Velveeta & Chessy Cat Grins: A Nod to My Dad

Happy Father’s Day to the first man that loved me.

My dad somehow managed to provide for a family of 7 and still be the calm, patient voice at dinner, though we called it “supper” back then. Insistent on a prayer first, a prayer after, and then a Bible Story, we never felt the stress of his day at Caterpillar, though hindsight, I’m sure the demands at work were massive and he was making a very conscious choice to create a separation.  He valued dinner time in a way that almost seems foreign now, as if the phone rang, he’d literally answer it with something like, “It’s supper time at the Rocke house…what’s so important that you’re calling at 6 pm?”

He taught me how to drive a stick shift uphill on our gravel road, Rural Route 1.  But I couldn’t even get out of our rock driveway without listening to the entire workings of an engine and practicing the clutch. Talk about patience with a 15 year old who just wanted to drive already.

My mom cooked during the week, but Sunday morning breakfast was all dad. He always made scrambled eggs in a large cast iron skillet. Any leftover proteins and veggies from the week got thrown in, and as he knew I hated green peppers, he’d puree them first and then mix them in. I used to think that was so mean, because if they were big pieces I could just pick them out. As an adult, I think it’s a proper love gesture. He’d top the eggs with 2 1/2″ squares of thinly sliced Velveeta cheese, which helped determine portion sizes. Though I know now that it’s “processed cheese food,” it’s still one of my favorite nostalgic, guilty food pleasures.

As the youngest, I sometimes think I got the best of my dad.  He retired from Cat when I was in college, and actually came to campus at Millikin, slept on the floor and took me to my favorite spot back then–Texas Roadhouse. Having dinner alone with him (especially as a poor college kid) is a memory I’ll always treasure. I know this pic is breakfast and not Roadhouse but I couldn’t find that one… same year, though.

I spent my college summers back on the farm, working through laundry lists of to-dos that were never complete come August, but that wasn’t the point. I knew I would move away after college, and was glad to have the time with both my parents to work on the garden, repaint the fences, and have an early dinner together before I scooted off to my waitress job at “The Homestead”  in town.

As fate would have it, I got to tag along with my parents to Atlanta on a business trip for dad, not realizing that the city would soon become my new home where I’d meet my husband and spend the majority of my adult years.

After I moved to Atlanta, my first visit home required me to bring Oscar, my kitty-cat companion, in tow. Dad pretty much hated cats in my childhood, as there were a million of them, and every winter they procreated and then cuddled up next to the porch door and were just a pain underfoot when he’d open the front door. But when I showed up with Oscar, he not only let me bring him in the house, but I have evidence of dad on the couch with my little furball. That was the first (and last?) time there was an animal in the house, (at least a live one).

He has always called me “Jewler,” loved me through some tough choices that were hard for him, and while I’m super close to my mom, I’ll always be a “Daddy’s Girl.” There’s a million more stories and things I love about my dad, but as the ugly tears are starting, I’ll wrap up with my favorite picture of us–this was in preparation to meet my sister’s fiance and we thought it’d be funny to wear our overalls with a gun/holster. Lol. I love his “chessy cat grin” (as he calls it) in this photo.

Love you, dad. Thanks for your wisdom, unconditional love, and really bad jokes.

 

 

“J” Leaves a Love Note

I went to the door for a delivery tonight, and saw 2 homeless folks waiting on the sidewalk to talk to me or come to the door, etc…I’m walking this weird line between being super suspicious and getting ready to be “man of the house” or run upstairs to get left overs to feed hungry bellies.

I can’t figure out the balance and I’m terrible at both extremes. I’d already battled a parade of homeless folks today and decided to just shut the door and lock it instead of engaging.

Hours later, I check the front, watch the cameras, and safely decide to walk down the sidewalk to get today’s mail. I step outside the door to a handwritten note from “J” (see below) but he essentially thanks me for allowing him to use our patio outlet to charge his phone and left me $5 to cover his part.

J's letter

And of course, because I can never manage the balance of being a bad ass equipt for the city or the soft-hearted country girl, I started crying ugly crocodile tears… (Because even though I joke about having “badass Betty” as my alter ego, I still have a really soft heart).

I thought about how it might have been to actually talk to him, and offer more help than an outdoor outlet, and felt terrible for closing the door in a moment that could have mattered to him (and me).

But it’s an impossible mission. I know this. I’m aware that engaging is dangerous, but every now and then I encounter a soul that’s not too different from me. They’ve just had a little bad luck and a few curve balls to put them in a different scenario than mine.

So “J” –I’m sure you’re not surfing FaceBook right now, but if we ever meet again, I’d really love to chat with you and apologize for shutting the door in your face when you were trying to be nice, and thank me for something I’d never have even noticed or been charged extra for. (I know that’s not proper grammar)

Sometimes the balance between safety and humanity is super gray. I don’t think I’ll ever master it. But I’m thankful to have a sense of goodness in the form of a handwritten note on my front door, from a random stranger who thought he should compensate us for charging his phone on our patio.

“J” I certainly hope our paths cross again. XOXO

A new shower schedule & hot dogs for breakfast: adventures of week 1

i-hate-showering

Because I know that I won’t see most of you for a little while and you’ll forget what I wrote, I have absolutely no filter. You’ve been warned.

I really hate taking showers.

Maybe it’s because I had to share bath water on the farm with 4 other hoodlums, so that’s not exactly a clean or fond memory. I just hate the disruption of going from the coziness of my sheets to water, to being freezing cold drying off, and then having to do something with my hair. I’m already a little cranky in the morning, and the daily shower schedule really cramps my style.

So imagine my elation when I realize that I can still fix my face (because make up makes my heart happy) but I don’t actually have to abide by societal rules and take a shower every day?!  #winning.

Before you judge too much and think I must be smelly, I’ve been spending the wee hours of the night in my HGJ (homegrownjules) garage workshop, which is full of all things squeaky clean: literally 40+ bottles of isopropyl alcohol, witch hazel, liquid aloe vera, mineral oil, every essential oil available…you get the idea. I’ve been cranking out hand sanitizers, kitchen cleaning products, coffee body scrubs, and as of yesterday, a homemade jojoba hand cream, so I smell as divine as a freshly showered babe.

In other news, I work in the food industry, and while sales are tanking, I feel the need to do my part to get DoorDash as often as possible—Café Bernardo’s Thai Noodle Salad, Pizza Rock’s Cal Italia, Thai Palace’s Phad Kee Mao? Yes, please. And I’ll eat those in my soft clothes and on red china, because I still have some standards.

But in between supporting local business, I have to support our shrinking bank account, too, and since I’m a rule-follower and am trying not to leave the house for groceries, it’s time to clean out the freezer for some frugal meals in between….be afraid for my husband.

“Breakfast tacos?” I ask. “How’s that sound?”

“Delish,” he says. “Potatoes, eggs, bacon, and chorizo? Sounds perfect.”

Hmm. No bacon. No chorizo, but I had a little baggy of “mystery meat” that turned out to be grilled hot dogs—from the one time we used our rooftop grill last summer. Lord only knows what possessed me to baggy those up, but sometimes I resort back to this super frugal farm living and freeze everything I can… “just in case.”

Let me tell you—just dice those little suckers into tiny squares (think Tostino’s pizza pepperoni bits), toss into a buttery skillet and they’re transformed. Cut the sprouts off the last couple of purple potatoes and whisk in some eggs, and I’ve got a filling for breakfast tacos that I could start delivering during this crisis. I’m pretty sure Nicholas actually thought it was chorizo, and while he was dying for seconds, I only had 2 hot dogs to start with and had to ration them for another idea come tomorrow.

I think Nicholas finds Covid-19 less scary than what I might thaw from the freezer next.

It goes without saying that this is a terrifying time and I’m beyond grateful for the jobs we still have, the food in our fridge, the family that calls and checks in, the thousands of folks putting their life at risk every day, and the hope of a better tomorrow.

I assume you know all of that already, so instead of stating the obvious in excess, I thought I’d provide a little levity instead.

That said, love each other. Work a puzzle. Teach your kids how to cook. Play spoons at the kitchen table. And say your prayers. It’s going to be okay.

 

 

Tyler, and my Bleeding Heart

I was watering my front bed of flowers last night, as I’ve been out of town for a week and it never rains in Sacramento, so my flowers were seriously freaking out.  I had just started a heavy water on my “ketchup and mustard roses” when I saw a homeless guy limping in my direction. I’ve lived in the city long enough in Atlanta, and witness the excessive homeless here in Sac just long enough to know to avoid eye contact and pretend I don’t have a soul. I had ear buds in, and Don Williams was carrying on about Amanda, and her need to find a husband, so I had a distraction. But he stood in front of me, and I finally looked up, made eye contact, and removed my earbuds.

“Can you spray me, please?” Mind you, it’s 104 here, and without water or shade, it’s got to be unimaginable to survive. He was young…like 30s…in an old jersey and ripped sweatpants, and I noticed as he walked up that he had a notable limp.  I changed my sprayer to something lighter and said, “Sure..but I actually feel really weird about spraying you like you’re a plant….but okay.” I sprayed him down, and he thanked me profusely. “I’m Tyler, what’s your name?” Nicholas would kill me for engaging, but I told him my real name and asked him to hang on so I could grab a Gatorade from the downstairs fridge. I came out with a drink, and you’d have thought I gave him a savings bond and apartment to stay in. He cordially moved on….but my heart was bleeding.

I kept watering flowers and was battling the urge to go get him some food. I made a pork dish today, there’s pizza in the fridge, and I had just made Nicholas a sandwich. The amount of food that is wasted in our house makes me sick to my stomach.

But I waited too long.

I ran upstairs and grabbed a sandwich I had just made, wrapped it in paper towel and came out to find him, but he’s a fast limper and he was gone. I left it on the patio, in case he came back, or someone else, and then felt terrible that I had hesitated so long to do the right thing.

I know Sacramento has an enormous homeless problem, but at what point do we cease to be human? I know I can’t save everyone and I know it can be super dangerous, especially if they know where I live, but how do I turn my head when I know I have multiple meals I’m throwing away and someone outside my house is starving? He wasn’t on drugs…he wasn’t acting crazy.  He looked like one of the many young people I’ve read about that have timed out of the foster system and have no one in life.

I doubt I’ll ever be homeless because I have hundreds of family members that could always take me in if misfortune really struck. But what about those that don’t have any family, have timed out of a messed-up system and are taking one moment at a time on the streets?

I actually applied for a lot of jobs to work in the homeless shelters and/or work on the educational programs for re-integration. I believe in divine intervention, and am super thankful for the career path I found, but sometimes I wonder what I could have done if I had gotten a job in a different system.

I hate feeling helpless when my heart is bleeding, but I’m channeling Lynyrd Skinner and saying, “All I can do is write about it,” even though my heart knows there’s more I could do.

I told Tyler to “Take care of himself” like that’s helpful…but at least we had a moment to connect and he got a cold drink. Here’s hoping he’s got a place to sleep tonight, but I have a feeling I’ll be pretty restless.

 

 

Meet Zelda–A Cautionary Tale

Tonight, I walked around our hardwood floors barefoot.

I mean, I didn’t limp around the house; I legitimately roamed the kitchen without
insole-d tennis shoes, for the first time in over a year. (I know, I just made insole into an adjective.) This is kind of a big deal, and I mean the walking part, not the grammatical invention.

Just a tad over a year ago, we expanded our little family by beautiful Zelda, who(m) I’d been talking about for years.  The moment we walked East Atlanta and I witnessed pretty mopeds littering the side walk, I was pretty convinced that I needed a moped to buzz around the city streets–you can park anywhere! The little 50-cc model goes up to 45, which is the limit in most of the Atlanta neighborhoods, and I really thought it was my time to own one, but these thoughts were mostly in my daydreams as I sat in crazy traffic most days and had a pipe dream of running around the city after-hours on a smaller, easier way to navigate the packed streets and increasing millennial population.

With almost no adult discussion, Nicholas surprised me on my birthday with 2 helmets…I kind of thought they were intended to be bicycle helmets, as I had been talking about more cardio in our life.  After the 3rd package turned out to be googles, it was clear I had something more motorized in my future.

On July 12th, I worked a Gordon Food Service bash at PREP Atlanta and was a sweaty, exhausted mess when I pulled in our drive. But one view of a mint-green moped hanging out in the driveway perked me up. Nicholas had broccoli in the oven and sous vide pork chops brewing in the kitchen and had just finished packing us for my belated birthday weekend in the mountains.

I didn’t even change out of my Gordon polo and dress pants before Nicholas turned the bike over to me and said, “just run her to the end of the alley and back; dinner is almost ready.”  I hit the gas, got to the end of the alley and mentally scoffed at the idea of turning around. People rent these in Europe all the time–I’ll just take her around the neighborhood. I blew through a few blocks, grinning with the wind in my hair, and then started to circle back. I turned the last corner and came up on Drip and Vickery’s–both with packs of people on the patio. I went to brake as I came up on the boccie court, and rolled the gas handle forward instead.

I nailed the cement curb of the boccie court, flew off, and landed on my right knee. I had quite an audience across the street, so initially, it was only my pride that really smarted until I tried to stand. I couldn’t put any weight down, and my knee had shifted a couple of inches to my right. The pain shot through my leg, and I remember thinking that I must have dislocated my knee, and I just needed to get it popped back into place.  (I mean, when I was a kid, I broke my nose a few times–dad would straighten it out with a good pop in place, and when the blood stopped, I carried on as normal.)

When Nicholas came around the corner, I was still a little dazed, thinking about that relocation procedure and trying not to cry. I wasn’t visibly bleeding, so he assumed I was okay and tried to help me up…and then tears came. I couldn’t walk. At all. It was an act of God to get me on the back of the moped to ride the block back to the house and from there it was holy terror to Urgent Care for X-Rays, then to the Emergency Room for more X-Rays.  5 torn ligaments and a shattered tibia later, I was admitted, but “holding” for a room in Grady’s Trauma Center, as Emory couldn’t or wouldn’t do my surgeries.

I’ve never been admitted to the hospital before, never peed in a bed pan, and never felt so helpless in my entire life.  Nicholas was beside himself, which made it even worse, and the only silver lining was that I had an absolute angel who had a Sixth Sense to get in an Uber to trek downtown before we even knew how bad it was.

My Mother-in-Law, let’s just call her mom from now on, has this bizarre intuition that could probably be a career as a See-er. She said she felt a dark cloud all day that Thursday, and couldn’t place her mood; Nicholas texted her that I had an accident and she was in an Uber in under 5 minutes, sure that I was the black cloud she was feeling and needed to be with us. My leg had swelled beyond what my pants could handle, and she was there in time to help cut my pants off of me and hold my hand in between Nicholas.

The trauma unit was a special kind of hell.  I had 4 screws drilled into my ankle and thigh bone to attach a rod to the outside of my leg, forcing it to straighten out after days of holding it in a bent position from pain.  Once the sun went down, it was all night-terrors; I had to sleep with my leg in the air so that the swelling would reduce as quickly as possible for the second surgery. The walls were thin and I could hear the screams of other trauma patients all night long–there were 3 rooms in a row of screamers and no one could seem to quiet them. It was truly terrifying.  In those moments, I realized that I was likely the luckiest in the wing.

The nurses were either wrapped-out or fresh out of empathy, so struggling with bed pans, wipes, pads and all the other mortifying parts of being bed-ridden were even worse and I’d find myself asking for help and then apologizing for it; They’d forget to give me back a bed pan and leave the room, and then be super annoyed when I mashed the service button for them to come back. They’d fill my water and leave it out of my reach…meanwhile, I’m in soul crushing pain and literally can’t move except when I elevate the bed.

The second surgery repaired my ligaments with cadaver, and “installed” enough metal screws, rods and plates for me to be “bionic Jules” and set off airport alarms.  The pain coming out of surgery was like, well, I’ll be redundant.  It was a special kind of hell. I hallucinated with pain in the days and nights after, and poor Nicholas was alone with me on one of my worst nights.  I was convinced that I was Wonder Woman and I was going to fly off the table, fueled with pain….it was truly awful, and I didn’t have to be the one to watch helplessly.

And then the visitors started…dear friends bringing food that trumped the wilted lettuce and inedible “dinners” that Grady called food. Flowers littered my little room, and while there was no where to sit or spend the night, mom and Nicholas would rotate the schedule to be with me even when I was out cold from meds and pain.

I couldn’t walk for over 3 months, and as we lived in a 3-story town house, I learned to scoot down the stairs on my hiney and borrowed an extra walker from a customer so that I at least had a mode of transportation on a couple floors of the house. It was the heat of the Atlanta summer, and the effort to get ready and get down the stairs to catch an Uber was almost more than I could handle. I’d beg to get out of the house, only to cancel plans half way through the getting ready process because I’d be worn out and in so much pain that I didn’t care about fresh air and lunch anymore.

I was on disability, so I wasn’t supposed to connect with my team, which was insane to me, but the beauty of great relationships is that they usually can transcend the rules, and thank God for the amazing folks I had in my corner who showed up anyway, brought shrimp and grits, and cared enough to risk an extra phone call or house visit.

I learned a lot about relationships, my own expectations of myself and others, and really tried to practice gratitude for the many people in my life who kept showing up, even when it was really hard and inconvenient.  Mom continued to stay with me, bring my coffee to the living room, and “run” the stairs for door deliveries even though her own pain was much worse than mine. (Imagine trying to use a walker with a hot cup of coffee….it’s a real juggling act and never ended well.)

Friends came with goofy t-shirts, a croqueted bag to hang on the front of my walker for incidentals and silly coloring books and bubble wrap to add levity to an otherwise mundane day of pain, naps, and self pity.

Nicholas would come home with his usual “babaloo!?” greeting as he walked in the door and somehow put aside the stress of his day to check in on me, order or cook dinner, and be my safe space to remind me that this is just a chapter, and I would eventually recover. But my cabin fever was real, and I had an incredibly hard time staying positive as I couldn’t see past the pain, immobility and reliance on everyone else to do everything for me, from bringing food, cleaning my kitchen, picking up dry cleaning, and making grocery runs.  It’s quite humbling, as a control freak, to ask for help on nearly everything.

I packed away my cute wedges, heels, and flip flops, as once I was able to start walking, I could only wear the ugliest of shoes and still limped with pain with each step. It’s crazy how much I’d taken for granted the simplest life tasks of being able to get in and out of cars, walk like a “normal” person, and have the strength to run the most ordinary of errands.

I returned to work, attempted to be as normal as possible and jump back into all the work that leading a team can entail, but I felt like everyone expected me to be 100% and I wasn’t even close. My work ethic didn’t cooperate with what I innately knew were my physical limits; I felt like I was mentally drinking from a fire hose to get caught up, and then my body would shut down my best laid plans.

This is all to say that it was an incredibly rough season; I’m so grateful for the friends and family that loved us through this time, and as I come up on my “year anniversary” of multiple surgeries, I’m reflecting on that season, what it built in me, and what I learned about the folks in our corner who were willing to put their plans on hold to helps me/us out. We moved during my continued PT and I still (in theory) have a couple of months left before I’ll be cleared for everything except running. I don’t normally run unless I’m being chased, but I at least want that option, which will come in 1-2 years, according to the doctors.

While I’ll likely never be able to be as active as I once was, I’m grateful that it wasn’t any worse, that I had somehow signed up for disability for the first time with work, and that we had enough outside love and support to see us through a time that felt very dark and endless.

So walking barefoot? That’s a big deal; and while I know it seems ordinary to anyone else, it marks another stage in my progress, and requires a moment to really remember the pain, disappointment, cabin fever, and vulnerability that I felt then and contrast with the gratitude for the life I have one year later.

What a difference a year can make.

PS– Zelda’s name sake is from the 20s, Fitzgerald, and all things flapper.

Big Love and Mullets: A Rocke Family Anecdote

Family can be hard.

You can’t choose them or change them, but I’ve learned to love them hard for a million reasons. And the older I get, the more I appreciate our differences because the one thing that’s constant is the big love we share, and the even bigger love my parents have instilled for us to have Faith; over the years, they’ve really embraced whatever that Faith and Belief looks like for each of us, as we’ve not always chosen the same path, and while that has created some momentary dissonance, in the end, great love and faith has always trumped all the idiosyncrasies….and as I try really hard to root all things in gratitude, I’m most thankful for the nimbleness of our family and the willingness to really try to understand and table judgement in the name of a bigger love.

I mean, we might share the genetic “fisherman’s nose” (sorry Jeff, you and I got that one honest from Dad and Grandpa Rocke) but sometimes the similarities can end there. We all grew up in this DIY world together on Rural Route 1 (yes, that’s a real address) but we couldn’t have turned out more differently. But that’s what makes the Rocke clan pretty awesome–we still make massive effort to gather together even though we’re as different as you could imagine.

My oldest brother is a father of 5 kiddos (can you imagine??) and the Elder of our family’s church in Minneapolis; he is the master-mind and owner of an engineering company and his daily tasks are so far over my IQ that I have to take notes on things to Google later so he won’t think I’m a complete idiot.  (As I’m writing this, I’m not even sure that it’s an engineering company…but again, over my intelligence level. It’s something important.) Being the oldest (especially of 5) comes with its own set of challenges, none that I pretend to understand, and he continues to be our leader of sorts and make time for family shenanigans even when I know that it has to come from some personal sacrifice.

My only sister is an interior design genius that left an architecture firm to go out on her own a few years ago, and is a super-mom (of 3) who literally has her hands in every possible honey pot in Bloomington, IL. You need her to bring food for 150 high school kids after the Joseph Musical? No worries. Give her 2 hours notice. Want her to run Bible School or the Vacation Bible School program? She’ll do it in her sleep while she coordinates a mission trip to a remote place with no running water. I need a Xanax and stiff drink after hearing about her day, but meanwhile, she’s already on to saving whales or planning to re-do the entire backyard without using a handyman (insert her husband here, but I’m just focusing on the core 5 here.)

My middle brother is a total unicorn. (Sorry, Brad…but I always joked your fashion style would never find you a wife…lol.) But he married young, had 4 amazing kids and started his own Ag company before being an entrepreneur was even a thing. Like my eldest brother, if you ask him about his business, it’s so complicated I feel like I need a translator just to have appropriate responses. I do care, but it’s so over my head that I resort back to that big love concept and just embrace that he’s happy and try not to have a brain implosion when I try to understand better. He’s the calm, even voice of us kids, as I don’t know that I’ve ever heard him get loud or irrational like the rest of us so easily do. (And his little bum was just too cute not to share here.)

And my littlest bro…he’s the family trail blazer…He’s always been the strong willed one who knew what he wanted before anyone else could even hope to start tracking; we spent the most time together “on the homestead” before the West called him for ranching and all the wild things that entails, but he’s the hardest lover…we used to fight and act crazy, but I always knew he had my back and would love me over the disagreement. He’s the awesome dad of 3 kids…and he’s a grandpa..which is amazing and hilarious at the same time, considering he’s the youngest of us that had kids. In a lot of ways, he’s been my person as we’ve gotten older, which is pretty wild if you see us together, as he’s usually trying to start a farting contest and I’m worried if I picked the right nail color.

I bring up the rear, as the perfect child, of course. Just kidding. Nicholas (my hubs) and I wore matching “Black Sheep” t-shirts to our family bash, and while I think I’m pretty well behaved, it is kind of true…I left for Atlanta when I was 21, met and got engaged to Nicholas in 3 weeks, and later decided we didn’t want to have any children.  We live in California now, and while my life choices haven’t taken the traditional or expected route, my family has embraced our path and only care that we are happy and have some version of spirituality.

All joking aside…we’re an interesting bunch and we love each other in spite of any difference in life choices, and while I’m clearly biased, I think my parents raised a pretty awesome clan.

My parents have been married for 50 years. Seriously?! Can you imagine being married to anyone that long and still look at each other fondly? Well, they do…and my dad shared a bit of their story this week that none of us had heard.

My mom was pretty hard-headed (shocker) and had no plans to every marry. Now that’s something we ironically have/had in common. She was in school at Illinois State to be a teacher, which was somewhat unusual in her time and situation, as women were typically not college bound, and instead were more apt to take a church marriage and settle in to raise children. Somehow, my mom was ahead of her time and managed to not only do both, but do so with 5 hooligans on a farm with little money and the need and/or desire to grow and raise our food, sew our clothes and manage family camping trips every summer.

And my dad was the guy who openly said, “I’ll love her enough for the both of us.” Thankfully, while their engagement began as my mom saying yes because she believed it was God’s plan more than anything, she wound up loving him completely (duh–to know him is to love him) and 50 years later, they’re a love story that we could only hope to replicate. It’s the Faith-based, all encompassing love that transcends all else, and this Rocke, motley crew was and still is fortunate enough to see in action.

I’ve always joked about my parents’ frugality (and I’m a self-proclaimed exaggerator, so sometimes Nicholas doesn’t believe me and I have to fact check to be sure I had the core stories straight.) True story–mom made most of our clothes, matching whenever she could, cut our very uneven mullets (and sometimes permed them) and we all bathed in the same 2 inches of cistern (rain) water.  There was no such thing as expired food (because if it did come from a store and not from the garden) it was never going to waste…insert Mystery Meat Mondays and solutions for spoiled milk. I’ll spare you too many details here.

Their frugality in our childhood and understanding that there are more important things than store bought Levis and Guess sweatshirts were the reason that they could fund a beach trip like we had this week. Their generosity and constant need to make sure we all stay connected is one of the many things that I’m thankful for, as it’s too easy to grow older and grow apart.

We gathered in Hatteras, NC this last week to celebrate them (and my mom’s 70th, though she looks 50) and it was an awesome time to connect, laugh, and share the many stories of childhood with our spouses and kids.

Mom prepped a slideshow of old photos, and I took the liberty of sharing some goods here–hilarious. I know that only folks that know us or grew up in a similar way might be amused, but I wanted to share a taste of our Rocke childhood on RR1 and all the love that grew with us.

So because I like to cheers all things lovely in this world, here’s to you, mom and dad, the beautiful story that you’re still living, and all the goodness you’ve planted in the Rocke kids. I speak for all of us when I say that we love you more than we’ll ever be able to articulate in mere words, and we’re so thankful for your love, your faith, and you’re incredible influence in the adults we’ve all become.

PS–I still claim the kids’ table.

De-cluttering & Enemas: a real ‘clean out’ story

My husband, Nicholas, is a bit of a neat freak. He scrubs the counter tops obsessively to make sure there are no streaks, and if I leave a pair of heels on the stairs he breaks into a full body rash. Before I purged for the big move, he would regularly peruse the house for anything he thought he could discard, in spite of the fact that I constantly had a designated “Goodwill” box in the garage to assist in regular clean out.  Last summer, I was couch-bound for 3 months with a shattered knee, and he knew I wouldn’t scoot down multiple stairs on my hiney to check any recent additions to said donation box. And thus, about a quarter of my “treasures” mysteriously disappeared into the abyss of the local Value Village.

In his defense, he’s been (mostly) a good sport about my constant stream of family inheritances (I don’t mean one expensive vase….I mean, boxes and boxes of things from my grandparents, my parents’ farm, childhood things…the list is admittedly excessive.) In the last 4 years, we lost two of my grandparents, Grandma Hodel moved into the local nursing home, and my parents moved off the farm.  All of these changes and transitions were emotional and tricky for me living out of town, and I found myself claiming boxes of country and gospel records, candy dishes, floral china, toothpick holders…I even saved the “1-2-3 Enema!” recipe card from my Great Aunt Edna. I mean, what if Google implodes and I need a little GI assistance to the rescue?  I like to be prepared.

The pending move to Sacramento sent me spinning, and I called in my parents for de-clutter reinforcement. They drove 12 hours South from Central Illinois in their work clothes and tennis shoes with game faces on. I was terrified to leave to-do lists and disappear for work, but I knew that I didn’t really want to know what all they were purging.  I just knew I had to get rid of about 1/3 of our goods, as California real estate thinks everyone made big in the Gold Rush and a square foot costs 2 new borns and a pair of this season’s Frye boots.

Everyone survived the chaos…I mean, some of my things suffered a home displacement, but I couldn’t tell you what’s missing. I look around our Sacramento digs and grin at my little mighty mouse toothpick holder, the pearly white chicken candy dish, and the fancy decanter and shot glasses from Great Aunt Wilma, (who I can only assume had for decor and not functional use).

I appreciate a good de-cluttering session, as it actually has an emotionally cleansing power as well.  I’m thankful for the bits of our families that surround us in a modern

space that hasn’t been lived in before us.  The Pacific Railway runs right behind our patio, and as I type, it rattles my mom’s old metal picnic trays and the lid on the penguin ice bucket from Nicholas’ mom. For a fleeting moment, I forget I’m in the middle of the city and not one of the box car children on a rural adventure from my childhood story books.

I do think I should get a free pass for a year or so on any other clutter commentary from the peanut gallery…and in exchange? I’ll share the family enema recipe.

 

Atlanta Ambassador Identity Crisis

I’m not originally from Atlanta, but I claimed it as my own, considering my “adult life” began there.

Anyone new to Atlanta was always sent to me–“ask Julie. She’ll give you restaurants to frequent, shops to visit, locations of the best schools, etc.”

Literally, they called me the “Atlanta Ambassador” and I loved it. Everyone got “Atlanta Magazine” the first Christmas, then locally made Atlanta neighborhood coasters, cuff links stamped with ATL…you get the idea. I never thought we’d leave, as my husband’s family and our friend tribe were our stability, and my family was an easy hour flight away.

I didn’t even know where to find Sacramento on the map, so when Nicholas read me an email from his CEO about an opportunity West Coast, I continued my Pinterest board for best new restaurants in Atlanta, and absent-mindedly nodded and smiled in support.

Fast forward 6 months from this seemingly neutral moment, and we’re moved into a townhouse in Sacramento. I mean completely unpacked, flowers and basil planted, security installed, fridge stocked with iced coffee and fruit punch crystal light.

I left a career I loved, the townhouse that we had just finished perfecting, and a chunk of my heart with our family and friends there.  AND, I left my position as the Atlanta Ambassador, of course. 🙂  Talk about some UGLY crying… with an entree-size side of identity crisis.

I didn’t breathe deeply for awhile…maybe weeks…
I unpacked and nested, set up new bill pay, searched for doctors, the best grocery store, a new nail salon, PT for my knee, bought furniture and agonized over a salon that wouldn’t fry my summer blonde.

And then I stopped, let my soul catch up to my body, and realized that a so-called identity crisis is a pretty awesome shot to look at reinvention. I mean, I think I’m pretty rad and am not looking for a do-over, but the next time a neighbor asked me if I did yoga, I thought (well, I used to do yoga…that sounds lovely. Maybe I’ll be a yogi here) and just like that, I “do yoga” 3 times a week in the local park (see sunshine shot below from the perspective of my yoga mat).

I planted the roses I always said I’d have… (the ketchup and mustard variety that are yellow on the outside and red on the inside). I water and chat with them every morning with my iced coffee and folk music before it gets hot and the job applications call me to get busy on my laptop.

Harold, my robin-egg-blue cruiser bike, is my main mode of transportation and if a certain opportunity works out this week, I’ll be able to even ride to work…how liberating is that?

I broke out my pink boxing gloves at a gym around the corner, swapped vodka for mint sun tea and visited the gun range for the first time. I tampered with the idea of wearing primarily camouflage fashion and going by GI-Jules, but my pearls look a little out of place, so that didn’t last long.  🙂

Nothing like the panic of leaving everything I know behind, and finding sheer liberation in the process.

I’m thankful for life’s changes that have given me time to reflect, breathe, reinvent, be intentional, and breathe some more…

Grandma Rocke, A Self Help Book

In a portion of my recent interview with my dad’s mom, I was shocked and humbled by some of her responses. I asked her for a fond memory of her parents…and she launched into the details of her dad’s premature death, and the fact that she then became her mother’s right hand. While these were details that I did want to know, it didn’t answer my question, so I redirected her to “fun” family nights, vacations, weekend getaways, etc.

Silence. Vacation? “No, honey. The first time I took a trip was with your grandfather for our honeymoon.”

My mind flashed to the camping trips my parents took me and my four siblings on every summer of my youth. We camped in every state except for Hawaii and Alaska, and while we were always on a budget, we did incredibly fun outdoors activities, like white water rafting in Oregon, camping next to the California Red Woods, and hiking down into Crater Lake. One year we even splurged big time and went to Orlando for Christmas.

My grandmother, however, had not been privy to these childhood luxuries. She helped raise her siblings, cooked, canned, and gardened at a young age; she dropped out of high school her sophomore year when she joined the church. After committing her life to the Lord, the expectation was that she was grown enough to quit school and get a job; her situation was taking up a job as a nanny with a local family, making $2 a week in turn for caring for two children.

She didn’t attend school dances, participate in local activities, sports, or otherwise usual childhood experiences. She helped her mother, raised her siblings, and served the Lord.

Nicholas and I recently booked a cruise to the Eastern Caribbean, and it’s literally the only thing we talk about at night…we read cruise reviews until we fall asleep, and check our “cruise countdown” app every morning.

I recognize the stark difference in my current life and that of my grandmother, and I listened in awe of her as she spoke so matter-of-factly about her life. Her voice didn’t resound with an invitation of pity or empathy for the childhood she experienced, the challenges of being married to a beekeeper who often didn’t make enough money to get through the Midwestern winter, or her current situation as a patient/guest at the nursing home; she speaks of her past with the same tone of voice she does about the Chinese food she had on Monday for her 98th birthday celebration. She sees the world through a lense of thankfulness. She’d never dream of being ungrateful of her experiences or wishing for more.

Every time I call her, and ask her about her care, she raves about the nursing home: the food? “Amazing. I couldn’t dream of more. Do you know they have unlimited ice cream? And for my birthday, they were willing to go to any local restaurant and get me anything I wanted. Of course, I asked for Chinese food.”

She’s incredibly resilient, and has so much to teach me.

I keep ordering and reading books about leadership, inspiration, and otherwise “self help” type books for my new career. The reality is, all I really need to do is keep interviewing my grandmother, and replay the audio when I need to refocus. Her life stories, experience, and wisdom is more powerful than any book I could order from Amazon—and I get the bonus of hearing her sweet, raspy voice with each replay on my audio. What a gift she is to me.

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Atlanta “Love-List”

About a week ago, I found myself aggressively defending what I now claim as “my city,” or when Nicholas and I are talking, “our city.”  I was on a “work with” for my new job with Gordon Food Service, and was ecstatic to be riding with a 10+ year employee, a Florida transplant as of this past summer.  I didn’t realize how fascinated I am by Atlanta and how proud I am to live here, until I found myself defending nearly everything about my “town.”

Yes, you have to lock your doors, even when you’re in the car…I even buckle in my purse, just in case.

I know that the traffic is obscene…but I’ve learned to plan my day around traffic and actually don’t mind my “windshield time,” as I can catch up with distance friends, enjoy NPR or sing along (badly) to classic country on my commute.  Plus, doesn’t the excess of people and congestion just prove that this is the place to be? 🙂

We have seasons, (unlike my colleague’s preference for summer year round) and while the seasonal temps are a bit bi-polar at times, the cooler air allows for a wardrobe change and an extra skip in my step as the crispness feels fresh and new.  And, cold weather is cuddle-weather, fireplaces, and hot chocolate.  Even better.  Our seasons are perfect, because it never gets too cold for too long, like it does where my family is in the Midwest—it’s never so cold that your nose hairs freeze or your skin cracks.  Now that’s a win.

Yes, we have rain. Glorious rain.  And the rainy days are my favorite.  I don’t mind limp hair and puddles in my drainage-challenged driveway.  It hydrates my soul and the pitter-patter is soothing.  There is no better sleep than windows open with chilly air and the sound of a downpour.

I admit we have many “transitional” areas—there’s a rich history here, and neighborhoods that haven’t quite won the battles of the past. The graffiti/art covers the walls of many buildings and tunnels, and some call it “garbage,” but I think it’s fantastic.

The niches of my city are full of eclectic characters—it’s not the all white suburbia of some folks’ choice, but a multi-cultural collection of interesting people, perfect to sit and google-eye from a park bench.  There’s nothing like a trek to East Atlanta, just a mile up the street, to make me feel comfortable in my own skin. No one gawks or judges (except maybe me still gawking from the park bench), because there’s no single appropriate style, mode of transportation, or acceptable hair color.  You’ll see a businessman on a bike, a 50-something on her Vespa, and the punk hair stylist on his skateboard. It’s anything goes, and that is a beautiful thing.

I love that it’s hard to find a chain restaurant (besides fast food, if you call that a restaurant) within driving distance, and that the boutiques are making a comeback in our need to “shop local” and continue to give Wal-mart and Target a run for their money. (Pun intended.)

While I know that my Floridian colleague is just merely adjusting to a new locale, I’m pretty sure I made his ears bleed with the laundry list of reasons to love Atlanta.  I don’t plan on convincing him, but as my Atlanta “love-list” mentally expanded on the way home, I found myself so grateful to feel this way about a place that not only holds a good piece of our past already, but a fully vested present and an inevitable future.

 

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