Showing posts with label love. Show all posts
Showing posts with label love. Show all posts

Monday, July 18, 2011

Not to brag or anything, but...

...they turned out flippin' awesome.
  I think I might even like these better than the original.
Is it weird that I've been carrying them around with me all day?  I just like looking at them...

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Monday, April 4, 2011

Is it wrong to swoon over something you've made with your own two hands?

I hope not.  Because these make me positively giddy each and every time I look at them.

And these are having a similar effect.

Sunday, May 9, 2010

A mini-Mother's Day moment

Rachmy crept up behind me early this morning while I was washing dishes.  He wrapped his arms around my waist and planted a big kiss on my left hipbone.  "I love you, Mommy, " he whispered.  "Now I've gotta go watch my fish."

Sunday, January 24, 2010

With all my heart, I love this poem.

After Our Daughter's Wedding - by Ellen Bass

While the remnants of cake
and half-empty champagne glasses
lay on the lawn like sunbathers lingering
in the slanting light, we left the house guests
and drove to Antonelli's pond.
On a log by the bank I sat in my flowered dress and cried.
A lone fisherman drifted by, casting his ribbon of light.
"Do you feel like you've given her away?" you asked.
But no, it was that she made it
to here, that she didn't
drown in a well or die
of pneumonia or take the pills.
She wasn't crushed
under the mammoth wheels of a semi
on highway 17, wasn't found
lying in the alley
that night after rehearsal
when I got the time wrong.
It's animal. The egg
not eaten by a weasel. Turtles
crossing the beach, exposed
in the moonlight. And we
have so few to start with.
And that long gestation—
like carrying your soul out in front of you.
All those years of feeding
and watching. The vulnerable hollow
at the back of the neck. Never knowing
what could pick them off—a seagull
swooping down for a clam.
Our most basic imperative:
for them to survive.
And there's never been a moment
we could count on it.

"After Our Daughter's Wedding" by Ellen Bass from Mules of Love. © BOA Editions, 2002.