Sunday, January 16, 2011
Those Silver Goblets
A prayer for what I believe must be a Christmas dinner. The year I am unclear of but near 1963. The little child me, eyes wide open with a grin. Naughty me to not be in reverence . My brother is praying so very hard with such determination. My mother in a nun like pose with her hands. My Nan, bowed head with humble heart.
God is great
God is good
And I think thee
For our food
Amen.
That was what I would say when it was my turn to say prayer. My brother must have said something more creative than my repeating this simple prayer.
Crisp linen table cloth and napkins, my mom's Chantilly silver neatly placed next to her Lenox China pattern of Harvest. Candles lit with her centerpiece of gold and red.
See the silver goblets? Oh those silver goblets how I loved them! Our water staying chilled in them as well as a frosty condensation forming on the outside. Sometimes she would fix real Egg Nog and serve it in them. But not for my brother and I as it had bourbon in it. Southern Egg Nog which is nothing like what comes in a carton. Real eggs separated, with yolks and cream beaten till frothy. Sugar added along with the bourbon then let sit to "cook" the egg. Beating the egg white to a stiff consistency and folding them gently into the egg yolk / cream / bourbon mixture. When I was an adult she fixed it after a very long time of not serving it. It had quite a kick and though I am not fond of bourbon I would try it again. Maybe when the silver goblets come back to me.
Remember the song "Indian Giver" ....
That song plays in my head over the numerous times my mom would give and take them from me. Several times she loaned them to me for a special dinner I would be doing. It was the gifting that bugged me. Each time she gave them to me they were all cleaned with silver polish and wrapped up. Some lines she would say were that she didn't really use them much and new I would enjoy them. Each time I was thrilled to be given those cherished globlets and within a few months she would need them back for her own special dinner. I would not see them come back to me the last time this happened.
I could have reminded her to return them but that wasn't something I could or would do. She didn't take to kindly to my asking for them back or most times there would be an excuse. She once even said I didn't want them and had given them back to her! They stand in grace in her large glassed door cabinet in her dining room. All twelve staggered on the shelf like trophies along with other silver platters, urns, and such.
Sunday, January 9, 2011
San Francisco 1977
Hauling our first Christmas tree up to our fourth floor apartment my Love and I were laughing and filled with smiles. The needles from our tree left a trail up the stairs to our door since it had been another drought year for California leaving Christmas trees dry and brittle. No trouble! It was Christmas! Just a few needles left behind for our landlord Mario to vacuum up. We had gone to the Delancy Street Foundation's tree lot down from where we lived and found our perfect tree. A trip to Cost Plus led us to small wooden painted ornaments and the nearby drug store where we picked up lights. We placed it in the corner between our windows in the living room to sit and admire as we cuddled on the the sofa. Our first year together was like being on a honeymoon all the time. We were far enough away from family to be really on our own but close enough when we were asked to dinner or a gathering.
My Love and I had lived in our San Francisco apartment since June, the month before we wed, in 1977. I had found this place while driving up and down the streets looking for 'For Rent' signs once we knew we would both be attending San Francisco State University for the Fall semester. It was directly across from Golden Gate Park, with a view of the ocean and the biggest down side was living in the fog most of the time. Still on quiet nights we could hear the fog horn blowing. It reminded me of times out sailing on a calm socked in fog night when all you would hear was the lap of water on the sides of the boat while listening for the deep 'BUUUUAAAAAA!' sound of the fog horn letting you know how far land was.
Of course this perfect apartment would be on the top floor with no elevator. We had a front row view from our bedroom windows as well as from the huge bay window in the living room of Golden Gate Park. We gazed at trees that stood strong and inpenetrable as though looking out on Sherwood Forest from the times of Robin Hood. Yes, there were Merry Men amongst the growth below those trees. I was warned by an officer on horseback while out jogging that it was not wise of me to do this as women had been raped or robbed in the hidden trails that wove in and out of the roads that ran through the park. My Love and I tried jogging together, or attempted to try, but he with his long legs ran circles around me. Our dear Arleen and Clark had let us use their lovely Oriental carpets on the hardwood floors which as much as we enjoyed using them we would have rather that they had not moved away prompting a need for a place for them to be stored. We had a charming breakfast room with a built in hutch with glass doors and the tiniest kitchen with oddly plenty of cabinets. I had a large old-fashion gas range that kept it cozy warm in there and was wonderful for cooking on. Unfortunately I was not the best cook for my Love. We did the laundry along with what felt like everyone else up the street at the nearest laundromat while we read the Sunday paper hopefully finding a place to sit while we waited.
Up the street from us was the home of Jefferson Airplane. We never happened to see them even though they still owned the house. It stood out due to the faded black paint color and oddly covered windows while we lived in the neighborhood giving it a forlorn and rundown look. We were close to the Haight which was a pretty seedy neighborhood in the 70's so we rarely ventured there. Our neighborhood was called the "Richmond District" with many small and unique ethnic restaurants and shops. It was so cheap to eat out for two that we spoiled ourselves often by trying them whenever we could. From Russian food at the "Miniature Bakery" we tried Borshcht and Pelmeni where the Babooshka who waited on us scolded me for not eating all my food.
We went to Chinatown often to browse the shops and bakeries but for us our favorite hole-in-the-wall restaurant was Henry's Hunan Restaurant. Small, with just a few closely placed tables, we chose to sit at the bar which filled the length of the place, while Henry himself helped cook and made suggestions of what to try. Hot, fiery peppers made the dishes tasty as well as cleared your sinuses that only subsided the heat for me with a 7-Up and a beer for my Love. If we sat at the end of the counter we could watch the help making the dumplings or chopping chicken with a cleaver knife. My Papa came to love this food and it's proprietor whom opened a larger restaurant several years later. Our personal all time favorite was the Smoked Ham dish that is unlike any Hunan or Chinese dish I have ever had. To this day we always order it. No argument over it except there is never enough. Oh yes, their Steamed Dumplings are simply the best we have ever tasted!
Occasionally on a Sunday morning my Love's sister and her family as well as his parents would come over to go for Dim Sum in the heart of Chinatown. We often went to Asia Garden and sometimes to Yank Sing for some incredible dishes. Chinese ladies would stroll up and down the aisles with metal carts covered with small plates or steam baskets singing out to the customer what dishes they had. We never understood anything they said but we would stop them and they would lift the lid for us to see and pick. A lot of great fun and adventure having Dim Sum as there was so much noise, talking, smells and sights to see. Many tables were crowded with Asian families of all generations as well as folks like us clicking away with our chopsticks. Afterwords we would walk the streets of Chinatown looking at the windows of Peking ducks hanging upside down or Tea Eggs in large glass containers, to Herbal shops, cookware, bakeries, and large stores filled with Chinese ware.
Another haunt we had enjoyed for years was Mario's Bohemian Cigar Store where we could get a great authentic Cappuccino served in a real cup no less with a small biscotti to dunk in it. In the back was a foosball table that you could play on for free. It was always crowded with all sorts of people from old Italians from the neighborhood to young folks like my Love and I, all there to warm up in on a cold San Francisco evening. San Francisco was an easy place to explore and parking was cheap once upon a time. We could park in the Police lot that straddled the old Italian area and Chinatown for a buck an hour. Perpendicular to these neighborhoods was the raunchy area of strip clubs, hawkers yelling for you to come in for the shows, flashing neon lights and streets often crowded with Sailors on leave for the night. Amongst them were the folks who lived in the apartments above this jungle. Such contrasts in such a small area.
My Love's brother found this crazy place called Cafe Sport that was also in North Beach. The inside of the place was as much a feast for the eyes as the food was for our stomachs. Every dish was filled with garlic and their specialties were seafood dishes. We always went with a large group so we could order as many dishes as possible. We would get so excited thinking about what the dish would taste like as we scanned the menu. Wine would flow as we waited for the waiter to come. There dinner times were seatings so everyone had to sit down before the food frenzy would begin. The standing joke however was that once we would start telling the waiter what we wanted he would often say they were out of it. We would pick another dish and it could be available or it too could not. What ended up happening was the waiter would tell us what we were getting! It didn't really matter because the food was so good the mood jubilant that we just waited till each dish arrived to devour. We would walk out of the place reeking of garlic for the next several days.
Those days are so vivid in my mind and I guess I wrote a lot more than I thought I would...and realized this is a subject that still has more to go on...so Part #1 ...to be continued!
My Love and I had lived in our San Francisco apartment since June, the month before we wed, in 1977. I had found this place while driving up and down the streets looking for 'For Rent' signs once we knew we would both be attending San Francisco State University for the Fall semester. It was directly across from Golden Gate Park, with a view of the ocean and the biggest down side was living in the fog most of the time. Still on quiet nights we could hear the fog horn blowing. It reminded me of times out sailing on a calm socked in fog night when all you would hear was the lap of water on the sides of the boat while listening for the deep 'BUUUUAAAAAA!' sound of the fog horn letting you know how far land was.
Of course this perfect apartment would be on the top floor with no elevator. We had a front row view from our bedroom windows as well as from the huge bay window in the living room of Golden Gate Park. We gazed at trees that stood strong and inpenetrable as though looking out on Sherwood Forest from the times of Robin Hood. Yes, there were Merry Men amongst the growth below those trees. I was warned by an officer on horseback while out jogging that it was not wise of me to do this as women had been raped or robbed in the hidden trails that wove in and out of the roads that ran through the park. My Love and I tried jogging together, or attempted to try, but he with his long legs ran circles around me. Our dear Arleen and Clark had let us use their lovely Oriental carpets on the hardwood floors which as much as we enjoyed using them we would have rather that they had not moved away prompting a need for a place for them to be stored. We had a charming breakfast room with a built in hutch with glass doors and the tiniest kitchen with oddly plenty of cabinets. I had a large old-fashion gas range that kept it cozy warm in there and was wonderful for cooking on. Unfortunately I was not the best cook for my Love. We did the laundry along with what felt like everyone else up the street at the nearest laundromat while we read the Sunday paper hopefully finding a place to sit while we waited.
Up the street from us was the home of Jefferson Airplane. We never happened to see them even though they still owned the house. It stood out due to the faded black paint color and oddly covered windows while we lived in the neighborhood giving it a forlorn and rundown look. We were close to the Haight which was a pretty seedy neighborhood in the 70's so we rarely ventured there. Our neighborhood was called the "Richmond District" with many small and unique ethnic restaurants and shops. It was so cheap to eat out for two that we spoiled ourselves often by trying them whenever we could. From Russian food at the "Miniature Bakery" we tried Borshcht and Pelmeni where the Babooshka who waited on us scolded me for not eating all my food.
![]() |
Jefferson Airplane home |
We went to Chinatown often to browse the shops and bakeries but for us our favorite hole-in-the-wall restaurant was Henry's Hunan Restaurant. Small, with just a few closely placed tables, we chose to sit at the bar which filled the length of the place, while Henry himself helped cook and made suggestions of what to try. Hot, fiery peppers made the dishes tasty as well as cleared your sinuses that only subsided the heat for me with a 7-Up and a beer for my Love. If we sat at the end of the counter we could watch the help making the dumplings or chopping chicken with a cleaver knife. My Papa came to love this food and it's proprietor whom opened a larger restaurant several years later. Our personal all time favorite was the Smoked Ham dish that is unlike any Hunan or Chinese dish I have ever had. To this day we always order it. No argument over it except there is never enough. Oh yes, their Steamed Dumplings are simply the best we have ever tasted!
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Henry's Hunan Restaurant |
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Henry Chung and his fantastic cookbook |
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Dim Sum |
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Peking Duck |
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Chinatown |
Another haunt we had enjoyed for years was Mario's Bohemian Cigar Store where we could get a great authentic Cappuccino served in a real cup no less with a small biscotti to dunk in it. In the back was a foosball table that you could play on for free. It was always crowded with all sorts of people from old Italians from the neighborhood to young folks like my Love and I, all there to warm up in on a cold San Francisco evening. San Francisco was an easy place to explore and parking was cheap once upon a time. We could park in the Police lot that straddled the old Italian area and Chinatown for a buck an hour. Perpendicular to these neighborhoods was the raunchy area of strip clubs, hawkers yelling for you to come in for the shows, flashing neon lights and streets often crowded with Sailors on leave for the night. Amongst them were the folks who lived in the apartments above this jungle. Such contrasts in such a small area.
![]() |
Mario's Bohemian Cigar Store |
My Love's brother found this crazy place called Cafe Sport that was also in North Beach. The inside of the place was as much a feast for the eyes as the food was for our stomachs. Every dish was filled with garlic and their specialties were seafood dishes. We always went with a large group so we could order as many dishes as possible. We would get so excited thinking about what the dish would taste like as we scanned the menu. Wine would flow as we waited for the waiter to come. There dinner times were seatings so everyone had to sit down before the food frenzy would begin. The standing joke however was that once we would start telling the waiter what we wanted he would often say they were out of it. We would pick another dish and it could be available or it too could not. What ended up happening was the waiter would tell us what we were getting! It didn't really matter because the food was so good the mood jubilant that we just waited till each dish arrived to devour. We would walk out of the place reeking of garlic for the next several days.
![]() |
Cafe Sport |
Labels: childhood, memories, photos
Chinatown,
food,
North Beach,
San Francisco
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Heebee Geebees!
5:00 A.M. I am awakened hearing the oddest sound. I can't figure it out in that brief moment before I prod my Love ....
"Wake up"
Nothing...he doesn't make a sound
"What is that?"
"What."
"Can't you hear that? What is it?"
I am wondering if it is the pool pump/filter that is going to explode. (I seem to think any odd machine sound is something potentially going to explode.)
"Go see what it is. Your the man." I think I have said this to my Love every time I am awakened by odd noises in the night, 'Your the man'. I notice the dogs don't even wake up. A shadow at the foot of our bed is the kitties who do wake up. It figures that they hear something.
My Love crawls out of the bed. What is that sound. RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR! He is softly walking but I don't know where. No sound from him. He comes back.
The sound is coming from this stupid thing.
Yes.
Now what I can't figure out is how it was turned on? You have to push in on the top to get it to turn on. I think the cats might have done it but they are at the foot of the bed. I think a mouse / rat (yikes!), no not strong enough (besides that just would so creep me out!). My Love assures me it could not be a mouse / rat. So how the heck does it just randomly turn on at 5:00 A.M.!!!!!! Why?
I oddly fall back to sleep. I say oddly because my freaked out nature is to lay there trying to mentally figure this out and I don't. I am peaceful. My Love however cannot fall back to sleep. The dogs still are sleeping. Little Luna comes and crawls under the covers to curl up close to my belly. Sweet kitty to keep me (us) warm. Of course once I do wake up at my so called 'normal' time, with the dogs jangling their collars, shaking and disturbing my slumber, time to be fed, I begin to think.
I find the device. The hand massager that we have in the 'Man Room' where one may want to use while sitting down watching the Telly. It is on the big wood table below our TV. How the heck did it just turn on? I press it on. It takes some decent pressure to do this. It lights up in a blue light and does the rumble as it vibrates. Are we being notified by the beyond?
I have been reading a book that Ms. Moon suggested, "How Clarissa Burden Learned to Fly. " The chapter I had been reading last night was a bit spooky only because of what Clarissa has just found out about what happened to the owners of the home she lives in. (Sorry can't give any of the book away!). Was something planted in my mind of ghosts? Of course it is one thing to think of ghosts but another to have this strange thing happen.
You tell me...ideas?
"Wake up"
Nothing...he doesn't make a sound
"What is that?"
"What."
"Can't you hear that? What is it?"
I am wondering if it is the pool pump/filter that is going to explode. (I seem to think any odd machine sound is something potentially going to explode.)
"Go see what it is. Your the man." I think I have said this to my Love every time I am awakened by odd noises in the night, 'Your the man'. I notice the dogs don't even wake up. A shadow at the foot of our bed is the kitties who do wake up. It figures that they hear something.
My Love crawls out of the bed. What is that sound. RRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR! He is softly walking but I don't know where. No sound from him. He comes back.
The sound is coming from this stupid thing.
Yes.
Now what I can't figure out is how it was turned on? You have to push in on the top to get it to turn on. I think the cats might have done it but they are at the foot of the bed. I think a mouse / rat (yikes!), no not strong enough (besides that just would so creep me out!). My Love assures me it could not be a mouse / rat. So how the heck does it just randomly turn on at 5:00 A.M.!!!!!! Why?
I oddly fall back to sleep. I say oddly because my freaked out nature is to lay there trying to mentally figure this out and I don't. I am peaceful. My Love however cannot fall back to sleep. The dogs still are sleeping. Little Luna comes and crawls under the covers to curl up close to my belly. Sweet kitty to keep me (us) warm. Of course once I do wake up at my so called 'normal' time, with the dogs jangling their collars, shaking and disturbing my slumber, time to be fed, I begin to think.
I find the device. The hand massager that we have in the 'Man Room' where one may want to use while sitting down watching the Telly. It is on the big wood table below our TV. How the heck did it just turn on? I press it on. It takes some decent pressure to do this. It lights up in a blue light and does the rumble as it vibrates. Are we being notified by the beyond?
I have been reading a book that Ms. Moon suggested, "How Clarissa Burden Learned to Fly. " The chapter I had been reading last night was a bit spooky only because of what Clarissa has just found out about what happened to the owners of the home she lives in. (Sorry can't give any of the book away!). Was something planted in my mind of ghosts? Of course it is one thing to think of ghosts but another to have this strange thing happen.
You tell me...ideas?
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Holiday Craft from a not-to-crafty person
Ah, the holidays are here!
Tis the week before Thanksgiving (oh it is just days away!)
and I look at my dining table wondering what to do.....
What to do?
Inspiration!
So, okay, I am doing a bit of copying....
Visiting my dear friend Kathy who had a lovely
try of candles, many candles,
all different heights.
Some of those nifty faux candles with a vanilla scent
that you just use a remote to turn on! (Costco)
Then the candles that have faux birch wood wrapped on the
outside. Leaves scattered amongst them on,
leaves scattered on her large coffee table as though a
wisp of wind laid them there....
Needless to say Kathy seems to decorate in the way
that feels warm, natural, and speaks of home....where
you want to sit and sip a cup of tea or better yet
a lovely glass of wine. (hint, hint, Kathy)
I had candle envy. Can you have candle envy?
Oh back to the dining table.
I had a mission yesterday. I was thinking, surely I can find
some of the faux birch bark candles.
Then I thought of how to use the candles.
I should have remembered while I was walking the aisles of
Cost Plus. I thought of a tray which I did not have the size I wanted.
I thought of a mirror laid on the table...reflection and light!
I found the candles at Cost Plus! Yippeee! Bought four.
(the employees need to know their merchandise as they didn't
think they had them. They thought they were only online. I found them
after searching aisle by aisle.)
On to the craft store. Once again I am distracted.
Too many women, too many carts.
I bought sheet moss, bright green, fresh moss.
I bought Lichen that is black on one side
soft cream on the other side, curly, crisp as
though peeled from a oak tree.
Distraction over the faux trees and what I
could do with them for Christmas......
Home. Thinking.
I look up and realize I have so many baskets of every type.
In the garage way of high I spy a long, low basket.
This basket was so dirty.
I thought of wiping it down but it was a mess
and would take too long to clean.
I hosed it down at full force and set it tilted over the heat vent.
Dry in no time!
Perfect.
I have plenty of my own candles I can add.
I have a wide enough table but I still need room for my place mats and glassware....
The basket will give me the length I need for a table set for nine.
I could look for some acorns....but went out and cut some
branches off the Maple tree for now.
Christmas ideas are brewing in my head.
Seriously...thank you Kathy for the idea....
Wednesday, November 17, 2010
Horse Tails - End
Rodger found the flag holsters for our saddles as well as the flags. Up until then we had practiced just with the horses, to keep the same pace and uniformity. We had that down and we were feeling quite good about ourselves. The vests and horse pads were almost ready and with horse show season as well as Fair time coming up we were getting excited about being able to do the Color Guard for the beginning of those events. Note: that we never thought we wouldn't get to do this.
Spring in Antioch is quite windy and this day was no exception. Becky wasn't able to work with us this day on her horse Whisky so David's sister was going to substitute for fun with us. There were a few other kids on horses in the arena along with us, just having a good time riding. Rodger had already placed the holster on our saddles where it would hang down from the saddle horn by the right side of the saddle next to your leg. David was on his horse walking around with the flag waving in the wind. His horse didn't seem to mind. Of course he noted that you don't want the flag flapping in your face. He was laughing and excited about the whole deal carry the flag. This will take a bit of learning on our part holding the flag with one hand and reins in the other, that when standing in place it would be a good to hold the flag against the pole with your right hand.
My Duke and I are all ready to give it a try. Duke is the kind of horse you call "bomb proof". He doesn't get nervous or do stupid things like some spirited horses can do. I can walk behind and under him with never a worry of getting kicked. He just isn't that kind of horse. He is the perfect kid horse. In my mind he is the best horse in the whole world whom I love with all my heart.
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Tragedy comes to each of us and we are never aware or prepared for it's arrival. A day will begin just as any other day. You rise, eat breakfast, dress and do whatever your day will be. And that was how my day was until it ended in that one moment of disbelief.
I can hear Rodger talking to me about holding the flag. I am standing next to Duke not up on him. I have split reins and one is up around his neck and the other is down. What I don't remember is why I was not on him when we put the flag in the holster. Why did we do it this way? Rodger had suggested I walk Duke and he would hold the flag for Duke to get use to before I was on him. What I remember is the flag flapping with Rodger holding the pole straight up and I was next to him. We had started walking, then with out any warning Duke took off running, the reins jerked from my hands. Just like that. I can hear myself yelling to him "Whoa, whoa!". Yelling is name "Duke!" I was running after him wanting him to stop. That horse of mine was running with the flag still in the holster dragging next to him. He was running in fear and I was as afraid as he was.
Then Duke did the next thing he had never done. He tried to jump the arena fence. The tall arena fence that was sturdy and strong. The height of which to climb you go up four rails till you reach the top. My eyes saw him try to clear it but Duke was not a jumper, he wasn't a big horse and he had that flag dragging in the dirt. I can see him in my mind making the jump. Though he made it over my thoughts next were, will he stop running? Will he keep running and why won't the flag pole drop?
I ran to the arena gate and swung it open. Dub and Ilene's barn is right there near the gate with the one lane drive that leads around the fairgrounds. There was Duke, stopped and I was so overcome by this crazy thing he had done that I ran to him as he stood there and it was then I noticed his trembling. I noticed his hind leg that he would not bear weight on. I saw the blood running down that leg he held up, cocked on the tip of his hoof. I ran to him my arms flung round his neck the tears flowing. I never saw Dub come to me and was looking Duke over. I never heard a sound but my own cry and the burning tears blinding my eyes.
Dub. Dear, sweet man, Dub. He gets his truck and hooks the horse trailer up. He unsaddles Duke and gets a halter on him. He somehow gets me to let go of my horse and load him in the trailer. Ilene was next to me, arms around my shoulders letting me weep and cry. I remember Dub telling us that he would go to Davis to the Veterinary School. I am reassured as I have heard they are the best for taking care of horses. I watched that trailer take my horse for as long as I could.
My mom came to pick me up, at sometime Ilene must have called her. She drives me to the doctor's office that she works at and gets me in a room. I don't think my mom knew what to do for me. This was not a situation she was prepared for to see her daughter so upset and unconsolable. The Doctor came in and it was discussed that she could leave early. We went home and I buried myself in my bed. Alone as the day became night, crying, just crying. At some time the door opened in the dark, letting a shaft of light in. My mom came to my bed to tell me that Dub had called. It was not good. Duke had shattered his hind leg in the jump and there was nothing that could be done. My Duke was gone. My dearest friend in this awful life of mine was gone. I know my mom must have touched me or stroked my back but she was gone before I felt the relief that I longed for. The darkness and at last sleep came upon me.
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It was weeks before I would go back to the barn and see my friends. See Duke's empty stall, his saddle and bridle, halter and all the memories flashing in my head day after day. I kept the shirt I wore that day with the blood on it, his blood. I hid it, I didn't want to have it washed clean, I wanted to have something that was of him with me.
Everyone was kind and caring. Telling me all the right things to say to someone who has lost their horse. I sat with Ilene in the office for awhile till I felt I needed to leave. Dub was not there, he was truck driving cross country for the week. I was never told I needed to remove my tack. Everything was the same there in the barn. It was only Duke gone and my insides twisted and torn.
The Color Guard group went on. A young girl named Ann on her pretty Appaloosa took my place. She was a sweet girl who had been quite upset over the accident. I have a snapshot in my head of the four of them all dressed in our uniforms, the horses with the fancy saddle pads, fluttering silver and black as they walked. They looked good. I never see myself in that picture. It was over and it was the end.
My mom came to pick me up, at sometime Ilene must have called her. She drives me to the doctor's office that she works at and gets me in a room. I don't think my mom knew what to do for me. This was not a situation she was prepared for to see her daughter so upset and unconsolable. The Doctor came in and it was discussed that she could leave early. We went home and I buried myself in my bed. Alone as the day became night, crying, just crying. At some time the door opened in the dark, letting a shaft of light in. My mom came to my bed to tell me that Dub had called. It was not good. Duke had shattered his hind leg in the jump and there was nothing that could be done. My Duke was gone. My dearest friend in this awful life of mine was gone. I know my mom must have touched me or stroked my back but she was gone before I felt the relief that I longed for. The darkness and at last sleep came upon me.
******************************************************
It was weeks before I would go back to the barn and see my friends. See Duke's empty stall, his saddle and bridle, halter and all the memories flashing in my head day after day. I kept the shirt I wore that day with the blood on it, his blood. I hid it, I didn't want to have it washed clean, I wanted to have something that was of him with me.
Everyone was kind and caring. Telling me all the right things to say to someone who has lost their horse. I sat with Ilene in the office for awhile till I felt I needed to leave. Dub was not there, he was truck driving cross country for the week. I was never told I needed to remove my tack. Everything was the same there in the barn. It was only Duke gone and my insides twisted and torn.
The Color Guard group went on. A young girl named Ann on her pretty Appaloosa took my place. She was a sweet girl who had been quite upset over the accident. I have a snapshot in my head of the four of them all dressed in our uniforms, the horses with the fancy saddle pads, fluttering silver and black as they walked. They looked good. I never see myself in that picture. It was over and it was the end.
Friday, November 12, 2010
Some words said....speak volumns
Some words can make you stop, pause, and feel good all over. Back in 1996 my youngest daughter M. was in the school's Speech Contest and made into the finals. As proud as I was for her making it to that point that paled in comparison to what she spoke of.
The topic was "My Favorite American" and the person she spoke of was her Grandma Betty. Her words tell it all. These were her dear memories, and observations, without a bit of prompting or help from the rest of us. It is of how much she loves her Grandma and about how loving to her Grandchildren this Grandma is. Fifteen years later, seeing this once again, it doesn't surprise me to hear what she said because M. has a deep love for her family. Her speaking of how much Grandma means to her is as natural as can be. Because when you really care about someone you share it. This woman is my mother-by-marriage and truly there is no kinder, or more dear a lady, than this woman who I have been privileged to have in my life since age 16.
So here is a love fest to see. I have been archiving home movies and I am up to 1996. A few video glitches but it was the 1990's before our digital cameras!
Film.
Life brought back as though it was just yesterday......and Grandma....hugs and kisses to you!
Megan's Speech Contest 1996 from Ellen F. on Vimeo.
The topic was "My Favorite American" and the person she spoke of was her Grandma Betty. Her words tell it all. These were her dear memories, and observations, without a bit of prompting or help from the rest of us. It is of how much she loves her Grandma and about how loving to her Grandchildren this Grandma is. Fifteen years later, seeing this once again, it doesn't surprise me to hear what she said because M. has a deep love for her family. Her speaking of how much Grandma means to her is as natural as can be. Because when you really care about someone you share it. This woman is my mother-by-marriage and truly there is no kinder, or more dear a lady, than this woman who I have been privileged to have in my life since age 16.
So here is a love fest to see. I have been archiving home movies and I am up to 1996. A few video glitches but it was the 1990's before our digital cameras!
Film.
Life brought back as though it was just yesterday......and Grandma....hugs and kisses to you!
Megan's Speech Contest 1996 from Ellen F. on Vimeo.
Tuesday, November 9, 2010
Horse Tails - March winds.....brew sorrow
While Rodger was out searching for fabric for our Color Guard vests and the horses pads, then having his friend sew them, he also was finding the holsters for the flags to sit in for our saddles. He was our leader every step of the way with the planning details. In the meantime we would practice in the arena working on riding our horses close together as well as in unity. David and I rode on the outside flanking David and Becky. We practiced doing turns as well as riding our horses at a trot or a canter in case we were riding in an arena carrying the flags in addition to in parades. We thought maybe we could ride as a group when the Contra Costa Fair came in July.
We had had a wet winter that year making the arena a mud hole a lot of the time. Our horses were frisky from being cooped up and not ridden too much. Still, whenever it seemed dry enough Rodger would have us practice. Most of the time it was David, Rodger and myself as Becky had odd hours of being a nurse at the hospital.
March came rolling in which meant my birthday. My parents thinking that my year in Antioch had been so hard on me thought to give me a surprise 15th party. What a horror for me when I walked into our house to find my school friends and my barn friends together saying "Surprise!". Two groups who had never met and couldn't have been more of a contrast from each other. I obviously felt uncomfortable just having my parents having anything to do with a party for me. I liked my friends, all of them, but they had nothing in common except for me. I could hardly wait for the evening to be over.
My next big shock was that my parents decided to divorce. It didn't really bother me as B. wasn't my real father and I didn't have that close a bond with him. Maybe it was the fact that I had heard them trying to get along but not doing so well, or maybe it was that I didn't care. I think I was selfish at 15 and could only see what I wanted. My mom, grandmother and myself would be moving into an apartment and B. to his own as well. My grandmother was still in Tennessee and would find upon her return a new residence we would be at.
Not long after B. moved out, he took me out to dinner. He was very nice to me, as he always was, but point blanked asked me if I wanted to live with him instead of my mom. I was floored. He brought up how my mom and I didn't get along and that it wouldn't get any easier with him gone. Not that he had ever intervened in any of our arguments. I firmly told him no. I let him know that while we fought she was my mom and I had no intention of abandoning her. Inside I thought that really it was my Nan that I couldn't abandon. I had missed her so much while she had been away. I never saw B. again or heard from him. In my adult years I came to find out that he had had an affair that started in Salinas and continued when we moved to Antioch. The woman was a friend of the family from way back when we lived in Atwater. It was insulting that he moved us from all our friends just so he could be closer to that woman.
I came home from school one afternoon to find our two poodles, Pepe and Charlie gone. When my mom came home from work that evening I asked her where they were. She very matter of fact said they had been ill for quite some time and they were put to sleep as they were not getting better. I was beside myself. I loved those dogs! I knew they both had been on special dog food but I could see nothing wrong with either of them whatsoever. They weren't old dogs either though they were near 9 nears of age. My never getting to give them one more hug, more more playtime, one more brushing, one more anything...no more hugs for those little guys. What I think happened, thinking through an adult mind now, was that where we would be moving they would not take pets. My mom had to think about where we would live and the dogs were not high on the priority for survival. Why we couldn't have found them a new home I will never no. The discussion and sorrow were not coming from my mom and I was at a loss for why my world continued to be turned upside down. My room became the only place I wanted to be. I look back and realize that these had to be very dark days for her as well.
In the meantime at the barn, Dub and somehow talked my mom into getting me a new saddle. I had outgrown my first saddle and we traded that one for a lovely tooled one that fit perfectly for my young adult body. I looked at all the areas of the saddle that someday I could add silver concho's to like the girls with their fancy show saddles. The only bright spot in the month of March, not that getting a new saddle dealt with my heartache.
We had had a wet winter that year making the arena a mud hole a lot of the time. Our horses were frisky from being cooped up and not ridden too much. Still, whenever it seemed dry enough Rodger would have us practice. Most of the time it was David, Rodger and myself as Becky had odd hours of being a nurse at the hospital.
March came rolling in which meant my birthday. My parents thinking that my year in Antioch had been so hard on me thought to give me a surprise 15th party. What a horror for me when I walked into our house to find my school friends and my barn friends together saying "Surprise!". Two groups who had never met and couldn't have been more of a contrast from each other. I obviously felt uncomfortable just having my parents having anything to do with a party for me. I liked my friends, all of them, but they had nothing in common except for me. I could hardly wait for the evening to be over.
My next big shock was that my parents decided to divorce. It didn't really bother me as B. wasn't my real father and I didn't have that close a bond with him. Maybe it was the fact that I had heard them trying to get along but not doing so well, or maybe it was that I didn't care. I think I was selfish at 15 and could only see what I wanted. My mom, grandmother and myself would be moving into an apartment and B. to his own as well. My grandmother was still in Tennessee and would find upon her return a new residence we would be at.
Not long after B. moved out, he took me out to dinner. He was very nice to me, as he always was, but point blanked asked me if I wanted to live with him instead of my mom. I was floored. He brought up how my mom and I didn't get along and that it wouldn't get any easier with him gone. Not that he had ever intervened in any of our arguments. I firmly told him no. I let him know that while we fought she was my mom and I had no intention of abandoning her. Inside I thought that really it was my Nan that I couldn't abandon. I had missed her so much while she had been away. I never saw B. again or heard from him. In my adult years I came to find out that he had had an affair that started in Salinas and continued when we moved to Antioch. The woman was a friend of the family from way back when we lived in Atwater. It was insulting that he moved us from all our friends just so he could be closer to that woman.
I came home from school one afternoon to find our two poodles, Pepe and Charlie gone. When my mom came home from work that evening I asked her where they were. She very matter of fact said they had been ill for quite some time and they were put to sleep as they were not getting better. I was beside myself. I loved those dogs! I knew they both had been on special dog food but I could see nothing wrong with either of them whatsoever. They weren't old dogs either though they were near 9 nears of age. My never getting to give them one more hug, more more playtime, one more brushing, one more anything...no more hugs for those little guys. What I think happened, thinking through an adult mind now, was that where we would be moving they would not take pets. My mom had to think about where we would live and the dogs were not high on the priority for survival. Why we couldn't have found them a new home I will never no. The discussion and sorrow were not coming from my mom and I was at a loss for why my world continued to be turned upside down. My room became the only place I wanted to be. I look back and realize that these had to be very dark days for her as well.
In the meantime at the barn, Dub and somehow talked my mom into getting me a new saddle. I had outgrown my first saddle and we traded that one for a lovely tooled one that fit perfectly for my young adult body. I looked at all the areas of the saddle that someday I could add silver concho's to like the girls with their fancy show saddles. The only bright spot in the month of March, not that getting a new saddle dealt with my heartache.
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