Tuesday, May 28, 2013

 
 

Gee I got a medal
 
Smiles, a great attitude and positive approach to a major bump in the road.
 
Twelve thousand  people joined in the Susan G. Komen Race for the Cure in Boise Mother's Day weekend.  Seven hundred of the participants were survivors.  You see families in the white t-shirts walking with a family member wearing a pink shirt which lets everyone know that she is a survivor. 
 
These women have battled a private war and have come through much stronger and more self assured for what they have experienced.  Not only is the race about raising money for breast cancer research, but it is a celebration of life and individual victories. 
 
The logo on the white shirts--INSPIRED-- is representative of the attitude shared by all walkers wearing them.  They support and praise those in pink who have journeyed farther than just the 1k or the 5k. 
She is the survivor and I am inspired!
Never too young

 
The Harley ladies--Leaders of the Pack

A fun atmosphere almost like a carnival

If you show up be prepared to have a good time and even be a little silly.  A good costume helps

 
 

   Will Kathy and I be back next year?  You bet we will.

Sunday, May 19, 2013

Oh So Good




Long before we knew that some of our favorite comfort foods were not really all that comforting we were a happy people.  We blissful ate at our local drive in and indulged in such horrible things as hand dipped corn dogs deep fried in GREASE which was saved and used over and over again.  Sides like onion rings and French fries, also cooked in that same grease accompanied the dog.  All the fat contained in this delicious combo was washed down with a thick chocolate shake. 

 
Sometimes you just have to relive the days of ignorance and marvel at how blissfully uncomplicated life was.  If it tasted good we ate it with no guilt or calorie counter.  Many of our memories are associated with food.  As a child going to the drive in for a hamburger, fries and coke was a special treat.  The 50's introduced us to the fast food.  You pulled into the parking lot and walked to the window to order and waited while everything was freshly cooked.  You sat outside at a table or ate in your car.  When I was in Jr. High my friends an I walked to the Jumbo Drive Inn with a dollar and ordered a 50 cent hamburger, 25 cent coke and a small order of fries also 25 cents.  What a treat.
 
We had no idea we were eating unhealthy fat depositing food.  The trip for hamburgers was not a daily or even weekly experience.  It was a special treat with days and weeks passing before the next grease surge.  We had no idea we were eating junk food.  There was no quilt associated with consuming onion rings, a shake, chocolate sundae, or hamburger; only joy and satisfaction.
 
Occasionally it is good to resurrect the fond memories of drive in food; to just eat it because you want it and because it tastes darn good.  Evidently others feel that way too because when we visit the Fanci Freeze in Boise we stand in line to order.  During the winter we eat outside in a large heated tent, and in warm weather we sit at outside tables with umbrellas.  There has to be something about the over used grease that feeds the soul and calls us back because Fanci Freeze  has served comfort food since 1947. I figure several times a year I can visit and eat whatever I want.  No quilt, remorse or calorie counting is allowed to come along and spoil the experience. Just give me a hand full of napkins and I am a happy camper.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

A Spring Day


 After months of gray skies, wind and
cold temps, I am hungry for the color green.  The grass is changing from brown to emerald green and 
the soft green of new leaves brings a lightness to the air.  Spirits begin to lift and everything and everyone comes alive.  It is time to breath deeply and enjoy the clean new season of spring.


This season called spring creates a new energy--the need to get outside. Today we took  our favorite bikes, the cruisers to Blackfoot to ride the path along the river.  It was a beautiful quite morning a fresh new day with sun just waiting to be soaked up.  The trees are bursting with new growth and the river bank is still free of brush and tangled vines. A heron fly low along the bank and landed ahead of us.  We quietly searched until we found him hidden in the willows.  On a perfect spring day even the ever present dandelion shines.  Today I welcomed its bright yellow buttons and thought of it as a flower and not a weed. 

   

 
 
 
 
 

Saturday, May 4, 2013

So Much To See


So Much Too See

Little Italy farmers market----San Diego


I have a restless soul, a soul that needs to move and stretch, a soul that needs to be fed. 
There is always something more to see and experience further a field.  Here is not enough.
Sometimes I have to leave the wide open spaces and seek the larger, more crowded arena.
People I don't know and have never seen before and will never see again intrigue me.
I like the color of noise and crowds and tall buildings stretching toward the sky.  The
activities of lives pushed together in a shared space makes me feel energetic, invigorated
and large.  I don't mind. sharing the sidewalk with people who bump my shoulder or ridding in
a bus rather than a car and even the grinding subway train is musical.

out door cafe Little Italy (phot shopped)


succulents big and luscious



My day to day space is small, brown and tiny.  I like coming back to it, but I also like leaving it.
Perhaps, I want too much of the world and should be content with what I have at hand.  I can plant my feet for only so long and  they begin to itch with wander lust, and soon my thoughts turn
toward some place diffeent.  There is more beyond here and now.  Someday I may be content to
rest and watch things move past me and not be a participant.  I hope not, but until then I will not think about it and allow my curiosity to propel me forward.