2016 Cultivating Gratitude: The Apocalypse Sucks

1009952_10151834907161920_2018758238_n    What would you do if you were one of the last remaining survivors on earth?  What would you do if the person you were left to live with was not a friend; not someone you would have hung out with back in the day? What would you do if your last bra bit the dust leaving you to repair it with a safety pin?  Would you face the danger of the empty shopping mall for the remnants of the lingerie department?

Sandra and Molly are now stuck living together trying to survive a day-to-day existence.  But they are not alone.  There are a few people left alive in their small town, and then there are those things.

Living in the fifteen-story corporate tower they used to work in has its advantages – they are up high and can see everything.  But the climb up and down the stairs is getting to be harder and harder.  Food is getting scarce since they have looted every store left empty since the virus hit a year ago – and then the bat creature starts hanging on the window at night.  What it is and where it came from is the first question.  It looks sort of human with red skin, black eyes, huge wings, long tail, and dripping fangs.  But is it?

The Apocalypse Sucks is a story about survival and friendship written as a dark comedy.  Some things are still important even after the apocalyptic virus decimated most of the world. Humanity has changed, but the old problems still exist – problems like accepting people who don’t look like you.  Food and shelter come first, but friendship and cooperation must take place.

Molly and Sandra are now family – and nothing is more important than family, unless it is the survival of the human race.

Check out The Apocalypse Sucks published by Airship 27, with original art by Andy Fish and Zack Bruner.  A dark comedy about women, survival, acceptance – oh and about bras.

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2016 Cultivating Gratitude: Grateful for a Beach Read

SecretsofSandhillIsland_w8259    What makes a great beach read?  It has romance?  Suspense?  Is a page turner?  And as they say in the real estate world, Location, Location, Location! Secrets of Sandhill Island has all of those things.

Meg lost her fiancé in a storm when he went out fishing alone.  He was desperate for money, a baby on the way, he had to go.  It was the last thing he told her.  But was it really a storm that took him?  Now years later, the baby is a lawyer in a very prestigious firm on the mainland and manages a large charitable trust.  Meg has moved back home where she grew up, on Sandhill Island.  It seemed like a good place to hide out from her past and do what she loved, garden.

But your past has a way of haunting you.  She never felt like she belonged in the society world of Corpus Christi where her father insisted she mingle.  But with is death, she had the opportunity to take his fortune – now hers – and do some good with it. The complete opposite of her father’s evil business dealings.

Then Alex entered her life.  Alex had a past too when he appeared next door to her vegetable stand.  At first he was a good neighbor who wanted to help her rid her garden of the rabbit that was making a banquet of it. But the relationship soon took another turn just as her son announced his wedding.  Then the sparks started to fly.  Meg thought she had remained anonymous on the island, but soon found out she wasn’t hiding – everyone knew who she was.  And then the blackmail began just as a major hurricane zeroed in on the tiny island.

Check out Secrets of Sandhill Island on Amazon or Barnes & Noble in paperback or e-published.  Summer is half over, but you still have time for another beach read even if it is read under the air conditioner!

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2016 Cultivating Gratitude: I Felt a Pop

tire with bolt   I come from a long line of do-it-yourselfers. The wife and daughter of aircraft mechanics (they are a special breed, they can repair anything) and the mother of a self-made mechanic, we fix our own problems – normally. This time I drove the car to Northcutt Chevrolet where I bought it and they had me back on the road in about an hour.

This morning I ran to the grocery store.  Be back soon, just need a few things. As I drove away down the service road and in front of the new Schlotzsky’s Deli, I felt a pop.  I knew I ran over something with the driver’s side front tire.  I have a nearly new SUV that is still under warranty and has rather large tires.  When I bought it, I thought I wasn’t going like the price of replacing those tires someday as I traded in my Corolla.  I drove on down the road toward home with my small bags of groceries and could feel something was not right with the car.  There was a thump, thump, thump as I drove.  I pulled into a parking lot and looked but couldn’t see anything.  One of those grocery bags contained raw meat and it was 100 degrees in the shade.  So I took the car home to the mechanic.

I tried to explain to my husband what I felt and heard.  Do you remember the old Down Periscope sit-coms where the mechanic tried to explain to the captain what was wrong with the ship?   My dad would die laughing as the mechanic made mouth noises trying to imitate what the engine sounded like when it was broken and what is should sound like when it was running correctly.  Well add that to a game of Charades and you have a vague idea of the conversation in the driveway.  He took the car for a spin.

When he reappeared, I saw it gleaming in the front tire.  A huge bolt about the size of my thumb was sparkling in the black rubber tread.  I drove it to Northcutt’s.  Fix a Flat wasn’t going to take care of this.  When I got out of the car, the mechanic said, “You’ve got a nail in a tire.  I heard it when you pulled in.”  (Up Periscope again) When I told him where I picked it up, he said they would prepare for the grand opening of Scholtzsky’s on Monday with tires that needed to be fixed.  But then, maybe I cleaned up the road for them.

I am thankful today that they could fix the tire with a plug patch and I didn’t have to replace a huge tire that was two years old and had less than 20,000 miles on it.  Lucky me.

Thanks for your help, Northcutt.

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2016 Cultivating Gratitude: Anthologies

loom    This week I’ve been working on an anthology with my writer’s club.  We are putting together a group of various writings from many of the members.  And we are a varied group.  That is what I love about us.  Diversity is a wonderful thing and there is no better way to get to know these people than through their writing. 

We have memoirs, short stories, lots of poetry (I’m not a poet, believe me), and some flash fiction.  We span the genres with mystery, fantasy, horror, westerns, children’s stories, humor and the list goes on.  We are weaving a tapestry, or flying carpet, guaranteed to take you to places you would never go otherwise. 

I am still waiting on a few people to send their manuscripts to me mostly because they think they aren’t ready.  But wait, what if I did this?  Writers.  Don’t they know everything I’ve read so far is wonderful?  It digs into the core of the author and pulls out the insides, holding it up for all to see.  They are the scribes that record history so that others can read it. They are the glue that holds the world together.  Because they not only feel what others feel but hold a mirror to the world reflecting those feelings.

I will let you know when the anthology is ready so you can read it.  It will be worth the time, reading words from the plains and the plain speakers.  We are the everyday person with everyday thoughts – we just put them down on paper.

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2016 Cultivating Gratitude: Class of ’71

Peggy in 71    I am grateful this week for reunions and the fact that I can still attend.  I always hated my senior picture.  My mom said, “Well, it looks just like you!”  I hated that even more. But I posted it anyway to make a point.  I am grateful to have made it this long.

My class has decided to have a 45th reunion this year.  One big reason being that we have lost so many of the students that graduated that year.  My husband and I graduate together from Enid High school in a class that still holds the record for the largest graduating class ever.  There were somewhere between 650 to 675 members.  To date we have lost almost 100. 

I haven’t always attended the reunions, but this year I plan to.  That number of people who will not be able to attend, makes me realize just how lucky I am.  Don in 71  I met my high school sweetheart at Enid High, we were married much too young but are still together after 44 years (you do the math).  Don and Peggy I still live in the same hometown and I am beginning to feel mortal. 

I knew all those students that have passed away since 1971 but the one that stands out the most is a girl I went to church and school with.  We were best friends in school and then drifted apart. I had no idea she was even sick until I saw the obituary.  Patti was 63 and lived a mere 90 miles away.  I let all those years slip away.  I was devastated. Well, the time for devastation has come and gone and the time for action is here.  I need to make more of an effort to see those people that I cared for once, and make the most of the life I have left.

My sister will be driving in from Arizona that same weekend for her 50th high school reunion.  My niece is getting married at the same time and I’m helping with the wedding.  But busy or not, company in the house or not, I plan to slip away for a few hours for a trip down memory lane and be grateful for one more opportunity to relive a life I love. 

Can’t wait to see you, Class of ’71.     

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2016 Cultivating Gratitude: Happy Father’s Day!

Leo and Fawn    The vintage picture of my parents was taken on their wedding day.  Dad was handsome and dashing (and a barnstorming dare devil), Mom the homebody.  They made a good pair.  I knew if I wanted my dad he would be in the garage restoring an Alpha Romeo Spider or building a pontoon boat if he wasn’t performing an annual inspection on someone’s aircraft.  He didn’t own an airplane himself – he couldn’t afford it –  but he loved to work on an engine and had secured every certificate the FAA offered except commercial pilot.  He had a private pilot’s license and HAD to see if the plane flew correctly after his maintenance.  I have no idea how many times I heard him say “Open her up and let’s see what she’ll do!”  And he did.

I sit writing a blog while the father of my children also has his lap top open.  What he is browsing is anyone’s guess, but we have learned to run a marriage that way.  We allow the other to be themselves.  He became a father much too early, but he was probably more excited about it than I was in the beginning.  Unlike my father if the kids wanted theirs he was probably on the radio.  I took my babies to press boxes and remember saying “Shush, Daddy is on the air.”  And they would.  Don and Peggy 2

My son has become a stepfather in the last few years.  I am sure stepping into a half-grown kid’s life when you’ve never been a father yourself is not easy.  But he wouldn’t have it any other way.  He loves the kids and the role.  If he is wanted, he too will be in the garage but his will have surround-sound music and an air conditioner.  He spent a lot of time with my father and loves to restore old vehicles, but he does it with more pizazz. 

I look at three generations of fathers and see how each did it differently and wonder how my grandson will handle the job.  He is quiet and gentle most of the time and like his uncle always surrounded by music.

The job of father has changed over the years but it is still the same in many ways.  They love their children and will do what is necessary for them.  Even if it means they don’t get to do all the things they want to do.  Kids come first,.

I’m grateful to have been around so many wonderful fathers. Tell me about the fathers in your life.

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2016 Cultivating Gratitude: Writer’s Block

LA talk Radio    I’m grateful this week to have talked with Jim Christina and Bobbie Jean Bell at L A Talk Radio’s The Writer’s Block. You can check out the interview at this link.   http://latalkradio.com/sites/default/files/audio/Writer-060916.mp3

Their enthusiasm was contagious and their ability to put you at ease made me feel at home.  In actuality I was.  It was a radio interview and I sat in the recliner I write in and talked on the phone.  I had no idea what I would say, but it turned into the shortest forty-five minutes of my life.  It was over?

Bobbie Jean read two passages from my book Secrets of Sandhill Island and we discussed the finer points of writing.  We also talked about my other books Glome’s Valley (discussing the Heavener Runestone) and The Apocalypse Sucks.  I was asked when the sequels were coming out.  I’m working on them!

I’d love to talk with them again sometime.  You can follow them on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/LA-Talk-Radio-49610374676/?fref=ts and see what they are up to on Thursday nights as they interview other writers.

Thanks Writer’s Block, I had a blast!

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2016 Cultivating Gratitude: The Lovely Month of June

Athena June2    Ah June.  Lying in freshly mown grass with a light breeze (okay, this is Oklahoma and the breeze is more than light).  My dog reminds me of what is important in life – we were put in this world to enjoy it.

I think that is easier for a dog; she didn’t have to mow the grass (neither did I, my husband did) and she didn’t have to buy the lot to mow, or the lawnmower to mow it, or get up each day and go to work so the money could be made to buy all that stuff. But she knows what is important in life.

I took the day off.  No housework, no laundry only a little writing. I blog on Sundays and whatever comes up on the screen is where my head happens to be that day.  Today it is the beginning of June.  I sat on the patio as my husband mowed the grass.  I helped rescue a toad from the jaws of the lawnmower (and the dog).  I may stretch myself as far as making an omelet for dinner – but it will be a good one.  I have few plans for this first full week in June, except for one.

On Thursday June 9, 2016 at 10:00 pm CST (yawn) I will be discussing my book Secrets of Sandhill Island with the folks at L A Talk Radio’s The Writer’s Block http://latalkradio.com/content/writers-block . My good friend John T. Biggs interviewed with them and was very impressed with the professionalism.  Since it is late in the evening and I’m old, there may be coffee involved.  coffeeI’ll try to sound intelligent. But it will be 8:00 pm on the west coast and it’s a live interview.  Tune in.  You can listen on your computer at the link above and call-ins are always welcome.

So begins another week in late spring/early summer.  The calendar still calls it spring, but in Oklahoma – where the wind comes right behind the rain – harvest is upon us.  The wheat is golden and the combines are ready.  With the way the wind is blowing today, the fields will be dry enough to get into soon.  Ah June.  Athena June

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2016 Cultivating Gratitude: Bloom Where You Are Planted

phillips    I fell in love on the Phillips University campus.  I remember it was fall, the sun was shining, and the monarchs were flying south.  Fresh out of high school and considered an adult for the first time in my life, I had a new boyfriend and the world by the tail.  Everything was shiny and new.

Our small town of Enid in 1971 had not felt the national political strife ravaging the big cities, even though there was an unpopular war and assassinations of public figures happened often.  There was still an innocence, unlike today, that was mirrored in my own soul.

In contrast to the newness of my life, the campus I loved was full of old buildings (many of them cold in winter and hot in summer), Plato-like discussions in class that challenged you to think, and life-long friends to help you tromp through fresh-fallen snow.  I loved the simple things. For a young student I had an old heart and something about the place felt safe, like home. I adored the classroom and was sure I would be a teacher someday. I felt a pure joy of learning.

We sat in my boyfriend’s car in the parking lot at lunch and ate sandwiches from home because we were too poor for the student union.  Most of our “dates” consisted of studying in the library on days we did not have class.  He worked nights and tried to stay awake during class.  I took notes and shared them with him.

But though I loved the old campus, hidden deep in my heart, I couldn’t wait to escape the small town of my youth.  If it was good enough for my parents, it was not good enough for me. I wanted to leave for the big city as soon as possible, leaving the old campus behind. However, there was a boy.

In an ironic twist of fate, by second semester I was on a campus in the big city, this time not because I wanted to, but because I was forced into leaving.  Strife at home and with my new love made it impossible for me to stay.  I soon found that the romantic idea of life outside of Enid might not be all that I had dreamed. I gained the freshman fifteen from too many parties and cafeteria food which consisted mostly of fried starch with gravy.  Friends were in short supply, and I was miserable.

At the new college I still learned, we still had discussions in class, I was still on a college campus, but there was a longing.  A longing for the boy I left behind and yes, even for the mother who gave me little choice but to leave my hometown.  I discovered that growing up and feeling free came with responsibilities and heartache.

By March I made the decision to call the boy.  He came – as I knew he would.  By June I was a new bride and a mother-to-be, but no longer a student, and about to find out that Responsibility would always be capitalized.

 The new baby girl in my life scared me to death the first time I held her.  Not because of her, she was beautiful and perfect, but because of me.  I had no idea how to be a mother, but she was the light of my life.  Responsibility could be like that.

A few years later another light was born; one for each side to show me the way.  I knew even less about raising a boy since I had no brothers and my father was not involved in child- rearing.  But I could learn.

We struggled through life paying bills and raising children.  I went back to school twice at the same time as my children – but never back to my favorite campus – and then into the working world. The marriage was good and bad, with ups and downs, but it was strong enough to endure life. I worked to provide for my family even though never accomplishing everything I planned. 

I still live in my hometown – other than that college semester in the big city.  I realized recently whenever I felt down, I traveled to that place where I first felt the stirrings of maturity and freedom bubbling to the surface.  I drove to the other side of town and walked on the campus that made me feel brand new.  There I was allowed to become the person I knew I could be, not the one I was molded into by the constraints of society.  That time in my life, not just leaving childhood and entering into adulthood, created a brand new person.

These days I’m retired, no longer working outside the home or raising kids.  I fill my days writing stories – some true and others not.  Again I feel much like that young girl who had the world at her feet just waiting to decide which path she would walk down today.  Getting dinner on the table and laundry done before the closet is empty is the biggest worry I encounter most days.  The boy is still around and he has become as old and gray as me.  The children have children of their own and they now spell Responsibility with a capital R.

As I write this it is fall and the sun is shining.  Outside my window, there are monarchs on their perennial journey south, and the Phillips University campus still stands on the east side of town, though it has a new name.  As I walk the grounds, I see students fall in love, study, and become the humans they were meant to be. Life goes on and the earth still spins.

Although I wanted to travel and explore, I was given the gift of blooming where I was planted. And bloom I did.  I made a family and a living all the while living with the people I loved. I grew up and had a splendid life in my hometown after all.    

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2016 Cultivating Gratitude: Free Plants

marigolds    I’ve been gardening for a lot of years and if you counted up what I’ve spent at nurseries, it is a wonder I ever got to retire.  I know that a perennial plant comes back year after year from roots.  However, there are other ways for a plant to come back.  Some plants sprout from seeds that it puts out after it blooms.

I found a ton of Marigolds in the yard for free this year and I’ve transplanted them to some bare spots (I don’t have as many bare spots as I used to).  I had some pots in the garden that were still empty and I was waiting on a sale at Lowe’s.  I also found sprigs coming up in a pot of Moss Rose from last year. A little shot of Miracle Grow and now I have free flowers!  moss rose

After visiting the herb garden out back, I found basil popping up and several bunches of Dill.   I love fresh dill and know it won’t last long, but it does put out a seed.  When it dies back down, I’ll shake the dried seeds back into the soil for next year.  dill

Speaking of free plants, when I cleaned out the irises last fall I found what I think is a wild grape vine.  I can only assume a bird dropped the seed. I cleaned a place for it and trained it on a trellis.  I’ll call you when it is time to stomp grapes for wine! Yum.

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