Category Archives: Just Me – AmeliaJake

A postcard from Italy

I received a postcard this summer from an Internet friend who was in Europe, and I was glad to get it. Yesterday, in the basement of the Lagrange House, I came across another postcard from Italy, one I received 63 years ago. I don’t remember getting it, but I was glad to find it – and maybe a little surprised.

I need to scan it into my photo library, but because I didn’t feel like going through the steps right now, I just snapped a picture of the back:
aunt sara rome

Actually, she was my great-great aunt; she was the youngest child of six and the oldest was my great-grandfather, so she was only a couple of years older than Grandma. They both loved to read, graduated from Lima High School, went to college and became teachers. They paths diverged and Aunt Sara married an Encyclopedia Brittanica salesman and traveled the United States with him; he died and she worked in Washington D.C. at the Veteran’s Administration; she remarried – (they both thought the other was rich); they traveled around the world; she kept her hair dyed red, but was very regal appearing. When I was around two and three, she took lots of pictures of me when she came to Indiana to stay with us for a summer – or longer.

Oh, she called her husband L.D. so we all did; I don’t think we knew why she called him that. He died in a doctor’s office waiting room of a heart attack in New Orleans. She came back to Indiana when she was very, very old and died not far from where she was born.

Look at the penmanship. I remember Grandma making each “p” with the same upsweep. I cherished those p’s. There’s one in the inscription in the Bible my grandma gave me in 1953.

I found the card on a dusty shelf under some other stuff. Dust to dust and not long until me too, but oh, how clear and solid memories can be. Maybe somewhere they are all stored; maybe moments are forever, we just don’t know it. If they were and if we did know it and if we could, maybe we would just step back into them . . . but which one to pick. What forever would we choose.

So many things go with us when we die and those of another generation have not a clue of the scents and love and comforts of the moments that were so dear to us. It’s in the details – the feelings of it, and I dearly wish I could find a way to link the emotions of one life’s experiences to those of another life. I would like to think that each link in the chain could at least sense the essence of warm sunshine and loved one’s smells that makes that chain.

Awake

There are occasions when you are sleeping along just fine and someone wakes you for some reason  – maybe worthwhile, maybe not – and then you are AWAKE. Obviously AWAKE and then that word begins to stretch itself out and grow taller and pretty soon you are  AWAKE with a Times Square New Year’s Eve Awareness.

This is one of those occasions. In the old days, which we now refer to as “in the day”, it was common to turn on the TV and see what was on The Late Night Movie. Sometimes you got lucky and it would be a classic with real actors and dialogue that didn’t fall flat and a plot. It was a crapshoot, but there was a comfort in a flickering black and white drama of merit or even a Japanese monster movie when you were awake alone at night.

Now, I could stick a DVD right here in this old computer and watch a classic of my choice. I could even find one of those gag gift DVD’s that feature some movie made on a tiny budget and shown three times at a matinée in Peoria. But it’s the principle of the thing and there is just not the companionship found in a random late night programming schedule: Hey, you’re awake and alone too? Well, watch me make the lighting dance on your dark, nighttime walls. And don’t mind the 10 minute commercials if you’re watching WGN. I mean, you know how my plot is going to go and if you fall asleep during a commercial, you won’t miss anything – like whodunit?

Heck, I even miss the homemade car commercials on WGN; I just flat out miss my late night sessions with that iconic station.

So, although I am AWAKE,  I am going to cuddle down and think about the 40’s and old cars and rainy nights with water dripping off men’s fedoras – and maybe Barbara Stanwick or Joan Crawford or that second tier movie actor who was almost a big star and chased robbers or traipsed through Africa in jodphurs and a pith helmet.

Keeping things in perspective

I read a book today and a book yesterday and one I ranked because the Kindle asked me to, and one didn’t bother asking, and I think I know why. Why I kept reading it is the real question. The first book was okay, but I was really in a mood to read and I had read books by this author before and my eyes scampered over the words.

When the BEFORE YOU GO thingie popped up, I was startled and gave it four stars because, hey, I liked his other books quite a lot. But this wasn’t his other books, and that dawned on me after I had clicked the stars. Actually, I guess it was a “you had to be there book” and what I mean by that is that you had to have read many, many, many books about the era and the subject. Otherwise, it was a blend of first grade’s Dick and Jane and Where’s Waldo?

Was the boy’s name Dick? I don’t remember. Jack and Jill went up the hill, but who was the boy in the first grade reader who didn’t do anything memorable. I can see the illustration; I can see the actual book; I can see my front of my dress with nicely turned collar and the poofed sleeves; I can’t see his name. I can see, however, the typeface, which was big – like I use now that I need cataract surgery.

The typeface of life: Big and clear for very young eyes and then in high school the tiny print in long books where the publisher wanted to save money, then back to BIGGER print. My parents used to yell at me for reading “in the dark” but it seemed fine to me, although I did use a flashlight some nights under the covers. I remember once I had a conversation with Suzy Wolff about how, depending on which side you were lying, you had to read the even or odd pages like they were on a ceiling. This was a serious subject to us, worthy of nuances about flashlight position and book size and so forth.

Once in McNutt Hall, I almost roasted myself in a hair dryer because the book was so racy I couldn’t put it down. (I think my eyes were open pretty wide then.) I doubt that they still have hair dryers in McNutt anymore – the beauty parlor kind. Girls probably don’t run around with rollers in their hair in the evening, either. We used to sleep on them. Holy Moses.

So, what the heck was I going to write about perspective?  Oh, yeah, don’t trust my ratings, although when I type BARFY,  you have to realize it’s one bad book. Barfy you can trust.

I found the purse

Having gone through a state of catatonia, I failed to mention the fate of the lost purse, which after three hours became the “had been lost” purse. It was in the basement, hanging on a chair with something thrown over it. It seems that I was cleaning the freezer when I got the call to pick Summer up and when I returned, I, and the purse with the driver’s license in it which was over my shoulder, went right back downstairs.

It was unusual for me, but I did not go anywhere with my purse later. It just hung there and I had had all I wanted to see of the freezer for awhile.

Yesterday and today, I painted the fence on the south of the shed Classic Barn Red. Five Gallons of paint weighs a lot. That repetitive brush/roller business gets a little old as well. I’d say I aged five years – at least my muscles feel like it. And I got splotchy – big classic red spots all over me; it was an adventure.

The good thing about it was that the Rural King lady who sold me the paint had a wonderful story about how her parents met during the war at a Curtis-Wright Plant in Ohio and then started dating when they met again at Purdue in a class in which they documented the number of bugs that crossed over a square foot of dirt. (I think Purdue calls it farmland.) Then we shared snake stories and then some young guy came up to buy some tool or whatever. He looked askance at us. Oh, well, no snake story for him.

Eating my way through Fairborn

I’ve been too busy munching to note anything. Traumatized  by a three-hour search for my purse on Saturday morning after working all day Friday and loading the car that night, I arrived to eat restaurant food to console myself. I have also been watching non-stop BBC programs – mysteries, MidSomer Murders.

AND APPARENTLY I BECAME CATATONIC BECAUSE THIS WAS WRITTEN THREE DAYS AGO.

Back to the dratted fence

More painting, with primer . . . and more and more fence. Is my fence a rabbit family wearing the cloak of a fence? Alien rabbits, or, oh dear, just aliens that breed fast and expand? Slimy things. I really don’t want to follow this line of speculation any more at all. I’ve probably spooked myself. And, of course, the fence is grey: and what color are the traditional movie aliens? Now, I’ve gone and done it. The next thing you know is that I will paint myself grey and claim to have been abducted. Or it could be worse; I could be actually abducted into the fence  – God knows my chest has always been flat as a board – and just stand there mute while people investigate my disappearance. Maybe Rose will speak at a little service for me.

Say, I wonder if I have been sniffing too much paint?

The Grommet, a site that introduces new devices, sent me an email about a teeth cleaning twig. Yes, TWIG. Perhaps there is a lot of paint sniffing going around.

Inside my chest freezer

Yes, you can get a body inside a chest freezer, but we all knew that from all the movies on TV. Now I know it because I realized there was just way too much frost lining the freezer walls and I took everything out. When I went to clean it, I discovered stubborn stains in the bottom corners. I’m short and leaning over just didn’t do it; the step ladder idea didn’t work well either. I climbed inside with a spray bottle of cleaner and a roll of paper towels.

Actually, it  wasn’t bad in there, not that I could stretch out and I suppose I would tire of getting low enough for the top to close. Climbing out was a little troublesome as well. After going to all that work to clean it out, I hated to put the frozen stuff back in, but I did because who wants roasts, hams and turkeys rotting on your basement floor?

Then I cleaned out the old refrigerator that’s down there. It is working much better since I discovered the iceball that had formed in the back of the freezer.  What is all this domestic work I’ve been doing? Could it be that I have had some sort of breakdown?

What do you think?

jody in ears

Totally pooped out

I could have painted last evening, but yesterday afternoon I was so tired, I decided to nap. As in actually go to sleep; do not pass go, do not read, do not surf the Internet. Then I woke up and there was still time to paint, but having decided to not do so the first time, the second decision was so easy.

I was feeling kind of down and thought about watching YouTube Tickle Me Elmo videos, but settled instead for Anderson Cooper getting the giggles. I almost wish I had a Giggle Me Coop doll. I suspect some people don’t admit to knowing me.

I’ve got way too much stuff

In this house on North Riley Street, I have WAY too much stuff; Glenda* is correct in her assessment of people having too much stuff. I emptied out about six  wooden boxes that had “treasures” in them and now I have two small plastic containers marked “Mother” and “Possible Christmas” – and I also have a cardboard box full of cute little empty wooden boxes. Being the sentimentalist that I am, I couldn’t bring myself to scrawl TRASH or NO KEEP on the cardboard flap; I wrote practically a whole sentence about them being okay, but not necessary. Oh, it is going to take a lot of 12-step meetings to help me.

Maybe I should post pictures of stuff and write, “You want it, you got it.” I even have an idea for the use of some of the boxes – put presents to people in them. Add a bow and, hey, they will think you are creative and then they can either use or toss the box. It won’t be my problem, or yours.

Of course, I suppose I could toss them in the fireplace come winter. I know, I’ll do it on a gloomy day and put a sad movie on TV and watch them slowly char and then go up in flames and cry tears that will fit the day, the movie and my incredible ability to attach memories to inanimate objects.

You probably don’t believe how crazy I can be. Well, try this on for size: I have the teaspoon that my father used right before he died AND THE APPLESAUCE IS STILL ON IT. I know, Daddy, I shouldn’t let people know about this quirk, but it may be the only way I can get help.

*Glenda – Wise first cousin who actually has uncluttered horizontal surfaces in her house.  Oh, but she lives on a farm with outbuildings. Glenda, you don’t have a hidden stash of old Woodrow/Grismore things, do you? Do you still have the first saddle Logan put on a horse, the first band-aid from when she fell off?

Which way will it go?

Will I do stuff today or not? Oh, I could happily do “stuff” like going out for lunch, renting a nice car and driving to Oregon, munching a cookie. The question really is: Will I do  gosh darn, really annoying, dirty, tiring, crummy chores? If I do, I’ll bet I’ll be stomping around and not a bit like Mary Poppins. And to think all the chores my ancestors did just a couple of generations ago . . . Well, that didn’t have the hoped for morale booster effect? It’s looking pretty bad here, folks.

AHA – –AND AN UPDATE

Yes, the kitchen has had some cleaning and the fence has a some priming, but the best  part was when my recruited worker got a sad look on her face and said, “We worked so much* and go so little done.” Oh, I know that makes me sound me and I probably am mean, but after years of pushing on, I couldn’t help but feel some fascination when she continued to remark on the amount of “sweat” on her body.

*One and a half hours outside. Not quite ready for the Japanese POW camps yet.