A Beautiful Blend…

Sitting in my tiny home on wheels, feeling the warmth of freedom, I sip my coffee while reading a book in the park. In front of me is a book with a page holder that I bought for my dad and to the side is a steaming thermos of coffee I brewed here at the park. My dad was an avid park and lake dweller who would read, drink coffee and nap for hours in the car.

As I was reading I got caught in my thoughts, as a vision of me as my dad, in that exact moment, took over my emotions. I am his daughter, so very much so. We were so alike in so many ways. Our insatiable yen for road trips. Our ability to make friends in the most benign and obscure places. Wanting to get out on the road for the day we would often trade loving persiflage, probably the result of us both being hangry…lol. We would always find a new delicious place to eat on the adventure giving rest to the banter while we ate a good lunch. He would then make the kind server make fresh pot of decaf coffee that had to be hotter than the fires of hell and damnation. I would convince my dad to split dessert, insisting that I didn’t want to eat a whole slice of creamcheese pecan pie. After several forkfuls my dad would say firmly, “Lori, just get your own piece of pie!” and then I would.

Sitting here in the park, I am so grateful for all that my mom and dad have passed down to me in my forty eight years. I am a beautiful blend of both of them.

Lovingly,

~L

“Afoot and light-hearted I take to the open road, healthy, free, the world before me.”

~Walt Whitman

Getting Back Out There

Last weekend I went camping with friends. Some of those friends I see on a regular basis, and some I have not seen in a few years. We all sat around a big ol’ fire and caught up with one another. It seemed comfortable, but I wasn’t comfortable. The night was nice and cozy, but I just couldn’t get into the swing of it. At one point, I got up and went on a walk by myself just to get away from everyone. I am still adjusting to the fact that I don’t have to go back to the house, that I no longer have anyone to take care of, and really, that I can just sit back and enjoy myself. I know my folks would want me to get back out there and restart doing things that I absolutely once loved to do.

I’m also getting back to car life. Way back in 2017, I sold or gave away 98% of my stuff and, with the help of a friend, built out a bed in my car and moved in. After my dad’s passing and the sale of the house, I felt an OVERWHELMING feeling to try car life again. To see if I enjoy it as much as I did eight years ago. I still can’t totally decide if I want a van or a tiny home, but right now this is where I need to be. I am on the road, making a way for myself and rediscovering my past love of the outdoors. I have sold a couple of pieces of ultralight-weight gear to beginners, and that is pretty cool. To help outfit a couple of folks who are just starting to discover their own love for backpacking and hiking.

Do I still love it? I thiiiink so. Before, I could not sit still and constantly had to be moving or traveling, and now I feel a little more stillness in my life. I think that is why I may be leaning toward a van (one with a proper stove and oven). I love to cook and bake now. I love the process of it all. I may not be the best at it, but the enjoyment is there, and that’s what I need. The days of quick meals in the car and not caring about nutrition are gone. I need a mobile space where I can make wonderful meals and still satisfy my love of waking up in different places.

I now have Lula that I need to think about too. Car life isn’t conducive long-term for a pup. She needs to be able to get up and walk around the vehicle, stretch out and such. I want her to have an adventurous AND comfortable life.

I am taking it all slow. I have days where I am super excited to be at it again and days where I second-guess it all. I am trying to build a life and grieve at the same time. If anyone has been the caretaker of their parents, then you know it hits different.

The other day I got takeout from Bob Evans and as I was pulling out of the parking lot I just started crying because my dad LOOOOOVED going out to breakfast and lunch. I wish him and I could do that again. Damn it I am crying now. Feeeeck.

I have the dream catchers that my dad bought in 2021 out in Glacier National Park in Montana. One blue with white accents and one white with blue accents, representing the sweatshirts he and my momma were wearing when they met way back in the early 1960’s. I also have one red bird and one blue bird that hang with the dream catchers. The birds were a gift from my amazing coworker. Little did she know that on the Christmas tree each year hung a pretty blue bird (my dad) and a pretty red bird (my momma). Ornaments that my parents bought a long time ago when they were first married.

The dreamcatchers and the birds flow on the wind as I travel. My folks are always with me, on my new, old adventures.

~L

‘Your grief for what you lost lifts a mirror up to where you’re bravely working.”

~Rumi

Dad… (this picture is pretty much reminiscent of our last few years having morning coffee together as well 😆)

To the man who tied my track shoes…

The one who gave the sidewalk a spanking when I fell…

The amazing girl dad who always said he wished he could take away my “period pain”, but he couldn’t, so he’d take me for ice cream and car rides to soothe my uterus…

To the man who would make my boyfriends hang up and call back to try again if their manners were not up to par the first time…

The man who ALWAYS told me how beautiful I am and that I didn’t need all that make-up…

The man who warmed my little kid hands underneath his giant arms when I’d come in from playing outside in the winter…

To the man who always said, “Just call me. I’ll come to pick you up. No questions asked.”…

The man who would fall asleep during mass and told me he was just “resting my eyes.”…

To the man who would follow me in the car so I could be safe, as I ran long-distance practice runs in junior high and high school…

To the man who would wake me up at 5am and tell me to grab a blanket and a pillow, pile me in the car, buckle me in, and take a road trip while I slept, eventually waking up some place a few hours away for a day of adventure…

To the man who instilled in me the spirit of roadtripping with no plan just a rough draft route in his head…

To the man who threw the fish back, when I was sobbing at 7 years old because I could not handle the poor fish gasping for it’s life…

To the man I would visit on his mail route to have lunch with…

To the man who always loved whatever gift I gave him, no matter how silly or simple it was…

TO THE MAN WHO SHOWED UP AT MY TRACK MEETS IN HIS POSTAL UNIFORM, LOUDLY YELLING FOR ME TO SPRINT AND FINISH STRONG, YELLING “TURN IT ON TURN IT ON, SPRINT!”…

And to the man who said, “I’m not your friend, I am your dad” (which to me meant he and my momma were my truest best friends), cut from the same cloth…I would have taken care of you forever…

I love you.

Jó éjszakát, apa.

Love,

Lori Annie

“Dads are most ordinary men turned by love into heroes, adventurers, story-tellers and singers of song.”

~Pam Brown

Maybe They Didn’t Want To Get Better…

Maybe she didn’t and he doesn’t want to get better.

As I left the skilled rehabilitation nursing facility where my dad is currently, I could feel my blood pressure rise, and the frustrating tears burst through into sobs that I could not control for the next several minutes. Again, I left, with him refusing to wear his BiPAP. It is the machine that keeps him from being readmitted to the hospital by shedding a buildup of CO2 from his body. I felt like I was almost about to have a heart attack or a stroke. I’m not exaggerating one bit. I knew I had to calm myself down. I called two good girlfriends but got both their voicemails. I asked Siri to text a coworker who is going through just about the same thing as me. I didn’t send it. I am glad they didn’t answer because if they had, I would not have had to come to a possible realization a few minutes later.

‘Maybe they didn’t/don’t want to get better.’

The other day, my brother told me, “Stop trying to save Dad.” I thought, I am not trying to save him, I am trying to help him save himself. I had the same exact thought with my mom a few years before she passed. If I just worked a little harder and could get them active, if I just learned a little more and then tried to explain the benefits of a healthier lifestyle, if I just tried to help them help themselves, then they would be happier and around longer. I simply could not understand why two parents in their early and late seventies wouldn’t want to get healthier, not only for their own sake but for the sake of their children and grandchildren. Why would they want to put their children through the ringer because they could not get their lifestyles in order? Their vice? Food. But I am starting to see now that a lifetime of their own experiences, especially early childhood, shaped their later years. They both grew up in difficult households.

My momma was fierce and BEAUTIFUL. Yet she struggled with her weight. My dad is sweet and is a charmer, but can’t charm his way out of his own failing health.

My mother’s father up and left her and her three younger siblings when my mom was twelve. My grandmother, her mother, could not cope, and my mom could not understand why her dad left, to never return. And digging the knife even deeper, he moved to Florida and remarried someone with children. My mom never had weight issues until her father left, and those weight and self-image issues plagued her for life. But she always instilled in us girls that we were beautiful and enough.

As for my dad, back in 1947, my grandmother gave birth to him at forty years old, and my grandfather was 55 years old. My dad’s siblings were quite a bit older than he was. Twenty years between him and his oldest sibling, and eight years between him and his next closest in age. My dad always said it was like growing up with grandparents instead of parents. Especially true when it came to his dad. Money was not abundant, and that, I believe, is why my dad doesn’t do so well with certain things. He never wanted to be ‘without” as an adult, so he wasn’t. Even if it meant overindulging in the food arena. He always has. (He has never mentioned going hungry as a child.)

But how did they get to their seventies and not learn how to love themselves enough to take proper care of their bodies? They ALWAYS made sure we kids were fit, active and had a healthy self-esteem. My mom used to say, “You kids got chubby AFTER you left home.”

But here I sit now, in the living room of my childhood, where I have been living for the past six years, helping my dad with my mom, and after she passed, helping my dad with his grief. And what I just realized in this moment is that as I sit here being mad at them for not taking care of themselves, is that I am not taking care of myself because I was/am consumed with taking care of them.

Maybe their life experiences didn’t prepare them for their later years, and therefore, they could not figure out how to be healthy because they were not given the tools from the start. I WAS given, by my parents, the foundation and all the tools to live a healthy life.

So maybe it’s not, they didn’t want to get better because I know they did/do. Maybe I need to stop trying to convince them to change for the better and see it as a lesson.

I cannot take care of them in the ways in which they want(ed), if I am not healthy enough to even take care of myself.

I have been very lost these past six years. So lost that I couldn’t see my own shadow. But tonight I had the realization that I put me back on the trail.

Like all good parents, my parents gave their children a better life, more than they had.

~L

We All Make Choices.

We all make choices. I am not talking everyday little choices. And yeah yeah I know everyday little choices add up to big choices, like I get that. I am talking about BIG choices. Where to live, where to work, where to travel, do I have kids, do I TRY to have kids (too late for that now lol), who your partner is in life, etc.

Would it not be fabulous if the only choices we had to make were what kind of coffee to have, do I want to wear my hair wavy or straight today, should I go to the lake or the woods (99% of the time, it is the lake), or do I want to make today a cell phone free day?! I would love every day to be a cell phone-free day.

Why do the BIG choices not work out sometimes? How can we be sooooooo sure that they will and then one day, POOF, they don’t?

I was 100% convinced that when I moved to Colorado in the spring of 2023, I would live there forever and retire from the National Park Service. You could not have convinced me otherwise. Instead, I lasted four months and I am back working in the same hospital I was convinced I had left behind to never return. The place is great and I really like what I do but how I could I have been so sure about Colorado?

If I had stayed in Colorado, I would not be living in my childhood home looking after my parent, whom I love, who is in cognitive decline. So, everything must happen for a reason? I guess, but man, it would be great if said parent was healthy and I lived back in California (not Colorado), living my best life. I know life doesn’t stand still, but does it have to be a rollercoaster? Why not just a really cool roadtrip? Maybe it is and I just can’t see it right now.

What about the people who marry multiple times, thinking each time that person was the one and it would stick, happily ever after? Why do people want to put themselves through turmoil? And I could definitely say the same for any romantic relationship. I myself have never been 100% sure about the man I am with. But with each new relationship I would be amiss to think in the lovey-dovey beginning that a hint of the future didn’t spring into my hopeless romantic brain!

And here is another big one. JOBS. How the heck do we end up in a job that we deep down never really wanted to work?

Why can’t we all be BRAVE enough to follow what is our passion? I certainly am not.

If I had my druthers I would be living in a tiny house, on land with a big garden and my sweet pup Lula who would be roaming free chasing the sun as it fades into dusk. I would have giant tomato plants and towering beans, endless swisschard that forever grows like a weed, big delicous carrots growing in rich soil, tall corn stalks, cucumbers, squash and big thick gardens of wildflowers so bees, so many bees, could pollinate and have restful naps in the petals.

How do I make choices for that life? How do I choose between keeping a promise to my dad about him living out his life in his home and me making the home of my dreams? I already know I will be in Ohio for many years to come, and Cleveland is home. My family is here, my friends, my beloved Lake Erie, and most of all my…. my what?… not sure how to finish that one, but something is here that I love, and I quite can’t put my finger on it.

I guess I just wish that one freaking choice that I make leads to the life I dream of living. I get so stuck in the doldrums of everyday life that I wake up far from where I’d like to be.

Where is the balance in the choices I make?

~L

“Tell me, what is it you plan to do 
with your one wild and precious life?”
― Mary Oliver

My Friendliest Rivalry…

We met in an old school building back in the late 80’s that was probably packed with asbestos and lead paint. That may explain some of my crazy life decisions, Oy! Certainly this building lacked air conditioning or any modern conveniences but I LOVED this building that was built in 1923. Our middle school was beautiful and it smelled like old wood and vintage clothing. I loved it even more because it was there that we forged our nearly 35 year friendship.

I remember hanging out in the basement cafeteria talking up a storm about who has a crush on who, what Porker got in trouble for that day, eating fiestada pizza and peanut butter balls. Damn I miss peanut butter balls! You were this tall lanky kid who had a crush on me. You were always making me laugh and not just heeheehee laughing but deep belly laughing. You were funny and bold as hell and I ADORED you, as my friend.

Then just like that you moved away to that state up north and I vividly remember being totally bummed.

And yet..

Somehow before the days of cell phones and internet we managed to keep in touch. I remember that you’d come to visit your one parent back in our hometown and we’d meet up with each other to catch up and hangout. On and off through the years we’d see each other but it wasn’t until about a decade ago that we became better and closer friends. Traveling to attend a game in the big house, watching them in the garage with a bunch of your crazy but fun friends. Razzing each other and making silly bets. You, wearing and looking the best I have ever seen you, in Scarlet and Gray. Bahahaha….

On one level or another over the years, we always looked out for each other. Us wanting the nothing but best for the other person.

You were and are a great guy. I wanted desperately to see you as more than just a friend. I/we definitely tried (hahaha) but timing was never on our side and that is okay. I was too restless and you were too settled. Lifestyles of oil and water.

But you know what I love most though, about our long and friendly rivalry? It’s that I get to watch you fall in love and grow your family. You are an absolutely amazing father. You are an ABSOLUTELY amazing friend.

A genuinely good dude.

C.P. you are my longest friend and I cherish getting to “grow up” together.

~L

“We do not pull in and fill up. And I’ll tell you why we don’t. It’s because I don’t buy one goddamn drop of gas in the state of Michigan. We’ll coast and push this goddamn car to the Ohio line before I give this state a nickel of my money.”

Woody Hayes~ to assistant coach Ed Ferkany as they were low on gas in Michigan on a recruiting trip.

 GO BUCKS!!!!

My Seasons Are Changing

 

A new season of life is upon me and I am trying to ease into it in a calm, self preserving, open minded, open hearted and accepting way.

Myself: My self embracing season. I am letting my gray hair grow wild, and I like what I see and, more so, how it makes me feel. I want to be the age I am now. I take care of my skin, and I love the way I look without makeup. Each woman chooses how she ages, and their own path is perfect for them. I myself have never wanted Botox, fillers, or cosmetic surgery. There is something so beautiful in the privilege of aging. I have no need to look younger than I am. I have made it this far, and I am proud of myself. I am growing to realize that I can no longer take the mechanics of my body for granted. I want to take care of my bones, muscles, heart, and mind. More books. My little sister is a librarian, and she and her daughter Ellie are bookworms, and they unknowingly inspire me to read more. A goal is a book a month..we’ll see hehehe 🤓

I have discovered a stillness too that is new to me. I used to fill every day off with adventures or road-trips. And while I still LOVE doing that, I am now feeling homier. Like I want to nestle in and be still in my dwelling. I want to create things that I never really wanted to before like cakes, decor and/or art. I have always wanted to do some type of woodworking or clay sculpting. I want to sip tea and enjoy my home and gaze at my beautiful pup that sleeps in weird positions..lol.

My dad: My amazing dad. A kid could not have asked for a better dad growing up, or mom for that matter. He is older now and needs his kids around to help him more and more. I have lived with him and my mom for five years at his request. First it was to help out with my mom. After she passed he didn’t want to be alone and I stayed for a while. I eventually felt the need for space and moved away to Colorado to regain my life but soon returned home because I love northeast Ohio and I missed my family. My dad has had several setbacks this past year and the time has come to help take care of him in a more hands on way. I told my dad that I would stay and help him for as long as he wanted to stay in his home. He told me his home is where he is comfortable and that he doesn’t want to leave it. Done. The challenge is keeping my peace and him keeping his. We are very similar and sometimes that can be an obstacle but we are learning to navigate this new road.

I want to be a tree. Changing with the seasons while remaining still and strong.

~L

“Give what you have. To someone, it may be better than you dare to think.”

~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

 

Remember The Summer We Became Best Friends…?

It was the summer of 1997 when we became best friends. The thought of that summer still warms my heart and has me smiling as I remember all the freaking fun we had!

I was working as a waitress at a cocktail bar, that much is true… Oh wait hahaha. 🎶

I was working at a TGI Friday’s when I met you… that I know is true. 🎶

We worked together that summer having fun and wearing FLARE, lol! We hung out after work, outside of work and really really got along. As we laughed, drank and talked our way through the summer I remember thinking I was so happy to meet a really genuine guy especially after the break I had just gone through the year prior. I ADORED you…as a friend. I didn’t really see you in the romantic way and I didn’t think you saw me that way either. maybe I didn’t wanna cross the line between friendship and something else. Maybe I didn’t wanna acknowledge that something could be brewing.

Then one night, I forget where we were hanging out but I know it was with my high school best friend and her guy. Her guy may have been your friend you always hung out with at Friday’s and his name, I cannot remember for the life of me. Anyways we were all hanging out somewhere on the outskirts of town possibly in the country, who knows. But I remember my high school bestie telling me that you told her, you had feelings for me. I was like, no way, him and I are just friends! Then after that night when we would hang out it became clearer that you did, and I did too. She watered a seed that I didn’t know was there . From that point it was on. You and I would go for drives in your blue old truck and make out on abandoned roads (that now are developments lol).

We almost did it on one of those roads but we decided to wait and not make it so cheap and icky. I remembering driving to your university late a night just to sneak into bed with you. I loved being in your bunk trying to talk quietly as your roommate slept.

I remember rollerblading through the park down a hill that was insanely steep for me and thinking I’d crash into the trees. But you promised me you wouldn’t let that happen and I trusted you.

Trust.

I can honestly say without a doubt in my mind that don’t know if I trusted someone the same way since.

You dude were the real deal. Romantic…writing love letters from Florence. Oh the long distance phone bills I racked up calling Italy and talking for hours. My parents were ready to kill me. LOL You were TOTALLY into ska and dressed the part sometimes too. I loved that you weren’t afraid to be your own authentic person at the young age of twenty/twenty one. And the most romantic thing that anyone has ever done for me, when my Italian grandma passed you kindly gave me back the letters that she helped me write to you in Italian.

Had I known how special you were maybe I would have made different choices. However when one comes out of an emotionally abusive relationship one just can’t tell what is true and what is false.

You were meant to come into my life to set the example of what an HONEST, cool and kind guy could be.

Thank you. After all these years I remember your kind and generous heart.

~L

“The wound is the place where the light enters you.”

~Rumi

R-you were the light.

A Smile

It was in the midst of covid in 2021. I was going to a therapy appointment to seek help on how to deal with my mother’s passing and navigating the emotional promise I made my dad when he made me promise that I would never leave him. Ugh the battle that has been going on since February 2, 2021.

Anyways I was checking in for my appointment in a Lyndhurst office when the man behind the counter asked me if I worked at main campus. I said yes I do. He then gave me the sweetest compliment I have ever received. He said that he worked there as well in the same building as me and that he recognized me even with a face mask on because I would always smile and say hello to him every morning and that he knew it was me this particular day because even with a mask on he remembered how my eyes smiled.

I often pass by people who aren’t smiling. You can tell they are upset, preoccupied or zoned out. I will 99.9% of the time smile and say hello. What I love is when a beautiful smile cracks across their face and they soften and say hello back. I really do wish more people could initiate a smile and a hello. They go so very far in making one feel good, feel seen and feel love from a stranger.

I love the way my pup smiles at me when I come home from work. I love the smiles of my nieces and nephews. I miss my mom’s beautiful slightly crooked smile (I have the same one 💛). I love my dad’s funny “Hi how are ya?” smile. My sister Lisa and a pretty soft sweet smile. My brother Donnie has a big genuine smile, think Santa Claus. My little sister Lana….well her smile is contagious in-person but in pictures she looks..ugh.. constipated. LOL… Love you Lana! Hahahaha..

I dated a man a long long time ago that I fell for instantly because when he turned around to say hello for the first time his smile was big and kind and just melted me. I knew from that very moment he’d be in my life for a little while.

“Children learn to smile from their parents.” ~Shinichi Suzuki

“Let us always meet each other with smile, for the smile is the beginning of love.” ~Mother Teresa

“I have witnessed the softening of the hardest of hearts by a simple smile.” ~Goldie Hawn

“Because of your smile, you make life more beautiful.” ~Thich Nhat Hanh

“A smile is a curve that sets everything straight.” ~Phyllis Diller

“Wrinkles only go where the smiles have been.” ~Jimmy Buffet

~L



Do You Remember the Coffee?

Thoughts of worry. I haven’t seen you or even spoken to you in so long. My dreams are so vivid that I know they are real within the dream itself. Several weeks ago in my dream we just happened to bump into each other in Montana. You were fly fishing and I was rambling through the area. It was complete happenstance. The cowboy hat atop your head didn’t quite seem like a right fit but then again it has been so long maybe your tastes have changed. As you were fishing you looked so happy, like BEAMING happy as you stood alone on that great Montana river in the warm bright sunshine. The smile that cracked across your face sent so many memories rushing to my head. You were always handsome. I feel like you knew it but couldn’t always completely believe it. You asked how I was and I hesitated before telling you I was going through a divorce. Funny because we both know that I don’t believe in legalities of marriage. It was almost as if our roles were reversed. Instead of fishing though I would have been listening to the plants and animals and feeling the wind around me as I sat on the banks of the river. That wasn’t the first dream. There have been many very real dreams.

This morning, as I was driving to get my cappuccino on the way to the lake, feelings of worry began to take hold out of nowhere. Deep, sad worry. I worried about you and your feelings. This is your second time around, and I remember you telling me how hard your first time around was. I ask myself how and why these feelings come up. Why do they hold space in my chest? Space for someone that I haven’t spoken to in many, many years. Yet here they are. As my eyes teared up, I asked you to stay, please stay. I don’t know what I meant by that. Maybe that you are incredibly important for this world.

~L