Friday, December 31, 2021

Goodbye 2021

 Every two months, I check in to see how I'm doing on my New Year's resolutions. I give myself a score between 1-10 with the hopes that I'm perfect by the end of the year. 


The year is about up. Let's see how I did on those resolutions: 


  • To be like 2020 Rebel Wilson and make this year a focus on health. - I did continue my walking every morning Monday-Friday with my neighbor/neighbors. We went from one mile to three miles and back again to one mile. I added water aerobics for the summer months. That's about it. I did not focus on healthy eating. Or losing weight. So... Score: 4


  • To eat breakfast before I drink my morning coffee - YES!! DONE! DONE! DONE! Check. Score: 10


  • To think of three positive, happy, uplifting things for every negative thought that runs into my head - This was the best thing I could've done. It helped me immensely!! I'm a huge worrier. I go down the worry rabbit hole often and redirecting my mind helped. I shall continue this practice forever. Score: 10


  • To edit book one and complete book two in all phases and attempt to publish. - Book one is still a hot mess. I did work on editing it though until I had to put it aside to concentrate on book two with my mentor. I did complete book two up to sending it to a professional editor. That's pretty damn good even though I didn't attempt to publish. Then again, this was a HUGE resolution with way too many parts! Score: 8


  • To continue down the path of completing past resolutions - Started strong. Got too involved in writing. Finished weak. I'm going to say 1/2.  Score: 5


  • To learn some Russian - Kicked this one for the first half of the year! So, I'm calling it a win. Score: 9


Total Score46 out of 60 - Not too shabby! 


I really worked on these resolutions throughout the year. I had a copy of them on my desk so I could see them. I'm feeling pretty proud of how I did this year. 


See ya, 2021. I'm grateful I stayed healthy. Grateful the family was together and healthy. I was vaccinated for the flu and COVID. My mental health declined in the last few months but I did write 50,000 words for NaNoWriMo in the month of November! Up and down. Up and down. 


Here's to starting off 2020 with a healthy bang and a positive attitude! 

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Christmas 2021

Christmas was different this year. Due to various circumstances, my family did not travel to Florida to spend the holidays, and everything we planned went out the window. Instead, we gave a hundred percent of ourselves to hubby's family. All 17 of them. Add our family, and we were a group of 22.

Yikes! Although we were all vaccinated, more than half of us were boostered, and those who flew and drove COVID tested upon arrival. 

Still, we tried to split groups, hang outdoors, and congregate in large, open spaces. It was all quite a whirlwind. I think I got some time with everyone. 


They arrived in stages. One on one day. Two on another. We hopped from home to home, shared hosting duties and cooking (until Nancy arrived, and then we just got out of her way), and everyone did various activities. Those interested joined. Those who didn't found something else to occupy their time


We celebrated the two birthdays, one before and one after Christmas. 



Caught up with loved ones we hadn't seen in a couple of years. 


Did our yearly Yankee Gift Exchange. 



Ate way too much food. Played games and cards. And totally forgot to take the yearly photograph, although the kids did manage to get one with their mother.


Christmas morning was quiet. Darcy's friend Sofie joined us, bringing several bottles of her homemade, delicious holiday coquito. We did the Starbucks early morning run, enjoyed the crockpot overnight breakfast casserole, unwrapped gifts, and had lots of laughs and tears.








Madison has agreed to be our event planner for my side of the family to celebrate a summer Christmas. Fingers crossed that will pan out. 

Merry Christmas to all! Hope the holidays were a good one and that everyone stayed healthy!

Friday, November 19, 2021

Sharon is shh...50!

On the first day of my new job in the city's recreation department, I met Sharon. It wasn't one of those handshakes, nice-to-meet-you formal greetings. Instead, she came barreling into the front office where I was working the front desk like an undercover police officer. Arms raised, hands in gun position and pointing straight to the sky, and she took cover on the other side of the wall before popping out, aiming her gun fingers over my shoulder and yelling, Freeze!" to the invisible intruders. 

We've been friends ever since. 

And we may or may not have spent quite a bit of our free time chasing bad guys and traffic offenders in her blue Toyota truck, screaming the siren sounds as if we were legit. Or following suspicious people in the mall and grocery, recording their activities in nonexisting notebooks, and communicating via pretend walkie-talkies. 

The 1990's Cagney and Lacey. Or better yet, Starsky and Hutch.




She was eighteen years old and worldly. I was seven years older and living on my own for the first time. We complimented each other perfectly. Still do. Sharon is the one person who senses when I need a pick-me-up and gives me a call. She can make me laugh harder than anyone else I know. 

This year she turned fifty! Sharon! Fifty! She hardly looks any different than the day I met her. Truly. It's scary. 

To celebrate this milestone, we spent the weekend on Clearwater Beach in one of my Wyndham resorts. We haven't seen each other in a couple of years due to the pandemic and her life raising and homeschooling two teenage boys. We invited Maddy and Darcy to tag along, but Darcy had a weekend conference in Orlando for a weekend conference. She and her friends came Friday for dinner.


Darcy
: "Let me warn you now. My mom and Sharon together? They're like us only on steroids and older."

Sharon: "Listen, kid, I delivered you into the world. I can just as easily take you out."

Half-truth. Sharon was in the delivery room when Darcy was born. Had the doctor not shown, she could have--and would have--easily taken over and brought Darcy into the world. In her mind, she did.

Sharon was born to do everything.


We showed those youngsters how to have a good time. The weather was cold, but we had a blast. We drank margaritas and sangria. We made a few drunk phone calls to former colleagues and reminisced about the good old days. We reflected on our youth and those friends in our past. We agreed we did better damn well for ourselves in the long run.






And we've decided that 2022 is the year of Cara and Sharon get-togethers. 

Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Lois 2021


I think I was four years old when the Smiths (Karl, Lois, Kim, and Steph) moved in next door to us. The story goes that I wasn't exactly welcoming when Kim appeared to introduce herself, and whatever I said sent her home unhappy. Her mother, Lois, marched next door to confront my mother, who'd recently given birth to my brother--and was probably the cause of my four-year-old rudeness--and my mother thought, oh boy, what do we have here?

Apparently, something wonderful.


That meeting was the beginning of a friendship that still beats fifty-three years later. Our parents remained friends, keeping in touch even after we moved, a feat managed during the age of snail mail and costly long-distance phone calls. Through their committed friendship, we kids stayed in contact. To this day, I count Kim and Steph as my golden friends.

Make new friends but keep the old. One is silver and the other's gold.


Our families vacationed together. We alternated holidays. We shared the good times together as we did the hard times. 













Lois died today. It wasn't unexpected, but it was still a shock. I just saw her two years ago, before COVID, where we talked about age, longevity, and death. While she was unsure about staying in her home, she enjoyed her family, friends, and activities. She was in reasonably good health and in no hurry to join her husband or my parents. 

Unfortunately, life took a turn in these last two years. 

Today is also my birthday. I can hear Lois now, in her distinctive voice with her signature "tsk" and "oh," lamenting how she should've planned that better. Waited a day. Or left yesterday. 

"Oh, I didn't do it on purpose. You know that. Right? O-h. I would never-- Oh, Cara."

It wasn't enough to share November as our birthday month? Yeah, yeah, you wanted to make sure I never forgot you! That's what I said to her--aloud--when I heard the news. I liked to kid Lois. She was always good for a reaction. 


Lois was just a second mother. I shared many firsts with her. She was with me when I got my period, took my first plane trip alone, and through my wedding and the birth of my first daughter. Kim and I lived with Lois' father and stepmother when we first moved to Florida. I was there years later when both of them died. 

In the summer of 1976 when I was eleven, my parents went to the Olympics. I was sent to PA to live with the Smiths for the summer. Lois had me do everything that Kim and Steph did, putting me on their swim team, and then advocating for me when I won my races and the other team complained. I remember her kindness when I got my period. How she showed me my hygiene options and then secretly reached out to my parents to make sure they'd call me later that night.

At the end of the summer, Lois walked me onto the plane, gave me a gift to open when I got into the air and talked to the flight attendant. She left and returned twice, much to the horror of the flight attendant. Both times were more to reassure herself than for my benefit.


Lois was a doer. One of those people who had to keep busy. If she wasn't volunteering or reading, she was sewing. Her upstairs sewing room was a thing to behold, and my brother and I loved that she included us in every sewing project. I still have stuff she made me: my first book bag for school, a purple octopus I spread out each morning in the middle of my bed, clothes, a pillow with my name on it, and a keepsake box that holds all the cards I've received over the years. I also have the giant Christmas stocking she sent Kim and me when we lived in our Florida apartment.




Getting a Lois gift in the mail was the best thing ever. One year she made us all tall, cloth dancing partners that fit on the end of our feet. Mine was a boy with red hair and a bow tie, and my brother had a lion with an unruly mane. Lois sewed snaps on the thumbs to hold their arms in place around our waist or neck while we danced. I wished I'd kept that guy. 


She was a thinker. A problem solver. She liked to make lists, and if people weren't busy, she assigned them jobs. My dad and Karl always had honey-do lists, whether on vacation or not. In the summers, she'd leave circled newspaper ads with activities or jobs we might be interested in. She emailed us those when we moved to Florida, and two years ago, Kim and I were given the task of removing paint that her granddaughter had gotten on the backseat of her car. 

One was never idle when around Lois.


But she was also a worrier. Not just with her children and family, but with the state of the world, the future, the neighbor's kid running around barefoot. Worrying came naturally. As a kid, I didn't think too much about it. It was just a part of Lois, and while it drove her daughters nuts, I was pretty oblivious. It did, however, keep her from sleeping. I would always tip-toe on my way to the bathroom because it was right next to her bedroom, and I didn't want to be the reason why Lois didn't get a good night's sleep. We talked about it recently. How motherhood upped the ante and how it wasn't easy to turn the worrying off. Not sleeping was a huge downer for her. 

Lois was an avid reader. She volunteered at the library and always told us not to bemoan when we had overdue books because the fine was needed and went to a greater cause. I passed that on to my girls and recently repeated it to my husband when he griped about paying my library fine. Books were another great gift from Lois. 

She had a lot of faith, which was a bone of contention between her and my mother. I think she tied quite unsuccessfully to sway my mother toward the light. When that didn't work, she did her best to see that I at least made a valiant attempt at seeing things through a different lens. My mother swore Lois took me to church to irritate her, but I enjoyed the dressing up part and the attention.



After we kids got married and spread out, we didn't see much of one another, but Lois kept in contact. She was a huge fan of this blog. She'd read my stories, send me emails with comments, and she always kept me abreast of the Smith happenings. 


Lois also kept sending me articles that pertained to my interests. Some came via mail, others via email. I recently came across some Steelers articles she'd cut out of the local newspaper. She was a sports fan but got a kick out of my Steelers obsession.


Until a few weeks ago, I still received articles or links to podcasts or websites she thought I'd be interested in reading. 


In 2006, my mother and I took the girls and traveled to Pennsylvania. It was a chance to introduce the grandchildren, my girls, and Stephanie's son, and we spent a wonderful week visiting and catching up. I tried to explain the importance of our friendship. To convey how the Smith house was so much a part of me, but I'm not sure my children understood the connection then. 



Lois and I had some meaningful written communication, especially after Karl got sick. I could relate because I'd gone through something similar with my mother, and I'd been with Lois when she'd made the decisions for her own father. It was an interesting dynamic to come full circle. To go from a child and surrogate parent relationship to one as two adults.  


Today, in thinking through the last fifty-three years, I'm so grateful I made the trip in October 2019. As I got older and lost my own parents, those relationships meant more to me. Lois was the last of the parents. I really wanted to let her know how important she'd been in my life. 



I'm so glad I did. It was a much-needed balm personally, but also a good trip down memory lane and a reminder of how important friendships can be when people work at it. We told stories and laughed until our stomachs hurt. We talked about death and the future. Like my mother, she hoped to go out on her own terms and when she was ready. Her kids made sure that happened.


I will miss beating her in Words with Friends. I will miss her emails. Most of all, I will miss that voice, her frown, the wrinkled brow and pursed lips when I said something nutty, and that tsk and her drawn-out, exaggerated "Oh. Cara--. What do you think of that? Can you believe she said that?"


I now have a Birthday angel, watching over me every year.