Kung fu Panda

I went and saw it with my daughter-in-law and Summer and Colin . . . mainly I went because Quentin had said he was going and I thought it was going to be a really clever little animated parody. Well, the panda was cute. One of the kung fu experts was a SNAKE and I couldn’t bear to watch her. I think little kids liked it.

These have been days with events flowing one into another: Robert’s leg will probably need surgery; I got a free gift for buying skin products at the Estee Lauder counter – nice little tote bag; I drove to Fort Wayne to pick up a prescription for Robert because the orthopedic office won’t call in narcotic painkillers to a pharmacy. Had to show my driver’s license even. Mowed the backyard; pulled weeds: worked with Summer with the weed-wacker and thought of making an Indiana Weed-Wacker Massacre video for YouTube, but didn’t; got disgusted with TLC for showing the Jon and Kate make Eight episodes over and over again; went out to see Mr. Feller at the hospital; washed the big sofa throw and draped it over the fence to dry in the sun.

Oh, shoot. Is it going to rain tonight? Must I get it? I think it will smell even better with the morning dew dampening it and then it drying once again in sunlight. Oh, yeah, that’s my plan. So, we’re betting against rain.

Been looking at Iowa flood pictures, wishing my brothers-in-laws were digital camera fiends deluging me with pics. Hey, I picked up the porch – some – and gathered a whole bag of stuff to throw away. I will never be a minimalist. I am a natural hoarder. I am soldiering on, though.

No reason to be writing this drivel, but it keeps my fingers limbered up. And if I limber up the rest of me, maybe I can be Kung Fu Grandma.

Oh, wait a minute. There was one line from Kung Fu Panda that I memorized: “Some times we find our destiny on the road we chose to walk down to avoid it.” See, you can make that mean anything and it sounds cool. An editor, Nancy, once called me up and said they needed one of those ending paragraphs that I was known for that sounded wise and lyrical but meant nothing. Ah, we all have our talents.