Saturday, August 15, 2009

DOINS



This morning was pretty busy. Started at 7:30 walking the east side of LaFortune Park from the library to 61st street and back to the library. Lots of walkers and joggers out in the cool of the morning. Saw a few jogging groups of 10 to 20 people. Lafortune has a number of walking trails around the golf course and some are shaded. We walk most mornings besides Sunday. This was our second walk at laFortune.

After the walk we went to the Savoy Cafe on S. Sheridan for breakfast. The Savoy used to be downtown. We burned about 200 calories walking and added about 500 in biscuits and gravy. Oh well.

Next we went to Philbrook Museum and spent the rest of the morning looking at the art exhibits. Philbrook was donated to the City of Tulsa by oil man Waite Phillips, brother to Phillips 66 founders Frank and L. E. Phillips. Probably one of the largest and most plush residences in Tulsa.

After Philbrook we went to the Walmart Superstore on S. Lewis for groceries and then home to collapse from 4 - 6 P M.

Tomorrow is Sunday. After morning worship we may go to the Olive Garden for lunch and spend the last of the gift cards we got for leaving Skiatook. Some people will go to any expense to get rid of you (lol) We have really enjoyed the gift cards and cherish the memories of all the friends who thought of us when we moved.

Next week is pretty empty so far. Stone starts to pre/pre/k Monday so we won't get to take care of him on Fridays until next summer. Maybe he'll be kicked out of school and we will be able to have him again. (lol) I hope he enjoys going to school but it's a thought.

Thursday afternoon I am scheduled to work at the church Food Bank. It's a good work that helps around 150 to 200 families a week who are in need of food. Each family that comes in gets two grocery bags full of dried and canned food to help them get by.

ME AND THE BOYS

MY TWO(GRAND)SONS




For those of you who don't have Facebook, here's a shot of Stone, Me & Ryan taken 08-14-09 at our apartment. We have been keeping Stone every Friday for some time but he will begin school Monday. Cole and Ryan came over to play with Stone yesterday afternoon. Stone couldn't wait all morning. It was a real blast to watch them play together.

Sunday, July 12, 2009

STONE


PIC TAKEN 7-5-9

Saturday, July 11, 2009

BUSY DAYS

Thursday we helped at the Food Bank at Park Plaza. Worked from 12:30 to 3:00. Helped probably 15 or 20 people with food.

Friday morning Stone came for the day. We went to McDonalds for breakfast. then we went to Hunter park on S. 91st. They have a lot of cool slides and things for the little kids to play on. They also have a splash pad with 6 or 8 water features. Stone had a blast.

After we got back home, Ellen took Stone dawn to feed the ducks and walk around outside. Doug had said that he, Shonn, Hunter and Stone were going to Branson Friday evening. Doug came to pick up Stone about 4PM. About an hour later Doug called and asked if Stone had taken a nap. We said yes, about an hour. Doug said Stone went to sleep right after they got home. Guess he got worn out with all the going and doing with us.

Thursday, July 9, 2009

RYAN WALKS


MY GRANDSON, RYAN, JUST TOOK 4 STEPS UNASSISTED. COURSE STONE IS RUNNING ALL OVER THE PLACE. HE'S 2 1/2. IT'S GONNA BE KATY BAR THE DOOR NOW. I TOLD NICHOLE (RYAN'S MOTHER) TO REMINDED ME IN SIX MONTHS HOW EXCITED SHE WAS WHEN RYAN STARTED WALKING.

Monday, July 6, 2009

NOW AND THEN 7/6/9

Things are slowing down now. We got to keep Stone Friday. Saturday evening we went to Doug's in-laws house for burgers and then went to watch fireworks display near the River Walk. Sunday was nice. We picked up a lady from our congregation who doesn't have transportation who uses a walker and has numerous physical problems. Went to Qdoba's for lunch with Nichole & family. Sunday afternoon I had a bout of Montezuma's revenge and so I stayed home from evening worship. Ellen said it was very good. Today Ellen, Cole & Ryan went to the Oxley Nature Conserve by the Zoo. Ellen wasn't impressed. I stayed home just in case the Aztecs made a return visit. Little queasy but made it O K. Weather has been nice the last few days but it is forecasted to be around 100 this weekend.

THEN

That wagon became my treasured possession for many years and I had many thrilling rides down the steep hill road to the west of our property.

The wagon did cause me some discomfort once when I was six or eight years old. My father and brother had torn out the flue, a brick chimney to which you could attach a stove pipe for a wood stove, on the north side of the house between the two large juniper trees. The brick lay in a big pile in the front yard. Mother said she would give me two dollars (no small amount at a time when you could go to the movies for a dime)to move and stack the brick in the back yard.

Not being an industrious individual, I was not overly excited about the task. I did however understand that my mother's proposition was was actually "do it for two dollars or do it for nothing but you will do it!" It must have taken the better part of a month and much griping from my mother for me to earn the two dollar.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

GOD BLESS AMERICA


NOW
It's the 4th of July 2009, 233 years after the establishment of "One Nation Under God". The "under God" part came almost 200 years later but the idea is in the writings of the writers of the Declaration of Independence and other papers and statements of the time.

Today we wonder how much longer we will remain a nation under God and ultimately a nation at all.

But today I will enjoy the blessings of liberty promised to "ourselves and our posterity (that's you and me) given by God for as long as it lasts.

We have been so blessed in being able to have most of our children and grandchildren close and also enjoy the blessings of being able to be retired and foot loose.

Last week we saw Nichole and her "boys" and Nic and Christa. We checked on getting involved in some work at church (food pantry & remodeling youth room) and continued our walking regimen

This afternoon we are going to Doug's in-laws for burgers and to watch the fireworks displays.

God has continually blessed our lives in amazing ways and for no justifiable reason on our part. He does it in spite of us. It's a love without end amen!

THEN
(not our house, just a picture)

As stated before, our "new" farm house can only be described as "rustic". We often called it six rooms and a path (viz: Mother & the wasp). There were no "conveniences". No electricity, gas, no in-door plumbing, and no insulation other than the linoleum on the kitchen floor and water-stained wall paper on the walls and ceilings.

When my maternal grandmother "Mama Wright" came to visit us before I started to school, she would entice me to take a nap in the afternoon by laying on the bed with me on our backs and, like children on a summer hill, and look at the multi-shaped water-stains on the ceiling wallpaper and imagine them to be people, animals, cars, ships and other things.

If I tend to repeat myself, please forgive me. I tend to wander sometime and insert memories when they come and then repeat them when they come up chronologically.

As I remember, it was a cold, grey, November day when my family and my mother's parents (Gaga & Mama Wright) went to see the new farm for the first time. I can still see the house as we approached it from the highway to Dallas, turning off at Havell's store at Corinth then on to Shady Shores Road for less than a mile, turning left at the Shiloh Cemetery and winding around to Jackson's corner, left again up the sandy road on the northeast of our land, past a grove of Blackjack oaks and Boise-De-arc (horse apple)trees that lined both sides of the road and then ... the house.
The Boise-De-Arcs and Blackjacks formed a curtain that hid the house until the last minute when it popped into view. The house was a grey, story-and-a half with two nearly twenty foot tall juniper trees flanking the windows on the front upstairs and down. In the front yard was a Chinaberry tree. The house stood a good two feet off the ground and was supported by tree stumps and stacks of large sandstone rocks. This made it possible to crawl under the house from any point and also for the yard chickens to find relief from the midday sun in the shade and cool sand under the house.

My early recollecions of the arrangement of the rooms in the house are confused in that I can't remember where the kitchen was when we first moved in. I believe it was in the southeast corner of the house. My confusion is due to the fact that the kitchen location was changed two or three times before the ultimate loss of the house.

The summer after we moved to the farm, I turned four years old. I am pretty sure the kitchen was in the southeast corner at that time with a south door leading to the back yard. On my birthday I came down for breakfast (Jimmy and I slept upstairs in the south bedroom and Sherrill had the north upstairs bedroom). Sherrill and Mother and Daddy sang "Happy Birthday" to me. Mother said they got me something for my birthday but I had to share the inside of it. About that time Jimmy came around outside to the kitchen door pulling a red wagon with a two-foot long watermelon in it. So I got the wagon and shared the watermelon with the family.




It wasn't just any old wagon. It was a bright red Radio Flyer with PNEUMATIC WHEELS! Most wagons and tricycles at that time had solid, hard rubber wheels. My wagon had wheels filled with air just like a car! It was one of my most treasured possessions in my childhood and one of my most treasured memories to this day.