May Festivities



 May is an exciting month for me. I have several things I'm very enthused about.


 I've learned to make Photoshop brushes, two of which I've included for your viewing pleasure. They are so easy to make and fun! I highly recommend doing a google search to learn this skill. If you have Photoshop and aren't making brushes, you're missing out on a great graphic tool.


Also, my three grand-nieces, ages 12, 10 and 5 years of age, are coming to visit me! We're doing art projects, going to the Aquarium, the Discovery Museum and cruising the Tennessee River. We're having Camp Sissy-Grammy, as I'm their grammy's sister... Logical, huh? Too FUN!


Additionally, an interview I participated in with Monessa Guilfoil, about my greeting card business, aired May 1, by National Public Radio, WUTC, 88.1. As a result, my website that usually has seven to ten hits a week had 110 hits the day the interview aired! Wow, so much for the power of the airwaves. For those of you who missed it, I’m attempting to add an MP3 player to my blog, but no luck so far. I’m sure it’s operator error, but nothing I’ve read and tried has worked. If you want to hear it – and can’t wait for me to figure it out – email me and I’ll send it to you. THAT I can do! :-)


Additionally, May 18, an article that I wrote about migraine headaches, will hit the streets when the May edition of HealthScope Magazine is distributed. This is a Chattanooga-based publication that goes into bookstores, homes, and doctor’s offices and waiting rooms. I am very psyched about the whole process, from having received the assignment, to conducting the research and doctor interviews, to composing the data into an interesting (hopefully,) and informative narrative. My wish is that someone with migraines will read it and discover new facts that may help their life become more manageable.


I’m also working on a compilation of my essays, photographs and art work – sort of like a picture book for adults! It’s interesting to remember that the first book of poems and illustrations I made was in 1975, as a gift for my parents. After their deaths, I found it among their treasures, and I still have it. I was surprised that one so young (21) had such insight into life – although the poems themselves were pretty sappy – the sentiments were deep. I sit back sometimes and try to reconnect to that young girl and assess where we’ve been since then and how we’ve grown!

It’s an exciting month for me. Thanks for reading.

To Look Beyond the Obvious



I’ve recently been in the Catskill Mountains helping a friend get ready to close on her sold house and to have a moving sale. Next to her beautiful house, which is named Marmalade Manor and was built in 1815, flows a rushing stream. I took a lot of pictures and enjoyed its sounds and spray.

However, next to my friend’s house and the rushing stream, is a house that has collapsed. Its owners died, no heirs came forth, and the building’s front eventually fell against a tree that had overgrown the front entrance. The remaining structure followed, falling into a dozen skewed piles of boards, cabinets, nails and furnishings. I stood across the stream and imagined the meals that were served within, the babies that were born, the illnesses that were endured, the weddings, deaths, and a million other events that evolved as life happened. While I pondered, I spied an apple cider-looking jug and a canister of flour that were still upright on the counter, seemingly awaiting hands to put them away. I felt melancholy for this family that put their life’s blood into their home never knowing that someday it would be a pile of rubble. I also was, and am, dismayed that such waste occurs.

I wondered how a house that withstood over a century of rain, snow, sleet, wind and sunshine could be left to just fall down – especially in a day of such homelessness and a need for lodging.

Wouldn’t it be amazing to have a repository of abandoned buildings into which the homeless could move for a new start and to establish roots? Would cities, municipalities and towns allow property to go to one of modest income and to become a home again instead of allowing it to fall into ruin or of selling it to the highest bidder? Would the neighbors shun a low-income family relocating into their territory, or would they pitch in to help with repairs, childcare and other necessities for the working poor? I know, I know, some homeless individuals have chronic addiction issues that preclude their interest in four walls, however, the average age of a homeless person in the United States today is nine years of age…
  N I N E  Y E A R S  O F  A G E. 

Several years ago, I was helping build a Habitat for Humanity house. It was in a neighborhood that had been lovely, had declined, but was on its way back to prosperity. As I walked from my car to the building site, I was enthused about helping Wendy and her family, build their home. Wendy and her children had put in sweat equity, so I’d become acquainted with them. She was delightful and, like so many women whose men leave, underemployed, but hard-working. She will be an asset to the neighborhood, thought I.

I was scheduled to help install siding on this particular day and I'd helped with roofing the evening before. The house was almost finished. I was excited.

As I walked by, I threw up my hand at the neighbors, and smiled a greeting. They turned their backs to me. My greeting was met with silence – stony silence. I was stunned. A woman living across the street yelled, “Of course, you’re happy, you just build the house and leave the neighborhood. We’re left to deal with those people and our lowered property values.” The “backs” pivoted forward again, waiting for me to answer the challenge.

I gulped.

As naïve as it seems now, this neighborly response had not been on my radar screen. I thought ANYONE would be HAPPY to see a homeless family have a home. I believed no one could want a family to be without lodging. However, from that point forward, I realized that the home had to be in someone else’s neighborhood for people to rejoice about the homeless having a home. Empathy costs money – so no empathy from these neighbors on this day.

So what’s the answer? The answer to homeless is complicated I know; however, there are measures to help those in dire conditions.

Interfaith-Hospitality Network is nation-wide and coordinates the lodging for homeless families in church buildings while the parishioners are away, snug in their homes. The homeless must be up and ready to leave in the morning before church business begins and are brought back in the evening for dinner and to sleep. Each housed person is allowed one plastic bag with which they may carry their belongings from church to church, until Section 8 housing opens for them. I have watched, tearfully, as children schlepped their bags from their make-shift rooms, to the bus, for their next relocation. NO toys, there is no room. Each church stay lasts a week and then it’s on to another church and new smiling faces of dinner-serving volunteers making small talk - no questions of any consequence are ever asked of the guests. The privacy of each guest is respected.

In addition to Interfaith Hospitality Network, there are also Community Soup Kitchens that serve food, offer health care and job assistance.  These are organizations that meet acute needs.

These are all vital interventions, but what about after jobs have been secured and individuals are ready to move forward? Often, Section 8 housing has built-in issues, such as ensconced drug dealers, violence as a matter of course, and people who have lost hope. This spawns generation and generation of angry, discouraged people who often seek lawlessness to meet their needs. It becomes an ideal training ground for impressionable youth - remember - the average age of a homeless person is nine.

So, as tax-payers, do we pay upfront and help the homeless into safe-affordable housing or pay on the backend and support them during incarceration or by our very lives, lost during violent acts? Do all homeless become drug-addicted, violent offenders? Of course not, but the odds rise as resources and hope diminish.

So, what about abandoned buildings being slated for the homeless, and vacant lots being dedicated to inner-city vegetable gardens and playgrounds? Couldn’t this cycle of waste be interrupted by outlining a process where need meets availability? Technology makes it doable; tax rolls could identify buildings, and organizations, such as Interfaith-Hospitality Network, could identify candidates.

There are people smarter than I who wrestle with this issue. This just seems like a possible intervention – especially when buildings fall down from neglect. We could ask, couldn’t we? Or is that too simple – or too complicated? Remember, the average age of a homeless person in the United States of America is nine years old.

What were you doing when you were nine years old? Do you remember? I’ll bet the homeless nine-year olds of this generation will always remember where they were when they were nine years old – without toys, friends, X-boxes, or necessities, carrying all their belongings in a garbage bag to the next handout; or, worse yet, sleeping under a bridge somewhere, hoping to endure the night.

Abandoned buildings; someone’s way to wealth or someone’s way to wholeness? We can ask can’t we?

Mother's Day Memorial


Until I was seven years of age, my mother worked outside the home.

She managed the concession stand of the only drive-in theatre in the area. She introduced Pizza Pie from the home office of Chicago, Illinois to the drive-in theatre going public of Independence, Missouri and they were immediate sell-outs! Also, for the shredded beef Bar-B-Que sandwiches, she made Morgan’s Bar-B-Que sauce from scratch, which was her family’s own secret recipe. It still remains a closely guarded secret, and hides out in my pantry, still in Mom’s handwriting. Everything she did was just a little more special than the norm. She was also an excellent business woman and was recruited several times by other corporations.

Whenever she worked during the day, taking inventory, I would run up and down the ramps of the drive-in, finding treasures that had fallen out of cars during the evening or I’d investigate places I’d never been. During one of my morning ventures, I went into the men’s bathroom and saw my first urinal. I thought it was a very cool bathtub and wondered why women didn’t have such treasures in their restrooms. It hardly seemed fair... Then, sometimes, as the popcorn machine was preparing the night’s offerings, she’d let me get my own hot popcorn and use the butter machine to slather my tub with as much butter as I wanted – at least four squirts. It was too special for words.

I never felt deprived by Mom working. I thought the adventures of new venues and babysitters were fun. During my daytime visits to the theatre, I also expanded my circle of friends, as I buddied up with Mom’s employees. There was a man who looked just like Arnold Stang, of Chunky candy commercial fame. I always asked him to say it for me and he’d grin a huge grin, and then – he would! “Chunky! What a chuuuuuuunnnnnnk of chocolate!” he’d say, smacking his lips. It never ceased to make me laugh! Lila ran the popcorn machine, Elvin grilled the hamburgers and Michelle ran the register. They were like another family.

Also, whenever there were special promotions at the theatre, such as finding the needle in the haystack for $100 prize or the performing white German shepherds, I always got a good seat to see the events. Every Easter, the drive-in held a sunrise service on the roof of the concession stand and broadcast the Easter message through the speakers. Although I’ve never been a morning person, I loved getting up while it was still dark, putting on my new Easter clothes and rummaging through my Easter basket while the minister preached about love and redemption.

At other times, when I was unable to accompany my mother to work, my eldest sister, Harrylon, who is nineteen years my senior, would babysit me. We were big buddies while I was growing up. Her son Lonny, three months younger than I, was my best friend. When it came time to send me to kindergarten, Harrylon called a taxi. My daddy, “Curly,” used to drive a taxi and all the drivers in our small town knew that I was Curly’s little girl, so I felt perfectly safe – and special. They’d always say, “Are you Curley’s girl?” I’d smile and nod and we'd speed off to deposit me at kindergarten.

I loved being with Harrylon and Lonny. Harrylon always had some interesting new food to try, pickled pig’s feet is one I remember now with revulsion, but loved then, and Lonny had a Jerry Mahoney puppet, which we’d play with on the sidewalk, next to their duplex.

Additionally, because my mother worked, we had money for extra things. I always had beautiful clothes. “This is the latest fashion,” my mother would tell me about my aqua dropped-waist dress, or the black and white checked with the red bow, and that I’d repeat whenever anyone complimented me. We received great toys for Christmas and birthdays, yet were generous with those in the neighborhood who didn’t have much.

Our house was lovely, and sported salmon-colored living room walls with sanded-paint and floor-to-ceiling draperies with impressionistic pictures of the Eiffel Tower, Parisian cafés, and the Arc de’ Triomphe. The year I was five, I wanted twin dolls for Christmas and got two Buddy Lee dolls, one a sheriff and one an engineer, which I still have. They sit on the bookshelf in my office and overlook my progress. That same year, I also got multi-colored bells on which I learned to play a variety of songs. Life was full and rich and fun.

Then, in an instant everything in the world as I knew it, changed.

Dorothy, mom’s sister, lived in Miami. She called to tell us that her husband had committed suicide with a gunshot to his head. Their twelve-year old son had gotten to him first. Mom flew into frenetic activity to go to her sister’s aid. My brother, Billie and his wife, agreed to stay at our house and care for his two little sisters; Kandi and me. Mom, Daddy and Imza, my middle sister, made arrangement with Delta Airways, to fly from Kansas City, Missouri to Miami, Florida to be with my Aunt Dorothy in her time of need.

However, there were hurricane warnings.

Regardless of the warnings, my mother, who possessed true grit beyond grit, went anyway. She needed to get to her sister and no warning of inclement weather was keeping her grounded. Their plane tossed, twirled and did loop-de-loops in the perilous weather and, as a result of pressurization loss, both of my mother’s eardrums ruptured during the flight. Until the day she died, her ears continued to extrude black liquid. As if the trauma of such an event was not stressful enough, upon her return, she had to stay in bed for weeks, trying to regain her equilibrium.

Her career came to an abrupt halt. Although the company held her job for her for months, she was never able to work again. Life as we’d known it, ended.

Although Daddy worked also, and was diligent and hard-working, his position as a laborer didn’t pay the money my mother’s in management had paid. So, we began to live the life of those who were poor. We ate commodities from the government. I wore my sister’s old clothes and coats that didn’t fit. Our toys and clothes from that point forward came from the Goodwill. I don’t remember caring about the toys being used, but I can remember not wanting to go to school sometimes because I didn’t have anything pretty to wear. Hmmmmmmmmmm, self-conscious even then – some may say, vain. Now that I think about it, pretty clothes continue to be paramount for me, perhaps it’s some unresolved childhood yearning rearing its head…

For years after Joe’s suicide, Mom rarely felt well enough to sit upright. I’d come home from school and find her lying on the sofa or behind her closed bedroom door. Our relationship changed abruptly with the onset of her illness. As a child, I didn’t understand all the changes; but I knew that my mother’s attention had been diverted from me. I felt sad and abandoned, although I couldn't put words to it for years. Our household went from fun and frivolity to darkness and solemnity.

Because Mom’s position included management activities during the day and supervising staff in the evenings, Daddy watched us at night, and we had great fun. He’d fix our dinner, watch the Mickey Mouse Club with us, and then later, we’d sit in the Adirondack chairs in the back yard, listening to the Cicadas and eating watermelon or ice cream. Additionally, he had a goofy sense of humor and we’d often jump around whooping like monkeys or he’d pretend to groom my hair as monkeys do to one another – monkeys seemed to be our favorite animal to imitate. Then, because Missouri nights are so hot and we didn’t have air conditioning, he, Kandi, and I would all sleep in the one bed that had the big window fan blowing. Daddy slept in the middle with Kandi lying on one of his arms and me on the other. In this Christ-like pose, I don’t know how he ever got any sleep, but he loved his girls and seemed unaffected.

That all ended also.

With Mom not working, Daddy’s responsibility as caregiver ceased. Because he arose at 4:30 am, and no longer needed to remain alert in the evenings, by 7 pm he was usually asleep in his chair. We occasionally did things together on the weekends, but not very often. Life became about being quiet and not bothering Mom, who didn’t feel good or Daddy who had to sleep.

However, Harrylon was a stabilizing presence until three years later when she had a nervous breakdown and was hospitalized in a Missouri mental institution. She received extensive electro-convulsive therapy, as well as massive amounts of pharmaceuticals. As her illness continued, she was eventually diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic with multiple personality disorder. I was ten.

I understood all of this with the understanding of a child. However, as I matured, I never seemed to expand my understanding and let Harrylon off the hook for her disruptive behavior. With Mom and Dad, I acknowledged that they’d done the best they could, given their health and the circumstances; but not Harrylon.

Life took on a surreal quality when Harrylon was around and we all ostracized her for it, except Mom. Mom always forgave Harrylon, regardless of the transgression. Mom said we didn’t understand enough about mental illness to make judgments.

Harrylon said she’d shoot our mother; we kept the drapes drawn and stayed away from the windows. When I was twenty-three, she dragged her daughter, whose arm was caught in her car, down a road, to teach her a lesson; I went through the court system to take custody of Lisa. Harrylon fought to keep her, until she learned that I didn’t intend to take her $10 weekly child-support payment. She then allowed me to relocate her sixteen-year old daughter to my home, 2,000 miles away. She’d kept her children home from school because she was lonely; none of them finished high school. She got mad at one of her five husbands and baked him a cake out of Ex-Lax, instead of cocoa. She put sugar in the gas tank of another man with whom she was angry. She got mad at our Mother for an imagined wrong and allowed her to die of cancer and languish with multiple fractures suffered in a horrific collision with a tractor-trailer truck, without ever making peace with her.

I was through making excuses for her! How could you love a boil that always threatened eruption? This was Harrylon: sore to the touch, menacing and unpredictable - she frightened me with her wicked ways.

So, my self-righteous anger kept me insulated from her illness - and her pain. Following the incident with our mother, I decided I wouldn’t talk to her – again - ever. Twenty-six years after I made that vow, Harrylon had a stroke. When I heard about it, I began to sob and to experience deep remorse about my silent treatment toward her for all of these years.

I went to see her.

In addition to the stroke, she has dementia and pneumonia. She resembled a tiny bird slumped down in her hand-cranked hospital bed with only her eyes peering over the top of her blanket. I don’t know if she recognized me, but when I told her my name, she said, “Well, you sure have grown.” I wondered if she’d remembered me as that little sister who so adored her all of those years ago. I hope so.

She’s 75 years old, still paranoid schizophrenic and still exhibiting multiple personalities. I’ve changed. Thank goodness.

In retrospect, it’s unbelievable to me that I’ve held her to normal standards for all of these years, when she was incapable of behaving normally. Her ranting always involved images of the church, Christ, or the devil. She seems to be haunted and has believed black devils sit on her back and on the backs of those she loves. She was and is ill.

That doesn’t mean her behavior didn’t make our family dynamics ricochet off the chart when she was episodic, but, as a fifty-something, I don’t have to let her behavior influence my love for a sister who has known a lifetime of hospitalizations, medications and shunning. I can be kind and loving toward her without needing to fix her (because I can’t) or insist that she acknowledge all the pain she’s caused to those who’ve loved her – because she can’t. The definition of paranoia is the BELIEF that someone is out to get you. This is what she BELIEVED. Her actions, crazy and incomprehensible to her family, were to protect herself – not to harm someone else. The distinction may seem like semantics, but is huge in its implication.

I also want to believe that she did the absolute best she knew how to do, given her circumstances.

Limitations come in all types of forms and behaviors. We all have them. Usually, only when we acknowledge that we aren’t perfect and never will be perfect, do we make peace with our foibles and by doing so, are able to accept weaknesses in ourselves and in others. I hope I continue to recognize and accept the flaws within myself and then continue to offer grace instead of judgment to others – and to myself.

This Mother’s Day, the best gift I could offer in my mother’s memory, is to continue to extend grace, understanding and peace to Harrylon until the day she is released from her troubled mind, when her spirit rejoins our mother’s, and she is free from her demons, at last.