Miracles are neither grand nor earth-shaking.

They come unbidden, like a

quiet surprise just for you.

They come undeserved, for you

do not need to earn them.

They are sprinkles of time

in an ordinary day

which add a special quality

that feels like love.

Miracles are a subtle offering

that only need a

caring heart to land within.


Don't miss the miracles!

I'm here because ...

I believe we are put here to give each other both inspiration and support.
My adorable nephew Kevin gave me some of both.
For Christmas one year I asked him to help me start my own blog. With characteristic enthusiasm, he did just that! I felt as if I were asking for the moon, some impossible task I set before him. To my delight, he set up my blog ... he sent me explicit, illustrated instructions ... and a book with tips and good examples of the potential blogging offers.
Kevin, you're my hero. I turned to you because I knew you had experience with your own blog (my inspiration) and because of your own forthright sharing of photography and writing (more inspiration). Your encouragement and unconditional support made me believe I could do this. And I have.

May your kindness come back to you tenfold. Aunt J

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Floating on Air


When the balloon lifted off the ground, I was surprised to find myself suddenly crying ... in an overpowering wave of happiness. Bob was there at my side along with six other entranced travelers. We were bound together for a timeless (hour-and-a-half) adventure into wonder.  At that moment, my camera’s battery went dead. Again, unbelievably, that did not dampen my spirits. It did not even leave a smudge. Because I was there, I was feeling the lift, the sensation of floating on air. Not a wisp of fear. I was light as a feather, it seemed. The ride was so gentle and at a pace that satisfied my need to SEE and really look at what was around me. And I would have been happy with any kind of a view, but I had the bonus pleasure of riding above and down into the Rio Grande gorge. The water at the bottom was shallow, but our basket managed to “kiss” the surface -- we squealed when cold wetness reached our feet! Then a gentle climb back up as we saw rocks and cliffs and native vegetation, both beautiful and ragged, alluring and stark. A lesson in adaptability and survival. What a view! Surrounding the gorge was flat, flat land. Again a landscape of contrasts and magnitude. 

How did we get there?? 

Bob and I had been planning a trip to visit my Uncle Bill and his wife Linda in Taos, NM. They had sent us some information about the area in anticipation of our arrival. I looked it over and realized that Taos had a lot more to offer than my mother’s brother, a man of very distant memories. I wanted to see him because way too much time had snuck by. (yes, I said snuck!). To the best of my recollection, I had not seen my Uncle Bill since I was in sixth grade. HE was the reason we were going there. But Taos is, I learned, a mecca for sports enthusiasts, scenery lovers, history and native culture fans, wine and art and food fanciers and more. But what caught my eye on the brochure of information, first thing, was a picture of a hot air balloon. Taking a ride in a hot air balloon has been a wish of mine for as long as I can remember. But it was never practical. The cost put it way out of reach. But the wish remained,for what is a wish, but hope ... and the belief that anything can happen. Someday.

Well, I looked up the cost of that particular hot air balloon excursion online a few days before we left on our trip. I had been saving the cash gifts that the agents at the office had given me as a Christmas present. As it turned out, what I had saved EXACTLY equalled the cost of one ticket. That gave me courage on top of hope. I talked to Bob ... and he agreed! I made the reservation for the morning that we were to leave Taos. Now to hold our breaths that the weather would not turn against us. We would not know for sure until that morning. 

. . . . . . 

The ending of that fairy tale wish-come-true was a well managed landing, a celebrational champagne brunch and an armload of precious memories. Oh, by the way, at some point during our float, my camera battery woke up. Then it would die. Then it would wake up for a couple of shots, and then ... Very up and down, just like our adventure. 

Take a look at these pictures, and if the inspiration sparks a dream of your own, go to: 

a perfect morning for flying
Bob helping to inflate
our sister balloon in flight
our flight path
the Rio Grande River 
at the bottom of the gorge
incredible sight
my only picture of our balloon in flight
back on the ground but still floating







Sunday, August 12, 2012

Hawk Eye


I have seen hawks resting on the wind in their slow circles across the sky and was delighted by their graceful dignity. I have seen hawks perched in the treetops and been captured by a closer look at their beauty. Once I saw a hawk hunting for a morsel on four legs by the side of the road while I paused for a stoplight just fifteen feet away and was mesmerized. It flew off before the light changed, or I might have pissed off the drivers lined up behind me. 
Sometime early in this year, an urge came over me that did not dissipate as urges often do. It stayed with me -- and the desire to know what it would be like to have a hawk perched on my arm gradually became something Important. I knew there were people at the forest preserve wildlife center who sometimes gave presentations on birds of prey. In photographs I saw injured birds brought there for healing perched on the caretaker’s arm. I saw in movies that hawks could be trained as hunters and would sit on their master’s arm as a perch.
I wondered what that must be like. Could I have that experience?

As you can see, my wish was granted. I went out on a limb (pun intended) and asked about it at the Willowbrook Wildlife Center when we took granddaughter Katie there. The timing was incredible as my trail led me to the Northern Illinois Raptor Center*. 
On June 10, Maggie, who is also a hawk lover and in fact a hawk magnet (she is always having close encounters), and I attended the Get to Know a Raptor presentation in nearby Hoffman Estates. As I said, the timing was incredible. NIRC is a new group just spreading its wings (pun intended), and this was their way to get their message out to the public. They house and care for birds of prey who are unable to survive in the wild. At the presentation I learned many things, which I am compelled to share with you. I think this is all fascinating ...

Birds of prey molt once a year. Their feathers drop out and are replaced with new feathers. This process takes place very gradually. What’s interesting is that when one feather on a wing comes out, a comparable feather in the same position on the other wing drops out simultaneously. Always. That way their wings are always in balance for flight. 

Owls have eyes that are embedded in their skulls. This is called binocular vision because both eyes see the same (close one of your eyes and then the other to see the difference in your vision). To look from side to side, owls have to rotate their whole heads. But they are built with the ability to rotate almost 360 degrees.

Great horned owls hunt at dawn and at dusk. There is more gold around the irises of their eyes to indicate the light range.

Barred owls hunt at night and their eyes are solid black. Beautiful. Their coloring is a pattern of black and white to camouflage their bodies.


Owls’ hunting skills rely on hearing as well as acute night vision. Their large, round, disc-shaped heads augment their hearing reception.

If a peregrine falcon were in a race for speed with a cheetah, the cheetah would come in second. The peregrine falcon’s top speed is 200 mph.

All falcons have dark markings under their eyes. A kestrel is a type of falcon.

The largest eagles can have a wing span of seven feet. 

80% of red tailed hawks die during their first year for a number of reasons. - it’s not easy being a hawk.

Hawks mate for life. But they are only together during breeding season.

Birds of prey in captivity do not like to be touched. They do not like when someone comes up behind them suddenly.

Owls eat their food whole. Later their bodies regurgitate the parts of the animal that they can’t use. They throw up pellets, which are sometimes studied.

Carion. The dead bodies that some birds of prey feed on.

Turkey vultures defend themselves from predators by projectile vomiting on them.

If a bird is taken from the nest before its eyes open, it imprints with the thief rather than its mother. That seriously and profoundly handicaps the bird from developing into the bird it should be. Imprinting determines its instincts, its identity and its means of survival. These birds must be cared for. Even though they are physically healthy, they cannot survive in the wild. They think they are humans.


The above statement explains why the Northern Illinois Raptor Center must care for their six birds of prey. Only one of them, the kestrel, came to them because of an injury. Stupid people think it would be cool/brave/fun to take a baby or an egg from the nest and raise it for a pet. And then change their minds. Very sad for the birds.

Maggie and I and the others were then led outside with the birds and taught how to hold the tether lines that are attached to the bird’s leg in trading off from one person to the other. The trade-off took place within a special “house” in case of an oops. I had a turn with the great horned owl first and then later with the red tailed hawk - who really wanted to fly away. But couldn’t. There was a lot of flapping and re-perching. It gave me a sense of his strength, his size, his nature. Also, a sense of his plight. Maggie had a turn with the owl and the pretty little kestrel. Everyone there was grinning. It was a very peaceful, moving experience. 
What struck me the most was the eye contact with each bird. This must be a reflection of the imprinting experience. Normally birds in the wild never look directly at me. But they do feel my eyes on them, and usually fly away.
Not these birds. They looked directly in my eyes. And they were literally inches away. I was in heaven. And I will remember this experience and my greater understanding from now on, especially when I look up and smile to see a hawk in flight ... or notice one in a nearby tree. I will remember and take great pleasure in seeing them not up close, but in the way they are meant to be. 

*The NIRC is a charitable 501(c) (3) organization that was formed to bring together different groups of specialists in the area of birds of prey, which includes Education, Conservation, Research, Veterinary Medicine and the unique cultural heritage of Falconry. They are located at Vogelei Park in Hoffman Estates.
The NIRC offers a variety of educational programs that can be tailored to the audience. Through lecture and demonstration, children and adults will learn about the physical and behavioral traits that make the raptor different from other birds.NIRC offers a unique opportunity to see these raptors up close and learn about the importance of their conservation. For more information contact Barbara Schmidt at bschmidt@tnirc.org.



Saturday, June 23, 2012

"Show a little faith, there's magic in the night ..."


I did not come to know the music of Bruce Springsteen until later in life. Truthfully, his big hits did not really grab me. (Except there were two tunes that Manfred Mann came out with in the ? 70’s that got in my blood and made me move. I didn’t learn till later that Bruce had written them: I Came for You and Blinded by the Light.)
Then one day about ten years ago I heard a song on the radio that I really liked. The DJ said it was off of Bruce Springsteen’s album, Nebraska. The song really caught my attention, and I could not let it go. It had a sound that did not fit into the usual pop genre. It carried a down-home, sort of nostalgic sound that got to me. Different but still bald faced rock n roll. No frills. I liked it enough to buy the CD. 
Listening to that CD changed my mind about Bruce. I could not get enough. And even though I have continued to discover the many moods and messages and sounds of the man, I have not yet been able to fill myself up with enough Bruce.
Seeing Bruce in concert went on my list of “things I want to do in my lifetime.” And when you’re 63, there comes a certain urgency to finding a way to check off some of those things.
This is the story of a little miracle that allows me to check this one off.
A few months ago I heard on the radio that Bruce was coming to Chicago for a concert. My eyes got big, my heartbeat picked up, and I was all ears. That night I went on the computer to get more details. 
Wrigley Field. 
September 7, 2012. 
Cheapest seats ..........$168. !!!!!!OW!!!! Kicked in the gut and outraged and shocked. I do not go to, well, any concerts these days. So I guess I am out of the loop. Didn’t really expensive tickets used to cost around $45? hmmmmm. Things have changed. 
I could not justify spending that much money. Don’t argue with me. I just couldn’t.
But I couldn’t stop thinking about it either. I was back and forth about it in my mind. Finally I called the one person that I knew that was also a big Bruce fan. Last time I had seen her, we talked about seeing Bruce the next time blah blah blah. She did not answer her phone when I called, so I left a simple message: “are you going to see Bruce?”
I never heard back from her. sigh. 


As it turned out, the day the tickets went on sale -- sold out in record minutes I heard -- Bob and I were spending the day with Maggie packing up stuff for her move. It seemed everything was against the possibility of going to see Bruce. 
So, I swallowed the disappointment and held onto the consolation that another opportunity would come along. 
A couple weeks later they announced a second concert date had been added. !!!!! Oh my, here we go again. My heart racing. What should I do? And again, as luck would have it, the day the tickets went on sale was the day that Bob and I were taking care of our two-year-old, adorable, delightful granddaughter Katie for the day. We went to the wildlife center instead of trying to buy a ticket.
Through the sadness, I still knew I would not have traded my time with little Katie or going to the aid of Miss Maggie for anything. Not even for Bruce.
A few days later came the little miracle. A message on our answering machine from my friend: “I’ve got a ticket for you to see Bruce. Let me know if you want it.”
You could have knocked me over with a feather. We hadn’t even talked. How did she know I hadn’t already bought a ticket? How did she know that I would buy this outrageously expensive ticket? I could not believe it. Somehow she took a chance and, well, W E   A R E   G O I N G . We are going to see Bruce Springsteen at Wrigley Field on September 7. 
W E   A R E   G O I N G .
W E   A R E   G O I N G .
W E   A R E   G O I N G .
EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!! I will let you know about that experience, if the words will come, when my feet are back on the ground, probably somewhere around September 18 or 19. I am very happy. I am smiling all the way to my eyebrows.
For now, I’d like to share with you my current favorite Bruce song (it is always changing because I haven’t even heard all of his music yet. I’m sure there will be another and another and another). Hope you like it.

(If you know and like his music, let me know your favorite Bruce song. Currently.)


F O L L O W     U P ... a few words about about the night of magic:

Man oh man oh man. Three+ hours of pure bliss. Of pure can't-sit-down, making-a-loud-noise-of-appreciation, lovin-it-all bliss. It was more like going to a really big party than to a concert. And Bruce was the host. The crowd at Wrigley Field (I was in the upper deck, first base side) was already wired, and immediately - I mean with the very first song - he got us all involved. We sang. He encouraged it! I've never seen a performer so connected with his audience. He was as into us as we were into him. I don't know how to explain it. So many times throughout the evening he would jump off the stage and go into the crowd, reaching out to the palms outstretched. No hesitation. He was so genuine and enthusiastic and energetic. He is about six months younger than me - (so that makes us practically school chums - ha!) but he was acting like a kid. And all the physical demands of his music have kept him in excellent condition. And believe me, I was looking.           Yeah.

The talent of his musicians and singers was so impressive, and Bruce was generous in sharing the stage and acknowledging that talent. Everyone there was giving his and her all. They were non-stop music. And we were singing along. And we were hooting and hollering for more and more and more. The music was familiar but still fresh. He did a mind-blowing rendition of The Ghost of Tom Joad. And still there were songs that I had never heard before too (Jack of All Trades for one). I was making out my Christmas list in my head as we were driving home that night.

He did not disappoint. He filled me up quite a bit that night. I know him now in a new way, a view of his on-stage personality. He invited a young girl on the stage and gave her the mic to sing the chorus of Waitin on a Sunny Day. And he was delighted. He danced on stage with a woman because her husband held up a sign that read, "will you dance with my wife?" And he was gallant. He gave us all - even on the rooftops and the upper decks - a vicarious thrill and the feeling that he was there ... for us.

I've loved his music for awhile. Now I also love who he is. Thanks, Bruce.



Saturday, May 12, 2012

Monarchs Rule


It was one of those days that I had designated for washing windows and frames and radiators and ceiling fans and such things that get blatantly neglected until the designated day in fall when it will be time to close up the windows again. It was a ritual of spring as compulsive as rototilling the garden. Not as much fun though. I had to stay focused on the task at hand, when I would much rather have been outside doing something that naturally involved getting dirty knees and seeing what was coming up and what should be pulled out NOW and where there would be room for ... the gardeners call. 
But not on that day in mid-April. I had the dust rag stuck in my back pocket and my hair tied back and the smell of ammonia in my nose. But there came a moment late in the afternoon that did take me to the garden. A moment that became a little miracle. 
I took my time meandering over to the compost bin situated in the far corner of the garden. My eyes skimmed over the little baby plants too new to even form a row. I saw a monarch butterfly out of the corner of my eye and paused to watch. Then I saw another. What a surprise to see two. Then I noticed another in the far part of the garden by the garage wall. My feet took me to the back of the garden where an old, old lilac bush was flowering in full glory. I looked ... and looked again. There were perhaps 50 monarch butterflies scattered throughout that bush. Every once in awhile one would fly up and land not far on another lilac cluster. The monarchs were feeding on the blossoms, and the stillness of their concentration and the intensity of their hunger seemed a wonder. 
I ran next door to get my neighbor to see (it was her lilac). I ran to get Bob to show him too. We had never had this happen before. It was so incredible. I ran to get my camera. Below you will see the entire bush plus a few closer shots. It does not nearly do justice to the scene.


But that is not the whole story - here is the best part. I had seen the monarchs feast earlier that day. At dusk I noticed a fast movement outside my window. I had to look. There they were. Hopped up on lilac juice, dozens of monarchs were twirling and whirling in flight, around and around each other in the passionate, potent enticement of youth and energy. 
M e s m e r i z i n g ....  I laughed! How grand to be that alive. A ritual of spring that leaves window washing in a far, far distant second place.
What is your spring ritual? I hope it occurs in a moment when your eyes are truly open to something incredible. And then tell me about it.

Friday, March 23, 2012

One Potato, Two Potato

On Saturday morning I bought potatoes at the store for the first time since digging up our potatoes in the garden the previous September. Our harvest had filled a ten-gallon crock, and we ate those delicious spuds in soups in the fall and as mashed potatoes at holiday meals and whatever other way we wished through the coldest months. We finally hit the bottom of the barrel a week ago, leaving a couple handfuls of the smallest potatoes to plant this spring. Nature provides recycling at its most basic. And those baby spudlings have been growing some mighty long, skinny sprouts, as if they know it is almost planting time.
So Saturday morning, with a tinge of sadness, I was forced to go back to store bought potatoes. It was OK. Part of the cycle. Those potatoes at the bottom were getting kind of wrinkly and soft anyway (just like Bob and me - ha!). The weather had turned warm way ahead of schedule, being mid-March, and we were planning on grilling some steaks that night ... and at our house, steak requires a decent sized baked potato to accompany it. 
I spent the afternoon pulling weeds from the big vegetable garden, getting it ready for Bob to rototill. There were a lot of weeds. As I was on my hands and knees digging into the dirt under those feisty weeds to get to the roots, my trowel unearthed something unexpected. A potato! A beautiful, decent sized, firm and pretty nearly perfect potato. I could not believe it. I have found some surprises over the years in the soil of our garden plot - including my long lost engagement ring (a story for another day). But that potato appeared as a little miracle - surviving a Midwest winter in glorious, mouth-watering condition. 
I ran to show Bob the treasure I had discovered. He shook his head in amazement with me. I placed it on the back step, wondering how we would decide who would get it for dinner that night. If it was by arm wrestling, I knew I was in trouble. I was back on my hands and knees pulling up weeds again when I decided it would only be fair to each have half. But a few minutes later, the dilemma was solved as I dug up a second, equally fine potato. How could that be? ! Well, that night we ate those potatoes, sprinkled with the first chives of the season, and considered ourselves well blessed. 
I know from now on, as I do my ritual springtime weeding in the garden, I will remember “one potato, two potato” and keep my (potato) eyes open for more.

Friday, January 20, 2012

My favorite Christmas gift

Sometimes a gift does not come wrapped or boxed. Sometimes a gift you asked for turns out to be the best gift you have given. That was the case this Christmas.
A few days before the big day, I told my husband there was something he could give me for Christmas. I asked him to take me to see the family hardware store in Oak Park. Of course, the business had closed up some 30 or so years ago ... but the building was still there, and I wanted to see it. 
I had heard the stories on occasion over the years, vague references really, about the family hardware store. I have a natural interest in family history to begin with, and I was curious. Oak Park is a suburb just outside of the city of Chicago, an older suburb with its own venerable history and at the turn of the century (the other century) was the architectural playground for Frank Lloyd Wright. It is perhaps an hour’s drive straight east from our house.
So. What was there to stop us? I wanted to go. I did not tell him I felt this request was as much for him as for me. Or at least I hoped so.
Christmas Day arrived with merriment and hugs and stories of its own. But no indication from Bob whether I would receive my wish. 
The day after Christmas was an extended holiday from work so we both had a free day. I took a chance and brought up the subject in the morning ... held my breath ... and wrangled a yes out of him. We would go to Oak Park! We would visit the hardware store! We would see what was left of it -- if anything.
To my delight, the drive to the hardware store was just as enjoyable as the destination. We traveled along old Roosevelt Road, shunning the faster expressway, and soon my husband was remarking on one familiar landmark after another. Such and such is still there ... or I remember that place. Memories of people from his college era, from his early work, of family members long dead, but still dear, came to his mind in a monologue of reminiscences. We were smiling, and I swear we were suddenly younger. 
Then we were there.
He found the building where his family ran the hardware store as easily as if he had been there just the week before. Some things come back to you as naturally as opening your eyes on awakening. Our experience there was very moving. It was good for me. It was good for him. And mostly it was good for us. We shared it. That was the gift I was really hoping for. 
The ground floor of the old hardware store had been converted into a very lively coffee shop whose owners serve up more than tasty dishes and straightforward, decent coffee. They embrace the concept of neighborhood and encourage local talent through live music nights and displays of their artwork on the walls. The upstairs they have made available for local clubs and organizations to meet. And the back corner of the shop is set aside as a kids’ play area for patrons. We discovered a very heart-felt, welcoming atmosphere. I was compelled to write to the owner that evening after our visit. Here is what I had to say:
The hardware store at 905 S. Lombard in Oak Park played an important role in my husband Bob’s growing up years. His grandfather built the building around 1910 of hand-poured concrete walls, hardwood floors, tin ceiling and oak trim. The second floor was an apartment for he and his wife to live and raise their two sons. One son was my husband’s father. 

Today Bob and I visited the old hardware store, which is now the Buzz Cafe. We’ve been married for 43 years and have never left the western suburbs. But this was the first time I had ever seen the building, and the first time that my husband had returned. Sometimes it’s a matter of waiting till the time is right. I believe we had waited just long enough.
We walked through the door to the Buzz Cafe, sat at a table and ordered some coffee. The physical presence of the bustling cafe and its many patrons seemed to disappear as Bob painted a picture with words to describe how he remembered his grandfather’s hardware store. 
I noticed the floor first. The old floor boards told a story of long time use but still sturdy condition. Bob told me about the many times he had swept those floors. His grandfather would drop a few coins from the register here and there in that long space for his grandchildren to find as they swept.
The long east wall held built-in cabinets with glass fronts. The shelves and compartments held all the nuts and bolts and doo-dads that people required in the days when they did their own household renovations and repairs. Back then the hardware store really sold hardware and held as vital a position in a family’s life as the corner grocery store. 
There was a counter that ran the length of the store in front of the cabinets, Bob remembered. Customers would come up to the counter with their list of items that they needed. Short lists, long lists. Sometimes questions. The hardware store was also a place for advice and exchange of techniques and ideas. You bought your nuts and screws but often took home something of greater value ... tips that would prevent disaster and wasted time.

At the far end of the hardware store, where the kids’ play area is now, was a walled off bedroom and kitchenette. This was added for the grandparents at the time when the upstairs apartment became home to one of the two sons’ growing families. 
The opposite long wall contained shelves to the ceiling filled with assorted paint cans. Bob said that there were two rolling ladders that they would use to retrieve just the right color or style of paint for their customers. Anyone who has struggled to reach what they want in today’s Disneyland parody of a hardware store can appreciate the ingeniousness of this simple solution. 
The older son John, my husband’s father, had two daughters, followed by Bob and his younger brother John. Bob’s Uncle Walter had four daughters. These grandchildren of the original owners of the hardware store spent much of their childhood at the family store. The time frame was the 1940’s and 50’s. This was still the era when Males were king ... of everything. Bob and his brother were the only boys in that next generation, and Bob, being the older, was on the throne. I believe his father, his uncle and his grandfather showered him with special privileges, although to a kid, it may have seemed like extra work. 
They taught him the “trade” and Bob grew up learning about the sheet metal side business that they operated in the basement. He helped hang gutters on some of those huge houses that Oak Park is renowned for. He knew what all those doo-dads were and how they were used. He overheard or was imparted with the secrets of successful do-it-yourselfers. His younger brother John learned all this too, but Bob was first. It is a subtle distinction that was ingrained in their German heritage. 
As time went by, Bob’s father took over the hardware business and eventually shared that responsibility with his younger brother Walter. As Bob grew older, his association with the operation of the hardware store dwindled and was replaced with high school, girls and football. He grew up in a modest home in Glen Ellyn that his father built around 1949, a short time after Bob was born.  
If you come to our home, you will see the influence of the hardware store in Bob’s life. We have lived in our brick American four-square since 1973 (I was a very young bride - wink wink). Not long after we moved there, he doubled the size of our two-car garage and added on a second story for storage. As you walk through the narrow winding paths of our overstuffed garage, you will see floor-to-ceiling shelves, tool chests galore, little compartments and jars full of doo-dads, gizmos, tools and equipment in seeming disarray, but actually very well organized and ready for the next project. 
Bob not only knows a little about everything when it comes to maintaining a home, but he has a gift for doing everything to perfection. You may say, no, it can’t be perfect or it is not hand-made! Well, I disagree. I am witness to his abilities and his unrelenting expectation of quality. 
His brother John also shows the benefits of that same early influence. He lives on a beautiful piece of land in western Tennessee with his wife and runs his own motor repair business. His shop has the same look of organized disarray that is evident in Bob’s garage. They know what they’re doing, and if they are lucky, their own sons and daughters will inherit their knowledge and tenacity. 
In its time, the hardware store was a place of dreams and hard work. That’s what it took to build the business. That’s what they sold to their customers along with supplies. And today it is still a place of dreams and hard work.
Our experience at the Buzz Cafe was warm and welcoming. Jessica showed a sincere interest in our story and graciously allowed us to snoop around a bit and dust off Bob’s nostalgia and renew his closeness to that time in his life. 
The cafe acknowledges and supports and reveres its place in the neighborhood and strengthens the local sense of community. The caring and innovation that sustains the Buzz Cafe is evident. We will have to return to try out that delicious looking menu!
Though it no longer offers doo-dads for sale, it is heart-warming to see that in this building is still a family business that cares about doing it right and about putting people first. May your values enable you to continue your dream and to pass it along to others.


Here is the only photo that survives from those bygone days:


The photo above was taken in the dining room of the upstairs apartment of the hardware store. I don’t know a lot about the photo, but I’ll tell you what I do. It was obviously a special occasion, a holiday perhaps. The two boys in the picture were most likely Bob’s father and his uncle. The man on the far left is the grandfather and next to him is somebody and next to him is the grandmother. I believe only the men have their glasses raised in a toast. The woman standing in the back was hired as a server, not uncommon in those days. 1920’s? The swinging door in the back left led to the kitchen area and had a little peek-a-boo window to avert dish-laden accidents!








Sunday, January 8, 2012

Grandma's Flower


When my husband's mother moved from her home of 50+ years into an assisted living arrangement, she gave me permission to dig up one of her favorite perennials, a clematis. I planted it by our back door and gradually it took hold and began to thrive. It made me quite happy to bring a piece of her garden into ours. Until the summer when an evil chipmunk came to live by us, and, undetected, burrowed under that clematis plant and killed it. So sad. But time moved on, as it does. 
Three years ago now, my dear mother-in-law passed away. She was ready to go, but I think of her often and remember the times we had with great fondness. The spring after she died, I bought two new clematis plants and planted them in the back of our big vegetable garden. One of the plants took off right away and grew and produced purple blooms the first season. The other plant seemed to be holding its own, but was not thriving. No blooms. 
The second season, this past year, again the purple clematis grew and produced profuse flowers. The other plant grew a bit more and seemed to be establishing itself ... but still no flowers. Until late in the season, mid-September, past the usual blooming time, I spied a large bud. I held my breath and checked it every day. The flower you see is the little miracle that opened up to give me a feeling that can't be described. It is for you, Grandma ... for you.