FIRST MRS. BLAIRE AND THEN, MRS. PARKS: Memories

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Memories on a day like today are sent from the forces that rule our world. Memories are truths melted and meshed into what we want them to be and sometimes they feel soothing, refreshing and other times formulate grating and abrasive points of view.

For example, the first day at Mrs. Blaire’s Day Care Center was the beginning of my psychological hell in the real world of humans on a larger scale. My mother and I climbed the stairs to the day care center and I knocked on the door. The door opened wide, SHE, Mrs. Blaire loomed large, and looking up into her gigantic, flared nostrils, I thought I was going to be sucked up into them. I imagined a life of flying around in her funny, fluffy body. Not only did her huge nostrils suck, flap and wave, her teeth were fangs and I was certain she was an eater of little children. I began to scream and kick my mother. Mrs. Blaire said to my dear shy mother, “Leave her here, we know how to handle little kickers and screamers.” My mother came back to pick me up, day after day, to reports of a little girl who kicked and screamed the entire day. Finally, Old Huge Nostrils told my mother that perhaps her little girl was not ready for her establishment. In hindsight, Mrs. B., you were not ready for me. Poor dear well meaning Mrs. Blaire is long dead in her grave, and look at me, speaking to the dead. I learned then and there that if you kick and scream, you get to go home and stay there until Kindergarten, or in this 21st century, kicking and screaming can get you institutionalized.

Remember the book, ALL YOU REALLY NEED TO KNOW YOU LEARNED IN KINDERGARTEN? Maybe it is true. I was taught by Mrs. Parks, my Kindergarten teacher, that someone could dislike all that you are and do. Mrs. Parks told me I was such a sloppy child and a very messy painter. I got into my passions all those years ago, and I still do. She said that I had the dirtiest face in the entire world. Impossible! My mother was an obsessive clean freak. Mrs. Parks was so innocent that she did not know I was beige, and that the sun had ripened, browned, and glazed my skin. My mother used to take me downtown on a trolley and I noticed there were people with dirtier faces than mine. Duh? Oh my Mrs. Parks, I didn’t have the dirtiest face in town after all, you should have ridden the trolley downtown a few times. Now, I am so glad that that is settled.

Mrs. Parks said that if I knocked all the blocks down one more time, God would punish me. I got into talking with God. I didn’t know then that I was praying, but a lot of pray talking was done. I learned in those talks to listen. Learning to listen is a lifelong task. In Mrs. Parks Kindergarten class, I began my lifelong passion of listening!

Mrs. Parks said that my kind wasn’t what people really wanted and that I would always be in someone’s way. It took me many years to understand what she meant. She meant that I would suffer the prejudices of many generations. From the day I began and left Kindergarten, I gained an understanding of my role in the world and my need to weather the storms of unkindly words from all of the Mrs. Parks I would encounter. My soul and my work never recovered until yesterday. Yesterday created an altercation and transformation of all that I have known. I threw off the camouflage and came into being. I am that messy, sloppy, screaming, kicking, dirty-faced kid, afraid of being sucked up into the nostrils of some giant, but finally I understand, and I am content with it all. You will find a Mrs. Parks around many corners, and now that you know about her, you can shake the evils off before they stick. Start shaking! Shake! Shake! Shake!

 

BERNIE SHORE: A Long Time Ago

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I tried to find Bernie’s Bio on Google, but he seems to have disappeared, at least the Bernie Shore I used to know sixty years ago. He became a doctor, one well renowned. He was honest, forthright and slightly Napoleonic.

He was no one I should remember for anything other that what I am going to tell you. I double dated with Bernie, his older brother, the doctor and Anne Francis, a starlet. I was cute, really cute, great budding body, but no match in age, physicality and or in sophistication for this group. I was barely sixteen. I do remember several great one-liners added to my score, but Anne’s deep and slightly graveled voice beat me into a corner. Who can remember what was ordered and or what was eaten. Who can remember even tidbits of the conversation that night. It is not important to the story.

Bernie and I had several dates after the first double date and each thought the other a nice person. I lived in the inner city and he being a Beverly Hills Boy found the distance unmanageable. We parted ways for many, many life changing years.

As the world turns, I came in contact with Bernie about twelve serious years later. He had matured. I had just completed the task of beginning to raise our five children, gained baby mama weight, wore little face saving paint and struggled to get out of the house and home let alone look like I used to look.

Bernie and I stood face to face at an event. I said, “Are you Bernie Shore?” He said, “Yes.” I said, “My goodness, hello, I am Sheila.”

He said, “Oh my God what the hell happened to you?. You used to be so cute?” Crushed to the matt, I said,” I have been busy, you shit head.”

If you are still kicking Bernie, I do hope you are well. But I also hope you are fat and ugly. Toothless. I hope you waddle. I hope you shrunk. I hope you have hopeless amounts of unwanted hair in your nose and ears. I hope you stink. Oh, I do hope so…

 

 

I WANNABE A SINGER, WHAT DO YOU WANNABE?

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I hadn’t heard from you in a long while. I sent you an email inquiring about how you were doing. You sent me an email telling me about your move and the downsizing process and the new building being built for you and the others. You prefaced all you had to say with, “Hi, Wannabe,” and ended with, “Well, Wannabe, you are always in my thoughts.” Wannabe? Where in the heck did you get that? Wannabe? Do you know the Urban Dictionary says,” a Wannabe is most likely lacking in self-confidence and is looking for guidance.” Plus, Dictionary.com says, “a Wannabe is one who aspires, often vainly, to emulate another’s success or attain brilliance in some area.” Did you know this when you called me Wannabe? I only want for continued health. I have everything I need and most of what I want. You called me Wannabe, and I’ll tell you what I really wannabe, but in the meantime think about this: What or who do you Wannabe?

Where did you get Wannabe? Must be you looking in the mirror and found a Wannabe. I don’t wannabe famous, I don’t wannabe be in another house, I wannabe right here in this one. It is perfect. Oh, now you might have a point here, and maybe I wannabe a little smarter, a little younger, and a bit kinder, more understanding, certainly more patient, and I wannabe a singer. That’s right.

Preposterous of course, but I have wanted to be a singer all of my life. When someone else is singing my brain is singing along with the voice, but my voice cannot be found. At first, I thought I was shy about singing out loud, but that’s not it. I am tone deaf. I cannot repeat the sounds I hear or the sounds needed to distinguish between each separate note. Tone deafness seems to be genetically influenced. It is a disability, but only appears to be with music. I can recognize a song, but cannot bring it back on my own. I learned long ago when I was kicked out of chorus in the sixth grade that something was wrong. I realized later that I was so off key, I began to mouth the words hoping no one would hear the off-putting sounds. The teacher caught me, and being put out of chorus stuck to me like a badge of deceit.

I’m whining now, but I wannabe a singer most of all, and if I cannot sing the words to you, I will write them. I do so want to write a song, sing a song, but they say singing takes hearing the pitch, tone, timbre, rhythm and the harmonic consistency in music. I hear none, just the words to accompany and integrate my tone-deaf mind.

I want to sing my song: “Wannabe Gone”

 

Singing on the mountaintop, biding my time, telling my story, facing the rain, hiding my pain

I want to be a singer, but I can’t sing

Want you to hear my song, but here’s the thing

I can’t sing anything.

It takes hearing music and I hear none, but I wannabe a singer and have some fun

Singing on the mountaintop, biding my time, telling my story, facing the rain, hiding my face, and bearing the pain.

He told me he loved me, he told me he cared, he told me our love would never die and he told me a lie.

I wore his ring, he wore my heart, he was my meaning and I was his receiver.

Singing on the mountaintop, biding my time, telling my story, facing the rain, hiding my face, and bearing the pain.

He took the sun; he took the stars, then he left the moon and my heart with a hole in it. He tried, but he lied; he is gone and this is my song…wannabe gone.

 

 

 

Wishes Don’t Wash Dishes

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

If  you sit on the couch and wish, wish, wish for the dishes to be done, I will tell you here and now, they will not be done anymore than they were when you first started wishing. Get off your duff and do something about the tasks in your life that need doing.

Some of my dear friends and relatives have died. I wish I would have told them how much I will always love them, and most of all I wish I would have told them how much I will/do miss them. Wishes Don’t Wash Dishes and to you B.J. you are right!

I wish to do so many things I think about, and sometimes I just sit and wish for them. Then, I remember B.J. and some of his last words to me were, “Wishes Don’t Wash Dishes.” When I heard him say these words a few weeks ago, I knew at that very moment I would spend the rest of my life doing what I needed to do to get those dishes washed. Now that you have heard B.J.’s words, get going and do what you need to do to get your dishes washed.

I remember as a child I wished for this and that and everything I saw I wished for in that moment. Now I wish for more concrete things. Health is one of my new wishes along with an absence of growing old pains, peace and quiet, plus daily doses of love and respect. My dishes are washed.

Here’s the deal I make with myself. I will DO the dishes if my grandchildren will be healthy, a little wealthy and mostly gain joy and wisdom throughout their lives. Let them live on to a ripe fulfilled age. Dishes are drying in the bin.

I will do your dishes if you will take the time to smell the roses and enjoy what you are doing right now. I’ll even do the pots and pans if you do something kind and nice for someone.

Instead of wishing for more time, I am going to enjoy the time I have. Sometimes I realize I am grumpy and do not enjoy the present moment, all rolled up into a wish for an opportunity to do something way off in the future. Now is the future.

I wish I would have cried out loud and ranted and raved when I wanted to instead of tying my throat up in a knot and swallowing my pain. I wish I would not go back in time and dig up old miseries, so off I go to wash the dishes.

I wish I did not have to make decisions. Some are more difficult than others. If I actually make no decisions, I will be on this chair for the rest of my life. I think I will get up and wash the dishes.

The dishes will get done if I watch someone do them. I like that, but then, I think, what is my role? Watching is so passive, so unreceptive, and so empty. I think I will help the washer, wash the dishes. They will get done faster, leaving time for another adventure.

Your wishes don’t wash your dishes, YOU do!

An Experience with Recovery Therapy

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I used to get the jitters once in awhile, still do. You probably do not get them, so, lucky you. I never know if they are coming, so I cannot plan for them.  I was hoping to work it out with some kind of therapy rather than drug myself into oblivion.  Going far away from home, or worry over the family is a time I have to work at calming down the symptoms of anxiety. Imagine at my age having anxiety. My life is nearly over. I should have been scared to death early on. Perhaps I was, and too involved to recognize it.  It was suggested that I try a form of therapy.  I believe it is written on my paperwork: Recovery Therapy. Recovering from fear I assumed. I made an appointment with a therapist.

The minute I walked into the door the “she” therapist handed me a box of partially used Kleenex. I said, “ I do not have a cold, is there something on my face, do I need these?”  She said, “Well you are going to cry and you will need them.”  I thought to myself then and there, no way was I going to allow myself to cry. The session began and ended with no consequences good or bad.  I did not cry and thinking back maybe I should have.

Miss K seemed like a novice in dealing with my meanderings. I was older and truly it seemed I knew more in some areas, especially the areas where I wanted to find some new connections.  If she had been more in tune, more experienced, maybe she would have been able to help me. Maybe if she hadn’t handed me Kleenex I would have been more open.  I thought perhaps I needed to go back to make sure it was not me who was blocking the therapy progress.  So, I made another appointment. I happened to pass a bakery on the way to my second appointment, so being the kind of person I am, I stopped and hand picked cookies for my family and a bag for the therapist.  When I handed her the cookies, she said,  “Oh is this a bribe? Can I expect cookies every time you come?”  Then and there, I decided there would not be a next time. She seemed so hostile.  It seemed like if I had the problem, I would not be an equal partner in my recovery. What recovery?  We are all recovering in some way or another from birth to death.  After such a traumatic thing as birth is claimed to be, I personally have no recall, the baby needs to recover.  The in between stages of living our lives is a jumbled mess of haps and mishaps, surely needing recovery. In death and dying, it all comes together in a big recovery experience and when you see the white light, “bingo” you are done.  Congratulations, you have arrived at the ultimate recovery. Your behavior heretofore has been structured and developmental, a road to personal growth, challenging, developing healthier relationships, taking responsibility for your actions and deciding to integrate all you have learned. Congratulations, you have arrived at the ultimate recovery and St. Peter is there to tell you, you are several points short, but he definitely appreciates your kind attention to the details and your dedication to recovery.

By the way, I just found out that my HMO is offering something new in recovery called Behavioral Therapy. You do not need to be referred.  You can just call and offer yourself up to this new format. Excuse me please, I do think I will pass, but I would like to know if they offer Kleenex and take cookie bribes.

What If you saw Criticism as “Terms of Endearment?”

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You perhaps would be able to rule the world, if not the whole entire world, certainly, your world by changing criticism into encouraging “Terms of Endearment.” You would see the doom and gloom portions of your life as bright and full of healing sunlight. Let us take an expression of disapproval, make it approval, fault finding, making it an authorization, having a condemnation, turn into consent, dealing with recrimination and blame turning into acceptance and reception. Are you getting the point? If we continuously turn critical judgments and take fault, we are hurting the stem of our mental and physical wellbeing. I know, I have lived with criticism as a means to motivate me to do better, produce more, climb higher and it worked until it didn’t.

What if you and I take the criticism we get in the next few days and turn it into “Terms of Endearment,” what will change? When a critical moment comes and you are actively changing that moment into love, acceptance and affection, then you feel the internal change immediately.  You are so stymied; you do not know how to react. You do not even remember having to feel this way before now. Heretofore, upon hearing criticism, you have turned yourself into a stick, a brick, and an inanimate object in order to ward off the attack. Instead you have created a complex new relationship with self-enjoyment. Yes, enjoyment. When you are actively changing negative messages into love and affection, approval and acceptance, you feel proud, strong, valued, a prize with great worth.  Honestly, if you surround yourself with constant barrages of endearment, you will rule. You will rule a kinder, happier self, you will spill this endearment over into your family, community, your place of work and in that way rule your world from a satisfied, cheerful place. Congratulations on a good positive choice. Remember, this seed of turning criticism into “Terms of Endearment” has been planted and you have to practice this concept to make it grow and flourish in your life.

Screw It!

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This is the first time I have been so brazen, but the need be. When I was preparing dinner the night before last, I realized the need to screw caps on and off. I was actually consumed by counting the number of screws it takes to screw off the cap and then, screw it on again. Stop reading, go to your pantry or refrigerator and take out a number of screw on and offs. Count them. Soon you will be consumed by counting and don’t let this happen to you, but if you add up the screws for a day, that’s a lot of screwing.

For example, in the above photo, if you are quite relaxed you get about 80 screws. Skip showed me that if you become more aggressive and work harder at screwing tops on and off, you can reduce the number of screws. Who wants to work too hard and some of you may or may not want to add to or reduce the number of screws. It is entirely up to you.

Now, if you are up to it, you can go into your bathroom and find plenty of screws. The best places for adding to your screwing numbers is in the pantry. Look in the garage, lots of screwing opportunities there too, right?

Arthritis sets in when you grow a bit older and you will find screwing harder. It takes longer, too. If you are not in a hurry, you will find screwing in older age quite practical.

Frankly, this screwing issue keeps me up at night worrying about how much I have to screw all day, in the bathroom, the kitchen, the den and dining room. Look around; you have a lot of screwing to do, too. You probably, and I probably, should not let it keep us up at night because screwing is just a natural part of life.

 

To Catch a Falling Leaf

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Have you ever tried to catch a falling leaf? You watch the leaves falling and know that it should certainly be a cinch to catch one. When you actually bobble your head and stretch out your hands under a tree of falling leaves, you catch nothing. They are not slippery to the touch, but slippery in their elusiveness to the catch. Anyhow, why even write about catching a falling leaf.  I write because life is a series of trying to catch falling leaves. Not that life is difficult, but it does tend to be elusive to catch in many ways.  You have to demand patience and a willingness to stick with the task to catch that leaf.  The harder and the longer you try, you build up techniques. You miss one and mentally challenge yourself to find out why.  You begin to see how it is done more easily. Your hands need to be positioned just right, lower and lower. You need to coordinate your options. Your head is positioned correctly, eyes, steady on the targets, hands even lower, feet ready to move, body on a swivel and heart hoping.  That’s it. It is having the heart that makes all the difference, so I have come to think.

Perseverance is a guide, and dedication brings the leaf floating directly on target, seemingly right into your lowered hands! You grab, scratch, open your mouth, gulp air, maybe that will help, you secretly make a promise to God you will be worthy and yes, indeed you make the catch.  The leaf is yours. You put it in your pocket like the poem says, never let it fade away and save it for a wintry day. You make a secret wish on this momentous occasion. You know you will have luck for the catching, so you do not wish for that, but instead your wish is a question.  But wait, your leaf will dry and crumble, perhaps one day it will fall away. All you will have is this day of luck, a question asked and the memory of a great split second catch because you did not give up until the falling leaf was yours. Congratulations!

WHO IS MISS PARROT FLOWER?

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Miss Parrot Flower is a friend of mine. Her real name is not Miss Parrot Flower but she likes this pseudonym and has accepted that I use it.

Miss Parrot Flower would like to know: If you were to build a temple to the higher powers, what stones would you use to give it stability? I surveyed some friends and received responses I share with Miss Parrot Flower’s permission.

I have three responses so far and please add yours:

  1. Awareness, acceptance and forgiveness.
  1. Diamonds, Rubies, Emeralds, Opals, Amethyst, and Sapphires.
  1. Love, faith truth and mercy.
  1. Faith, Love, Forgiveness
  1. Audacity Imagination Love Heart Compassion
  1. Humility, Compassion, and Gratefulness

7. Very Dear Miss Parrot Flower,

With all due respect, I wouldn’t waste my time building any sort of temple to the non-existent higher powers (or perhaps you’re referring to high tension power lines: yes, those really do exist). Instead, dear Parrot, I’d go eat a lovely orange and read a great book.

With love,

Miss Crab Grass

  1. I can’t do better than the ones you have, sorry.

8. Faith, hope, charity, and a few diamonds!!!!!!!   🙂

9. GOOD HEALTH, THE LOVE OF YOUR LIFE BY YOUR SIDE, GOOD HEALTH, MORE GOOD HEALTH

AND A LIFETIME OF LOVE SONGS! ! !

10. Health, Love, Piety, Compassion, Truth, Relief, Forgiveness, Critical Thinking

11. Family, friends, time for all, and good health

12. Faith, Relief and Forgiveness

13. Goodness & Mercy

14: PIETY, COMPASSION, TRUTH, and HUMILITY RECTIFICATION

15: Laughter, passion and family

16. Love: love of humanity, love of God, love of self, love of health, love of wonder, amazement, and nature.

17. Truth, Honesty, Devotion, Health

18, Feel hope, seek peace, share love, give love

Thank you to those who have participated in this commitment. It is not closed. I will add your responses as soon as you send them, or feel free to leave your response in the comment section. Thanking you in advance.

Hillary Clinton Does Not Drive a Car! So?

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Dear Hillary,

You do not drive a car?  You recently stated you haven’t since 1996.  It is so nice that you can be driven wherever your life takes you, but I have a concern that by being driven, you have lost some very important skills.  I am not approaching this as a political strategy, I just have a few thoughts on what it takes to drive, and many are the same thoughts on what it takes to be president of any organization, society, union, you get the idea? Many people do not drive cars for various reasons, but they probably won’t run for President of the United States in the near future. Perhaps you won’t either Hillary, but if you do decide to run, drive a car, please.

The reason I state driving a car will be so good for you is because so many skills necessary for leadership, believe it or not, are encompassed in being able to successfully drive a car. Skills like concentration and focus are extremely important.  Concentration means giving your undivided attention and singling in on something specific in nature. When you are skilled in focusing you are able to single out the main purpose. As a leader, knowing the main purpose of so many things are important in serving the interest of your people. Take the car out for a Sunday jaunt and keep your skills honed.

Anticipation and forethought are important when driving a car. You usually mentally plan out the route you will take and aimlessly driving is not productive. If you do not know where you are going, you really can’t get there.

Judgment when driving a car is paramount and particularly vital. When driving a car you must evaluate the road conditions and the position of other cars continuously in order to make a safe decision. Decisions are a constant in driving as well as being a person of authority.

Patience is a virtue not only in life, and a hard state to achieve, but exceptionally important when driving. Wikipedia states that patience is the state of endurance under difficult circumstances. Having patience is being steadfast and does not include hastiness and impetuousness. I see impatient drivers causing road problems on a daily basis. When involving yourself in a decision-making problem, do you not think having patience is a valuable tool in procuring long-term rewards?

Having peripheral vision in driving as well as all aspects of decision-making is enormously important, do you not agree? Having peripheral vision, seeing outside the center is enormously important.  It opens the field of opportunities and does not keep one looking only straight ahead. Think of how much you enlarge the playing field by not using only central vision and thinking. Think of how important what you are looking at can be in terms of leadership and as well as driving a car. Sometimes we simply need to open our field of vision to attain our goals.

Another important skill you need to keep in the forefront when you are driving a car is confidence. The roads these days have tripled and quadrupled in the gathering drivers and cars. People drive longer and longer distances, people who jump in their cars, put in the key, turn it or just press the on button take with them a bundle of skills all rolled up in the word confidence. They trust that their chosen actions are the best because they do this job of driving nearly everyday with success.

Driving keeps you on the ground, connected. We need a leader to bridge gaps and connect the world in as many ways possible. My dear Hillary, get out there, put on your seat belt, follow the rules, and get connected. Go for a drive. Do it yourself. Sharpen your skills.

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