Crazy During Covid: Patio Toast and The Flower Thief

Since moving to Sacramento just over a year ago, we’ve seen some pretty wild shenanigans outside our town house on 20th street.  Homeless folks eating ice cream on our front porch like they own the place, double car break ins (and there was nothing to steal but vitamins), a New Year’s Eve brawl behind our garage that ended in pepper spray and police, freshly planted flowers clipped off at the base…the incidents are endless.

One night last fall we were waiting for Uber when two folks walked up to our patio, plugged in some kind of torch, and started trying to warm up a plastic to-go of mac and cheese. We didn’t even engage and left them work their magic. We have to keep the water spicket under lock and key, and after 3 hoses disappeared in one week, I had to start taking the hose inside after each time I water what’s left of my ravaged flower beds.

But then there’s “Pooch” the mayor of our neighborhood who calls every time we leave the garage door open or have a package in the front. Gina down the street brought me eggs a few weeks ago when I was sure every chicken within 50 miles of Sacramento was on strike. Zoe knows I can barely walk a few blocks until I get my knee fixed again, but still checks in on me and asks me to go on a walk with her and her sweet pooch– and doesn’t mind when I throw in the towel after a few blocks to turn around. Mike next door “installed” a soaker hose in my flower beds last week, and Marco, a few blocks down let us “borrow” the crane he rented to get our grill onto the roof. There’s a lot of goodness in between the madness.

This is all to say, it all balances out.

But this week? Sigh. I find not one, but two toasters, plugged into my patio outlet one morning. Now what homeless person is walking around with toasters and a loaf of bread? They broke the lock and case on my outlet, but left me the toasters to sell on E-bay. I guess that’s still generous.  And I guess I’m glad that there are some inventive folks out there who still have proper standards for toast.

And then yesterday, our next-door neighbor caught the same woman on camera (2 nights in a row) digging up his freshly planted Impatiens. Seriously? So, because I’m just crazy enough, I busted out my 1920s floor length fur coat and oversized sunglasses at 10pm last night to watch over their flower bed.

I’m happy to report that there was no theft last night…and just enough folks walked past the patio where I was staked out to know that a crazy person lives at 1700 and shouldn’t be messed with.

If anyone needs a toaster, let me know. I’ve got two extras. And if you live in Sacramento and need a late night watch-woman, I’ve got you covered.

And don’t judge my really bad dye job in this video; those Goldilocks roots are for another post.

Parking Violations, Blueberry Champagne, and a Ninja in the Living Room: more shenanigans as we enter week 3.

Let me tell you who’s not minding the “shelter at home” order. These guys.  In spite of the fact that I live 7 feet from my parked car, and have a visitor’s pass (the story of why I don’t have a permanent sticker is for another day,) these little pesky parking dudes are still leaving the comfort of their homes to disrupt the pollen on my car long enough to add a fresh ticket to the old one I still have under my wiper. For awhile, my “trick” of leaving the last ticket in place worked, but now that it’s spring in “the city of trees” and construction is still stirring up layers of dust, the grime on top of my last ticket isn’t fooling anyone. And, I’m back to using my Georgia driver’s license because I lost my California one on my last business trip, so that complicates things…I mean, I’d go take care of these things, but we’re supposed to be sheltering, right? As I’ve mentioned before, I follow the rules.

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I’m just hoping there’s going to be some “parking forgiveness” at some point, though my Google searches thus far don’t turn up any forgivable loans for the good citizens at 1700 20th street. Sigh.

Meanwhile, the 8 food magazine subscriptions around the house are finally getting some page-turning. Every time I get hit up for another school fundraiser, I opt for the magazine subscription, so while I certainly don’t have the ingredients I need for most of the recipes, I’m working through all kinds of interesting substitutions. (Don’t worry, no mystery meat has been thawed yet this weekend.)

My typical MO with a new recipe is to substitute half the ingredients for whatever I have on hand anyway, but with the current situation (and unlike the Sacramento street patrol) I AM minding the rules to stay home and feel like that gives me a pass on following a recipe properly. That said, I made this awesome goat-cheese cream sauce with truffle spaghetti this week.  I swapped the pappardelle pasta for truffle spaghetti, the peas for roasted broccoli, skipped the chives and lemon in trade for extra leeks and diced chicken from take out leftovers. Delish.

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Fun fact–did you know you can regrow leeks in water with no dirt? They’re already re-sprouting in the living room window, right next to the garlic I’m attempting to grow..stay tuned.

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In other breaking news, I brought back a little plant based eating yesterday, to undo other damage from the week. Nothing finer than butternut squash, halved, sprinkled with kosher salt and pepper, a little olive oil and a slow bake…heart happy. Meanwhile, Nicholas was making barf noises in the background, but as my dear friend Brandon would say, “Don’t Yuck My Yum!” I’ll eat both halves, thank you very much.

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Today I woke up feeling a little Gatsby in my soul, so since it was shower day anyway, I put on what I’m positive would have been Daisy Buchanan’s Sunday best: a sleeveless black flapper dress, pearls, and glitter eye shadow. I’m sure she wouldn’t have sported a knee wrap and orthopedic sneakers, but my fashion has its limits.  I poured some Spumante in one of my favorite Atlanta-Map glasses, added some frozen blueberries, and felt really fancy for a Sunday in quarantine.

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I got up to refill my champagne and literally thought I was about to be taken hostage by a Ninja type character in my living room; turns out it’s just Nicholas, living his best life in some sort of iridescent head wear that allows him to teleport or something. I don’t know what it’s supposed to do, but I hope it can at least kidnap an egg laying chicken.

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Keep some levity, friends; have some really cold, sweet champagne.  Make cupcakes and inject frosting into the center with an icing tip. Call someone you haven’t talked to in awhile. Write a thank you note for your mailman. Buy a couple fresh daisies the next time you brave the grocery store. Plan your Easter menu.  And send as much love into the universe as you can. And pray for me and the alien in my living room.

XOXO

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.

An Ode To My Mason Jars

(Well, It’s not really an ode…just a blog.)

This past spring I made a few road trips from Atlanta to central Illinois, where my parents were cleaning out and preparing to sell the family farm. Regardless of whether it was just nostalgia, or a general need for certain items, I hauled full loads in my CX7 back to our townhouse, in hopes of preserving pieces of the farm in the city.

One of the many items I rescued was a serious stash of Mason/Kerr jars that were in my parents’ cellar or in the chicken house. Much to my dismay, my mom actually admitted that she had thrown a load away already, and terrified at the thought, I took as many as I could box up.

My sheer delight regarding my farm things hasn’t exactly been shared by my husband, who is under the delusion that I have inherited too many jars. Too many?? That’s impossible! The options are endless, but he doesn’t quite appreciate that, as he only sees the precarious stack of them on a garage shelf. I say I’m hoarding them because I use them for my homemade detergent, but the reality is, I have a hard time parting with them, even for a sale.

In perusing Pinterest the other day, I determined it was time to begin my fall decorating, and as I began changing the seasonal goods around our house, the ideas for my sacred jars began: candle holders, toothbrush holders, make-up organizers, vases, weight loss marble visual aids, and the list goes on.

I love to find a purpose for them, but I don’t mind just having a serious stash of them for the intended use—next summer when I have a neighborhood garden plot, I’ll can up any kind of fruit or veggie I can harvest from our red-clay soil. Until then, I love having them sprinkled throughout the house, and don’t mind that there’s still an un-used stash in the garage. I feel a bit of the simple, country life every time I dust one off and use it, and the older I get, the more inclined I am to cling to a few things from the past.

Disclaimer: I know this is a lot of pictures–that’s the point. 🙂

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Gatsby? My Gatsby.

I didn’t teach The Great Gatsby this year– for the first time in 11 years of teaching. I have a somewhat bizarre obsession that began long before Leo and Jay-Z made it cool again.

I first taught the Gatsby the fall after I turned 22, when one of my only serious relationships finally came to its last end. in a lot of ways, I still chased my own past while I struggled to teach a novel that I didn’t even enjoy in high school. I found its lessons on love, letting go, and reserving judgement profound, long before I became enamored by the glitz, glamour, pearls, and lace of all things flappers and Daisy Buchanan.

My first go at the Gatsby probably left my students with few memorable classroom lessons, as I think I was the one who learned most. In many ways, I grew up this last decade with Gatsby by my side– a trusty friend and teacher who reminded me that that a long summer ahead holds all kinds of promises and life will inevitably start over again in the fall. As a teacher, this has absolutely held true, every year for the last decade, as summer always provided renewed hope and fall meant another chance to be a better person, a wiser teacher, and correct the mistakes from the prior year.

Over the years, I’ve honed the lessons of Gatsby into ways to reach students and have learned how to make a classic applicable and even modern to teenagers. The last few years my classroom has turned into a full fledged 20s throwback, complete with a movie project and a full costume Gatsby luncheon on the last days of school in May.

Last May, I wrapped up my last full year of teaching in a style of which I’m sure Fitzgerald would have been proud. I began the day in white as Daisy Buchanan, and most of my students dressed up; the guys wore snazzy suits and the girls went all out with flapper dresses, pearls, floppy hats and feathered hair pieces. We drank school appropriate versions of Mint Juleps, ate finger sandwiches and watched the student remakes of Gatsby scenes. It was a fantastic final day of glitz, jazz, pearls and Gatsby charm. As the new movie released, we took our party to the theater in partial costume to witness the modern interpretation.

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Daisy Buchanan at our luncheon last May.

In the absence of a classroom to decorate this spring, I redecorated our guest bathroom in Fitzgerald’s honor. My two copies of the text with 10 years of annotations and insights made up the wall paper and I hung the 70s movie posters from my classroom. A few bits of homemade lace and old pearls helped to soften the space, and while I have yet to figure out how to hook up motion censored audio, I’m pretty content with my Fitzgerald tribute.

In spite of the fact that the past constantly does reshape my future, I also know that summer does stretch out ahead with new promises and life most certainly does start over each year; the lessons of Gatsby are inevitably accurate, even this year as the school year ends without me in it.

“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.”
– F. Scott Fitzgerald

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