacent to the kitchen and bath. Not to mention the talented architect on-site who’s beautifully drawn it all and will ensure it gets built to its glorious specifications. The pets also will be in heaven.

 

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Evan’s bench has a reclaimed wood top, leftovers from our renovated garden shed.

More lumber, new and reclaimed, put to good use. May I present the bench that Evan made (with Joe’s design help). Sturdy for plants or people, and as it now stands, perfectly positioned for social distancing on our porch too.

TUESDAY: Some good news! As I’d wished for yesterday, mask wearing will now be required on our state’s college campuses. Seems jumping to “required” didn’t take as long as I thought. A seemingly simple step which will afford far better outcomes for students and faculty returning to campus. While I’m at it, I wish for good news in November’s election. Just putting it out there.

IMG_9902These days at home together may be different than what we’re used to, but they offer the same cast of characters and rather predictable if not comical commentary. Take tonight for instance. Joe walks in the kitchen as NBC Nightly News is interviewing an adjacent state to the south’s governor, and all he can do is lean into the TV, get the gist of the story, utter “douche bag” and walk away. This is where we are.

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Not picking up.

At least twice a week timed late in the afternoon, I reach for the phone and nearly pick up until – whoa! – don’t touch that handset! Please DT, don’t call me.

WEDNESDAY: Ben is busy making garments and new patterns arrive, and I can hear the hum of the sewing machine churning out a jacket, a turtleneck for his girlfriend or in the case of today, pants. Evan has been helping Joe make railings for the new screened porch and both boys are learning more about woodworking, captivated by possibilities. They’ve each dealt with these strange times with grace and patience and resilience and despite not being able to stray too far from this home we’re quarantined inside, they’ve managed to fill their days rotating through simple pastimes – biking, frisbee, wiffle ball – or taking a drive to the mountains, just the two of them.

Joe returned yesterday from the store, as if just in from a hunt, hauling the kill stuffed in white Publix bags over his shoulder – pork ribs and ground beef (and ground turkey thrown in for my sake). Somehow, we managed to rearrange the fridge and freezer again to fit it all – a favorable problem in these times.

A simple burger normally eaten alone for dinner or with some chips or carrots now needs to be elevated – maybe baked beans on the side, green salad with veggies and homemade dressing, and what about for dessert? We are all relying on something to look forward to, each equally vested in turning these monochromatic evenings into something colorful, and food is the logical start. The days ramp up to dinnertime and you hope it’s all you hoped for and then you digest and clean up and begin sketching out the next sit down.

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Patterns and toes.

At least once a week there’s an Amazon Prime truck parked in front of our house. I run to the door wondering, have my vitamins arrived? Or maybe its that cord I lost and reordered for my external hard drive? Ben rushes to the door too, considering his own package, has my zipper come? He’s been sewing and ordering fabrics and now is waiting on an Etsy zipper to complete a jacket he’s begun. It’s as if Santa’s sleigh is out front and those few minutes he spends sorting out packages nearly kills us as we wait and wonder. Surely, we were good this year, good enough for one of these to be ours?

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Divine especially with salted butter and honey.

I’ve stayed busy baking, perfecting various favorites of mine, even taste testing on a few friends. Maybe this little hobby will grow, and I can start another little business. Obviously we must eat if we’re going to live, but if we can infuse the experience with memorable taste and texture and depth and light, I think we’ve accomplished something important. The days can be hard, but the meals don’t have to be. They offer chances to unwind and savor something satisfying. Might as well make them extraordinary. I’m working on it.

Today at least has gotten more interesting. As I sat on my bed to write, I noticed my vision increasingly strange, my lens now a watery veil, with bubbly visual noise in the corners. This being a pandemic coupled with my recent health “thing,” I was on the phone with my oncologist and eye doctor immediately. Seems I had an ocular migraine. They tell me they’re not cause for worry, yet their origins aren’t completely understood. I had one ten years ago during a particularly stressful event, details I won’t bore you with. So is it stress? Very likely the culprit. I know discord, tumult, or too much uncertainty make me uncomfortable. I was that girl when overhearing her parents argue who would make them kiss and make up. They used to make my siblings and me do that, so I figured why not them too? Besides, I hated hearing them argue. Ultimately, they’d oblige and offer up a disgruntled peck on the cheek at best, and I always stood my ground until they did. They would go on to divorce. Damn.

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Normally a nearby busy park in summer, this scene typifies life now.

Today we’ve got the perfect storm on our hands with all that’s going on in the world and in our own homes. Even though it changes by the hour, consistently the news hasn’t been good. I feel scared leaving my bubble, and so like others, I rarely do. I’ve heard friends announce before that they can’t watch the news, but I’ve been fine with it on all these many years. However these days I think it is finally getting to me and manifesting on a physical level, as with today’s migraine. I realize good nutrition, exercise and rest have absolutely got to remain in place but a little more fun needs to find its way in, too. On the peace-of-mind upside, as with colleges and universities, Atlanta will soon have a required mask mandate in place. That’s a start.

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Nice to sit next to someone for a change. Robert Frost with me in Agnes Scott’s fountain courtyard.

Despite its continued efforts, my brain can’t wrap itself around the layer upon layer of difficulties in our world that you can never fully unwrap. It almost seems shallow tackling insignificant household minutiae when there’s this enormous elephant in the room trying with all its might to get out, and there’s absolutely nothing you can do. Or a better analogy would be there’s a massive tornado, with a tail the likes of which you’ve never seen, and it’s coming to a neighborhood near you. Except when? Where? Have you battened down the hatches sufficiently? There is no perfect solution. Except there is that life-saving trifecta, our own part we each can and should do: Wear a mask, social distance, wash your hands.

Finally, I asked my family to sum up in three words what living together during this pandemic has been like, and our different perspectives are interesting:

Susan: Togetherness, nourishing, unpredictable

Evan: Uncertainty, boredom, projects

Ben: Free time, productivity, relaxation

Joe: Surreal, enjoyable, virtual

 

(Stealing from Garrison Keillor)… Be well and keep in touch.

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