Little League Soccer :)

What things give you energy?

I’m sitting here this morning with my huband, mom, and daughter, watching my grandson and his teammates chase the soccer ball from one end of the field to the other. The ball slices through the cool crisp air until another young set of legs stops its drive. It brings a smile to my face and joy to my heart to see my grandson’s face light up every time his foot connects with the ball. Their team might be scoreless, but they sure are having fun! Cheering gives me energy.

Sad Songs Make Me Cry

What would your life be like without music?

Sometimes, on sad days, I like to cry it out by listening to sad songs. One of my favorite sad songs is “Tears in Heaven” by Eric Clapton.

When I’m cleaning, I like to listen to Miranda Lambert songs. “Little Red Wagon” is a fun one.

It is so cool how songs can take you right back to a place in time every time you hear certain songs. Madonna songs take me back to high school. Journey takes me back to dating years.  “We’ve Only Just Begun” by The Carpenters was sung at my wedding.

Can you imagine weddings without music? Or funerals without music? Or Dancing With the Stars? Haha! Nope!

Music and lyrics speak to our hearts and souls like nothing else can!

Turn That Frown Upside Down

This morning I woke up feeling depressed. It is a feeling like no other. I won’t go into details about how I felt, buy I am blessed to have a husband who cares enough to sit right there and listen to my unreasonable rantings.

My father died in January, but I feel I am just now truly mourning his death… and my mom’s sadness. The loss of a loved one who is such a “larger than life” type of personality really leaves a huge hole of emptiness in the lives of those left behind.

The medication I was taking for anxiety and depression made me feel “numb” to the loss of my dad. The benefit was that I could read the life sketch at my dad’s funeral without tears. People complemented me on how “strong” I was to do that without crying. I didn’t feel strong. I felt numb. I have made some choices since then, that I wonder if I would have made had I not been on that medication. Maybe. But, I can’t help but wonder. I made decisions that go against my values and who I am at my core.

So… three months ago I stopped taking the medication so I could feel “all the feels.” They are strong feelings. Mostly negative. There is an underlying sadness in my life most of the time, which, at times manifests as anger/irritation. I am definitely mourning my father’s loss. Among all of the things I miss, a couple of things really stand out. I miss his common-sense approach to life and his down-to-earth advice.

I also feel deep regret for the choices I made recently that are not representative of who I am. Feelings of regret are the worst. I keep asking myself WHY? Rebelliousness? Midlife crisis? Repressed mourning? Not sure, but regret adds to feelings of deep remorse, unworthiness, anger, frustration, depression, etc. “All the feels.”

So, anyway, this morning I woke up feeling deeply depressed. So, so, very sad. My husband encouraged me to go for a walk with him. After some prompting, I agreed and we went for a walk around the river’s edge. It was a beautiful warm summer morning. The walking and talking with my husband was a much needed distraction and very helpful in changing my feelings. I enjoy the outdoors and the beauty along the river. I have learned it is good to get moving when feeling down. The fresh air was fabulous! I took some pictures along the way. Enjoy!

This brought an immediate smile to my face and a curiosity to my mind. What were they discussing? What is their life’s story?
Enjoying the shade before crossing over the river to walk the other side.
If walls of old buildings could talk….
Smiles  > Frowns

Keep a Journal

Daily writing prompt
Share a lesson you wish you had learned earlier in life.

Time moves so fast. And your memory fades over time. The details of your life, over time, become less and less easy to recall. One of my friends became an author. She has kept a journal her entire life, which was very helpful to her when she wrote her first book. I just wish I had kept a record of all of our family experiences when our children were young. It would be fun to share those memories with our adult daughters and our grandchildren now. Also, it would be good to have something in writing to solve disputes when my husband and I are discussing past experiences from our separate perspectives and aging memories. Yep. Keep a journal! 🙂

It’s Life

What are you doing this evening?

Watching the presidential debate between former President Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris. Nothing earth-shattering to report. In my opinion, if an Independent was watching, I doubt they were swayed one way or the other.

I’m also thinking of my dad. Today would have been his 85th birthday. He passed away this last January. It would have been interesting to hear his take on the debate. He was a Trump supporter who liked the economy when Trump was in office.

It was a rough day. One thing I did not anticipate upon my dad’s death was my brother moving in with my mom and how that would change the dynamics of my relationship with my mom. He is divorced, and in his 50’s, so he is not responsible for anyone else. He and I have not really ever been on the same “sense of responsibility” scale.

My worry is that he will take advantage of our mom financially. But, I believe we are only taken advantage of as far as we allow it… unless there is a mind altering substance involved. In this situation, there is none of that. So, I just have to trust he has her best interest at heart. Maybe now that I know my mom feels good about relying on my brother, my husband and I can move to an area in a warmer climate.

I’m feeling a little lost. Our children are grown and raising families of their own. My mom doesn’t need us like I thought she would. My sister is happily married, working, and nearing retirement. Maybe I should quit my job, sell the house, and, as I mentioned, take my retired husband and move to a warmer part of the country. All of my family lives here in my hometown. There are a lot of memories here. The good, the bad, and the ugly. Maybe a new start in a new place with people our own age (haha) would not be so bad.

The question is, where? Nevada, where there are no taxes? California, where the governor scares me? Arizona? New Mexico? Southern Utah, where the dirt is red? Let the dreaming begin! (Or figuring out I am just feeling emotional and trying to run away from it all!)

My husband and his unconditional love amazes me! So grateful he is willing to ride this rollercoaster of a life with me!

Morning!

What’s your favorite time of day?

Easy. Anyone who knows me very well knows I love mornings! The air is cool and crisp…well, not so crisp in the dog days of summer, but still cooler than midday in mid summer. 😎 

Mornings are when everything good happens, like the start of a trip,  a morning walk before breakfast, or….picture this….

A stay at the cabin on the 8th Crow Wing Lake in Northern Minnesota. It is early in the morning. You wake your family, grab your  lunch and fishing gear gathered the night before, and head from the cabin down to the lake.

The light is barely peaking through the cloudy sky. The steam is lifting from the lake, creating a misty appearance all around. The water is still and glass-like, the air so quiet that you can not avoid hearing the creeking sound of the wooden planks beneath the tip toes of your feet. The rocking as you step down inside the boat breaks the glassy appearance, forming the first mini waves across the water, and the quiet talking and laughter is an indication of a family fun day ahead.

Starting the motor cuts through the silence, deafening the tinkling of the lures dangling at the end of each fishing poles that are clanking while being secured for the chilly morning boat ride toward the perfect fishing spot near the lilly pads on the other side of the lake. (Because the lilly pads on this side of the lake are not good enough for fishing. One must always boat to the other side!) 😉

Crossing the misty lake, zipping my jacket all the way up, stretching the sleeves over to warm my hands, creating fresh wake behind the boat, I can’t help but smile a sleepy smile looking forward to a day of fishing with my family, each of us hoping to catch the first fish!

Yes! Morning is:  awaking to a fresh start, a new day, the beginning, the start of something great. It represents hope for good things to come. And if you are lucky, it starts with a beautiful sunrise!

A New Gig

For several months now, I have been driving for Uber and DoorDash, delivering food to hungry people. And it has been a fun way to earn a little extra money. My daughter and my niece jumped on the gig bandwagon, and they really like it as a way to make extra money, too.

About the same time I signed up for delivering for DoorDash and Uber Eats, I also signed up with Amazon to be a flex driver. I was put on a wait list for Amazon. A couple of weeks ago, I heard from them. They invited me to apply to be a driver. This afternoon, I accepted my first 3 hour block of deliveries as a flex driver. It consisted of 41 packages that needed to be delivered to 40 places.

I was nervous to pick up the order, but that app made it easy to follow the directions. The deliveries were all in a good part of town. I had a few apartments to deliver to, but that was good exercise. I made $67.50. It was a lot of work and an exhausting 3 hours, but it was a new experience. And I did not let fear keep me from accomplishing it. It was a great adventure, but now this 58-year-old body is ready for a good night’s sleep.

Zzzzz….

My Back Yard

What do you love about where you live?

Bird’s Eye View of the Salt Lake Valley (Copyright 2024 by Chatterlei)

What I love about where I live is that it is my home town. All three of our children, their spouses, and our six grandchildren live in the same town. For as much as we get together because everyone’s lives are so busy, we might a well live in Timbuktu! Our little (growing) conservative town/city is a great place to raise a family.

We are only 3 hours away from a University hospital where my husband can have surgery on his leg, then lie in a hospital room to heal for a few days and enjoy bird’s eye views, as captured in the image above, taken through the window from his 6th-floor room.

From our home, within a couple of hours’ drive on a Saturday afternoon, we can be on a bench in Yellowstone National Park with other tourists watching in awe as Old Faithful reliably spews it’s steamy water up to 180 feet into the air. We can pick up a souvenir from the nearby shops and eat our packed lunch either in the car or at a picnic table in the area. Then enjoy a drive though the park on our way home, hoping to see buffalo, elk, deer, and maybe even a bear or two in their habitat.

In about the same amount of time, we can drive a different direction and sit at the still glasslike water’s edge of Jenny Lake which is tucked away at the base of the Teton Mountain Range. This is one of the area’s most beautiful and most visited sites. We are fortunate to have Yellowstone and the Tetons in our back yard, so to speak.

Taking a long day’s drive we can be at the Oregon Coast enjoying a cool walk along the beach listening to the waves crash along the shoreline. In the same amount of time, heading in a different direction, our drive could take us to San Diego where we can enjoy the warmth of sunshine and see the beautiful sunsets fade below the horizon of the ocean as it meets the sky in the distance.

I absolutely love the outdoors and I love to travel! Living near the Rockies to the East and not far from the Pacific Ocean to the West we can enjoy a variety of God’s most beautiful creations. These are some of the things I love about where we live.

Making the best of it

Monday. Sitting here with my husband at the North Clinic Check-in, waiting for his appointment with the orthopedic surgeon to look at his left knee. Again. The appointment, which was scheduled in August, can now be canceled.

Three days ago, my husband stood up from the bed with the aid of his walker and nearly collapsed to the floor. The pain in his left knee was excruciating. Fear filled the room like fog filling the room from a fog machine at a rock concert. Not another infection! You see, once you have MRSA in your system, it lies dormant and can rear its ugly head at any time.

The medical assistant in black scrubs with a long french-braided ponytail cascading down the middle if her back checked my husband in. She happily asked, “Where’s the pain? When did it start? What meds are you on?” He answered each question. She stumbled over a couple of words, which she blamed on the fact she had just returned home last night after spending a month in France for “study abroad” so she was a little tired. That was not something I would have guessed about her. She seemed awake, happy, and her word stumbles were not noticeable. I wanted to talk about her experience in France, but she was quick at doing her job and the next thing I knew, she was headed out the door to let the doctor know his next patient was ready to be seen.

The doctor is easy to talk to and very personable, a bit unusual for most surgeons. Long story short, another surgery is in my husband’s future. In three weeks, he will have his 9th knee removal and/or replacement surgery.

Here we go again. Good thing he is full of determination. Sigh….

Smokey Sunset

Tuesday. Our conversation on the ride home last evening after Joe’s appointment was mostly about what he was feeling about another surgery and we started planning for an upcoming week-long stay that our 7-year-old grandson has with us prior to the surgery.

Our daughter said our grandson is very excited to spend the week with us rather than his other grandparents because he “gets too bored” when he stays with them. And, I thought they were the fun/interesting ones! Now, I am questioning our planned trip to the museum. Guess we better throw in an ice cream cone. 😉

Life goes on…. Make the best of it!

Hospice or Not?

    My dad had his first stroke on December 14th, 2023. After a series of watershed strokes, several rides to the hospital in the back of an ambulance, time in and out of the emergency room, a couple of weeks in a rehabilitation center, and three more trips back and forth to the ER, he was sent home on hospice with “comfort care.”

    He was driven to his home via non-emergent transport from the hospital. Home is where he wanted to be for however many days he had remaining. It was a Sunday. Monday and Tuesday were fairly good days. Wednesday, he started seeing children playing around his bed. Dad was full of smiles. His demeanor was relaxed and peaceful as he watched the children play. Even when he could not quite catch the pork that was floating at the end of his bed, he seemed unbothered. Thursday, there was less talking and more sleeping. By Friday, late afternoon, he had slipped into unconsciousness. 

   We were not fully prepared for what came next. The “death rattle” type of breathing began at 6pm Friday night. For twelve and a half hours, we surrounded our dad, husband, and grandpa, administering medication to him via syringe between his cheek and tongue, as we listened to that rattle. At first, it was administered every 2 hours, then one hour, then every 30 minutes at the direction of the hospice nurse via telephone on call that night. We were up all night. No nurse came. No matter how many times we called to explain that our dad seemed to be in distress, unable to swallow (for the last 12+ hours) the medication inevitably draining down the back of his throat. No suctioning was offered. Nothing.

   We were together as a family but alone in this process. We were exhausted to the point of tears, each of us lost in our own loneliness and confusion. Torn between the desparate need to hang on to this man, who is THE central part of each of our lives, and letting go, knowing his body gave him 84 years, but would not be able to give him one more day. It was his time to go home to his family, who were waiting to greet him on the other side of death. He took his last breath at 6:30 a.m. on Saturday morning. 

My sister’s grief poured out of her body in inconsolable sobbing and wailing exhales of emotion that her heart could no longer hold. Her daughter, my daughter, our mom, and I all wrapped her in arms of love, understanding exactly how she felt.

I don’t remember who made the call to the hospice nurse. I do remember watching the men from the funeral home load my dad into the back of their van and pull out of the driveway.  I don’t remember anything else, except feeling the need to sleep.

A few weeks after the funeral, my mom, my sister, and I met with the director of the home health and hospice company to share our experience. We do not want another family to experience the trauma our family experienced with “comfort care.”

We explained that expectations and options were not made clear. The nurse never offered to come lay eyes on our dad to make sure we didn’t need to change what we were doing. He did not appear comfortable. My understanding was that hospice meant comfort care. Our experience of comfort care was anything but comfort.

Home health and hospice listened intently to our concerns. We hope they make the changes they said they will, so anyone using their hospice service in the future has a positive experience of their loved one’s passing.

The good memories of our dad help to soften the pains of our loss. For that, we feel immense gratitude. 

The Empty Chairs

Friday night was the third Friday we played pinochle without my dad sitting across the table from me. Someone was sitting in his chair, but it did not matter who occupied his seat. The emptiness permiated the entire house, as did the smell of all of the flowers from his funeral. My sister and I celebrated our January birthdays together in February with our traditional family meal and cake for dessert. It was noticeably quiet. Our dad was not there to celebrate with us. Somehow, the food did not taste as good this year….

As time moves on, yes, it moves on, though it feels like it should stand still, as I look across the livingroom at the reclining chair where my dad previously sat and laughed, cried, relaxed, and freely offered advice to his family, I realize that instead of feeling sad and longing for my dad to come around the corner with his walker and fill that empty chair with his body, smile, and magnetic personality, I can look at that empty chair, as well as the one at the table, and see in my minds eye the memories of his life. Of the good times, laughter, sadness, and discussions of lessons learned. That empty chair contains all the memories my mind will produce for me to enjoy.

I am grateful for the memories of Dad and I playing Cribbage at the table. Of times as a small child, him patting my back as I cried because of a tummy ache or other sickness. Of the time helped me set up my first checking account at age 16. Of the time he cried over his Mom’s death at age 70. Of the time I laughed at him as a preteen looking over and seeing him close his eyes while taking that initial bite of a hotdogs. Of his shaking hand as he tries to fill his fork with food from his dinner plate and move it to his mouth before the shaking causes the food to fall back onto the plate before reaching his mouth. Of all of the hugs and I love yous from him as he sat in either of those chairs.

Every time I look at those empty chairs, the good memories bring a smile to my face and help heal my broken heart.

Dad passed away toward the end of January. We miss him, but we believe he is in a better place and are happy that he is no longer suffering.

A tender mercy

My thoughts are all over the place. Not sure where they will land.

My parents have lived in the same house for 56 years. It is the same house where my sister, brother, and I were raised. Lying here alone, waiting for sleep to overtake my overactive thoughts, in the same room where I was raised, is a little like being in a time machine.

My young self could not imagine my much older self lying here tonight with my mom, who is sleeping alone, snoring the night away in her bedroom next to mine, while my dad is spending the night sleeping alone in a room at the rehabilitation center across town, where he has been recovering from the stroke he had on the 14th of last month. This is the longest my parents have slept without each other in their 61 years of marriage. The good news is that my dad has worked hard with the PT and OT to improve his strength enough to come back home to my mom this upcoming Sunday.

It will be a relief for them to be together again. I will get to return home to my husband, who has been holding down the fort while I have been staying with my mom. Our daughter, her husband, and our young grandson have stayed at our house since before Christmas. After this weekend, everyone will be back in their own homes with their loved ones, and life will return to a somewhat normal state…with the unsettling knowledge lingering in the back of our minds, however, that our dad still has a blocked artery in his neck.

We don’t know what the future holds for our dad, but what we do know is that we are not going to take him for granted and we are forever grateful to God for the tender mercy of this extended time our parents get to spend together in this beautiful little house where they created a loving home filled with unforgettable memories.