I met some friends over the weekend to catch up. We’ve all been off doing our own thing for quite a while. Yummm – white sangria!
Category: Life
Peaceful, easy feeling.
The urge to purge.
After mom’s funeral, I stayed on another month, expressly to help sort through the myriad of papers and things. It took that long because there was so much to look through, and also because I looked at each thing. Some things documented a memory of my mom & dad’s. But many also documented one of my own memories – each of which I relived as I uncovered something new. In the end, the task was completed. What was left was no small pile of boxes of papers that needed to be shredded. I googled “mobile shredding service” and found one that would come to a residence with a shredding truck and shred all documents right then and there in the presence of the customer. We had enough to fill a 100 gallon bin, and it cost around $130. Not bad.
Now that I am home I, too, feel a need to purge the boxes of records documenting the last 30+ years of my own life. And so, I’ve begun. I started with the oldest first. And, I think perhaps that was not the most expedient approach, because I find my progress slowed by the recall of long buried memories as I looked through each item I’ve saved:
- Transcripts from college documenting the high and low points of my academic journey.
- College medical bills for stress induced stomatitis, birth control pills (ironically), mono, painful dental work and… the mumps, no less.
- Plane ticket receipts for every back and forth leg of my life’s path, so far.
- Student loans and paystubs from jobs to help me barely get by.
- Car repair invoices for the junkers that got me from one place to the next until I could afford a real car.
- Applications to graduate schools; knowing now, but having no idea back then, what the profound impact that choice would make on the direction of my life.
- Phone bills showing in detail each and every call I made home….every couple of days…some for just a few minutes, some for a half hour or more. Records that bear witness to my committment to keep a close relationship with my family over the years. This especially touched me because when I came across the annual Christmas letters my mom sent out after I had gone off for college, in the blurb where she wrote about what I was doing, she would always add her wish that I would be moving back to be near the family. Which I never did. And that still makes a part of me sad.
- Graduation documents, job interview letters and interview trips. Job offer letters from some prospective employers. The letter of the job offer I eventually decided to accept, which took me even farther from home, and further wove the fabric of my future.
- Bank statements from a variety of banks, different ones as I moved from one place to the next – one showing all the money that I had to my name (unpaid student loans not withstanding) on my first day of work of my professional career: $1067. I must confess that seeing that got the tears rolling for me. I was simply overwhelmed at how far I have come from that day, and the staggering amount of hard work it has taken to live my American dream. I had forgotten. It also reminded me of how my father and my mom’s father immigrated to this country on their own life journies, each with a hundred or so dollars in his pocket, to live out their American dreams.
I’ve gone on too long. But I guess the point is that they don’t call it a “purge” for nothing. The process of purging those papers from your past can end up being an emotional purge as well. So, if you’re up for it, join in, grab some kleenex, and find a mobile shredding service near you.
Bubbly and pinochle.
Happy Champagne Day!! My calendar tags August 4th every year for this bubbly celebration. Google also lists various other champagne-related days in October and December. I, for one, will celebrate them all!
We sipped as we played a few rounds of pinochle with these nifty vintage cards – found in the time capsule.
Fair city.
My seat for my flight home on Saturday was on the side of the plane that usually faces away from Mt. Rainier. So, I was happy to hear the pilot announce that we would be taking off to the west and flying around the city, due to the fact that Seafair was underway and the airshow that accompanies it over Lake Washington. It turned out that I was treated to the most beautiful views on the way up after all. Thanks, Mom. 🙂
This shot is taken looking to the south east. Queen Anne Hill is the treed hill to the lower left. Lake Union is above it. Downtown is in the center of the picture. Elliott Bay is to the lower right. Above downtown is the south end of Lake Washington, and the wispy loops of smoke to the right of the I-90 floating bridge are from planes in the airshow flying over the hydroplane race course. And, of course, Mt Rainier watching over it all – Mount Adams poking out to its right. If you look closely you can find the Space Needle, Seattle Center, CenturyLink Stadium and Safeco Field, Boeing Field, Elliott Bay Marina, among other landmarks.
I love this town.
B’bye.
Goodnight.
Monday Monday.
Time capsule.
We spent a long weekend together – my sisters, brother and me. Time to empty the house. We stayed at mom’s house together and shared feelings, memories, and laughs while going through a lifetime of keepsakes and all manner of things.
A poem I wrote at age 12:
The Tide.
Pouncing endlessly on the weary, defenseless shore of sand and rocks. Constantly charging and retreating, high tide or low. The tide never sleeps, but sometimes weakens to a slow, silent creep. Always bringing in waves that turn into a frothing, white foam. The shore can never rest from this endless beating; never.
Yeah. It’s not Shakespeare. 🙂 I found a number of my poems – long forgotten. Ironically many are about some aspect of Nature. But maybe that’s not ironic after all.
So much stuff. Preserved in time for 50+ years. Birth announcements, funeral prayer cards, decades of pictures, letters, cards, gifts, momentos… points in time defining the lives of my mom and dad and all they held dear.
1st or 2nd grade, maybe?
But I digress. We made a dent in it and have a garage full of neatly packed bags and boxes for donation, shredding, recycling and trash.
I spent the day today with Fran and kids – geocaching in what turned out to be a downpour. We got soaked but found every cache in the park. At one point we came across 3 big woodpeckers. They didn’t sit still, so I didn’t get much of a shot. But, here ’tis.
I wish you all a peaceful week.
Playing in paradise.
Monte and I joined 2 of my sisters, brother-in-laws, and 3 nieces/nephews for a weekend of fun on Lake Cushman. It sits just east of the Olympic mountains in Washington State. The lake temps were in the 70s and clear, sunny and in the 90’s above. Just beautiful. We kayaked, tubed, ran up the lake by motorboat, tried the rope swing, tent camped, played games, and just had a really great time together.

















