“Not in Assisted Living (Yet): Dispatches from the Edge of Independence!

Welcome to my World---Woman, widow, senior citizen seeking to live out my days with a sense of whimsy as I search for inner peace and friendships. Jeez, that sounds like a profile on a dating app and I have zero interest in them, having lost my soul mate of 42 years. Life was good until it wasn't when my husband had a massive stroke and I spent the next 12 1/2 years as his caregiver. This blog has documented the pain and heartache of loss, my dark humor, my sweetest memories and, yes, even my pity parties and finally, moving past it all. And now I’m ready for a new start, in a new location---a continuum care campus in West Michigan, U.S.A. Some people say I have a quirky sense of humor that shows up from time to time in this blog. Others say I make some keen observations about life and growing older. Stick around, read a while. I'm sure we'll have things in common. Your comments are welcome and encouraged. Jean
Showing posts with label Read and Share MeetUp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Read and Share MeetUp. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

Whiny Wednesday and the Writers' Meet-Up



These past few weeks could only be described as boring-times-three, but that’s about to change. The second half of every month is when all my reoccurring social dates take place. If life was perfect, those dates would be spread out throughout the month but a little unfairness never killed anyone. Whining about it might not add to my happiness quota, though, so I should stop doing it right here and now. At least my reoccurring outings aren’t to medical clinics, caring for an elderly parent or other stress inducing life events that I left behind when my husband and dad passed away. ‘Boring’ can good. Not that I’m glad they’re gone. But, you know what I mean. It’s the living with the dying process of loved ones that I’m glad is in the past. Dad and Don were by far the most influential people in my life and I will always be grateful that they were both good, honorable people. My life was richer having loved them. However, love changes to another form when someone dies. It’s poignant instead of warm and fuzzy. It’s sad instead of smiles and sunshine. (One paragraph into this blog and already I’ve used three words on the writers’ list of no-no words: ‘little’, ‘but’, and ‘so’. Maybe I’ll make it a goal to use all thirteen before I’m finished. Stay tuned. I’ll let you know if I accomplish that infamous feat.)

Still, it’s almost the middle of August and with that date on the calendar I’m fighting with myself to keep the change-of-seasons melancholy away. Soon the school bus will be picking kids up at the end of the cul-de-sac, the leaves will start changing to a palette of colors I love in nature but loathe everywhere else and I’ll be collecting flyers off my mailbox from snowplowers. Look at me, I’m rushing my life away again instead of being in the here and now, enjoying the way the early morning dew sparkles as the sun threads itself through the White Pines outside my window. 

I read blogs written by women who enjoy their morning coffee by pools or in gardens and I think, why can’t I be like that? Why can’t I let the sweet, summer smells and sounds of early mornings help wake up my brain? Why do I have to start multi-tasking from my very first cup of coffee until bedtime? Recently, I realized I was watching an online video and TV plus writing at the same time. “This is crazy,” I said out loud, “pick one and go with it!” Do I have to wait until I’m imprisoned in an adult version of a highchair, drooling in my breakfast before I finally learn how to live in the moment, letting my senses drink it all in? By then, I’d probably bite some well-intentioned caregiver who’d be force feeding me. Hey Missy, I’d be thinking, can’t you tell the smell of bleach, urine and institutional oatmeal mixed together is making me sick! 

My ‘Write and Share’ Meet-Up group met last night. Only five of us attended and all we did was each read a couple of pages we’d written followed by positive reactions from the others. No cutthroat critiques from this group. It was a simulating conversation and the range of personal and writing experience we cover is amazing. One woman (my age) goes to writing workshops all over the country and is well-known in the local coffee houses that have poetry reading nights. A guy has a master’s degree in literature and where my vocabulary could fit in my hip pocket, he’d have to carry his around in an overnight bag. Two us who are self-taught writers who mostly write memoir type stuff. Three of them belong to more than one writing Meet-Ups. When I read a story about Don titled The Colorado Barstool Rancher the poet said, “I challenge you to submit that for publication. It’s just the kind of short story a lot magazines like Reader's Digest are looking for.” Needless to say, I went home wearing the compliment on my face.

As promised, as I wrote this essay I kept track of the thirteen words writers should avoid using at all costs: Little, but, looked, oh, and, just, very, tiny, then, and then, so, look, suddenly.  The ones I’ve underlined are the no-no words I used up above. Two of those words---‘but’ and ‘and’---I’m so addicted to using them they should go on my grave marker. “Here lies Jean, the Queen of Using Conjunctions.” ©

Thursday, May 14, 2015

The Beatles, MeetUps and Chocolate Cake



The co-chairmen of the luncheon that I worked on Monday and Tuesday sure knew how to organize and treat their volunteers. After we finished up the first day they treated us to a “Thanks, Volunteers” cake with ice cream and a goody bag to take home. That’s never happened the other times I’ve volunteered at the senior hall. Someone made the comment that they were setting the bar high and “I like it!” she added. It was a pleasure working for people who were so well organized. I could have done without the sinfully delicious chocolate cake and salty caramel ice cream but it’s not their fault that I can’t resist getting a sugar high whenever the opportunity presents itself. I don’t gamble, drink or spend money I don’t have on things I don’t need but I lack self-control when it comes to desserts that got withheld when I was a kid if I didn’t eat my vegetables. Yup, I’m blaming my mother. Isn’t that what we all do when we don’t want to take responsibility for our own actions? 

The "Write and Share” group that I got invited to took place at the library this week and it turned out to have been organized through the MeetUp website. MeetUps in general look interesting. You can organize one (or find one already organized) for just about anything you want to get involved in. Just go to the MeetUp website by typing your city and state into your browser plus ‘+MeetUp’ and a whole new world will open up. Within twenty-five miles from me, for example, are 266 MeetUp groups for things like: mushroom hunters (38 members), Bible study, dancing (269 members), sport fans of every kind, singing, book clubs in various genres, restaurant hoppers, walkers, quilters, women 60+, geeks (188 members), and 63 people are in a MeetUp titled “forage for food”---whatever that is. Since most of these groups meet in public places and you communicate through the MeetUp website, it looks like a safe way to meet like-minded people. 

There were just five people at the Read, Write and Share MeetUp I attended but two more are planning to join us next time. It was fun and a little scary reading an essay I wrote out loud. But it was well received as were the other pieces people wrote and read. One guy, 50 years old and back in college to study photo journalism, said he hasn’t written anything in many years. Two women (40 and 70 I’m guessing) have been writing and submitting things for decades and another woman in her sixties writes memoir stuff similar to what I write and I felt the two of us were well matched. The woman who organized the meet is very knowledgeable, is a skilled facilitator and set a nice tone for critiques. I came home from the session completely happy that I joined. Afterward, several of us got back on the RWS MeetUp web page and made comments. It’s like a mini message board for just our MeetUp group and I can see where that will enrich the group experience. I have the feeling we’re all going to get to know each other well.

Wednesday night I went to see the off-off Broadway production of Rain, a Tribute to the Beatles. It was billed as: “a live multi-media spectacular that takes you on a musical journey through the life and times of the world’s most celebrated band. Going further than before, this new RAIN adds even more hits that you know and love from the vast anthology of Beatles classics such as I Want To Hold Your Hand, Hard Day’s Night, Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, Let It Be, Come Together and Hey Jude.” I hate going downtown and I just won’t do it on my own, but going on the senior center’s bus sure made attending this event easy. They dropped us off and picked us back up within ten feet of the Performance Arts Center's main door and we had great seats, at a discount rate. And for the first time in my life I was glad I was wearing hearing aids because I was able to take them out. Was that show ever loud! And colorful---like living inside a kaleidoscope. It was surround music and color. 

I haven’t been to a live production of anything in this century and I loved the experience. The jumbotrons sent me into sensory overload. Their content was so artsy-fartsy beautiful, constantly moving and triggering many memories of times gone by---news clips, art, iconic Beatles stuff, audience shots from past Beatles concerts plus our own. The music was like listening to the sound track of my life. The center holds 2,400 people and we were all on our feet several times, singing and swinging the two-fingered peace sign. At one point during the evening I was sitting there completely happy, the whole place washed in bright lights and patterns that floated all over the place, including the audience, and thought to myself, If I knew I was going blind I’d want this to be one of the very last things I see. Needless to say my first experience at the performance center, seeing the Beatles tribute, was one of the coolest things I’ve done in recent memory. ©