Monthly Archives: November 2014

Could a Day Start any Better?

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Rise and shine! The sun comes up pretty early, so we get an early start these days. Our pup can hardly stand it till we start moving toward the door. “I have to get my shoes on, Isabela.” That sets her off to the bench in the outdoor shower where we keep her ball and the chuck-it. All her days start like this. We walk across the street onto the trail Greg made for us, and we’re down on the beach in under a minute. Happiness is a dog on the beach with a ball.

 

Today’s happiness, besides throwing the ball for Isabela, was Greg casting his fishing line, me finding beach glass and newly hatched turtles.

 

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That’s right! BABY TURTLES TODAY.

Oh how happy! I yelled to Greg down the beach where he was fishing, and he came a running! Two of our neighbors and a Mexican worker, whose part of a crew building a house down the street, also came to be part of the thrilling spectacle.

 

I’ve mentioned this before, but I get so upset about the tire tracks the turtles get stuck in. This is the time of year when the gringos all show up to live in their second homes. Some ride their 4-wheelers on the beach. It’s not all gringos though. Many Mexicans start bringing their big 4X4 trucks and drive up and down the beach as they fish on the shore.

 

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I never tire of this.

 

There were about thirty babies. They were slow and seemingly exhausted, so we figure they were hatched in the night and tired out from their arduous journey to the water’s edge.

 

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Oh what a beautiful morning!

What a Beautiful Morning on the Beach

Wow! Lots of bait fish in the water this morning. Teeming in fact and close to shore. Some of them were washed up and left to…well…die. They look like infant ballyhoo, but I don’t know for sure if they are.

 

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Baby ballyhoo?

 

 

Our neighbors were having a great time casting and catching this morning. Our dog had a ball too—literally and figuratively. She loves to chase and catch the ball as much as the guys love tossing in their lines and catching fish.

 

 

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Tim with his Rooster Fish

No baby turtles today, but there have been many trucks and 4-Wheelers on the beach. I’m so glad we were able to mark out nests with sticks; at least they won’t drive over them.

 

Another of the 15 or so nests we've marked.

Another of the 15 or so nests we’ve marked.

 

I’m happy and thankful to be alive to enjoy the richness that life has to offer. As you can see, the fishermen were happy and thankful today too.

 

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Hey Aldo, they look like fish–only smaller!

Another fun-filled afternoon at the Hogar del Niño in Todos Santos

 

 

My dear friend, Julie, is an art teacher in Maui and, with her husband, she has a home here in my neighborhood where they spend about half of every year. She reads my blog and it prompted her to express an interest in going to the orphanage with me. That’s how I got lucky enough to be a part of Julie’s water color lesson.

Last Saturday she and I worked on our lesson plan and we created some samples. I learned a lot from her about how to break it down into small steps, which is what good teaching is about. On Monday, armed with courage, water colors, markers, lots of paper, and water color pencils, brushes and some containers for water, we loaded everything in my truck.

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Even I can paint a fish!

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Just painting up some samples!

 

On the way to the orphanage, we picked up another of my friends, Stacee, who hales from Colorado, and with her hubby, she also has a home here. And so it was that we three adults got charged up and went to have some fun. As one might imagine, we enjoyed it every bit as much as the children. Receiving blessings is normally what giving delivers, right?

 

¿Qué vive en el mar? What lives in the sea?

This was the question posed by Julie to the eight, energetic, children artists in our first group. It was exciting to watch their faces light up and see how easily they took to the project.

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They just dig right in!

We were amazed as we watched them dig right in, creating their own special underwater scenes.

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Stacee at the ready!

 

 

We managed to work with about 20 of them before our time was up, and I, for one, was exhausted at the end of two hours. It was a contented exhaustion reminiscent of my years as a teacher.

 

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Angela, Teacher Julie, and Dayana

 

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Rebeca

 

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Alison is a serious painter who loves red.

 

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Jesus proudly displays his art.

 

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His creation is beyond detailed.

 

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Julie and Stacee with the Kids

 

You can’t get too much of a good thing when it comes to days like this. If you are ever in need of a “pick-me-up” you must visit the Hogar del Niño in Todos Santos.

 

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My ear-to-ear grin says it all I think.

 

 The kids are generous with their smiles and their talents—sharing and helping each other is their norm.

 

 

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Angela loves to paint–she did two!

 

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We’re already gearing up for another painting session. Next time we’re going to paint birds!

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Work Day

In sunshine and with light ocean breezes we find lots of work to do around here, but some of it is fun. I made a design around a barrel cactus with the pink rocks I gathered at the beach many months ago. Greg loves to work in the yard–more so than I, but doing it together makes it tolerable and sometimes it’s fun.

We’re all cleaned up and straightened up after the hurricane now. The palapa is finished and the only thing we are waiting for is our friend the painter. He will put lots of marine varnish on it after spraying it with anti-termite stuff. Termites are voracious eaters. Pesky, nasty little varmints who are not welcome in our palapa.

I swept every room in the house and in the process removed a ton of sand. Okay, that’s hyperbole, but it was a lot of sand. And dog hair. And Susie hair. I shook out all the rugs and put everything back and now it looks so nice. Don’t anybody move!

My friend, Julie, is going to go with me to the orphanage soon. She is an art teacher and is going to teach them how to paint animals. In the process, she will be teaching me to paint animals too. We’re gathering our supplies and our courage. Our teacher hearts are going to be very happy playing with those energetic little beings at Hogar del Niño sometime later this week.

I started out a little grumpy this morning, but as the day wore on I got my happy back with my working and playing, planning and dreaming! Hope you have your happy on too!

Now it’s time for a nap. Oh the joys of being old enough to know how delicious a nap can be.

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The Candy Promised

 

Please note: The poet, in this case me, is not the “speaker” in the following poem. I thought it best to give this disclaimer so people wouldn’t worry about my marriage.

 

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I know how to spend my allowance

of daily smiles. Opportunities seen as

calculated chances, I’m traveling a gravel path

to find the candy promised me.

 

 

Marching down your boulevard I see

a burning wild fire of enthusiasm.

A powerful you. A capable me. Pleasing.

A promise given, a promise received.

 

 

The holy presence of our communion shines.

Unafraid, we light our interdependent lamps.

Laughing we will rise, and shield our eyes

from the unexpected brilliance of our kinship.

 

 

Delicious flavors tingle on our tongues;

we savor a notion of cohesion because

it helps us map a richness for our unity.

A vow’s been made—the candy promised us.

 

 

Why is it then that later we do battle?

Casting clever exchanges to be

licked from our lips like ice cream. After all,

we are the pair who clipped our own wings.

 

 

No longer do we wear the hat of empathy

or reside within the photo album of our lives.

It seems contentment only lived on glossy paper,

and fidelity was not the candy promised us.

Musings of Death

Note: I wrote this some months ago and I posted it on my Facebook page. Since then, one of my friends has died of her cancers–brain and lung. Another of my dear friends has decided to forego anymore chemo and is working on her bucket list. I admire her for her grace and courage, among other things, that make her the truly remarkable woman she is. Our Baja buddy was cancer free for about a year, but is once again “dancing” with cancer (as he puts it), trying to put an end to it once and for all. Now it is my father-in-law who has been given the news of his liver cancer. He, too, is demonstrating grace and courage, mixed with a lot of pragmatism. Again, I am in awe. And my heart breaks.

 


 

I’ve spent a lot of time lately thinking about death, more importantly, what happens to those left behind. I am at an age now when people in my inner circle are sucking in their last breaths. By my current standards, these people are too young to die.  Not too many years ago 65 was considered borrowed time. No more. Whatever the reasons, and there are many, we humans are living a lot longer.

My own mom is 98 with a strong heart and super low cholesterol. She says she’s ready to die, prays daily that this day will be her last, but for brunch every day, she eats her fresh fruit, yogurt and cottage cheese after swallowing a minimum of 10 vitamins and other supplements. When questioned about this irony, her reply is simple and sensible: “I’m ready to die, but I want to feel good while I’m still here.” This is the woman who taught me the importance of having and keeping a good sense of humor in order to keep things in perspective.

While cancer continues to ravage the bodies of so many of my friends, I find myself feeling blessed with my health one moment, and scared shitless the next. Will I become the next cancer victim? Will it be my husband who is besieged with a terminal illness? One of my children? What would life be like without them? How would I deal with the death of someone so close?

I shudder to think of it, and I try to push the fear and anxiety from my consciousness. I get better at doing this until I learn of another friend’s passing. How can you console those who have just lost a loved one? Their pain is raw. One widower I know explained that losing his wife of 42 years was surreal. Another man whose wife took care of all the business end of their lives for 44 years, must now learn to navigate in situations previously foreign AND deal with the loss of the woman who was his wife, his best friend and his lover. How can they find solace?

In our relationships we develop patterns and we adopt roles of responsibility. When our spouses die, we not only lose our partners in the business of living, but suffer the loss of companionship as well. No wonder we find ourselves living a surreal existence. The rug has been pulled from beneath our feet. The rules have changed.

And we must also take care of death certificates, wills, distributing property, and tending to the deceased’s wishes about cremation or burial, and to have a service, or not have a service. These things cost money and many times there have been no provisions made for these expenditures. If there were medical treatments, the bills will continue to arrive. There are people to contact, an obituary to write. The paperwork involved requires a clear head at a time when we are anything but clear headed. When my stepfather passed on the last day of May, we had to send his social security payment back to the government for the whole month of May. The cruel irony is that he died one day too soon to keep his last payment.

After a dear one dies, grief becomes our tormentor and no amount of slamming our fists, howling or crying can bring enough relief.  Certainly some who survive their loved ones will have family and friends they can rely on. But sooner or later everyone goes home to carry on, and what you’re left with is a broken heart. I doubt anyone is prepared for what emotions come next, and certainly we have not been given a course in how to survive our loss. We must take one day at a time, and put one foot in front of the other.

For me I imagine the ache I would feel at reaching for my husband at night in bed and finding his side empty. Even that small gesture and feeling his warmth has given me comfort many nights when I’ve struggled to sleep. This makes me think of all the little things we share that I would miss. Sometimes it just boils down to appreciating the little things in life. I want to slow down and take them all in—to accept the small joys of being alive and share them with my husband. I want to learn to savor these moments, to be more loving and slower to anger. To taste life before it swallows him or me up.

There may be no discernible life after death. That debate is for others, not me. For now all I can do is hold those I have lost in my heart, and try to be there for others who have lost those they love. And it occurs to me that while we remain blessed to be alive, we have the ability, maybe even the duty, to be more appreciative, to take pleasure in a sunset, share a laugh, help others, take our vitamins, give compliments, forgive, and best of all to hold each other close. While we still can.

 

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Lots of Hardware in There–I’m a Bionic Woman

The year: 2008

Me: My shoulder hurts. It hurts all the time and I can’t even open a door it hurts so much.

Husband: You need to see a doctor.

Doctor: You need a total shoulder replacement

Long story short

  1. SURGERY–complete shoulder replacement–cobalt chrome humeral ball, a prosthetic rod about 5 inches long, and a plastic socket.

 

Susan

 

  1. Had to have a substitute teacher start my year for me. Ugh.
  2. Pain and exercise (some of the pain caused by the exercise, but mostly the surgery)

  3. Almost a year later I’m good to go. I retired from teaching June 19th and and then I broke my humerus boogie boarding in San Diego, CA. on August 2, 2009. (The humerus is the bone of the upper arm or forelimb, forming joints at the shoulder and the elbow).

 

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You can see the break right where the rod ends.

Whatever

Broken humerus–oh well.

  1. Couldn’t use my arm for a long time, so my physical therapy went on hold. Not good. Six years later I’m still limited and with pain, but not anywhere near as bad as in the beginning, thank God.
  • Need to do lots of work to keep movement and strength.

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    But wait! I didn’t stop there. I broke my foot doing Zumba (so much fun when you have the correct footwear) just before we moved to Mexico. I spent two years with a bum foot, lots of pain and it is all my own fault. I didn’t seek medical care in the first place. Dumb me. Now I have lots of hardware in my foot too. I had what they call a triple arthrodesis…fusion in three places. Now I have one motion–the walking motion: nothing sideways, just up and down. But I can walk without pain now. Whoopee!

    I had the surgery done in San Diego, but the follow-up x-rays were taken as I was healing back here in So. Baja. These are photos of the x-rays (which weren’t very good to begin with). But you can get the picture…lots of hardware in my foot.

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    This isn’t the actual x-ray…it is the photo of the x-ray.

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    This is a photo of the x-ray and you can see La Paz in it.

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    A week after surgery.

    Now you know why they call me The Bionic Woman. Oh, and not to worry–I do not set off the alarms at the airport.

     

     

     

    Happiness Prevails

     

     

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    Happiness is a rose in Donna’s garden.

     

     

     

    Today I resolve to stop looking for happiness. I will stop trying to make happiness too.

    Instead I’m  just going to allow happiness to find me.

    I know it will find me because when I quit trying,

    it shows up dancing around my door.

    It flies in through the windows and swirls around me

    every single day.

     

    Happiness found me yesterday when my dog and I were walking on the beach. There! Right in front of our eyes were about 75 baby turtles on their way to the ocean. 75 of them!!! I helped some of them to get out of the ruts left by trucks driving on the beach. (damn trucks). The little turtles were climbing in the ruts and falling back into the depths of the tracks. Some of them were overturned and couldn’t right themselves. But…Whoopee! Susie to the rescue. Those adorable little guys came to show me that perseverance pays off. They visited me with their joy of being born and finding their way to their home in the water. A beautiful and sacred rite of passage and I was a witness (though without my camera).

     

     

    This morning happiness found Greg and me again on the beach when we witnessed whales spouting and jumping in the ocean.

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    Two of our dear friends and their little dog were on the beach too, and we walked together, the four of us and our dogs. We spoke of the news of their baby that is “on the way,” and how the papa-to-be just came back from the States loaded up with “baby things!” Things like car seats, baby bath tubs…oh the happiness in their faces and their voices.

     

    See?

    You don’t have to look for happiness.

    You don’t have to work at making your happiness either.

    Just allow it to come.

    It will.

    It will come to you every day.

    (It’s up to you to recognize it).

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    Spooky or Sacred?

     

    Celebrating Day of the Dead or Halloween?

     

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    This is my mom at 98 years old celebrating Halloween 2014.

            This is my mom at 98 years old celebrating Halloween 2014.

     

     

    Mom has always done a really good witch cackle, so it is appropriate that she dress like this. However, she doesn’t really look scary enough to be a witch with that smile. I told her she should do her witch cackle for the trick or treaters, but she was afraid she would scare them. My brother and I used to beg her to do it for our friends, and later, after I had kids, my own would beg her to do it for their friends. One time she did. The little friend of my son’s said, “If you had done that when I was in the woods, I would have shit my pants.” Mom was flabbergasted with his potty mouth. (This kid was only about 10 years old). We all got a good laugh.

    Personally, I am not a fan of Halloween, but I know a lot of people who are. Dressing up as a different character can be fun, I’m sure. But it’s just not what I do. I am interested in the Mexican tradition of Día de los Muertos, Day of the Dead, though, especially now that I live in Mexico. In this culture, one celebrates those family members who have died. There are certain foods and things to prepare for the alter and it is a chance to show respect and love for the ones who have gone to the other side. Here’s a good link (short) to explain more if you are interested: http://www.celebrate-day-of-the-dead.com

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    Traditional-pan-de-muerto-example

     

    I love the art associated with this holiday.

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    Greg is off to his favorite surf spot.

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    Whether you like to dress up on Halloween, go to parties, hand out treats, or celebrate the Mexican way, may you find joy cada día, each day.

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    Frida Kahlo and Jack Sparrow