Sunday, December 13, 2015

Socks and Shoes


            Two-and-a-half-year-old Joelle was not ready to end our family Christmas celebration.  Still hopeful there might be more presents somewhere, she pulled out the now-empty Christmas stockings, sat down, and put them on her feet.  Delighted with our laughter, she walked about the living room holding them up like hip waders.
            This is not the first time we have celebrated Christmas early to accommodate travel schedules.  Nor will it be the last.  And I do not mind at all.  In fact, there are definite benefits to celebrating early.  Just at the time when most people are frantically shopping, decorating, and baking for the holidays, I am peacefully done.  I get to soak up the wonder of the Advent season without the rush and hurry. 
            There is much to anticipate even after all the presents have been opened.  Advent is the season of joyful expectation as we remember the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ and look forward to His return.  I still remember the first time I heard about the Second Coming of Christ.  (Maybe I had not been paying attention at church as a child and as a young teen, or maybe it was simply not talked about.)  I was surprised and thought to myself, “Wow!  He’s coming back!”

            No matter your particular beliefs about how the time leading up to Christ’s return will play out, contemplating the certainty of that Second Coming should spur you on with joy.  No matter the trials and tribulations ahead, we know the outcome:  God wins.  What better reason to celebrate, to share the gospel freely, to give generously, to serve wholeheartedly.  We probably won’t put on Christmas stockings like Joelle, but we can take Paul’s words to heart:  “Put on your shoes so that you are ready to spread the Good News that gives peace”  (Ephesians 6:15, God’s Word Translation).

Sunday, October 25, 2015

First Trees


        A familiar catch of wonder grips me as the colors--burnished hues of yellow, orange, and red—come into view.  Set against a green landscape, the first trees of fall draw me into the hushed and holy presence of Beauty.  Such artistry our God creates!
        Driving up and down Bartlesville’s side streets in pursuit of Saturday morning yard sales, I notice each neighborhood’s first trees:  the ones with crimson mingled in with yellow and orange.  Is red the last gasp of life before the crunchy, brown leaves that litter the lawns? 
        My morning of driving, then stopping, then driving again seems like an analogy for life.  I am following the signposts to each goal, but the way there is winding and unexpectedly full of wonder.  I enjoy the journey as much as the destinations, which yield their own surprises.  I rather like following signs instead of charting a route beforehand.
        And today I reap a multi-colored harvest:  pale blue summer dress, navy flowered T-shirt, and velvet green tunic top for myself; headband with a pink flower as well as a Hello Kitty placemat for my granddaughter; and Monster vs. Aliens for my family.
        After lunch and a nap, I take a walk through my neighborhood.  My predetermined route will last another week, I hope.  Once the leaves have fallen from my favorite first tree, I will no longer plan my walks to take in its glory.  Each day the red increases, working down from the top branches to mingle with fading yellow, burnt orange, and summer green.  After this tree’s last leaf falls, I will let the signs of autumn lead me to new adventures.
       
       

        

Friday, September 11, 2015

A Four-Pancake Morning

September 7, 2015
            The usual protein drink does not sound good this Monday morning.  Nor does muesli, oatmeal, or toast.  So I mix up the last bit of the Bob’s Red Mill 10-Grain Pancake Mix, which yields four medium-sized pancakes.  Along with my espresso-strength iced coffee and handful of morning medications, it makes a superb breakfast.
            As I down the last bit of my super coffee, I wonder how long it will be before my blood sugar crashes.  I can already feel the fat cells expanding.  In another hour I can take my morning nap.
            Truthfully, the last four days have been lazy ones.  I’ve been motivated to go to the store, babysit, and go to church, but not much else.  Hours slip by with nothing accomplished.  My problem, I believe, is acedia, referred to by the ancient desert monks (and by Kathleen Norris in her book of same title) as “the noontime demon.”
            Except that my acedia is not confined to the noon hour.  It expands to include the entire day.  The only problem with me labeling my utter lack of motivation acedia is that it is not entirely correct because the word refers to the listlessness and restlessness that can creep into the daily discipline of work and prayer.  You know, the routine gets boring.  I don’t work and I don’t pray nearly enough.  Besides, I don’t really have a daily routine other than eventually getting out of bed in the morning and back into bed at night.  Okay, I’m exaggerating.  I do shower, eat meals, and take naps.
            I’m thinking that I’m not the only person who deals with this acedia problem.  It seems directly connected to having too much time on my hands, which stems from being careful to not get too busy, which stems from needing to have plenty of extra space in my days to accommodate the fibromyalgia.  When your body has no get up and go, it’s easy to let hours slip by.  I don’t have a TV, but I do have a Kindle, and in the name of keeping my brain sharp, I waste a lot of time playing games.
            Why can’t I make the hours count by engaging in prayer and Bible study, or cleaning my dirty house, or writing, or practicing my flute? 
            That is an excellent question.  It even has motivating power.  However, before I ponder it more or take action, I am going to apply ice to my cramping back, try the pressure points for nausea, and then take that morning nap. 

            

Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Electronic Grief


It does not seem fair that I should experience a sense of loss over a shift in my electronic devices.  You see, I'm dealing with too much electronic change at once.  My desktop computer is showing symptoms of an imminent hard drive crash, and I've switched smartphones.  It doesn't take too much to rattle my sensibilities and challenge my abilities. 
It is far too soon for my desktop to fail, but there you have the risk of purchasing a refurbished CPU.  (I think that is the term for the box that holds all the circuits.)  Less than a year ago, I transferred all my Lenovo laptop files to this lemon of a desktop.  I have had enough crashes in my computing lifetime (since 1989) to make me very afraid of losing all my data--in my case, all those precious Word documents.  But I hate computer change precisely because I do not know what I am doing when it comes to technology.  So this afternoon, I meant to save my files to Google Drive (or is it Google docs)?  Instead, the only icon available to drag and drop my files was Microsoft's One Drive.  So that is where they went.  And it took a very long time due to my desktop's unreliability and my own lack of ability; plus, I triggered a MIcrosoft email alerting me to possible suspicious activity on my account due to my repeated sign-ins on various devices as I was trying to figure out what I was doing.  But at least now I can access everything--if I did not lose files in the process--on my Chromebook. 
At least the other part of my technical stress is a positive improvement:  a change of smartphones from an HTC One that never connected to wireless networks to a Sony Xperia Z1S that appears to do everything but my dishes.   Bigger screen, fast connections, confusing display:  fortunately, Sony remembers that some of its customers lack electronic savvy and provides a "Simple Home" screen option that I can almost understand.  It is reminiscent, I think, of the much maligned Windows 8 home screen. 
Still, the learning curve on using a new phone is rather steep for me.  Plus, I have a new phone number.  Given the option to change my number, I did, so now I am an Oklahoma local. But at least I am down to one phone again:  for a few days I was using both the HTC and the Sony while my brother was working out the details of the family plan switch from AT&T to TMobile.  Give me some time, though, before I customize my voice mail. 
Tonight I'm feeling a little nostalgic for that 360 area code and a little blue over the terminal illness of my desktop.  But I will get used to the larger phone screen and smaller Chromebook screen.  And I will learn my phone number and how to use OneDrive.  In the meantime, I need to load some toddler games for my granddaughter to my second oldest Kindle.  But first, maybe I'll read one of the recent free ebooks I recently downloaded to my Kindle Fire. 

Saturday, June 6, 2015

At Grandma's House


            Except for the very last thing Joelle does as I walk her home, we have a fine time Thursday afternoon.  She is very excited at the prospect of going to Grandma’s house.  As we stroll across the street, she makes conversation in her 2-year-old fashion:  “House?!  Piano.  Tree.  What’s that?”  She squeals in sheer delight as we open the front door.
            For the next hour and a half she keeps me busy.  Naturally, she wants to play the piano.  She loves to get up on the piano bench and hit the keys as well as carefully turn the pages of the beginner’s book I play from.  There is a little confusion over music terminology, though:  when she points at the notes, she says “pictures” or “flute.”  I decide to clear things up by showing her my flute and playing it.  When my back is turned toward my music and she is quiet, I mistakenly think she is a captive audience, but instead she is helping herself to my water at the dining room table.  She loves the straw, and fortunately the plastic glass has a lid.
            Another activity Joelle requests is for me to pick her up in front of the music stand and switch on the stand light.  “On” and “off” are still challenging concepts, so she always asks by saying “Light off.”  Smiles and laughter ensue as I switch the light on.
            When I tell her “no” to her first requests to look at pictures on my smartphone, we explore other pictures instead.  First, we look at the digital picture frame in my kitchen.  Again, I’m holding her so she can see, and today her interest is drawn more to the items on the windowsill and the bunch of bananas on the counter.  When she says, “down,” I comply and follow her back to my office.  There she stands in front of the full-length mirror and talks to herself, gesturing toward my desk and saying “computer.”  Usually it’s just “pewter,” so I happily note the extra syllable.  I hold her on my lap and we peruse her mommy’s Facebook page, which has plenty of pictures and videos of he and her brother.  Her favorite is the one of her playing the piano at my house.
            Now, before I go any further, you have to realize that I am imposing a false order on today’s events.  In reality, just about anything I mention here is done multiple times.  We move fluidly from one activity to the next every couple minutes.  Back and forth, forth and back.  Again and again.
            The toy room does not get much attention today, just a quick look through a couple books.  There are more interesting things to explore at Grandma’s house than the toys that Mommy periodically sends over.  Surprisingly, today Joelle neither asks to color at the table or to touch the seashell decoration that hangs from a ceiling hook in the dining room.
            She goes to stand in front of my closed bedroom door and says, “Room?”  As always, I answer her one-word question with a full-sentence question:  “Do you want to go into Grandma’s bedroom?”  She makes her usual reply, “okay,” adding an affirmative nod of her head.
            There are so many exciting things to explore in my room:  the chapstick, the eyedrops, and the hand lotion on my bedside table; the bench at the end of my bed; the half bath; and the array of items on the antique crates.  She asks for the items she cannot reach.  I get the stacking Russian dolls and we bring them out to the piano bench where she helps me take them apart, pretends to drink from the lower halves—which do look like small cups—and says, “Coffee?”  A little later she finds two cleaning cloths for my glasses as well as my arthritis gloves.  After she wipes her nose with one of the microfiber cloths, I make a mental note to finally wash it.  I put on one of the gloves, and she is entranced.  She holds out her hand, and I pull the other glove on up her arm; then, we wave at each other for a while.  She pretends to talk on the phone, gloved hand to her ear:  “Hello.  Mommy?” followed by her brand of gibberish that she uses so well to fill in the gaps of her sentence skills. 
            But the highlight of the day—after we share a banana—is the old lanyard she finds in a container on the lowest of my crate boxes.  It belonged to my sister, who worked at the University of North Carolina.  I find a small picture to put in the now-empty plastic casing, and Joelle is delighted.  She calls it “new” (I think) as she holds both ends and flings her arms up and down, stomping her feet in a dance.  I smile, thinking how my sister would have enjoyed this moment, so I decide to take a video of Joelle playing with that old lanyard.  Then we must sit on the couch so she can watch herself on my smartphone.  She finds parts of her playtime very funny, so we watch the two-minute video three times in a row.  Before the third viewing, I tell her that this is the last time and then we will go back to her house. (I learned recently that leaving my house is easier for her if I tell her when we are going and if she can take something home.)
            Today that something is the lanyard.  After we cross the street and start walking through the front yard to her house, she stops and reaches down for something she sees in the grass.  It is in her hand before I realize it is a bird’s egg, and before I can take it from her, she squeezes it hard.  Pop!  Rotten slime squirts out, hitting my hand, the lanyard, and my phone.  I get her to drop the broken shell and hurry her along to the front door.  The smell is horrible beyond words, and, I must add, doesn’t not wash off with the slime.  Dana gets Joelle cleaned up, and I wash my hands.  I grab the lanyard and my phone on my way out.  Lanyard, cell phone case, and protective screen are now in the trash.  I’ve wiped down the phone the best I can and have scrubbed my hands with dish soap and then with lemon juice.

            The lanyard is one of those little things I did not have the heart to throw away after my sister died in 2009.  I’m glad it had its last fling with my granddaughter. I hope that the rotten egg smell in both houses dissipates soon.  And even though our afternoon ended on such a slimy note, I am glad I get to enjoy my house through the eyes of my granddaughter.

Friday, May 15, 2015

My Dashboard


            My dashboard tells me I am doing an admirable job of engaging Ford’s EcoMode.
            And, I am sure, there are many more things it has to tell me that I have not discovered yet.  Without an owner’s manual, I am at the mercy of trial and error.
            I have navigated several times through the front display, where I can learn things like the odometer reading, the EcoMode use, the outside temperature, the current mpg (I’m averaging 31-33 mpg in town!), and even how many miles are left to drive based on what’s in the gas tank.  Those I understand.  But how to manage Trip 1 and Trip 2 is still beyond my arrow commands.  As is how to get back to the dashboard displays I want to see.  I’ve spent a fair amount of time sitting in my driveway or garage pushing buttons.
            At the center point of the dash between driver and rider are the temperature controls.  Those were pretty easy to figure out.  But it is all the buttons that have to do with the audio system that stump me.  So far I have successfully used the CD player and have scanned radio stations.  I believe there is a way to save the stations I want and possibly more options for audio use, but I haven’t gotten around to those yet.
            It took a dead battery and a demonstration from the Ford dealer to learn about the light settings.  The one marked “automatic” is the safest way not to leave the wrong things on.  I’m hoping that it also gives me the proper headlights for night driving.  So far I’ve been able to see.
            I have adjusted the telescoping steering wheel and the mirrors, lowered and raised the windows, found the door lock button, and used the turn signal and windshield wipers.  I have put gas in the car, run over a curb, and found that the paved alley behind the Dollar General on the west side of town was much narrower than I thought.  I have parallel-parked, angle-parked, and successfully navigated in and out of my garage numerous times.  And I have not been stopped by the police once, despite the “arrest-me red” color of my car.  Believe me, I am extra careful about following all the rules of the road.

            But there is still one thing I wish my dashboard would reveal to me:  the trunk-release button. 

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

A Little Chaminade


            A little Chaminade is good for the soul.
            Yes, Chaminade:  Cecile, that is.  Concertino from Opus 107 for flute.  It is a piece I performed in high school with able accompanist David See. 
            Back then, I focused on getting all the notes right.  It sort of, kind of made up for my thin, airy tone. 
            Now, I focus on producing the richest sound I can.  It sort of, kind of makes up for my many missed notes.
            Today, playing through the whole piece (and just about killing my embouchure), I emote through my flute.  What soulful music:  yearnings and aspirations and disappointments soaring through the melody and streams of scales and arpeggios.
            I am grateful for muscle memory, which allows me to play through music so long neglected.  I am grateful for music that expresses what words cannot.  I am grateful for God’s grace.

            I am at peace.

Friday, April 24, 2015

Past Her Prime



Priscilla Charlotte Johnson Lussmyer
April 24, 1927 – May 16, 2013

            Mom liked 83 best.  “A prime number,” she would say.  On her 85th birthday when I took her out to lunch, she proudly told the server she was now 83.  She stuck with 83 most of the time except once, when wondering why she was living in a memory care center with such very old people, she asked, “I’m only 73, aren’t I, Jan?”  She was quite relieved when I told her she was 85 (or was it 84)?
            So today I wonder what Mom would say about turning 88.  I am quite sure it would be a mathematically disappointing age:  in her mind, there would be nothing terribly special about being 4 x 22 or 2 x 44.  Here’s what I say about 88, though:  it is a fine number, though today it makes me miss her fiercely.


Wednesday, April 22, 2015

A Long Goodbye


            Type in “The Long Goodbye” and you find the 1973 movie and the 1953 novel.  Change it up to “A Long Goodbye” and you discover poems and memoirs about Alzheimer’s Disease.  Experience a long goodbye and you understand the grinding heartache stretched over weeks, months, or years.
            I’m thinking about long goodbyes this afternoon because I read on the Whidbey Presbyterian Church prayer chain that Bob W. has made the final journey home.  Debilitating health problems compounded by a fall that messed up his memory led to a year or so at HomePlace, the memory care center where my own mother lived from 2012-2013. 
I have fond memories of Bob.  He was the one who invited me to be part of the informal band that performed for the Oak Harbor senior citizen dances once a month. We had a fine time playing simple swing music with piano, drums, several varieties of saxophone, clarinet, flute, trumpet, baritone, bass, and a solo singer.  I was the lone female in the group, and just about everyone else was old enough to be my father.  Bob would joke with me throughout our practices and gigs.  At church, he always had a grin, a wisecrack, and an encouraging word for me.   
I am quite sure that it was a long goodbye for Noreen, nursing him through repeated hospitalizations and long recoveries at home until she broke her leg and could no longer care for him.  Her cheerful spirit always touched my heart—and still does.  She seemed to take in stride poignant developments such as when he thought that the skilled nursing care facility was a cruise ship and when he stopped recognizing her, thinking she was his mother-in-law. 
Long goodbyes are never easy.  I’ve experienced them with my sister and then my mother.  However, those last weeks and months when you know that the final goodbye is on its way have their own sweetness.  Each visit gets tinged with the knowledge that it could be the last.  A fleeting moment of recognition, a shared joke, a held hand:  all carry the sweet weight of love.

So, goodbye, Bob.  See you on the other shore.  Maybe we can play “Alexander’s Ragtime Band” one more time.  I’m pretty sure my mom and sister would love to join in, too.

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Music Memories


            I knew I had the right book when I saw “Bill Grogan’s Goat” in John Thompson’s Modern Course for the Piano:  The Second Grade Book.  A few weeks ago when I was sorting through the two boxes of old music that came with the piano I had just purchased, I was sure to put the beginner books in the piano bench.  Tonight I pulled out the Thompson book and started at the first page.
            A flood of memories washed over me as my fingers remembered the notes I had taught myself in elementary school.  I remember the clunky sound of our old upright player piano, which was long past the capability of staying in tune or sustaining any notes.  I remember carefully reading the instructions on each page and following the fingering.  I remember being puzzled when I tried out the sustain pedal and it did not sound any different.  I remember being sad that, according to my mom, the pedals did not work anymore.  Thus, I never learned to use them.
            It seemed a normal enough activity at the time, but now I marvel at my determination that I could teach myself to play just like my mother before me.  An elementary physical education teacher and divorced mother of four, she simply could not afford piano lessons for any of us.  If I remember correctly, I was eight years old when I started my quest.
            I eventually learned to play everything in the first eighteen pages, one song past “Bill Grogan’s Goat.” I worked on some of the later songs, but they were too hard for untutored hands.  And I never took piano lessons, though in college I took two semesters of harpsichord lessons just for fun. 

            So, tonight, as I worked my way through the music my fingers and my heart remember fifty years later, I felt homesick for those long-ago days when I was perched on the piano bench and my feet didn’t reach the floor.  If Mom were still alive, I’d be on the phone right now to tell her all about this evening of music memories.  

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Stray Phrases


            Stray phrases for writing have passed through my mind of late, all at times inconvenient to record them and see where they lead.
            Looking at my decrepit front yard yesterday and comparing it to the other lawns on my street, I was reminded of an old commercial, to which, of course, I had new lyrics.
            Here are the original lyrics:
            My dog is better than your dog / My dog is better than yours / My dog is better ‘cause he eats Kennel Ration / My dog is better than yours.
            It is entirely possible I have skewed the original lyrics, but for those of you old enough to remember this commercial, they should do.  Here are my new lyrics:
            Your yard is better than my yard / Your yard is better than mine / Your yard is better ‘cause you used fertilizer / Your yard is better than mine.
            I am trying my best to remember another fleeting idea that passed through my sleepy brain just before I got into bed last night, but unfortunately, since my brain cells were under the influence of Ambien at the time, they did not retain the phrase for me.  I even remember thinking I should write it down, but didn’t because I was so sure I would remember it.   

            My doctor tells me not to feel guilty about needing to take Ambien every night in order to sleep, but that does not keep me from getting groggy.  Perhaps what I thought was a clever idea really wasn’t.  At any rate, you are spared from reading it.

Monday, March 16, 2015

Confessions of a Former English Instructor


            I ate the whole jicama, and I can’t even pronounce it.
            I love the unaccompanied flute solos of French composer Charles Koechlin, and I do not know how to say his name.
            I’ve always loved Kate Chopin’s short stories, but her characters’ names are beyond me. The same goes for Russian novelists such as Tolstoy and Dostoevsky, but for them I have an additional problem:  I cannot keep track of who’s who in Anna Karenina and The Brothers Karamazov.
            I mispronounce English words even though I was a college English instructor.  The time a student corrected me on the pronunciation of hyperbole was embarrassing, to say the least.
            And, if a person’s name is foreign to me—well, I always give it a German twist.  That does not work well for Japanese names, or Spanish names, or any names other than German names, for that matter.
            Writing is safer than speaking, because even if I cannot say a word correctly, I can usually spell it if I’ve seen it.  Even onamatoepia.
           

            

Saturday, February 14, 2015

Complaints


            I’m getting tired of her.
            She sleeps a lot and leaves dirty dishes in the sink.  She wastes lots of time on silly YouTube videos.  She forgets to plug in the Chrome book and spills crumbs on the couch.  Her tossed Kleenex don’t always land in the wastebasket.  She spent two days in her jammies, and one day she didn’t even wash her hair.
She was extremely annoying before she realized she was sick with something or another, all that moaning and groaning about the pain.  Naturally, she did not realize she needed to see a doctor until after business hours.  By then, she was reduced to lying on the couch muttering, “Oh God, oh God,” and wondering if she would become delirious from the fever.  Or maybe she had already been delirious the two sleepless nights before when she was chilled to the bone and never once considered she might be running a temperature.
            She started to get a little less tiresome when she finally picked up a book again.  She knew it was a good sign that she could concentrate to read rather than staring off into space.  After another day, she finally took care of those dirty dishes.  She realized that she was beginning to walk instead of shuffle and that the dizziness had subsided.  She tried her hand at a few simple household tasks.  But she wasn’t ready to do her taxes yet because her brain still felt more unreliable than usual.  She finally got so sick of reclining in the recliner that she walked into her messy office, sat in her office chair, and wrote these words:

          “I’m getting tired of her. . .”  

Friday, January 9, 2015

What To Do?


            Something didn’t sound right.
            Turning away from the sink, I saw that the toilet had flushed but now was filling with water.  I lifted the lid, took a closer look, and panicked.  Hastily setting the tank lid on the floor, I watched the inexorable rise of water, almost to the rim now. 
            I took a guess and pulled up the chain.  Wrong move.  The water became a fountain, spilling over the brim, cascading onto the tiled floor, following gravity down the two inch lip between half bath and bedroom floor.  I immediately dropped the chain, but the water kept coming.  What to do?  What to do? 
            A long-unused bit of information found its way to my shrieking brain, and I reached behind the chain to pull up the float.  The fountain ceased, but the spilled water kept its quick course into my bedroom on those beautiful hardwood floors.  I let go of the float; the flood renewed.  I grabbed the float and tried to think.  Clearly I needed help.  Hoping to wake my son at the other end of the house, I hollered as loud as my post-bronchitis voice would allow but to no avail.
            There I stood in a good half inch of water, watching it fan out into the bedroom.  What to do?
            And then I remembered the water turn-off valve, you know, the one at the back of the toilet.  I thought back to my garden-watering days on Whidbey Island and my brother’s words:  “Righty, tighty; lefty, loosey.”  Maintaining my death grip on the float with my right hand, I bent down to turn the valve to the right with my left hand.  I turned and turned and turned and finally it was off.  Gingerly, I let go the float and nothing happened.
            I had already slid the throw rug to the bathroom threshold and tossed my bathrobe on the bedroom floor. Now I raced to the hall closet for towels to mop up the mess.  As I cleaned up the lake under my bed, I noted that it had been a long time since a dust mop had visited those nether regions.  Once the hardwood was dry, I made quick work of the bathroom floor.  And then I called the plumber.

            Five hours and $120 dollars later, I started a load of sopping wet towels in the washer and counted my blessings, the chief of which was that the toilet had flushed completely before it became a fountain.

Friday, January 2, 2015

A very late Christmas 2014 letter . . .

On Thanksgiving Day, the decorating and gift-wrapping were done.  On December 11, I celebrated an early Christmas across the street with my family.  On December 19, the Hemmingers left for Christmas with Shawn's family in Minnesota.  On December 21, I got sick with the flu, which morphed into bronchitis.   Today, January 2 I'm still sick. 
But I have great news to share:  Dana is expecting!  Her due date is my 60th birthday.  Something tells me that additional babysitting is on my horizon . . . It has been such a blessing this past year to be a part of my grandchildren's lives.  Benjamin, now 5 1/2, enjoys his second year of four-year-old pre-school and has lost his first two baby teeth.  His smile and hugs light up my life.  Joelle, who turns two in February, started out by calling me "Diva" just once, and now has settled on "Gandma."  She is going to be quite the talker. 
In addition to full-time teaching (special ed. language arts), Shawn helps pastor New Expression Church and is working on graduate credits to get his permanent teaching certification.  Dana stays busy with home and children--and she self-published her first book this year, Reflections from Holland:  A New Mother's Journey with Down Syndrome. 
Joseph moved here from Colorado Springs at the end of June and lives with me.  He continues work on a B.S. degree in I.T. with a software emphasis.   
I've self-published two books this year (Three Corners Has My Cat:  Caregiving in Alzheimer's Time  and Random Reflections;  2008-2013) and have settled into life in Bartlesville.  Oh, yes, I still miss Whidbey Island, but this has been a very good first year in Oklahoma.  At Good Shepherd Presbyterian Church, I serve on session, assist with worship, sing in choir, play my flute, and write for our newsletter.  I'm on the pulpit supply list for Eastern Oklahoma Presbytery, and have started speaking for Stonecroft Ministries again. Various opportunities to play my flute in concerts have popped up, and I am looking forward to playing with the Bartlesville Symphony Orchestra in the January 17 concert, filling in for another flutist. 
In April and again in July, I spent two weeks on the island, enjoying family and friends and church and the magnificence of nature.  In May, I attended the Oklahoma Writer's Federation writing conference in Oklahoma City.  Later that month, I enjoyed a visit from a good friend from Grinnell College days.  And in November, I took the train to Austin to spend a weekend with longtime friends from my high school days.   
All that makes it sound like I'm perpetually busy, but really, I am not.  My idea of a full day is to have something scheduled for part of it (go to Bible study . . . visit a friend . . . attend a rehearsal . . . volunteer at The Journey Home hospice).  I am irretrievably spoiled by the slower pace of retirement and looking forward to my seventh year in the slow lane! 
Blessings to each and every one of you in 2015, 
Janis