February Photos

Sunday, October 31, 2021

Photos: Braille Christmas Cards

 I addressed and signed (via my HP printer) a heap (141, to be exact) of Christmas cards today -- including three for my blind friends.  For the Braille, I used the little slate and stylus you can see a glimpse of in the first picture, below and to the right of the card. πŸ˜ƒ One of my blind friends gave it to me when I was 9 years old.




Saturday, October 30, 2021

Old Photos: Lydia & Jeremy

 Scanning old photos...

Here's our daughter Lydia, and there's Jeremy, whom she married in 2008.
Pictures taken December 25, 1997




Old Photos: Victoria

 Scanning old photos...

And see, these right here are the reasons I keep at it! πŸ˜†
Victoria, 9 1/2 months. Her big sister Hannah, 16 1/2, crocheted the bonnet.
December 11, 1997





Thursday, October 28, 2021

Old Photo: The Red Scarf

I'm scanning old photos -- and look, I found a picture of Victoria, our youngest, wearing the red polka-dot scarf that was my very first sewing project at age 7! My brother Loren (22 years older than me), who sold sewing machines back then, had just given me an older Singer, showed me how to use it, and helped me make that scarf, which matched my favorite red polka-dot dress. He showed me how to attach the ribbons, put navy lining on it, right sides to right sides, sew around the edges, leaving a hole by which to turn it, then how to turn it and hand-stitch the hole shut. You cannot imagine how delighted I was with both Singer and accomplishment. All the girls loved that scarf (probably because of the story I told them about it), but none more than Victoria. When she wasn't wearing it, she often put it on a big teddy bear that sat on her bed.

I made the doll dress, too, to match Victoria's Thanksgiving Day dress of 2000.  The denim strawberry jacket was one of two that I made for Hester and Lydia about 5 years earlier.







Monday, October 25, 2021

Journal: Photo-Scanning, Vehicle Hiccups, & an Opossum

 


I spent several days last week scanning old photos, finishing an album and starting on the next one.  Here’s our Aerostar van crossing a rickety old wooden bridge by Bellwood Lakes.  (Yes, Larry stopped on the other side and waited for me to catch up and get back in.  πŸ˜‰ )  I have now scanned 21,800 photos.

Last Monday when Larry was at Loren’s house, Loren showed him his wallet, all worried because there were only $3 in it.  “That’s not much money!” said Loren.

Larry agreed, “That’s not much, in this day and age,” and added, “Looks like you need to get some cash at the bank!”

Loren had evidently forgotten how to do that; he used to do it every couple of weeks or so.  Maybe he’d even forgotten where the bank was?  We figured I would have to start doing that for Loren.  I don’t like doing things like that, much.  I have Power of Attorney, so I can, legally; but I never want there to be a question about how I’m handling Loren’s money and what I’m doing with it.

But whataya know, Loren went to his bank Tuesday morning and got himself a bit of cash.  I was glad to discover he had done that, via Vyncs and the bank’s website (and he even remembered to tell me about it later).  I’m thankful for these little things as long as they continue.

Keith and Korrine’s 3rd anniversary was Wednesday.  Korrine just tested positive for Covid-19 Monday, and Keith tested positive on Wednesday.  They haven’t gotten too awfully sick with it, fortunately.  Both have aches, chills, headache, cough, and sometimes a runny nose.  Korrine has lost her sense of smell and can taste only certain things along the sides of her tongue.

Joseph and Jocelyn’s 11th anniversary was Sunday.  Teddy and Amy’s 19th anniversary and Caleb and Maria’s 8th anniversary were on the 13th.  Todd and Dorcas’s 7th anniversary was on the 18th.

We sent Todd and Dorcas and Joseph and Jocelyn gift certificates to Cracker Barrel.  For Keith and Korrine, I had a nursery called The Petal Pusher in their hometown of Layton, Utah, give them a gift certificate.  I spelled both of their names for the gift card, and the lady repeated them back to me.  Remember that...

We gave Caleb and Maria a dehumidifier for the six-foot crawl space under their house, as theirs went kaput, and their house has a bit of a musty smell if they don’t keep a dehumidifier running.  We gave Teddy and Amy $$$$.

I paid some bills and ordered some groceries.  In looking for jelly, I found Gator Jam (ginger, apple, tangerine, orange, elderberry) and Frog Jam (fig, raspberry, orange, ginger).




Gotta try some of that stuff!  Did you know that a group of alligators is called a congregation?  πŸ˜„  A group of frogs is called an army.




I finished scanning the photo album with the pictures of Victoria as a wee baby, and started on one with pictures taken at Henry Doorly Zoo.

 Loren was okay that day when I took him a meal.  A little mixed up, but okay.  It seemed like he thought he was still selling for NFIB, as he said he didn’t know for sure if he’d be home the next day – “We might be heading out,” he said, pointing northwest.  So be sure and call first before you come.”  He and Janice used to take their camper and stay in parks to our northwest when he was working for the NFIB. 

I saw by the Vyncs tracer and SpotTrace that he went to church Tuesday evening.  That large clock on his table displaying day, date, time, and morning, afternoon, or evening, does him no good, if he can’t think to look at it!  Part of the problem is that he sometimes piles things in front of it, making it difficult to see.  I unearth it, when I find it thus.

He went straight back home again after discovering there was no church meeting.  As Larry says, “Oh, well; it gives him something to do (getting his suit on, driving to town and then back home again) instead of looking for ‘Norma’.”  😏 

I wonder if he thinks I told him wrong, or if he then remembers I told him right, or if none of the above occurs to him at all?

I sent this picture to Hester, writing, “Here you are at the zoo.”



She responded, “😊Keira liked that picture but wants to know where the animals are hiding.  There’s definitely a bird or something on my head. πŸ¦ƒπŸ˜†πŸ˜†

So of course I immediately sent a bunch of pictures of animals at the zoo, writing, “Tell Keira, here are the animals!  Love, Grandma”

Here are a couple of them:




Soon Hester wrote back:  “Keira really liked all the animals!   Now she’s ready to go to the zoo.  πŸ˜†

I want to go to the zoo, too!  But Larry is uninterested.  Maybe if they let him ride a scooter...  πŸ˜‰

Larry got the rest of the shower curtain rods put up around the tub that evening, and then we went to Wal-Mart to get a shower curtain – and it didn’t occur to either of us that we needed two curtains, because the shower curtain has to go all around the inside of the tub, front and back.



We also forgot to get milk and eggs, so we headed into town instead of onto the bypass, planning to stop at Hy-Vee.  However, Larry turned into Columbus Motors just before we got to Hy-Vee in order to drool over the new Jeeps.  And then of course we forgot the milk and eggs.

Wasn’t it just last week that I suggested that forgetfulness is contagious?!

Here’s Lydia at about age 7, drying her hair in the sun.  



Below are Hannah and Dorcas at the zoo.




Wednesday, Keith thanked me for the gift card from The Petal Pusher – and sent me a picture of the card.  It reads, “Pete and Korrine”.  Pete!  I’m telling you, I did spell the names!  Even Keith’s.  And the lady spelled it back to me.



Kenzie, Korrine’s youngest daughter, is now calling Keith ‘Pete’.  🀣

Keith said they were still doing all right, although he asked, “Why can’t orange-flavored Zicam taste good all the way through!!???”

“I know!” I agreed.  “After the first bit of citrus flavor, you’re down to the gasoline!”  😜

Thursday, Victoria wrote to say that their house loan has been approved.  There’s one more step, and then they’ll be pretty close to a done deal.

When I took Loren some supper that afternoon, the Jeep was misbehaving quite badly, roaring and missing and knocking and sounding terrible.  Also, the steering wheel shakes at high speeds, and the brakes aren’t so great.  I think I’ll park that thing until it’s in better shape.

Friday, after requesting and receiving the grandchildren’s sizes, I spent some time looking for Christmas gifts online.  How about this:  Aaron, who’s 20 now wears the same size shirt as Larry!

I started the hunt for a shirt or sweater for Aaron on eBay.  I typed in “Men’s XL” – and eBay offered me 13,950,998 selections.  Okay, let’s pare that down.  I checked ‘Buy It Now’, ‘U.S. Only’, ‘New with Tags’, and plugged in a price range.

There we go; I’d shaved it down to 2,898,289.  Much more manageable.  Theoretically.

I clicked ‘Lowest Priced Items First’, and then began looking for ‘nice but affordable’.  And there it was, just the ticket:  an Eddie Bauer fleece sweater in heather green.  The listing even had a ‘Make an Offer’ button.  I made the offer... the offer was accepted... and I saved $3 on an already-good price.



I proceeded on down the list.

Here are Teddy and Joseph at the zoo.




Soon it was time to call Loren, and then to make him some supper.  I drove the BMW to his house.  It worked fine, but I very much dislike driving a vehicle I fear will let me down at any moment.

Loren’s meal that day was deer burger meat loaf made with crackers and eggs, French-cut green beans, blueberry streusel muffins, peaches, prunes, V8 cocktail juice, and ice cream. 

A while back, Loren thanked me for the food, saying, “You’ve never brought anything that I haven’t liked; it’s always very good.”

And that right there was one of those occasions where I follow Psychology Today:  “Never argue with a dementia patient” (never mind how fictitious it was). 

Keith asked, “Does he eat everything you take him?”

“Seems like it, most of the time,” I replied.  “Every now and then, though, I find an ancient piece of Whatzit in his refrigerator.  Once I asked him, ‘Are you conducting a science experiment in here?’  He laughed – but I can’t tease too much, or he gets all worried because he wasted something.”

Here’s Keith at the zoo, and below are Joseph, Hester, and Teddy.  These pictures were taken May 29, 1995.




Here is Caleb in his room.


  

Home again, I returned to the CCH (Christmas Clothes Hunt) on eBay.  One year, I got all the clothes – and some other gifts, too – at Sears.  The next year, it was J. C. Penney’s.  The year after that, Wal-Mart.  These days, I do most of the Christmas shopping online; but sometimes I like hunting for gifts at brick-and-mortar stores, too.

By the time I closed my laptop that night, I had all the clothes ordered for the grandchildren.  But kids need more than clothes, don’t they?

“Indeed they do,” answered a friend to whom I posed this question.  “Clothes for Christmas signifies the child was dangerously close to the naughty line.”  πŸ˜‚

Our children were always delighted with Christmas pajamas and nightgowns from their Grandpa and Grandma Swiney... sweaters and vests and skirts and pants from their Uncle John H. and Aunt Lura Kay, and from their Uncle Loren and Aunt Janice... and outfits from Grandpa and Grandma Jackson (handsewn by Grandma)...  but I won’t forget the stories my father told of receiving socks and underwear for Christmas from his parents while his siblings received toys.  They got their clothes as they needed them throughout the year.  How could parents be unfair like that with one child??  To her credit, my Grandma Swiney apologized to Daddy for that, years later. 

The grandparents, aunts, and uncles gave our children toys, too.  I try to do the same (clothes and toys, both)... but it’s no easy task, with this many kids to buy stuff for.  When they get past, oh, say, 14 or 15, I sometimes give them clothes and a big, nice book or some such thing.  In addition to Aaron’s Eddie Bauer fleece sweater; and the pair of jeans I got for Ethan, who’s 16, we’ll also give each boy one of those fancy-schmancy pocketknives we got at the Nebraska State Fair.

I remember feeling really grown up when members of my family gave me clothes for Christmas (although one of them seemed to never have the foggiest notion what sorts of styles I liked, even after I got old enough to pick out or sew my own things).

 As for the toys, for three of the little girls I got ‘sleeping kitties’ that ‘breathe’ when a spot on their sides is pressed.




Last year I bought the grandkids a whole lot of games.  So this year, I’ll look for vehicles, Lego sets, balls, frisbees, magnet sets, flashlights, books...  And maybe I’ll get each family something from Schwan’s.

Loren went to the church that night, even though he asked me as I was leaving his house that afternoon if there was a meeting, and I said no.  After thinking about it for a moment, he nodded (a bit hesitantly) and said, “That’s right; we don’t have meetings on Friday.” 

That understanding evidently vanished in the next couple of hours.

Here’s Joseph in a suit I made him for Easter.  It was April 7, 1996.  The suit had elbow patches that matched the collar, which was all the rage back then, and it was made of raw linen.  Pretty snazzy!  πŸ˜ƒ 



Saturday, I got back to scanning photos, even though I hadn’t gotten all the toys ordered for the grandchildren.  I could certainly get this done a lot easier if money was no issue!  😏

I threatened one of the kids with nothing but bookmarks made out of the sides of cereal boxes, but he just laughed at me.

Larry sold a skid loader that day to someone in McCook, down in the southwest corner of our state, 216 miles away.  He delivered it for an extra $250 – didn’t get home until 2:45 a.m.  He did stop and take a nap somewhere.  Oh, and he stopped in our garage on his way into the house and put the air condenser, etc., back on the Jeep so he’d be able to pull it the rest of the way into the garage, as it was about to rain.  Thunder was rolling and lightning was flashing. 

I was still awake when he got home, though I’d gone to bed some time after 1:00 a.m. 

The last time I looked at the clock, it was about 4:00 a.m.  My alarm went off at 6:50 a.m.  Ugh.

After church, Victoria gave us chicken, carrots, and a baked potato for Loren.  We took it to him, along with Tropicana orange juice and yogurt with granola; then we went back to Kurt and Victoria’s house and ate dinner with them.

We played with Eva after church last night.  She tries hard to imitate things I say to her.  She likes the little pictures I give her, which I cut from the back of calendars.  I showed her how to flip-flap them together, making a flapping noise, and she promptly waved one picture and said “Fap-fap-fap!”  She’s walking now, but carefully, and when she’s in a hurry and really wants to get somewhere fast, down she goes to hands and knees.

We found this little opossum on the back deck railing when we got home from church.  He’s having a feast on black-oil sunflower seeds.



I drove the BMW to Loren’s house again today.  That’s three times to Loren’s house, plus twice to church yesterday, and, amazingly enough, it hasn’t gone into limp mode once.  It will the very next time I drive it, of course.  I’ll get stranded somewhere; just you watch.

Now let’s see how many pictures I can scan before bedtime!



,,,>^..^<,,,          Sarah Lynn           ,,,>^..^<,,,








Sunday, October 24, 2021

Photos: Found on the Back Deck

 We found this little opossum on the back deck railing tonight when we came home from church.  He's having a feast on black-oil sunflower seeds.





Monday, October 18, 2021

Journal: Keeping on Our Toes

 


Last Tuesday, my bobbin tension screws arrived from Handi Quilter in North Salt Lake, Utah.  I happily ripped open the padded envelope, took a look, and thought, Aarrgghh, they’re way too small; they sent the wrong ones.  Nevertheless, I decided to try one – and whataya know, I was wrong.  They are the right size.  Wow, no wonder I couldn’t find that thing when it fell out.  The heads of those screws are barely an eighth of an inch across.

Screw in place and adjusted, I proceeded to load the pillow sham top that matched the Fairy Forest quilt I’d quilted the previous week.  And then it was time to call Loren and make him a meal.

By 7:00 p.m., the pillow sham was quilted, and everything was packed in a box ready for shipping.  



I gathered up laptop, cellphone, and coffee mug and migrated across the landing to my little office to scan old photos.  How many could I get scanned before a quilt arrived from Washington State?

181 photos, it turned out, as the quilt arrived two days later.

We had just finished eating when Hannah, Joanna, Nathanael, and Levi arrived bearing birthday gifts.  Hannah gave me this picture she found somewhere; it’s hand-embroidered.  Note the ‘Purrnina’ logo on the machine.  You know I love Bernina sewing machines, right?  😊  And cats.



Bobby came shortly thereafter to help Larry cut up the deer he’d gotten the night before.  Fortunately, I’d fixed the whole bag of Schwan’s Sweet & Sour Chicken with Rice & Vegetables, as he hadn’t had supper yet.  It’s described on Schwan’s website as “white-meat chicken with pineapple, green and red peppers, carrots, and water chestnuts in a tangy sweet-and-sour sauce over a bed of long-grain white rice”.  Yummy stuff.



While Hannah and the children and I chatted (and ate banana nut muffins and drank Alo® Aloe Vera Fuji Apple & Pear juice), I got all of Norma’s old family photos that I recently scanned – 1,262 pictures – loaded onto 18 new flash drives. I’ll give them to our children, Larry’s brother and his children, and Larry’s sister for Christmas.



Joanna gave me a pair of soft, fuzzy, white and lavender slipper socks and a big piece of vanilla fudge with caramel.  That fudge lasted Larry and me four days.




Late that night, it began thundering and lightninginginging (I never know when to stop, with that word), and soon rain started coming down.

My father used to open our garage door and stand there under the overhanging eave to watch storms.  I loved standing there beside him, holding his hand, watching the lightning, listening to the thunder, and collecting little pieces of hail if they came bouncing into the garage.

Wednesday, I went on scanning photos.  The album I’m now scanning is full of pictures of Victoria as a new baby – and here’s a shot of Keith with his first pickup, a 93 F150 Ford.  It was April 24, 1997.  Keith did a good deal of the rebuilding himself, with Larry’s help.  Larry painted it.



I sent a copy to Keith, and he soon replied, “That was my pride and joy of a truck.”

“It was a pretty one!” I said.

“Absolutely loved it,” Keith agreed.  “Made a good $10k profit on that, too,” he added.

He then sent pictures of the Utah mountains covered with snow.




“Beautiful,” I said.  “I’ve been looking at the snow reports... and I wanna be in the middle of it!”

“Ha, 😬” wrote Keith, somewhat disbelieving, I thought.

I added a disclaimer:  “Well, with a warm brick at my feet, of course.”

“This is Trappers’ Loop Road between Green Mountain and Huntsville, Utah,” Keith told me.  “It’s a steep mountain pass between towns that we haul a lot of concrete to.”  (He drives a cement truck.)

That afternoon after taking Loren some food, I took my customer’s quilts to the post office and shipped them off to Virginia.

Soon it was time for church, always a welcome break in the middle of our busy week.  I tucked several large, shiny postcards into my church purse for some of the grandsons, and also a cute little felt snowman.  It can be used as a Christmas tree decoration, and it has a pocket in front, too. 

The snowman was for Keira, as I only had one (found amongst Norma’s things a while back).  I tucked a little picture cut from the back of a calendar into the pocket.

After church, I doled out the postcards to Jacob (he got this one with a picture of a bright red 1955 Chevy pickup), Jonathan, and Ian; handed out small picture cards to Carolyn, Violet, and Eva (who generally has hers folded in half within five minutes – but she likes it, and that’s what’s important); and, as soon as there were no onlookers who might feel slighted, I gave Keira the snowman.



She was delighted.  Hester told me that Keira has recently taken a big shine to pockets, so this was just the ticket. 

The next morning, Hester sent a picture of Keira in her car seat, still playing with the little felt snowman.  Yep, I think I chose the right child to give it to.  😊

Victoria, Carolyn, and Violet came visiting that afternoon, bringing me a Strawberry & Rhubarb Pie scented candle, and two bars of handmade soap, one with Lily-of-the-Valley fragrance, and one with Wild Honeysuckle.  Those are three of my favorite scents (and flavors!) right there.  Mmmmm...



Like Bobby and Hannah’s children, these two love to read, and head straight for the bookcases after they come in and greet me.  Carolyn just turned four; Violet just turned three.




By the time I stopped scanning old pictures that night, I had reached a total of 21,251.

A quilt from a customer in Washington State came shortly before noon on Friday, bringing a halt to the photo-scanning. 

The UPS man came to the door... started to hand me the box... and then suddenly jerked it back and stared toward the floor.  Reckon he’d caught a glimpse of what he thought was one o’ them thar nasty li’l ankle-biters?  πŸ˜‚



I read the funnies while I ate a late breakfast. 

In the comment section under Calvin & Hobbes, wherein Calvin was scheming ways to take over the world, someone commented, “I’ve never understood why anyone would even want to ‘rule the world’.  We are such an unruly bunch.” 



The comments are often funnier than the comics themselves.

I went upstairs to my quilting studio to see how much I could get done before it was time to call Loren.  



When I called at 3:00 p.m. as usual, he said I didn’t need to bring anything, as he had plenty of food.  After asking what all was in his refrigerator, and knowing that I’d taken him a little more food than usual the previous day, I decided he would be all right, and got on with the quilting.

At ten after five, the sun dimmed a bit and I glanced out the window.  Over the hill to the northwest, a raincloud was spilling its moisture all over the valley.  I trotted downstairs with my camera, walked out on the porch to take pictures – and Tiger trottity-trotted right along with me.  If I went down the porch steps, Tiger came down them after me.  If I went back up those steps, Tiger clambered up the steps after me, even though it’s something of a struggle for the poor ol’ arthritic kitty.  I gave him a treat for his lovableness. 





Upon reading this, a friend on an online quilting group wrote, “Apparently, he needed the exercise and was afraid you might hurt yourself and no one would be there to help.”

Hee hee, yes, cats are always a great help and comfort.  If you hurt yourself or get sick, they come and stare into your face with such love and concern. 

(Except they’re thinking, Who’s going to feed me now?!) 

Tiger came indoors a little later and loudly and plaintively informed me that three or four sprinkles had fallen on his back.  However, near as I could tell, those were the only sprinkles we got; the rest of the little cloudburst went around us.

Someone from Wal-Mart called at a quarter ’til 8 p.m. – and I was not surprised, because I knew (by way of the tracers on his Jeep) that it was the third time Loren had been there in the space of two hours. 

The lady – one of the managers – told me Loren was there looking for his wife.  He said hed run over her toes by accident in the parking lot, and then she went off somewhere, and he couldn’t find her, and he thought maybe someone had taken her to the hospital.  The lady had called the hospital for him since, as usual, he didn’t have his cellphone with him.  Of course no one named ‘Norma’ was there, whether sporting squished toes or otherwise.

The lady then spotted my phone number in Loren’s wallet, and called me.  I explained the trouble.  She let me talk to him on her phone.  I told him he couldn’t have run over Norma’s toes, since she has passed away; shes in heaven (it usually helps to add that last part). 

“Everything is okay; you need to go home,” I said, and then asked if he was feeling all right, and if he’d be able to get home okay.  He was, and he could; but he didn’t like me telling him that, much. 

“Okay,” he said in a peevish tone before handing the phone back to the manager.

The lady then added her voice to mine, telling him all was well; he could go home now.  That convinced him (it generally helps to add another voice to the mix), and he went home.  I called shortly to make sure he was home and all right.  He was, but he didn’t want to talk to me. 

He said, Ill just have to talk to someone who understands. 

I asked if he wanted to talk to Larry; he said that would be fine.

By the time Larry called a couple of minutes later, Loren thought he’d been talking with Norma on the phone, and she’d told him ‘everything is okay’; he’d barely snigged her toes.  

“That was Sarah Lynn you just talked to,” Larry told him.  “But yes, everything is okay; you didn’t run over anyone’s toes.”

(At least, we hope he didn’t run over anyone’s toes.  If he did, they’re not saying.)

Loren wouldn’t listen to any of Larry’s reassurances or explanations.  Yes, he was too talking to Norma, and if he’s not married to Larry’s mother, well, then, he’s married to his sister, and now she’s at her daughter’s (or sister’s, or mother’s, or granddaughter’s) house.

Finally he said he needed to get some sleep, so they said goodbye.

It was long past his usual bedtime.  I wonder if he’d gone to bed once, and dreamed that running-over-the-toes scenario?  This happens with those who have Lewy Body Dementia.  They sometimes ‘act out’ their dreams, either while sleeping, or after awaking.

Siggghhhh...  We’ll laugh later; at the moment, it’s a bit too rattling.

We were thankful for the Wal-Mart manager who treated all of us so kindly.  She couldve just called the police, and then there wouldve been a heap more trouble, Loren wouldve gotten exhausted by the mess, and all of our heads wouldve been spinning.  We are thankful it turned out as it did.

Late that night, I made it to the halfway point on my customer’s Scrappy Time quilt.  I used light turquoise 40-weight Omni poly-wrapped poly thread on top, and cobalt blue 40-weight Signature cotton thread in the bobbin.  It sure takes a lot more bobbins when I’m using 40-weight thread, as opposed to the usual 60-weight Bottom Line thread – but this thread matched perfectly, and that’s the main criterion.  The pantograph is called ‘A Little Bit This’ by Barbara Becker. 



Saturday, Loren went to Wal-Mart again right before 3:00 p.m.  He usually remembers that I call him every day at that time, and that I bring him a meal at about 4:00.  Fearing he might continue the previous evening’s episode, I called Larry.  He was in town, so he said he would get Loren a Subway sandwich, then continue on out to Wal-Mart to look for him.

Larry didn’t find him at the store, though he saw his Jeep; but after a little while I saw by the tracers that Loren had gone home, and called to tell Larry.  So he went to Loren’s house, and visited with him for a bit.  All seemed to be well.  Loren had bought a few groceries, and was glad for the Subway sandwich.

A couple of hours later, he called Larry and started off with, Im over here in this house I used to own, and I’ve parked my Jeep in the garage...  (He was in his very own house, of course, the house hes lived in for 28 years.)  It was the same song, next verse:  he didn’t know where Norma was.  

Larry tried explaining.  “My mother passed away –”

Loren interrupted, “No, I’m not married to your mother, I’m married to your sister!” 

After a few more oddities with which Larry tried to either be helpful or ignore, whichever seemed best (one can seldom tell what might be best at the moment), Loren said, “I’ll just have to talk to someone else!  You’re all mixed up!” 

Before long, he drove west, perhaps thinking to talk to our nephew and pastor, Robert, or maybe our sister, Lura Kay.  But after traveling only a mile or two, he evidently changed his mind (or forgot where he was going), turned around, and went back home.

Meanwhile, Larry brought home the SD card from a new game cam he’d put up out in the woods where he goes hunting.  He asked me to put it in my laptop so he could look at the deer on my 17.5” screen instead of his small cellphone screen.

I plugged it in.  There were 108 pictures.  Three were of Larry setting up the camera and the deer feeder.  Three were of a deer strolling through (though not paying any attention to the feeder).  The rest were multitudes of these stripey-tailed, masked bandits.  πŸ˜‚  A couple of the pictures had caught six raccoons all at once.  So much for feeding the deer!




That night, on their way back from an event where they were selling their Lilla Rose hair clips/jewelry, Hannah and Levi stopped by.  Levi had bought something at another vendor’s booth – with his very own money –and he wanted to give it to me:  this tea towel:



I told Hannah about the recent twubbles and twials (Γ  la Caleb, age 3) with Loren. 

She asked me, “Do you think he’ll need to go to another home soon?” (meaning, some type of assisted-living home.) 

I said, “Well, he already thinks he’s in another home, so that part’s taken care of.”  

And with that, we all burst out laughing. 

See?  I said we’d laugh later!  And ‘later’ wasn’t as long coming as I thought.

It’s better to laugh than to cry about it; that doesn’t do any good.  And we pray, asking God to help us do and say the right things, and to be cheery and treat Loren as kind and loving as we would hope to be treated should we ever be in his circumstances.

One step at a time... one step at a time...

I finished my customer’s Scrappy Time quilt that night.  It measures 96” x 112” (there’s quite a bit of this king-sized quilt draped on the other side of that twin-sized bed).




When Larry called Loren in the morning to remind him it was Sunday, and tell him what time Sunday School is, he said he didn’t feel very good, and didn’t think he’d go to church that morning.

After the service, Victoria asked us to stop by; she had steak, potatoes, and carrots in the slow cooker, and had made enough for us and for Loren too.  We picked it up, played with Carolyn and Violet, and then took Loren the food.  We found him sitting on a chair on his back deck, enjoying the pretty day.

He’s always very appreciative for the food.  He thanked us, and asked us to thank Victoria for him, and even remembered that she is our daughter.  I asked him if he was feeling better.  

“Oh, I feel fine!” he told me. “I’ve felt good ever since I woke up!”

Huh.  Does that mean he went back to bed and then got back up after Larry called him?

Then he said, “That’s quite an ordeal to go through, when you know you aren’t making sense to anyone, and you can’t make it stop.”

!!  Wow, that’s the best he’s understood it (or at least put it into words) in almost two years.  Too bad it won’t last.  Anyway, we were glad he was {sort of} okay again, though he did forget to come to the evening church service.  Not that we reminded him.  On the contrary, we tiptoed softly out of the house for fear of jarring him back to nonsense.

Later that day, Jocelyn, Joseph’s wife, sent pictures from a wedding they were attending.  Justin was the ring bearer, and Juliana was the flower girl.

Loren came here a little after 12:30 p.m. today, looking for Larry.  He had a new pair of canvas and suede work gloves in hand that he thought were Larry’s, but they were the ones we gave him for his birthday in August.  I told him Larry was working, so off he went to Walker Foundations. 

Larry wasn’t at the shop right then.  Loren told our friend who works in the office that he needed someone to grease something on his John Deere riding mower.  Our friend promised to tell Larry when he returned; but it would be a while.

Loren wasn’t hungry when I called him at three, so I said I’d bring his food a little later than usual.  Then I rushed off to the post office to mail my customer’s quilt back to her.

I’d tried hard to stuff it into a smaller box, even using my vacuum, but couldn’t do it.  After endangering ribs and arms and shoulders, I finally gave up and found a bigger box, only slightly smaller than the one she had used.  So... instead of the $46 it cost her to send it to me, it ‘only’ cost $43.85.  πŸ˜‘  Shipping prices are too, too high these days.

Home again, I gathered together some food for Loren and took it to him.  There was chicken breast filet, potato salad, a banana, cottage cheese, pears, Greek yogurt, and apple juice.

He didn’t seem well.  His voice was weaker than usual, and he wasn’t himself.  I hoped the food would help.  He’d been better when he came to my house earlier.  Maybe he was bothered because he hadn’t found Larry, and Larry hadn’t been to his house yet to help with the tractor?  Larry did talk to him on the phone, telling him he’d come later.  Loren does not really understand that Larry actually has a job, and works, and gets paid per hour, and doesn’t exactly come and go as he pleases.  Well, sometimes he sorta does... but, still, he is an employee, even if his boss is our nephew.

After giving Loren his food, I put new batteries in the Moultrie game cam.  It’s so tight I can hardly get it open, and my fingers weren’t tough enough to tighten the strap and get the camera back in the place it had been.  It’s a bit askew now.

Here’s the first picture I took after Victoria was born that has all nine children in the same shot.  It was May 20, 1997; so Victoria was 3 months old.  In the order they are in the photo:  Teddy, 13; Hester, almost 8; Keith, 17; Hannah, 16; Victoria, 3 months; Lydia, almost 6; Caleb, 3 ½; Dorcas, 14; and Joseph, 12.


Victoria, 3 months


Six of our children have anniversaries in October.  I’ve been busy ordering gifts; everyone is now taken care of except Kurt and Victoria, whose fifth anniversary is on the 30th. 

It’s Keith and Korrine’s third anniversary in two days – and Korrine just tested positive for Covid this morning.  The girls, Keyara and Kenzie, tested negative.  Korrine doesn’t feel well, and can only taste food from the sides of her tongue.

I reminded Keith of the time when Lydia was about 3, and got a bad cold.  She was the only one in the family with it.  She told her Grandma Swiney sadly, “I’m the only one who has a cold! – I must’ve caught it from my dolly.”

When Larry went to Loren’s house this evening, he found Loren on his riding mower in the yard.  He could see that it was running.  Loren saw him coming, and climbed off to tell him that he thought the pedals must need greasing, because he couldn’t get them to work, so he couldn’t make it go.

As had happened with his bigger tractor with the enclosed cab, he had put on the parking brake and forgotten how to release it.  When Larry pointed out the problem and told him how to release the brake, Loren put a hand to his head in a ‘Good grief, how could I forget that!’ gesture.

Larry, feeling sorry for him, stayed and visited for a couple of hours.  Moultrie notified me of new images from the camera when he left.  I took a look – and found the camera was still askew; he’d forgot to straighten it up.  Forgetfulness is contagious, I think.

This is me at age one year, three months.  It was January of 1962.



And now I shall bid you adieu, and good night.  Tomorrow, I scan.



,,,>^..^<,,,          Sarah Lynn          ,,,>^..^<,,,