Discovery Channel.
"Hoarders" .
Yes I watch it!
Their somewhat "subliminal" message of suggesting I may have "hoarding" tendencies made me address my "extra" bedroom straight on with garbage bag in tow!(a 33 gallon thank you very much)
I knew there was stuff that needed to go. I didn't need a reality show to tell me that!
I collect plastic bags. No, really! I have one here from a coffee shop in Vienna. A bookstore in London. Saks fifth Avenue for god's sake!
National Geographics are collectables_ period.
Wallpaper is expensive. I have enough of these end rolls to do alot of cubbies.
I will be a size 10 again.
Maps before interstates? Collectables.
I had to call my daughter Katie on this one...
"Honey...."
"Yes Mom."
"I have your baby teeth in the fairy box. Of course you want to save these."
" Gross....teeth from 1978?"
" Yes....what?"
"Mom, listen to me. I'm 33 years old!"
"Jeez you sound like you want me to get rid of every little thing I saved..."
"Mom...you have hair from my first hair cut don't you!?"
" I can't believe how blonde you were honey, almost white really!"
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Wednesday, November 19, 2008
Listen to simplicity
A Zen saying.
Sitting quietly, doing nothing, spring comes, and the grass grows by itself.
Sitting quietly, doing nothing, spring comes, and the grass grows by itself.
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Soulful Cookery
I enjoy using old pots and pans. Smoothed wooden handles.Generation-seasoned cast iron pans. Rolling pins with handles molded perfectly by use.These are my aged treasures that had prepared past foods with love and expertise.
Aunt Katie's hammered aluminium pots that boiled, mashed or roasted are as dear to me as the old recipes they held. Not all of my beloved kitchenware was handed down by family. I have scored some great things from antique and second hand stores. It is the handprint of time on these culinary tools that give them their soul. And soul is the best seasoning to cook with!
Aunt Katie's hammered aluminium pots that boiled, mashed or roasted are as dear to me as the old recipes they held. Not all of my beloved kitchenware was handed down by family. I have scored some great things from antique and second hand stores. It is the handprint of time on these culinary tools that give them their soul. And soul is the best seasoning to cook with!
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
Monday, October 20, 2008
A Roast for My Big Brother Greg
Gregory Gerard was born into a still, pristine child-free household on the 22nd of October 1952. This "First Born" child of proud parents George and Joan, was photographed with paparazzi frenzy. The darling, dimpled cherub's first two years of existence were recorded in baby books with hundreds if not thousands of photographs indexed into heavy volumes.
Greggie on a pony.
Greggie with his Sammy Dog.
Lil Greg on Santa's knee!
"Just how adorable it this!" cried his parents."OH, and so bright!" others exclaimed in hopes that they too would be able to hold the bright,shiny new boy.
I did not mind being born as his younger sister, coming in second. Really. There is absolutely nothing wrong with hand-me-down diapers.I am sure my parents' camera had become misplaced or perhaps broken by December of 1954.
Greg wasn't quite willing to leave the comforts of his crib at the time of my birth. Playpens were much roomier anyway. Mom said it always gave me the opportunity to explore. Of course I can't blame my brother for my confused identity. Boy clothes were fine. A boy's bike? Sure. Except that middle bar was sometimes an ouchy.
No really, wearing my brother's football pads, helmet and jersey for a Halloween costume. Cool.
"No mam. I'm NOT Bobby."
The pristine household? Greg managed to clutter it up with toys and rocks and other such boy messes but hey, he shared. He shared boogers,chicken pox and the gum he stored under the desk.He even let me rub his back if I watched his choice of TV fare.
Yep. I was the number two of our household. But you know what? I wouldn't change it for the world because there is nothing better than having a great older brother! Love you Greg and happy birthday!
Greggie on a pony.
Greggie with his Sammy Dog.
Lil Greg on Santa's knee!
"Just how adorable it this!" cried his parents."OH, and so bright!" others exclaimed in hopes that they too would be able to hold the bright,shiny new boy.
I did not mind being born as his younger sister, coming in second. Really. There is absolutely nothing wrong with hand-me-down diapers.I am sure my parents' camera had become misplaced or perhaps broken by December of 1954.
Greg wasn't quite willing to leave the comforts of his crib at the time of my birth. Playpens were much roomier anyway. Mom said it always gave me the opportunity to explore. Of course I can't blame my brother for my confused identity. Boy clothes were fine. A boy's bike? Sure. Except that middle bar was sometimes an ouchy.
No really, wearing my brother's football pads, helmet and jersey for a Halloween costume. Cool.
"No mam. I'm NOT Bobby."
The pristine household? Greg managed to clutter it up with toys and rocks and other such boy messes but hey, he shared. He shared boogers,chicken pox and the gum he stored under the desk.He even let me rub his back if I watched his choice of TV fare.
Yep. I was the number two of our household. But you know what? I wouldn't change it for the world because there is nothing better than having a great older brother! Love you Greg and happy birthday!
Pondering the Me Question
My guess is I started wondering who I was at the age of seven. I was cozy in my family nest but felt outside stirrings. Neighborhood. School. Church. I was incubated in midwestern Iowa. German influenced since 1886 when my great grandparents landed on New York's coast that April.
Rules and regulation.
Somewhat mellowed with three American generations, it is still the moral fiber that makes me who I am. I would never take something that was not mine. I was raised knowing I represented not just myself but my family. I represented my Church. I represented my Town. These were the teachings.Though I find pride in my heart for it even to this day, I find rebellion and the want for change. I image it is the natural progression in life.
Rules and regulation.
Somewhat mellowed with three American generations, it is still the moral fiber that makes me who I am. I would never take something that was not mine. I was raised knowing I represented not just myself but my family. I represented my Church. I represented my Town. These were the teachings.Though I find pride in my heart for it even to this day, I find rebellion and the want for change. I image it is the natural progression in life.
Friday, October 17, 2008
The 291st day of 2008

Autumn's leaves, plucked by cool breezy gusts,
dip and swirl to summer's last song
and a fat yellowed moon casts silvery shadows
from the edge of the earth so eerily long.
Spiders and mice and low flying bats
make a search for warmth, comfort and food.
Owls with haunting nocturnal voices
announce the strange and ghostly mood.
I welcome the season of hallowed harvests
of apples, corn and pumpkined vine.
Cheers to this colorful Autumn Season
made of patches in earthtone design.
S.G.Dunn
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