Wednesday, July 29, 2020

A Lesson From Geese



It's a slow process but quitting won't speed it up.


The first time I stood over my son Daniel's gravestone I wished it wasn't so small. Sadness, coupled with regret, wove a shroud around me. “Don’t worry, baby," I said in the way a mama talks to her child's grave. "I’ll make things right. I’ll tell the world about who you were as my boy.”

As the March wind rustled over the last of the dead leaves from autumn, I made my promise. I would atone for not spending more money on a lavish marker---one larger than life---as he had been to me. I was a writer; I would write a book in his memory. Not just any book, it would be the kind that sparkles against a deep starry night. It would be brilliant and bold, honest and filled with the things he loved.

I wrote poetry about his soul being in Heaven, stories about the way he lived and the things he had enjoyed---watermelon slices, trips to the beach and mountains, watching Toy Story over and over again. Some of the poems were published. Articles I labored over about losing a child after cancer treatments ended up in bereavement magazines. I wrote some novels too and made sure each one had a character who had experienced a significant loss. I compiled three cookbooks in memory of children gone too soon. More time passed; my three living children grew up and left the house.

But the book I had vowed to write was still a long way from being completed.

The cemetery provided spring mornings for sitting and writing. The aroma of mowed grass and the songs of the birds that nestled in the oak by Daniel's grave all became part of my healing. But there was life on the other side of the cemetery that called me and took my time. My husband and I had a wood-working business and there were orders to fill, sanding, and staining to do. When I made time to write, the words that I typed felt bulky and weighted. Writing a memoir was more difficult than writing a novel. I wanted to get the facts right and poured over articles by memoirists about emotional truth.

When I woke during dark mornings at two, I thought about how I could tailor the book and make it shine. But it didn't shine, it didn't even glow. My inner critic told me to give up writing a book about Daniel. One day I was so fed up with it all I decided to listen to her. I went into the garage and found some wires and jump rings and things that I'd stored in a box from previous years when I made some very sad looking earrings. I looked online on how to make necklaces with beads. And one afternoon when business was slow I made a necklace. And then I made another. I ended up making three necklaces. They were pretty and I wore them. But they were not my heart. They were just a detour to keep me occupied until I could figure out what I really needed to do to get my book into shape.



On an autumn day under a gray sky, I learned a lesson that would transform me. God used a gaggle of geese to show me the art of persistence.

When I arrived at the cemetery on that particular morning, across from the circular drive where I always park my Jeep, I saw a new sight, something I'd never seen before or since then at that location. Canadian Geese greeted me. A few walked in circles on the pavement. Others walked away from me as I approached with my camera. There was one who darted over to a grave. The overall consensus was clear to me. These creatures were confused, and as my aunt Mollie would say, discombobulated. None of them were in cahoots but all were cackling, wobbling, vocal. I took some more pictures and then decided it was time to get my pen and pad from my Jeep and sit on a towel by Daniel's grave and do what I came to do. I walked away from the noisy encounter and the screeching conversations I did not understand.

When I got to the Jeep, I opened the door and that's when I heard the most air-shattering sound. The ruckus made the entire cemetery come alive. I looked overhead because that was where the sound was the loudest. That's when I saw it. In a V-format, flying through the sky, were those discombobulated geese. I grabbed my camera and took a picture, but by then, the geese were far into the sky and just little specks dotting the gray.

When the cemetery returned to calm, I asked, "How?" How had those geese, who had been so confused just minutes before, were now flying in sync together in harmony with purpose and direction? Which one of them had given the sign that it was time to be responsible? Had one of them lifted a foot indicating that it was the moment to leave? A wink? Can geese wink? How had such a motley crew taken off in such a glorious formation?

I spread Daniel's Thomas the Tank Engine towel, and sat with legs stretched out by the tiny grave that I had struggled with all these years.

I picked up my pen. I wrote a few words.

I had begun. Again.

One more time.

My inner critic had even been transformed; she was now my cheerleader. "One day," she told me in that way that critics speak to us, "if you do not give up, it will resemble a gaggle of geese who have found their place after a morning of confusion."

To the untrained eye, the photo I took of the geese in flight doesn't look like geese. Some might mistake it for a crow, a drone, or a smudge on the print. But to me, it is one of the tangible items I view to show me not to give up. Persistence is what we have to put on every day, if we want to pursue what is ours to do.




Monday, July 27, 2020

Cooking With Author Jennifer Delamere



Today we welcome novelist Jennifer Delamere to the Patchwork Quilt Blog for my Cooking With Authors segment. She has a recipe for us and a new novel.

Take it away, Jennifer!


Crowd-Pleasing Quiche

Pastry for 1 deep-dish pie crust (never having mastered crust-making, I like the pre-made kind you can unroll, which is found in the refrigerator section)
1 1/2 cups (6 oz) grated cheddar cheese
3-4 oz diced ham (the more finely cut, the better)
3 eggs
1 cup heavy cream
1/2 cup milk
1/2 teaspoon powdered mustard
1/4 teaspoon black pepper (or more, according to taste)
1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper (or dash of hot sauce)
1/8 teaspoon salt (optional) (I like Lowry’s seasoned salt)

Arrange pastry in a 9-inch, deep-dish pie pan. (I like to use a glass pan.) Spread the cubed ham evenly over the bottom. Spread the shredded cheese evenly over the ham.

Gently beat eggs together. Blend in cream, milk, and seasonings. Pour over the cheese.

Bake at 375 degrees for 45 minutes. Remove from oven and let sit for 15 minutes before eating. (Waiting is the hard part! But it gives the quiche time to settle and firm up.)

Cut into wedges and serve warm. Enjoy a larger serving as a main course, or cut the quiche into smaller pieces to serve at parties. (For parties, I cut the pie into 12 slices. It’s always the first item gone at the potluck!)

Variations: For a vegetarian quiche, replace ham with gently cooked broccoli or other veggie, enough to cover the bottom of the pie dish. I have also used vegetarian sausage. Try varying the cheese for a change of flavor. This recipe is endlessly adaptable!




About the book

Since she was young, Alice McNeil has seen success as a telegrapher as the best use for her keen and curious mind. Years later, she has yet to regret her freedom and foregoing love and marriage, especially when she acquires a coveted position at an important trading firm. But when the company’s ambitious junior director returns to London, things begin to change in ways Alice could never have imagined.

For Douglas Shaw, years of hard work and ingenuity enabled him to escape a life of grinding poverty. He’s also determined to marry into high society—a step that will ensure he never returns to the conditions of his past. He immediately earns Alice’s respect by judging her based on her skills and not her gender, and a fast camaraderie forms.

However, when Alice accidentally angers a jealous coworker and his revenge threatens both their reputations, Alice and Douglas are forced to confront what is truly important in their lives. Will their growing bond give them the courage to see the future in a different light?


About the Author

Jennifer Delamere’s novels have won many accolades, including Romance Writers of America RITA® award finalist, a starred review from Publishers Weekly, and the Georgia Romance Writers Maggie Award for Excellence. Jennifer earned a B.A. in English from McGill University in Montreal, Canada, where she became fluent in French and developed an abiding passion for winter sports. She’s been an editor of nonfiction and educational materials for over two decades. She loves reading classics and histories, which she mines for the vivid details to bring to life the people and places in her books.


Connect with Jennifer.


Get a copy of her novel at Amazon or wherever books are sold.

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Cooking With Author Angela Caudle



Today I welcome Angela Caudle to the Patchwork Quilt Blog for another Cooking With Authors segment. She has a new book out and a recipe for us.

Take it away, Angela!

Angela: Cheesy Chicken Enchiladas is a family favorite meal in my house and gives our family a sense of comfort. My daughter is in the U.S. Air Force and she asks for this meal when we visit each other. The recipe is easy as 1,2,3!

Cheesy Chicken Enchiladas

Ingredients:
Chicken Breast
1 can of tomato sauce (8oz)
Salt
Pepper
Sugar
1 Package of McCormick Enchilada seasoning
Mexican Shredded Cheese
Flour Tortilla Shells
Olive Oil

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Cook chicken breast thoroughly with olive oil, salt and pepper in a pan. Add tomato sauce, the package of McCormick Enchilada seasoning, a teaspoon of sugar (optional), 1/2 teaspoon of salt and pepper (optional) in a medium-size saucepan. Whisk over medium or low heat until sauce is not lumpy for about 5 minutes. Pour tomato sauce over cooked chicken and stir over medium heat for about 3 to 5 min. Add chicken and sauce mixture to flour tortilla shells and wrap. Place in a baking dish, cover with Mexican shredded cheese, bake for about 10 minutes. Serve with sour cream and Mexican rice. Enjoy!




About the Book
This book is a collection of parables that will connect God’s word to everyday life experiences through five expressions; praise, position, perception, patience, and protection.

Our ability to make connections can involve deeply rooted experiences that help guide us through our life’s journey. Although not all experiences are good, the world is filled with expressions of God’s elegance, beauty, strength, power, and wrath. In the Bible, God used fire, water, wind, war, peace, and above all, love to express His love for us.

The Essence of His Expression is a collection of my private, personal and public experiences that the Holy Spirit cultivated over the course of many years with a desire to help others see and hear God in their own experiences.

About the Author
Angela Caudle is a graduate from North Carolina Wesleyan College with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Sociology. She received her Master of Education degree from Strayer University with a concentration in Educational Management. As a Special Education teacher for over fifteen years, she is committed to ensuring student growth through data-driven strategies and interventions. Writing is her passion and inspiring others is her commitment. She has contributed to community-based writing projects and enjoys blogging. She has gifted her gift to others through her very first book entitled: The Essence of His Expression.

Get a copy of The Essence of His Expression
Visit Angela’s website for more information and to purchase your copy.

Be part of Angela's upcoming book launch! I'll be there. Find out more at her website.


Sunday, July 12, 2020

Always Keep Good Tissues Around



The other day I was optimist as I worked on a different slant to my memoir, deciding instead of making it so Daniel-and-me-centered, I could make it more God-centered. I even thought that after twenty-three years, I could make the portion about intense grieving less fierce, because, after all, twenty-three years since Daniel's death has gone by. I wasn't that once-upon-a-time young mother who couldn't help but get nostalgic and cry over a grilled cheese sandwich or a little yellow raincoat with a frog on the pocket. I was not that mama who kept asking God "WHY?" I had adjusted.

And then today came along. This afternoon I spent time online looking for a mountain getaway for Carl, the boxer-dog Levi, and me. Church friends seemed to all be taking trips to the mountains and then when a neighbor walked by (keeping over 6-feet apart) telling us her plans for a family trip away, I thought it was time to convince Carl of my intentions. I'd been tinkering with the idea that Carl and I could head up to the North Carolina mountains and have a break from our home business. I could write the great American memoir and Carl could play with his new drone. Levi could gnaw on a bone.

Most of the listings on VRBO had their COVID-19 deep cleaning statements. There were paragraphs about how they adhered to the CDC guidelines on cleaning, using an EPA-approved disinfectant between customers. That sounded super safe to me.

Carl's never been to Asheville, and while the Biltmore isn't open, I figured that we could venture around that artsy city. I dived into looking at rental cabins, at their porches that overlooked mountain views, the nearby streams, even photos of black bears. And that was when the nice little planning of a getaway went into full flash-back. I was surprised that it took no effort at all. It was October 1996: I was in a rustic bungalow in the Banner Elk region with three of my kids and their father. Four-year-old bald-headed Daniel, in a blue T-shirt that covered the catheter in his back, was with Rachel by a stream. They were laughing together, enjoying the water running over their toes. With that scene in my mind, I was no longer excited about a mountain adventure; sadness swept over me.


The churning in my stomach went up towards my heart. I swallowed the lump that had formed in my throat. I didn't have to think about if I were in a movie what music would be playing. As tears hit my eyes, the Jazz playlist I had on played an instrumental version of Eric Clapton's Tears in Heaven. As if it knew what I was going through and what that song does to me. I closed all the browser windows. Goodbye to the cute cabins with crisp mountain ranges surrounding them. So long to imaging myself on a porch swing with a morning cup of Earl Grey.

I thought I could be normal. I thought I could plan like my friends and neighbor do. I called myself a fool for thinking that I could slip into suddenly being unbereaved, especially at this time of year. Daniel's birthday is next month. I always say you could be on a deserted island without a tangible calendar and yet feel that pang in your heart and throat as your child's birth date approached. There's no hiding from it. We mothers know these things.

So for those who wonder how we mamas go from happy to sad in the click of a mouse, this is one way it can happen. We are bee-bopping along, content, going to plan something or do something like normal folk do. And then, that trigger --- a song, a word, a memory --- reminds us that ever since our child died, we lost the ability to be considered normal. We function at a different level and the truth is that it often brings tears, loneliness, and isolation. We might be in a room filled with merry people and we might even have a smile on our face, and then, as quick as a lightning bug flutters across a summer lawn, we are no longer one of the merry.

Eventually Tears In Heaven reached its end. A happier song filled the room. But my heart and mind had not caught up to a mellow-Sunday-afternoon feeling again.

What saved me is knowing that I could write the scenario I had just experienced and post it here on my blog. I could share what had happened to me via social media and others would read and go, "Ah, yeah. I know." And that would suffice. Knowing that I am not alone and that many mothers can relate to this breach of normalcy somehow makes me feel less lonely.

I will get back to searching for a mountain place to rent. But first let me understand who I am and never be surprised at how even after twenty-three years I can still be caught off guard by tears. Parental bereavement with all its hidden characteristics never goes away. We just learn how to adapt to living with it.

Perhaps that's why my motto is: Always keep good tissues around.