Sunday, December 4, 2016

Yummy!

I am not a baker, so this is my fiasco for the season.

I am taking part in the cookie exchange with a group of ladies that I used to work with. Third year running.

Here's hoping that the continue to allow me and my limited baking skills to continue to participate. I've combined a basic sugar recipe with another idea that I saw somewhere along the way. The test run for hubby and the kids (25 & 26) for Grey Cup last weekend worked out well, so here we go again.

Chocolate Surprise Sugar Cookies


Preheat Oven to 350 and line cookie sheets with parchment
2 ¾ cups all-purpose flour
1 tea
1 tsp baking soda
½ tsp baking powder

1 cup butter, softened
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
30-35 mini chocolate bars/macaroons


Cream together butter and sugar.
In separate bowl sift together flour, baking soda and baking poweder.
Beat egg and vanilla in with butter and sugar.
Mix in flour mixture and combine to create dough.

Form small ball of dough, hollow out centre with a thumb-press. Insert
mini-chocolate bar. Roll dough around the chocolate.

Place cookies on cookie sheet with plenty of room around.

Bake in oven for 9-11 minutes at 350.

Enjoy!!

Saturday, December 3, 2016

Words - time to get creative

I sometimes need to give my creative brain a nudge and this is one of those times. I've been doing a great deal of writing lately. Business writing - in hopes of landing a paying gig, personal writing - in hopes of getting to the deep dark recesses of my soul and list writing - in hopes of getting things organized and able to check them off. I haven't done much creative writing and won't make it out to the writers group that meets this morning, so I thought I would dazzle the page with the following.

I'm using a little help prompt help to get me started.

“Unhappy families are conspiracies of silence. The one who breaks the silence is never forgiven.” ~ Jeannette Winterson


The revelation came in a manila envelope with the symbol of the Manitoba Provincial Archives in the return address folder. I ripped it open hoping not to rip any of the pages inside, but too impatient to find the letter opener that was likely tucked under something on the side of the counter. 

The gasp of the archivist heard from the other end of the phone had been true to it's sound.  This was shocking and stunning and caused the ground to shift a little beneath my feet. The bastard hadn't been divorced when he married Mom. That meant that their marriage was not real and instead of him being a bastard there were seven of us. 

We all suspected for decades that Edward was either born out of wedlock or at least conceived there, but it turns out after a check with the church that they shared their nuptials in that had been a truth. One of very few that made up the foundation of the marriage. 

I had started this journey in order to give my mom something special for her 80th birthday. A little link to her past and some information about where her parents had come from.  She had rarely spoken much about her growing up years. The stories few and far between never went any further back then her childhood on the prairies during the depression and drought of the thrirties. Any stories were fraught with the prairie version of Dickensian depressiveness and with sorrow and economic hard times.  Occasionally she alluded to fun games of kick the can or taking the gopher tails to town to sell for candy money. Gophers were a big problem on the farms - they ruined the fields and that's the last thing they needed during the midst of the drought.

What I came away with though, aside from one picture of her parents sitting on kitchen chairs in their Sunday best in the middle of a snow bank, was more information on her husband, my father.

My father was out of my life, thankfully, at the age of 12. He was a large, imposing man who abused his wife and children and made our lives hell. We didn't need the priests to tell us about hell on Sunday mornings - we lived it.  Sure, there were good times. Times when we laughed ourselves silly, played pranks, or just amused ourselves with whatever we could get up to, but most of the time we were all just hiding from the horrors that we knew would come with the next bottle of rum, rye, moonshine, or just because someone had said something his warped sense of decorum didn't agree with.

I guess, in retrospect, I was lucky. I was one the last child and learned quite a bit from example. I watched what others did to bring on a rage and I avoided it as best I could. I hid in my room a great deal. I hid in my head much more than that. I knew that things could get very bad and I prayed that I could stay out of the way long enough to keep it at bay.

Jack had been married before.  Apparently in 1947 in his hometown of Winnipeg. The wedding took place in the family church in which he and his siblings had been baptized.  I imagined that they had all had their first confessions, first communions and confirmations to the Catholic church in that building surrounded by a tight-knit congregation.

His first had filed for divorce in February of 1953 stating infidelity as the cause. In those days, the divorce law was a national law and you had to petition the federal government after having published your intention along with the reason in the newspaper. This small one-liner is where I had seen the first clue to the original marriage. After that I had contacted the church that had been named in my aunt's wedding announcement to find a record of my father's birth. Turns out he had lied by a year about the year of his birth. On the baptism certificate I found a one-liner at the  bottom noting the date of the original nuptials and the year of the wedding.
Eventually, I tracked down the archivist in Manitoba who was more than happy to supply me with a photocopy of the divorce paperwork. Included in the package was the original petition. That petition not only stated the reason as fidelity, but also named the party with whom my father had been accused of cheating on his wife with. The woman shared the same name as his first wife. Given the surname and address of the co-accused I knew it had to be a relation.  Unfortunately, by looking at the original marriage license application I determined that Jack had been stepping out on his wife with his wife's mother.

The subpoena for divorce was served upon Jack as he was at work on a military base in northern Manitoba - working as an airplane mechanic. The paymaster confirmed that the paperwork had been served in March.  I have not yet received a copy of the military records, but I am certain that any stories told about his service overseas during the Korean war will prove to be untrue. How he managed to leave his post shortly thereafter and make his way to Banff in time for a summer romance with my mother is still unknown.

He did make his way to Banff though. Why Banff? It wasn't a destination of note for most in those days. Certainly not for prairie people from Winnipeg. They were more apt to go east to Toronto to make their fortune in the big city. The answer to that might be in the fact that the divorce decree was actually granted in Vancouver, BC - the new home of his first wife and the child of the original marriage.

My suspicion is that Jack either ran out of money, or train tickets on his way to Vancouver and wound up stopping over in Banff to try to make enough to get him the rest of the way to the coast and his lost family. However, during his stopover he met my mother. A prairie girl who had no doubt not had the best upbringing in life on the farm and had left it at 15 with her younger sister in tow.

The romance must have blossomed or my mother held fast to her Catholicism and wouldn't allow him to go past a certain point without a ring on her finger. The part that had always confused us, though, was the fact that both had grown up Catholic, but chose to marry in a Lutheran church. This was another reason that we were suspicious about the timing of Patrick's conception. Their anniversary was September 14 and Edward was born September 17, 1954.

I was desperate to share my findings with someone, but who? If I shared them with mother it would send her into a spiral of depression that she may not be able to climb out of at this stage of the game. Edward didn't like to hear of anything unseemly unless it was political in nature and worldly in interest. It would cause Michael to go into a drinking binge and that would spiral much like mother. I didn't know where the other boys sat on this, so for now I would keep it to myself lest my precarious position in the family tree change.

Friday, December 2, 2016

Ho Ho Holy Crap!

True to my word I sent out the note to the next generation last night to get a butt count for Christmas dinner. The easiest way I have found is to use Messenger to create a group. My note went out at about 8:15pm last night and the smart @ss remarks back and forth amongst the cousins was still going on at 8 am this morning. Oi! I love that the cousins are mostly close, but they sometimes try my patience.

I'm housing it this year. I hesitate to say 'Host' because it really is a committee that puts this on each year. My brother brings the turkey and ham that he has roasted at home and toted piping hot to my house. My other brother's wife brings the cutlery and plates. Folding tables and chairs come from a variety of sources. This year, as of now, there could be 26. In most years this is a fluid number, so I will try to make sure that I have seats enough for 30 just in case.

Thirty might seem like a great deal to a lot of people, but it's a partial family gathering. My mom had seven children and six of us remain, with five of the six having children of our own. So, mom has wound up with 14 grandchildren and six of them, soon to be seven, have their own children. We have remained relatively geographically close, so this year we'll have three of six siblings together and a smattering of our children and some grandchildren.

When you add that ridiculous tale of numbers falling off the family tree to the fact that as a close-knit family we often feel the need to feed some extra folks who for one reason or another might not be participating in a dinner shindig - the table fills up quickly.

My next task is to define the menu and send notes to everyone asking them what to bring. This has become more of a struggle in recent years as the 'kids' age. I believe in equality, but it's so much easier for the single young men to get a pass on bringing a dish then the young mothers and fathers since the parents are 1) used to cooking by now, and 2) bringing more mouths to the table. That seems wrong though, most parents with small children at home will be busy enough that morning without having to stress over making and bringing something, while the single ones will likely be enjoying a sleep in day. Hmmm....well, I have a couple weeks to wrestle with that dilemma.

Since there are so many of us we long ago gave up exchanging gifts amongst us. Now we do a gift exchange. Each adult brings along a gift for under the tree that cost them less than $20. Numbers are drawn, wrapping is destroyed and theft and mayhem ensue. It's a blast! There is always at least one gift that is stolen more often than others and there is usually a couple more that cause us to wonder about the gift givers thought process, but it's always in good fun.

As the big day approaches and my to do list gets shorter, hopefully because things are done and not because I've just decided to downsize I'll keep you posted on what's going down in Shanny-town!


Thursday, December 1, 2016

31 Days of Blogging

The last few weeks, months have been a challenge for me to get out of the habit of staying in my happy place with my words confined to my various notebooks or as files on my computer and put them out into the world. As karma would have it over the course of the last 3 days of this week many people in my life have been telling me to start blogging to get over my fear of putting my words out there.

Today the 31 Days of Blogging Challenge came into my Facebook feed and I knew I could not ignore the signs anymore.  So, thank you Cheryl, for the virtual kick in the keyboard. 

As many of you can tell I am new to the blogosphere, so I hope that you'll be kind and if you see me make an error - I'd love to hear about it.  That's how I'm going to learn.

So, just a tidbit about my first day of December.  I woke up inspired by fresh snowfall and hoping that I would get inspired to kick it into gear with getting the Christmas projects on the go.

Well, that went a little sideways....good intentions and all. I managed to finish the afghan for my sister-in-law that should have been done weeks ago and then decided that I must get the Charlie Brown/Ugly Brown Snowsuit quilt out of the way before I got going on the first of the projects. Instead of simply moving it to the binding chair in the living room and leaving it there for tv watching after dinner, I moved it, took a seat and started up a podcast in order to finish my 2nd coffee.

Well, then the boys needed to go out around the block to get their daily dose of exercise, so off we went. Upon our return I needed, of course, to eat.  This led me to sitting at the table and getting annoyed by the fact that for the last few days my Office program hasn't been letting me save. So, after trying to be my own IT department I broke down and went to their support website. It helped. Not the first time, or the second, but by the 3rd phone call and 4.5 hours later I was uninstalled, reinstalled, uninstalled the wrong version, reinstalled.....until Yippee!!!  it worked.

Needless to say, it's time to put the dinner in the oven.  (I had even planned to be so busy with sewing Christmas things that I had taken some previously made and frozen shepherds pies out.)  At 4:30 pm I didn't want to start anything as I'll be busy this evening assisting hubby with prepping for snack day at work tomorrow - it's his turn to bake/take.

Therefore, I sat down to cruise Facebook while the oven preheated and saw Cheryl's challenge and here I am.  On that note.....I'm anxious to finish the first of the blogs for the month and wander through the other ones.

Good to see you all here and good luck with your own challenges this month!! 

31-dayblog-challenge-1

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Where's the map?

Finding a new direction for my career is my new goal. I thought I had it. However, speaking it out loud to someone it sounded hollow and not like something I truly wanted to do.

Don't misunderstand me, I know my skillset and where my natural talents lie and I've proven myself in that field many times over. However upon speaking my plan out loud I got a pit in the bottom of my stomach and it just didn't feel like something I would want to jump out of bed to do. In order, to be successful in that field I would have to put on a physical coat of armour (corporate attire) and then put on an emotional one (corporate persona).

I worked for 25 years to build my corporate persona and had a great one until the last three or so years of my career when my physical health challenges came along. Although they were very real - two surgeries will attest to that - I think that they might have been fate's way of telling me to change direction. I had accomplished in that persona what was needed.

Now, I am wandering, which is not really a good place for a goal oriented person. I have some ideas in mind. Have spoken of them to people that I respect and they have indicated that I am not completely out to lunch, but entering a new pathway system without a map is unnerving.

This is reminding me a bit of my first two days on the Camino. The signs were there and then they weren't and then there again. And at one point what I thought was the waymarkers in a different form turned me literally in a 5 km circle. I didn't exactly wind up at the exact same spot, but the same two dogs came up to greet me not far from where I'm sure I saw them the first time I checked my phone for the mileage to my destination. At the original point it was 4.5km to go and after I saw the dogs again it was 5.5km to go.

At that point I got off the trail, or lack of one, took myself to a highway and did the unthinkable. I flagged a passing car down and took a ride from a tattooed stranger in a strange country on a quiet country road. What could possibly go wrong??

He did get me to my destination and all was okay....until the next day, but that's another story for another day.

So, to get back to the topic at hand I think I just need to have faith that I will make my destination even though I'm unsure of exactly what my destination will look like and the pathway there is going to turn me around and I'll at some point have to get some assistance.

This direction causes nervous nausea and not the dread of talking about just resurrecting the old career in a new forum. I'm going to take that as a positive sign and keep trying to move myself into this new field. I'm becoming more comfortable talking about it and even working toward it on a daily basis.

I just need to figure out how to monetize it. I'm fairly sure that I'm not going to make double my previous salary, but if I can get to the fifty percent mark by the end of next year than I will be thrilled.

Thursday, November 17, 2016

I'm back...yet again and hopefully it won't be as long a break for the next while. 

Just to give the update since the end of July to the middle of November.

End of July:  Settled my mother into a new living arrangement.  This will likely be the last major move - we can hope.  She's now in an assisted living facility that is absolutely lovely and has so many activities throughout the day that I wonder how she can handle it.

August: Time at the trailer by myself doing some test hikes and time with friends and family.

September through October:  Accomplished a dream!  Yay me!!!  I walked 416 km from Viseu, Portugal to Santiago, Spain with a backpack.  I did this on my own, but I was not alone. All along the way the love and support of those who make my world a special place was right there with me and then I made new friends over the course of my trip. Some will stay in my heart and life for a very long time and some I had the opportunity to make beautiful memories with in the moment.

Mid-October to now: Resettling into life again and figuring out how to arrange my life in such a way that I can apply some of the lessons I learned along the walking route in Europe to my everyday life.

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

I'm back on the grid!  Ho Hum...power at the flick of a switch and almost unlimited hot water is great, but.....

I love my home, my neighbourhood, my city, but I much prefer the pace and space that being at the trailer affords me.

Time is measured by your belly and your naps and the sun.  That is completely the way our bodies and spirits should be guided.

Space is taken up by trees and birds and sky and apparently by wolves, bears and cougars, but to this point we have managed to avoid those quite well.

I can tell that being out of the work a day world for a while has made a huge impact on my soul and well-being.  While working in my last role the only place I could totally unwind was when I was out at the trailer. By the time I hit the city limits on the way home the knots were back in my shoulders and it felt like I'd only been gone a few hours.

Now, I'm sitting here after having bathed the dogs, unloaded the truck and ordered pizza and the knots still aren't back. When hubby and I walked in the door it felt like we had been gone for weeks and yet it was 48 hours and 16 minutes from the time we had left the house.  This is the way it should be.

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Update:

I'll be off the grid until at least Monday.

Hubby and I are taking off to spend a couple of nights at the trailer.  Yay!!!!  Love our time out there together!

Have a happy, safe weekend!!



Friday, July 22, 2016

WORDS

This is a piece that I started years ago.  I'm curious to see how others react to it.


Wednesday morning greeted Mags with sleepy eyed smiles on a 2 year old boy on the potty and a curly headed girl reaching up to her from the crib. They had all slept soundly through the night. The first in so many that she couldn’t remember the last time it had happened. The dawn shone a light on what had been niggling the back of her mind. Days starting like this are how life is meant to be lived.
On the Sunday before she had spent the day helping to prepare for a trip. One that he needed to take to regain his balance. She did what she needed to. Kept the kids out of the way, packed all that was on his list just the way he liked it and said all the things that he needed to hear. “How will I handle it without you here?” ”The kids and I will miss you so much.” “Are you sure you’re going to be okay?”
Not saying what was truly on her mind came naturally to her. It was what she had learned from an early age. One of the great life lessons that Norma had given her. Not in so many words, but in her actions.
Margaret knew that what she was living was no different than what she had grown up in.  She had sworn she would never repeat it. Mag watched her mother suffer through decades of abuse, both physically and emotionally, delivered from one of the most charismatic men she had ever encountered-her father. All her young life she had promised to never put up with that and yet here she was. Here she was, 21, with two children and living under a spyglass.
Sunday morning was spent prepping his hiking supplies for the week. She hadn’t realized that by Wednesday she would feel a profound sense of tranquility. After 4 years of anxiety in the first person and a previous 17 years of observed and peripheral anxiousness, this was a strange situation. Not watching the clock to see when he would be home and ensuring that she could account for every moment of the day including each encounter with someone. She didn’t have to stay within earshot and a two ring answer of the telephone. He was completely isolated on his climb and couldn’t get to a phone to check up on where she was, who she had run into, how long she was gone, what she was wearing.
As Wednesday evening faded and she sat rocking the younger one in the chair by the window with the blinds partially open her thoughts drifted freely. Is this what the other people in the other homes felt? This sense of not having to share, edit, hide a part of their lives from the scrutiny and judgment of the people who loved them?
Her boy was asleep in his bed with the blankets askew. 2 years earlier she had prayed for guidance in making her decision on whether to stay or go and asked that the gender of her child be the sign. If a boy came into the world she would go. A boy would be able to withstand the pressures of life without a male influence
.  Her brothers would be able to act as his mentors. She hadn’t heeded the sign then. 
Now as she rocked her curly haired daughter she wondered if this sense of peace would be what she could give them as her gift in life. She knew that the handling of all practical matters would be easy enough….she did all the daily stuff now. She could do it. She would do it.

On Saturday evening he opened the door and called out. Why was the living room empty? He called out down the hall and his voice echoed. As he moved further in slowly there was a different scent. Ahhhh, the little woman couldn’t have known what time he’d be home – in fact, he hadn’t been due home until tomorrow and yet she had the furniture hauled out of the living room so that the freshly shampooed carpets would dry. She knew how to keep her man happy.

Thursday, July 21, 2016

Toot!!

I spend some of my rejuvenation time in the loveliest part of the world, tucked away in the forest, alone, but within reach of some family that I have always enjoyed, but have grown to love and appreciate more and more with every moment.

During one of my visits to this area I got the chance to go to a local market on a hot summer Saturday morning. As chance would have it, my tea connection introduced me to her soap lady. I have to say that I was skeptical about the products she sold - I have been plagued since my early 30s with allergies that for a number of years rendered me make-up free and limp haired.

I went from a woman who would not leave the house without foundation, mascara and a tube of lipstick, not gloss, to a woman who had to troll the aisles of the natural food stores squinting at ingredient labels.  For a number of years would shock colleagues at Christmas parties when I would actually break into the incredibly expensive cosmetics to bring a little glamour to my new normal - blank face and pony-tail. Even finding shampoos, lotions, and soaps was frustrating.  Not only did I have to find ones that I could use, I had to source ones for my husband too.  Any contact with an allergen would see me scratching, blotching and flaking.

Back to the lovely soap lady....the smells emanating from the booth were rich and natural and made me think of summer breezes wafting across sun warmed skin. Her assistant was magnificent. A shy smile just peeking over the display table encouraging me to try this favourite or that.  Who can resist a big-eyed girl proudly touting her Mom's hardwork?  I bought a few bars to bring home and try.

The following week I broke into one of the bars and hopped in the shower with a little bit of trepidation.  Would the welts show up on my face again? Was it truly as natural as it seemed? Would I be comfortable with a bar as opposed to a lotion or gel again after all these years?

I got out of the shower glowing and tingly. My first experience was with mint poppyseed.  The grit of the poppyseed gave a good scrub and the mint invigorated me from top to bottom.  MMMMMM

My husband is a slow-adopter to all things that are not chocolate and sweet and eaten after a good meal. However, when I stopped buying shower gel and he had to break out one of her soaps for a morning ritual he instantly had the same sensations I had. He was a devotee!!

On a trip out to my little corner of paradise in the months leading up to Christmas I got the chance to stop by the factory. It sits in the heart of a small town and the smells from there must waft over the area in indulgent waves. The factory is a 10 X 14 foot converted garden shed with a guard dog and the cutest little assistants ever.  Covering every wall are shelves of ingredients and flat upon flat of deliciousness.  During my visit I filled up a grocery bag full of goodness to tuck into all the stockings from Santa, all the hostess gifts I would during the upcoming holidays and just a few for hubster and I. I also tried out a shampoo bar for the first time ever - Converted!!!

These lovely little bars of joy are now a staple in our house and more often than not you'll find them tucked into a gift bag so we can share the love of handmade with friends.

If you want a slice of heaven to enter your morning routine I encourage you to check out Soco Soaps on Facebook.  Here you'll find which markets Karey and her products will be at, be able to order on-line, or find her wares at retailers in your area.

Karey, a big glee-filled tooty-mctooterson to you!!!!

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Words...

Last night, after an uncomfortable day of worrying about how it would be, I made my way up to a "Writers Meetup".  I am a writer, after all - even though it feels strange to refer to myself in that manner.

I was remarkably anxious about stepping out of my comfort zone and meeting up with a group of strangers to practice something that has been a very personal pursuit of mine. I write for work and/or school all the time, but putting my imagination onto the page makes me nervous.

Anxiety around strangers isn't something that I'm used to dealing with. I usually view interactions with strangers, now that I'm on the other side of forty, as an opportunity to be myself. If it works out that the people like me I view it as a bonus. If they don't, then I've lost nothing because they weren't in my life before. However, doing something that I normally do on my own with a coffee shop full of strangers and then possibly discussing the process, the thoughts, etc. with them had me on the edge all day.

I pushed through and did it and it felt good. The people came from different age categories and obviously different walks, and stages, of life. All of the various writers I spoke to were focused on different genres, themes, projects.  It felt like a cornucopia of folks all walking different paths, but stopping at the same place to look at their maps, refresh themselves and then carry on.

By the end of 60 minutes of quiet writing time I had more than 1500 words on the page! I haven't yet read what I wrote - it strikes close to the bone and I'm not sure if I can detach enough yet to do any good re-work, but at the end I felt a sense of relief and release. Even better, I got the full sketch of the story that's been rattling my brain for years now onto a sheet of paper and I know better where I need to focus on some research in order to full flesh out the story pieces.

Reading back on my first paragraph I'm still haunted by the statement "I am a writer". I either need to work on owning that label, or find another word that encompasses more of my passion for tales.

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Introduction

Hi All!

Welcome to A Messy Mind Workshop....be very careful where you step.

Having one single place to collect all of my thoughts, musings, writings in one place felt like the right thing to do today.

A few thoughts on what you might find as you pop by on occasion to visit:

Horn Toot!  So many times I come across something that makes me want to toot a horn and I thought this could be the place to do it.  There will be happy squeaks and there will be the full on honks here.  It could be a small business that I've found, a helpful person I've run into, a creative person who needs to be recognized, the fact that I've achieved a personal goal, or it could be an irritant that I try to come to grips with using my fingers on the keyboard and not giving sign language.

Scraps from the cutting room floor...in this section you might stumble across a few of my crafty ideas.  Watch out for pins, knitting needles, crochet hooks...they can cause accidents if left in the wrong places.

Words from the forest/highway/dogpark/shower - so....when you're walking down the street and you see someone mumbling away to themselves, please don't automatically think that they are having a psychotic episode.  It may be me!  Often times I'll be engrossed in my own thoughts and then find out that I've said it out loud. When the dogs are with me I can usual camouflage this tendency by pretending that I'm chatting with them. Alternatively I use this method as opposed to hiking with bear bells.

Drop a line, if you wish, but most especially if anything I've said on here causes you to smile, giggle, or think about something in a new light.

Share the happy - it's the best kind of contagious!