I like to use colloquialisms when I am at a loss for words.
Also I turn to random happy pictures in times of stress.
All of these from last weekend, when we celebrated Grace's eighth birthday with trips to
Sweet Life, Wildlife Safari and...
Sweet Life, Wildlife Safari and...
Tolly's. The only 1880s ice cream shop I know.
And, really, why would I need to know another?
And, really, why would I need to know another?
The trilliums are just opening here.
Some are broken by the ice and snowstorms we've been experiencing.
Spring, not so sprung.
Me, a bit undone.
This weekend we hosted dear friends for a multiple-kid birthday party.
Heavenly coconut cupcakes I resisted (wheat-free. gah.).
But lasagne was too good to leave alone.
We went to a radical 1980s party for another sweet birthday girl.
The kids looked better than I ever remember looking in the 1980s.
We saw The Hunger Games and it really was as good as the book.
We (the royal we) trenched out the entire backyard
and replaced the water line from pump-house to house-house.
We remembered what a shower is, as opposed to a trickle.
I read a lot of Emily Dickinson.
But it didn't improve my outlook as much as did looking through some happy pictures.
Not so long ago I saw a report that said we, internetbeings, are at risk.
At risk of a form of depression that supposedly springs from
reading (incessantly) about the (maybe trumped-up)
happinesses and successes of others.
Like a year-round Christmas brag letter.
But I beg to differ.
I like the happy.
Post all you like.
I'm reading.
And some days it is holding me up, holding my undone together.
Me, a bit undone.
This weekend we hosted dear friends for a multiple-kid birthday party.
Heavenly coconut cupcakes I resisted (wheat-free. gah.).
But lasagne was too good to leave alone.
We went to a radical 1980s party for another sweet birthday girl.
The kids looked better than I ever remember looking in the 1980s.
We saw The Hunger Games and it really was as good as the book.
We (the royal we) trenched out the entire backyard
and replaced the water line from pump-house to house-house.
We remembered what a shower is, as opposed to a trickle.
I read a lot of Emily Dickinson.
But it didn't improve my outlook as much as did looking through some happy pictures.
Not so long ago I saw a report that said we, internetbeings, are at risk.
At risk of a form of depression that supposedly springs from
reading (incessantly) about the (maybe trumped-up)
happinesses and successes of others.
Like a year-round Christmas brag letter.
But I beg to differ.
I like the happy.
Post all you like.
I'm reading.
And some days it is holding me up, holding my undone together.