Search all posts
My Sister Ellen
My sister hated me. Was it my brilliance that turned her against me? Or was it that time when I encourage her to stick raisins up her nose and my mother had to dig them out.
My Wedding
But back to my preparations for what would be my first and only wedding. So far. No morning of pampering, no make up artist or hair stylist, no decent shower because everyone had taken a shower before me and the water was COLD!.
Telling Stories
My parents never read to me when I was a child, but I knew books were important.
Don’t Kill the Dream
Art. I still remember our art teacher’s name. Mr. Shubert. He was a very nice, mild-mannered man, but he never recognized my talent. I had the distinct impression he thought I didn’t have any.
The Great Escape
My father’s parents were immigrants from Eastern Europe. Despite the fact that my father topped six feet, his father was five feet two and his mother barely five feet. In fact, all seven children were taller than the parents.
Of Me I Sing
Why do they no longer have music classes in schools? All of us in kindergarten had to purchase a flutophone and learn to play the scales and a few simple tunes.
The Block
Passing through Oneida, New York, I stop the car where I always stop, in front of the apartment house on Sconondoa Street that bears the name “Paul” on its keystone. Even now I can see my grandfather, with his watery blue eyes, his body bent double due to polio, standing on the stoop, tilting himself backward, waving at me. Would that he were still with us, the man whom I loved with all my heart.
My House is Falling Apart and so am I
Does anyone else have nightmares about their house? Last night—and may I say I never sleep through the night anymore—I had several fleeting dreams, mostly about the house. I cannot remember most of them. They leave me anxious and forlorn. But the one I do remember is about my garage door. It wasn’t working.
Did I Do Right By Them?
But they’re gone, both Greta and Shelia, and I doubt whether they’ll make a reappearance in any other form. But who knows?
Give Us A Name—But Only One
Hard to believe perhaps but I’m a latecomer to the classics. In fact, it was a college roommate my freshman year who introduced me to the “Messiah.”
I’m an Old Woman
Like most seventy-nine-year-olds, I tend to feel as if I’m in my thirties, forties on a bad day. So when reality smacks me in the face, my tendency is to snarl and fight back. However, when our guide in Valencia was extolling the values of Spanish ham and I thought he was talking about Spanish hats, I know there’s a problem
The Cruise That Wasn’t
Our flight from Chicago to Munich went well. All we then had to do was transfer from that international flight to a local flight to Venice. Too bad about the buses Lufthansa had on offer to take us between connections.
Being Short—and Shrinking
I reached the gigantic height of five feet two during the age of my most profusive bloom. Now that the bloom is definitely off the rose, I’m five—uh, five feet nothing. I could really use those two inches back.
The Toilet Situation
Does a single woman living alone in a three-bedroom house really need three toilets with bidet seats? The overwhelming answer to that is—Yes, damn it!
The Cheese Is Unappreciated
As my physical ability declines, thanks in large part to a broken ankle, due to Lufthansa’s uneven steps on their buses, I reflect on a childhood full of snubs regarding my fitness as a team player.
After a Long Absence—Rain!
But I remember the rain. The rain on the roof. Lying in bed and hearing the comforting, cleansing rain.
Novels That May Never Be Finished: Part 2
Annabelle Bellmarsh was cursed by the men in her life.