Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Kath's Cat

Shared an apartment with Kath right after high school.  Wasn't the last time I roomed with her, actually ... eventually we went off to college & shared a space there, too ... and over the years her love of cats finally rubbed off on me.

However, in 1970 I'd never had the pleasure of knowing a cat before, and Kathy's cat took a particular disliking to me, because I expected cats to RESPOND to my wishes ... such as, "Cats do NOT belong sitting on the open toilet seat."

I was forever chasing the cat out of the loo (as you Brits say).  Kitty eventually got so she could hear me coming home, and would get down while my key was still in the apartment door lock, so that by the time I reached the kitchen (the loo was off the kitchen ... isn't THAT gross!), Kitty would be sauntering out the bathroom doorway, yawning at me all innocent-like.

Kitty KNEW what time I got off work (I got home sooner than Kath).  HOWEVER!

One day, I came home unexpectedly for lunch, and evidently I startled Kitty cuz as I reached the kitchen, I heard,

SPA-LASH, ME-YOW-OW-OW-OW!

and out of the bathroom came a streak of wet cat, lifting dripping paws in disgust with every step. 

I must say, I laughed my you-know-what off! 

  Sorry, Kitty. 

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Writers Block Challenge # 23


Stuff and Nonsense by Rani Kaye

(formerly known as “Mystic Poet”):

 

This should be a cozy haunt:

Up and down the stairs I jaunt.


If I try to walk away,

I’ll find I’m asleep, and stay.


If I try to reach "awake"

I’ll discover my mistake:

(Flying through here in the rain ...

Lightening out my window pane ...

Pelting teardrops o’er my head;

I am really still in bed!)


Have you ever dreamed you waked?

Took a walk, and couldn’t shake

Some fool notion you’re not there

But asleep in bed, somewhere?


If you do, just say a prayer!

And your spirit will recover;

Leaving dreamland, find the other

Place that is your true abode

(While the shades of death withhold

Your existence from the sky ...

In determined steps to try

To remember on which day

You assumed a shell of clay,

And were bound by time and space

To exist in but one place

Until time and space shall end --

Then you get to fly again!)

 

-- Poem by Rani Kaye, all rights reserved

Joy

"Weeping may endure for a night, but JOY cometh in the morning." -- Psalm 30:5 KJV

 

Monday, October 29, 2007

Yes!

Puh-leeez tell me all the work I did till 3:30 last night putting those pictures back on my blogs has made it through the night ......  E-YES!!!!! 

Happy day!

Later, y'all -- Time to earn my livin'!

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Yahoooooooo!

Oh, I get it!!!  I copied and pasted my photos (my very own photos!!!!!!) from my yahoo blogs into my Multiply blogs ... but they came with a nasty little yahoo link.  They looked just fine last night ... but today they are little x-in-a-boxes, and when you click 'em you link to yahooooey.  Blah!

Okay.  I can deal with this.  Give me some time.  I will fix all the blogs by re-posting the photos from my computer, instead of from (good riddance) yahoo.

And just when I thought I was all moved in and gettin' settled, too.  Sigh.

  Hee hee hee -- Look what I just snagged (with permission) from our Yahoo Refugee Group site --- Thanx Alan!

Stuffed Cabbage

1 lg. cabbage (scald to remove leaves)
1/2 c. brown rice (boil in 1 qt. salt water 10 min, drain, & rinse)
1 med. onion (dice & cook in 2 T. olive oil 'til transparent)
1 lb. ground lamb
1/2 lb. bulk turkey sausage
1 egg
1-1.2 t. Lawry's seasoned salt
1/2 t. garlic powder
1/4 t. garlic pepper
5 slices turkey bacon (uncooked)
1 can tomato soup, combined with 1 soup can of water

Spray roasting pan with canola oil spray. 
Combine the rice, onion, meats, egg, and seasonings in a separate bowl. 
Remove the leaves from the scalded cabbage, drain them, and then put the meat mixture into the cabbage leaves and roll them up like a cigar or something. 
Place the rolls into the roasting pan.  Top with 5 slices of turkey bacon. 
Combine 1 can of tomato soup with 1 soup can of water, and then pour this over the bacon-topped cabbage rolls. 
Cover the roaster with either its lid, or some Reynolds Wrap.  Bake at 350 for about 2 hours. 

Delicious!  Even little kids will eat it IF YOU DON'T TELL THEM WHAT IT'S CALLED UNTIL AFTER THEY HAVE TRIED IT.

Been strolling through the neighborhood

Got up early this morning, after staying here late last night moving my blogs over from 360 and MySpace.  Have spent the past hour-and-a-half strolling through the neighborhood, and trying to remember to say hi everyplace I go ... but I'm not very gregarious in real life (kinda shy) so remembering to comment is a newly-learned skill for me.

I have a recipe to post before the kids get up, but I wanted to say hi to y'all.  I LIKE it here on Multiply!  I LOVE the way the My Multiply page shows me all my friends' friends and what y'all are up to!  Makes me feel so connected and so welcome!

Well, gotta type out that recipe.  Got one grandson here for an overnight, and even HE loved eating this yesterday!  Youngest son, of course, is almost 17, and eats EVERYTHING!

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Picture Perfect -- Collective


The collective cousins' collective martian antennae behind the youngest cousin's head.

I TRIED to post this on my Yahoo360 page.  It disappeared into cyberspace.  Twice.  Welcome to Multiply, everyone!

Friday, October 26, 2007

Test Entry for Multiply

Well, here goes, I am starting to work on this new site.  Hope I can figure out how to copy all my blogs, photos, etc. from MySpace and Yahoo360!

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Entry for October 24, 2007

"Well done is better than well said." -- Ben Franklin, from Poor Richard's Almanac

Monday, October 22, 2007

S'More of my OLD poems

#1 "Too Many Poets"

There are too many poets
With nothing to say:
We look into ourselves,
We look out at the day.

There are too many poems
That get tossed aside:
They speak of the seasons,
They speak of the tide.

There are too many errors
In epochs of men:
What we've done in the past,
We keep doing again.

#2 "Eleven-fifteen"

It's tense, and tight,
And all we are is waiting;
With painful glances:
I at you, and you at me.

We would touch,
But fear is single,
And time ticks on.

STOP! STOP!

Oh, no, the end will come;

And our memories

Are only gray visions

Blurred with the rain.

--The above poem was written at 11:15 a.m., just before the bell was to ring, ending the last day of my favorite class in my last year of high school.

-- Poems by Rani Kaye, all rights reserved

Ok -- I've had it with the leaders who can't spell led!


Ladies and gentlemen of the journalistic profession: The past tense and past participle of the verb, lead, is spelled L-E-D!

I realize that the word spelled L-E-A-D can be pronounced the same as led ... HOWEVER, when lead is pronounced led, it is a NOUN! As in "get the lead out"! I feel
led to let you know that you should get the lead out!
 
Sheesh!
 
I won't name names. (Hint: I read my news online, in Grand Rapids, Michigan.) Hopefully you all know who you are. (Yes, I realize I should have put a comma after Hopefully, but I'm actually crying out loud here, and I wouldn't actually pause at that point in my speech, and so I am using my poetic license to omit the comma.) If I'm gonna misspell a word, I want to do it on purpose ... If I'm gonna use crappy grammar, I want to do it on purpose!
 
I sure do wish y'all would do the same! (I surely do!)

A Quiet Soul

Writer's Block Challenge # 22 (My first time participating.) :
 

Why would a quiet soul want a scary door?
This is not the door to MY heart.
If I close my door, it is only for solitude ... it is only to revive ...
and never would I want to terrify you away.

P.S.  If you ever see a scary door like this one,  I say slap some paint on it and plant some flowers!

Friday, October 19, 2007

'Nother One Squirrel Picture


Squirrel tricks on the whirly-jig that hangs on the walnut tree.

Watching for Squirrels


I'll tell you more about the squirrels. The guy who posed for yesterday's Picture Perfect post isn't the only squirrel who lives in my back yard. There's a little chipmunk-looking fellow, too, who's been here for a couple-three years ... and now he's got a runty little mate. I will have to try to get their pictures some time. Those two are TINY little squirrels, but they don't get bigger as the years go by, so I've realized they ARE NOT babies.
 
Anyway, squirrels live here for two reasons:
 
1. To eat, throw, tear apart, bury in the garden, and make a general mess with walnuts.
 
2. To taunt my cocker spaniel.
 
"SQUIRREL !!!!!" cries my son.
 
Dog HUUURLS self against sliding glass door.
 
"Woof ,woof, woof, woof, big-bad-I'm-a-fierce-dog woof !!!!"
 
Squirrel sticks out tongue.
 
Squirrel comes up on porch and looks in sliding glass door.
 
Dog HUUURLS self against sliding glass door.
 
"Woof ,woof, woof, woof, big-bad-I'm-a-fierce-dog woof !!!!"
 
Squirrel munches walnut. Sticks out tongue at dog.
 
Sometimes, just for kicks, a couple squirrels tag-team-torment my dog.
 
Once, my husband actually let her out to chase them. The squirrels simply climbed the fence (same fence as in the Picture Perfect post from yesterday), stuck out their tongues, flipped their tails, and trotted up to the neighbor's garage roof, then sailed down the street from tree branch to tree branch.
 
The dog thought she was TRULY big-and-bad. Kicked some squirrel butt, did she. Serious squirrel butt-kicking. Mess with me, will ya?
 
I've got other squirrel stories. Maybe I'll write them another day.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

How NOT to Prune the Family Tree


 

Genealogy Research Success Story


 
 
Second cousins, three times removed.

Picture Perfect -- Unusual

 

 
He hung around on my neighbor's fence, waiting for me to take his picture. (He likes the walnut tree in my back yard.) Photo taken with Canon PowerShot A520.

Okay, so here's a better picture of the peppers


 

From My Garden

 
Of the 750 photos I took of these three peppers, THIS is the photo I choose to post????

Cool City

 
Grand Rapids, Michigan

'I've got pictures of you, in funny poses ... '


 

Playing House


 Some things I recalled about childhood, just before my baby sister's 45th birthday ... Rambling in my journal, I wrote:

“Rani Kaye’s always got her nose stuck in a book,” my dad would often say, and not without affection.

“Rani Kaye, get your nose out of that book, and go outside and play,” my mom would sometimes say.

And so I’d go outside, and swing on the swings in the back yard, and look at the trees or the sky, and daydream.

Sometimes I’d climb the bars on the side, and then hang by my knees and swing upside down. I did that more on the swings at school, but I did it at home, too, ‘til I grew too tall to hang from the swingset’s side brace because my fingers would brush the ground. You can’t dangle smoothly if your fingers touch the ground.

I played with my sisters much of the time. We played house. I was the oldest, and in order to pretend well, so that our play would be interactive, I was the one who told the story.

The story was always the same. We were three sisters, all grown up. We had husbands (imaginary men with names we had chosen who had jobs we had imagined) and we had children (all the dolls we’d gotten for Christmas through the years). We all lived next door to each other on the same street. My husband was a police officer. Debbie’s was a fireman, I think. Was Vickie’s a businessman? Possibly. I can’t remember.

House was my favorite game to play, but we were seldom allowed to take our dolls outside. What we could take outside were the “old” toy cars.

Did you know you can play house with toy cars? There was hard-packed dirt beside the driveway where one could draw houses with complete floor plans, and garages with a nail in the wall to hang the roller skates, and sidewalks, roads, and grocery stores and schools.

Same husbands, same children (but now the children had to be imagined as well) and the only thing real were the toy cars. These we drove from house to house and to the store and we had family barbeques and various adventures playing house with the “old” toy cars.

Our one little brother would sometimes play house with us too. He didn’t own dolls, but he did have a Yogi Bear. It was easier for him to play with us outside with the cars. We said he had to be the dad of the Yogi Bear doll, and he didn’t quite know what to do with it. He was good with the cars, though, even as a toddler.

When he was about eight or nine they came out with Matchbox cars, and well into puberty he would create entire towns on the floor in his bedroom using blocks and I don’t know what-all so he’d have a place to drive his fleet of Matchbox cars.

Until my parents moved South in their retirement, Dougie’s Matchbox cars were still at their house, and my sisters’ sons and mine would play with them; but we girls made sure our sons treated those toy cars with reverence. “Those are Uncle Doug’s toy cars. They’re really old. Take good care of them.”

When Doug was two, my parents gave us one more little sister. I was nine by then. It’s almost her 45th birthday as I write this down today. Her name’s Jeri Lynn. She was named after Daddy, or maybe after my mother’s cousin Jeri Louise.

Most of my memories of childhood, though, are before the baby was born. I called us the “Sisters Three.” We used to practice songs together, and then make our parents sit on the couch and listen to us sing. We sounded like the Andrews sisters, or at least that’s what I thought.

Believe it or not, my whole family used to sing together, every time we went for a drive. Mom and Dad taught us to sing “Let Me Call You Lizzy, I’m in Debt For You,” and “Ninety-nine Bottles of Beer on the Wall.”

Grandma and Grandpa (my mom’s parents) taught us songs too. Grandpa taught me all the words to “The Old Kent County Jail” before I was old enough to go to kindergarten. Mom was terrified I’d offer to sing that for the teacher once I started school, and she made Grandpa stop singing it with me.

“Ka-ka-ka-Katie” is a song I learned from Grandma, who also used to sing, “I’ve Laid Around and Played Around This Old Town Too Long.”

When I was in sixth grade and Debbie was in second, The Singing Nun sang a song called “Dominique” and I learned the words and taught it to Debbie. When we sang it for our mom she seemed really, really happy.

The last time I ever sang with Debbie was in the mid-seventies when she was married to, or maybe just dating Dave. Dave played guitar in my mom’s kitchen and had Deb and me sing “Time in a Bottle” by Jim Croche. Dave was a music major at Grand Valley. I took a 20th Century American History Class with him at night school not long after that. Pretty soon Dave and Deb split up. Many years later I read in the Grand Rapids Press that he had gained some renown as a composer.

When Jeri’s son got married, she tried to get me to sing Karaoke at his wedding reception. She thinks I have a lovely voice. I do not have a lovely voice, though. She is mistaken.

Candidate Match Game

I really haven't thought much yet about who I hope runs for president, and I thought I was leaning towards the democrats (I was raised to be an independent voter -- you vote for the person, not the party, my parents always said). But a quiz I took today at USA Today shows me that, based on my own views on various issues, John McCain is the candidate whose views on these issues most closely match my views. Interesting. Click on the link to take the quiz yourself.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/politics/election2008/candidate-match-game.htm?s...