OT ~ Welcome to Saturday Morning!
Sit-a-while
on swinging porch
where tin-dippers and
sweet water
in cool touches
meet lips
from hand dug wells.
Well, I’m back--after cancer, open heart surgery and recently diagnosed serious lung diseases, pulmonary hypertension and bronchiectasis--answering the call in hopes of providing a little assistance in sustaining this community of good people: writers, thinkers, artists, friends, and I’m pleased and honored to be here.
My open thread folders are empty, so please be gentle with me for a few weeks as I get geared up to do Saturdays.
I hope today or in coming weeks, you folks will freely join in with ideas of developing this morning thread, creating a template, so to speak; what would you enjoy on Saturdays, escaping or news or...?
A few of us have been sharing online for more than ten years and I’m feeling fire in the words of new contributors which comforts me; spring-boarding this gathering of talent, furthering the wants and needs of the people, the 99%, one step at-a-time and preventing this sphere from becoming a shadow box of social media.
So...
Morning news: not doing any news this morning as the comedic tragedy races along just fine without my help.
Morning theatre: it’s not in the climax where talent exists—anyone--writer, musician or actor can reach emotional and intellectual heights. Greatness reigns in the fall away, releasing the tightened rope one string at a time.
Morning poem:
In the fall away
touch me, I’ll feel you,
move me, applaud you;
praise me, duck a little, maybe…
love me, I’m in.
Morning humor:
Many mow grass on Saturdays; some eat it, best when smoked.
Morning essay:
First posted on c99p in April 2015: fly away to another time when nature seemed to simply rhyme.
The Man Who Lost
Whether forking a pie crust together or hoeing in the corn fields, she moved deliberately, her pace matching nature's. A quiet, pensive expression softly suggested she was forever in thought; a beautiful woman, mature, old to me, even in my first memories of her.
Worn in a bun, her hair reached down to the back of her knees. On quilt pallets by the pot-bellied stove, with shadows of light sparsely illuminating the blue tongue-and-grove walls and ceiling, I played as she let down and brushed her hair, holding the long strands in front of her and stroking forward and away, the full-length of her reach--pausing intermittently to spit into a tin can. Grandma enjoyed snuff.
Born a few years after the Civil War, Annie witnessed a lot, knew a lot, shared a lot.
She and Grandpa cleared fields by hand from a portion of bequeathed land that originally encompassed four modern-day counties in the Piedmont of North Carolina. My grandparents descended from English and Irish stock who in the 1600’s settled the rolling hills that begin where the ancient alluvial plain gives way to the rising terrain of clay, superb potters’ clay…red clay.
During my childhood, my parents worked and I was farmed out to live with childless Aunt Rosie and Uncle Graham. You could see Grandma’s house from Aunt Rosie’s, both occupying the tallest hills around. It was a wonderful, naive, barefooted adventure to skip, run, and leap down through the forest, cross two branches and climb the rutted path between the fields and pastures to Grandma’s--a distance of about twenty-minutes travel. We spent a lot of time at Grandma’s, Rosie and me, or just me.
When I traveled alone to Grandma’s, Rosie would pensively wait and watch until she could see in the distance, my white hair bouncing around in Grandma’s yard. Then she could relax and tend to her chores. I was the fortunate cousin; I had two farms, all the animals and four adults to myself.
Grandma was literate, but Rosie wasn’t. Not being able to read and write didn’t interfere with Rosie’s capacity to love however; her hugs were the strongest and most sincere. “I’m your second mother,” she always insisted.
Rosie could not learn in the Acorn-ridge, one-room school. “It was because she was touched in the head,” Grandma said.
Before the Model T, Grandpa and Grandma would take teams and wagons filled with farm products they had grown or Grandpa had purchased from his brothers and others who had surrounding farms to Pinehurst and Southern Pines to sell. The road was constructed of wooden planks. The Plank Road connected Fayetteville to Winston-Salem and ran through our isolated community.
Today, Pinehurst is around a twenty-minute drive, but it took a day-and-a-half for my grandparents to make the journey by wagon. Pinehurst resort was developed in the last years of the 19th century and Southern Pines had a railway station, both good marketplaces for the farm goods.
A smile and then a quiet chuckle always preceded a tale from Grandma as she often reminisced with me. In winter, on the Plank Road, it was so cold that they would let the horses go unattended while she and Grandpa would walk and take short cuts through the woods to stay warm, meeting up with the teams of horses on down the way. A favorite story of Grandma’s was when the stones they heated to stay warm while sleeping caught the blankets on fire. She relished retelling that story of Grandpa’s reaction to the smoldering blankets.
Grandpa was the first in the area to purchase a Model T, a door-less cab with a truck-bed. When Rosie was a baby, traveling to Pinehurst in the Model T, they hit a pothole in the planks and Grandma and Rosie were thrown from the cab into the ditch. Grandma said that baby Rosie landed on her head, hence the meaning, ‘touched in the head.’
"Carpetbaggers," mumbled Grandma when she was agitated.
Our family church was established in 1703 and the original trustees included African Americans. After the War Between the States, the congregation segregated. I assume from Grandma’s disdain of carpetbaggers that the answer to why after almost two hundred years of worshiping together the church’s segregation became necessary is in the reconstruction’s mess somewhere…Carpetbaggers?
Annie lived 99 years and I wish I could write justly about her, share all her wonders with you as she shared the wonders of nature with me—where the birds lived, nested and if the bird had lost its partner or not—and the names of trees and plants and the plantings of the moon--but, alas, I’ll leave you with a memory of a special conversation.
On a visit around 1970 towards the end of Grandma’s farming days--she kept going, gardening and so forth long after Grandpa passed away--she and I were shelling peas together on the L-shaped porch. I inquired about her hand-carved dough board, a hardwood, knife hewed vessel large enough for a toddler to use as a canoe. The board that fed generations from her kneading hands with breads and pies made with homegrown grains, stone-ground a few miles away at the water mill.
The smile and chuckle of hers appeared.
Grandma first asked for my trust, to keep secret what she was going to say, and I agreed.
“I was thinking about him.”
“Who Grandma?
“The man who lost,” she answered smiling deeply, remembering.
The dough board--my most precious possession today--was a wedding-day gift to my Grandmother, Annie,
from the suitor who lost.
Morning music:
Let’s live, the floor is yours!
Comments
smiley7, you are a soul !
good 'ol Joan Baez. Well, Melania, will she pick up all her jewelry? I admit that thought came to my mind before.
Sigh, times are pretty awful these days. Thanks for your beautiful writing.
https://www.euronews.com/live
Good morning Mimi...
good to see you; yes, the times are difficult; lets pray they are a-changing.
The American Mathematical Society’s website has a post titled
Get out of the way (directed at cis white males)
Righteous polemic for social justice?
2 + 2 = whatever won’t make the activists angry?
Is the concept of objectivity in science and mathematics merely or mainly a social construct, with some categories of people favored and others excluded?
What would be some likely effects of adopting that argument on the climate change debate?
" Mathematics, too? "
"Yes, dear."
Well . . .
I guess the group identity element is pretty important in mathematics . . .
it's only normal.
that's all I got.
Morning lotlizard...
thanks for the link and for being here cross the Atlantic.
My great-aunt Dale stayed single all her life.
There was once a suitor, to whom she became engaged and he later backed out of the wedding. She sued him in court for breach of promise and won a monetary settlement. I suspect that is why no further suitors appeared.
When still young she traveled to Europe several times and collected some interesting items. Later in life, she became the family oddball. She sent the lyrics of Froggie went a'courting, hand-written to her great nieces. She became very paranoid and would only call from pay phones because the FBI was stalking her. My father and aunt were her two surviving relatives when she died. Her estate was split between them. My father came home and in one day bought a Volvo and a Mercedes Benz. So some craziness was inherited. At least she did not die of breast cancer like both of her sisters.
Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.
Morning riverlover...
hope you're injuries are healing fast and not causing too much pain. Thanks for the tale of Dale, sounds like a good character. Tell her spirit, I look over the shoulder, too. Take good care and enjoy the day!
She sounds like my kind of gal.
native
Violins and fingers on chalkboard
They were the same thing in my head until I started listening to The Doobie Brothers ha ha. Here is one song that blew my teenage mind, the beauty, the poetry, the harmony, the arrangement, everything. Loved Pat Simmons, but crushed bad on Tom Johnston back in the day. Came this close to meeting him one night at a party in Greenbrae, good thing I didn't 'cause I was big trouble back then. Heh. I picked this vid for the recent comments, some people are so passionate it makes me smile bigly. yay
The Doobie Brothers - I Cheat The Hangman
This is good news, I just mentioned the same area in another post:
Bellevue school garden teaches kids healthy eating, social responsibility
Thanks
Peace & Love
P.S. Why I had to go to Kansas to get this I don't know, well yes I do never mind:Wet spring in California leads to high price for lettuce, other produce in Kansas City. And if you search for the same headline the year before, high prices because drought. /grannyintheditch
Morning eyo...big smile...
love the music, China Grove and all...
Cool story about the lettuce; screw Reagan and Trump veggie catsup.
Wish we had a local place to volunteer, helping kids feel the soil and watch the magic, I'll have to ask, maybe we do. Play on.
Happier than the morning sun
Nick DeCaro - Happier Than The Morning Sun
This is the guy who did the strings arrangement for that song:also this:
Happier Than The Morning Sun - Stevie Wonder
that's the one I remember, but Nick is pretty pretty smooth. I went for a sunrise river walk, the dogwoods are blooming.
Thanks
Thanks for the tip and music...
glad Spring has arrived, going into the wilderness tomorrow to take care of Sadie and Bruno, looking forward to walking in the woods and stream side, should be the right time for that special color of new green in the forest.
Good Morning smiley and 99%'ers
I remember that wonderful essay about your grandmother. It was one of my all time favorites here.
I wanted 4.5 miles this morning with my neighbor/walking partner. It is another gorgeous day here in our bucolic little town.
I am hoping Lone Star Mike will do an essay on this latest article by Brook Hines concerning the DNC lawsuit. For those who might want to read her article published today, here is the link. I will also promote her article via our Twitter account. She does a masterful job dissecting the DNC's argument on the motion to dismiss.
Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?
“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy
Morning gg, good to see you...
forgive me, I've been remiss in keeping up with everybody. My son spent a few days in your neighborhood last week, he's a friend living there, thought of you.
Thanks for the Hines link and enjoy this Spring day!
Good morning Smiley and friends.
Sunny and rather cool in the suburbs of the D.
Love having you write an OT for us Smiley. This is perfect. There are so many clever and creative people here, I love it when I get to share in the fruits of their unscripted labor. Thank you for doing this for us.
"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon
Morning dk...
thank you for all you do for c99p and for your kind words today.
I was thinking, would a subhead or closer placed in OT's linking to c99p on twitter and facebook be beneficial, a late thought?
JtC has both linked on the page, left column under menu.
Each article posted can also be cross posted to Twitter, FB and ?? by anyone with an account. Thanks for asking. The biggest help would be to have our tweets and posts liked, followed, and re posted/tweeted by others.
"Religion is what keeps the poor from murdering the rich."--Napoleon
Thanks, I see. n/t
Good morning, Smiley et. al. Thanks for the OT and the
memories and welcome to the Saturday OT.
At the intersection of humorous and hideous we have the following fabulous cure for Ransomeware, courtesy of those pesky Russkies. I'm posting a link because of copyright uncertainty, but do have a look, it's a quickie:
https://boingboing.net/2017/05/17/prophylactic-bricking.html
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Morning el...
great to see you and that wizard in the link had best not get near my laptop with his holy water... thanks for the link, needed this good laugh.
Thank you most for carrying the weight; writing multiple OTs for so long, appreciated!
Enjoy the day.
My pleasure, it was fun, mostly. ;-)
That, in its essence, is fascism--ownership of government by an individual, by a group, or by any other controlling private power. -- Franklin D. Roosevelt --
Hey Smiley, you are a word man, beautiful words strung together
so well, music to my eyes. Hope you feel as well and strong as you write.
To thine own self be true.
Morning Marilyn...
Happy you are here this morning. I've complex challenges ahead and some days are too difficult; presently, I taking a short break from white-coats, going back to that grind in June, thanks for asking.
Hope you are painting: sending good vibes from Mtns-to-coast.
Here's an oldie
Rainy Night on the Burrard Bridge (Vancouver BC)
pencil crayons on card
To thine own self be true.
A treat for today...
thank you for sharing, love your work, as always!
Morning smiley...
great to see you gracing the open thread pages of the old 99 again, we need us some culture and grace, yup.
Here's hoping the health problems are behind you.
Signed: Just an Old Friend
Keep climbing, brother.
Just fiddlin' around.
Peace, my friend.
Morning JtC
yup we can just make-up that culture and grace stuff cause it's not in the genes.
Another touching laugh, good man and heh, we think alike as I almost posted Foggy Mountain in the morning music.
No place I'd rather be, my friend!
Good on ya Smiley7
Another thing to look forward to on a Saturday morning.
I want a Pony!
Afternoon Arrow...
Good to have you here; enjoy the weekend!
Lovely, smiley7. Thank you so much.
Whatever you decide to write of a Saturday will be fine. Commenting may be light for a few months as the weather seduces us away from our electronics.
I am so sorry that you've through so much! Many good wishes.
Afternoon HW...
Thank you for the good wishes and for your contributions to c99p. Yep, I'm anticipating placeholder OTs, it being Saturdays and all the summer activities.
Enjoy the weekend!