Happy New Year to all -
May 2026 bring all those good things we're hoping for.
There’s a small shop here in our small town that - alongside fancy teas, apples from a nearby orchard, and artisanal breads – sells my books and those of my neighbor Dave, who's a local historian.
After three days on my feet preparing, creating, and clearing up Christmas, my left knee went on strike. On Saturday the idea of bending it was laughable.
This will be one of the few years we won't be lighting a menorah before we sit down to Christmas dinner, what with Hanukkah coming early. With both daughter and son having joined up with members of the Jewish faith, it's been a tradition for quite a few years, and it'll seem kind of odd to skip that.
You can see even our tree has everything covered.
Merry Christmas and Happy whatever your holiday may be!
I’m sitting down. Absolute bliss after
a day that began in the kitchen at 8:30 and didn’t end until 4:00, except for a
small break, of which I’ll tell you more in a minute.
Completed: Apple cake, Brussel sprouts
prepped, vegetable tray, chocolate cake, chicken pot pie with much pot washing
and counter clearing in between. (Never mind the dish-gathering and present-wrapping in there somewhere.)
I did have a bit of a moment, though,
when I turned back from contemplating fancy sorbets to find my cart full of
hard-won items was gone. I looked up and down the aisle. Nothing. I started
through the store at top speed, peering up more aisles, until I realized the frozen
section is at the end of the store so most people go from there to the
check-out. Sure enough, there he was in line, a skinny gray-haired guy in a plaid
shirt and camo pants.
(And yes, my cold never arrived!)
What had me really worried was the
possibility of having the tooth pulled, with all the attendant stuff that would
go with that – sitting around waiting for the site to heal, prep for an
implant, putting in the implant, etc, etc.
So I now have one more crown. I could have bought a new couch or a couple of new couches with the money spent on my mouth.
My break today from hour after hour on
my feet was another trip to the grocery store.
I’d sent My Guy to pick up the roast I’d
ordered and then checked on Monday to verify it’d be ready. I gave him a slip
of paper that said “cradled beef roast” on it.
Sure enough, he came home proudly
bearing the meat, and I took one look at it, and the label said “rib roast”
with no mention of cradling.
I did not want to wrestle with trying
to carve around bones. What to do?
I found
my shoes and motored off to the store, muttering “One job. He had ONE job.”
Yes, you guessed it. The butcher
looked at me pityingly and pointed out that the roast was tied with string to
hold it to the ribs, and yes, it was cradled, thus the string.
So I’ll be having a little crow on the
side for Christmas dinner.
It was about
to come true: one of my greatest fears.
A succession of sneezes and unusually
tired eyes. Was I getting a cold?
Never mind that Christmas is next week.
My big concern was the dentist.
Earlier in the month I’d gone in for a
check-up and was told that I had a massive cavity that would need to be
addressed.
“But I don’t feel a thing there,” I said.
“That’s because you’ve had a root canal there and the nerves
are gone.”
My fear come true. Sitting in the dentist chair with a cold, unable
to breathe.
So, I dug around and found my supply of zinc lozenges and knock-on-wood,
they seem to be working. The cold is probably still lurking, waiting to spring,
but if I can just make it through Monday’s appointment, I’ll be thrilled.
Or as thrilled as you
can be, going to the dentist and about to have an expensive crown removed,
drilled on, and then have another expensive crown put back in its place. And
that’s the best-case scenario, since the dentist had muttered darkly about the
possibility of extraction.
So, in the interest of not thinking about grocery
lists, presents, or teeth, I went off to play pickleball Friday afternoon.
The people where I play are a nice crowd, unlike other places
where they play as though there are scouts in the audience or this is the
trials for the Olympics. We’re a laid-back group. Not beginners, but with
enough skills to challenge each other.
I play to the front, my days of running back and forth are
gone. Or at least I’m not willing to risk a turned ankle or a fall. There I was
- receiving from the other side - I raised my paddle to return with a brilliant
shot my opponent would never get to, and . . . .Instead I belted the ball, not
to the other court but right into my nose.
But we found the gym’s first aid kit and I was ordered to the
side lines with instructions to Sit still! and Keep that ice pack on
your face!
It must have worked because no black eye today, and when I
played the next game, we won.
(For anyone interested, as requested by Steve at Shadows and Light, here’s a link to the recipe for that chocolate cake I mentioned
previously. Wacky Cake)
Here we go – less than a week and the mad shuffle begins. A friend of mine decided that everyone, everyone is getting gift cards and that was it. Another friend will be ordering take-out (albeit fancy take-out) for their Christmas meal. Truly role models for better living.