Do not read this blog if you want to stay awake....it will tell of VERY mundane, average things.
Steve had a doctor appointment on Friday because he has had a painful leg for a few months. So painful that it wakes him up in the night - every night - and all the pain meds he takes can't be good for his liver. The doctor suspects a bad hip. He had an X-ray. Results pending.
I had follow-up blood work for my high cholesterol. No one told me I was supposed to fast for this test so my first results - back in November - were probably skewed by the delicious breakfast and lunch I had enjoyed that day. My doctor is getting back to me on my results.
I am making progress on collecting my Harris family line information. I am almost finished with the rough draft of my 2014 blog book - meaning I am working in November entries. I caught up on my filing and I updated photo and scrap books. Our income tax papers are now with the accountant. I complete the sewing machine work on my baby bib project and now just have to hand-sew snaps on the last fifteen. I ran my wool pieces through the washer two times and I now have two lovely pieces of felt. We fed the missionaries Friday night. Yesterday, I baked gluten-free biscuits and a Texas sheet cake and granola. Steve ground wheat and made gluten-full biscuits and granola.
Sarah and I went to watch "Jupiter Ascending" on Thursday night. I liked it. She thought there were plot holes. Steve and I watched "Dear Ruth" via Youtube on Friday night. It is an old black-and-white from the forties. It was amusing. I watched "The Vow" last night. It was rather cheesy but made bib-sewing go smoother. I finished the book The Centurian's Wife, I started The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane and I checked out Divergent from the library.
I really enjoyed my week but my question is, "Are YOU still awake????"
If you are, then you can read the one bit of "unusual" news this week. I saw a man die this morning. Steve and I were visiting the Jefferson City ward and we had just walked into the building about twenty minutes before meetings were to begin. As I entered the chapel, I saw an older man just as he was falling straight backwards onto the floor. Someone called 911, the ambulance arrived, he was wheeled out with paramedics performing CPR but he never regained a regular heartbeat. It was a massive heart attack. He was 72.
Sunday, February 22, 2015
Monday, February 16, 2015
Counting my blessings
This past week was cold and often the sun stayed behind a
cloud but I am very thankful that it is not still January filled with
instrument exploration nights. Please, ANYTHING but to go through those again! And,
February is already half over! I am
thankful for many other things today….
First, it snowed last night. Our first substantial snow of the
season. I was already going to get to
stay at home today because of President’s Day but MU cancelled classes so Steve
is also home. I imagine if I lived in
Boston right now, I wouldn’t still love snow but I don’t and I do.
The snow began during my Columbia Civic Orchestra concert
and it was still coming down fairly hard by the end so my car was completely
covered in white when I was ready to drive home. I am thankful for front-wheel drive and Elise’s
reminder to put the car in a lower gear (she has had a LOT of practice doing
that, lately). I am also thankful for
the chance to play in CCO. We played an
all-British program last night and I loved every minute of it, even the
ridiculously difficult Mendelssohn Scottish Symphony.
I am thankful for the walks I got to take last week. One in particular was over at the park with Sarah and the
three dogs . There are
about 30-40 Canada geese setting up residence in the pond and I got a nice
photo of them that day.
On another walk
this past week, they were flying around (daily exercise? Goose drill teams? “cabin” fever?) and about 10 flew directly
overhead, quite close, with the sun glinted off their wings. It was breathtaking.
I am thankful for family. On Monday, my father would have turned 99 and
my sister, Jerri, turned a healthy 81 on Thursday. I am glad to be close to our Southerland grandchildren and we
had a wonderful visit with them on Saturday. Emily had a mini-photo session in the morning
so we joined Joe in taking Noah, Lucy, and Quinn to the St. Louis Science
Center. What a terrific place that
is! So well done, so full of interesting
displays (I need to visit when I don’t have to keep an eye on an active
seven-year old so I can read about everything
without distraction) and it is FREE! Good
for you, St. Louis! It was also good
that we had three adults because Quinn took ALL of Joe’s attention – that boy
is a RUNNER. Lucy latched onto Steve and
I kept a look-out for Noah. Below are
some fun pictures of our outing.
We were home by lunch and Steve and I attended the 1:00
temple session. After returning to the
Southerlands and having a lovely nap, we helped with a delicious Valentine
dinner: steak, loaded mashed potatoes, broccoli, fresh pineapple, and a coconut
cream pie (gluten-free) that I had brought.
Steve and Noah converse in the family room
Lucy wore her super cape and cuffs ALL day. She added the sunglasses when she got home.
Speaking of food, I am thankful for it. The Grajeda family of Mexico, Missouri (Sarah
is friends with their young-adult sons) invited us for “heart-attack” tacos
last Sunday. Regular tacos but with corn
tortillas that are cooked briefly in oil to make them very soft and
pliable. Mmmmm, delicious. They had also invited the sister missionaries
so we got a group shot with everyone except mom Grajeda and son Ben.
![]() |
| back row: Brother grajeda, me, Steve front row: Hannah, sister missionaries, Sarah |
I am thankful that Sadie is not scooting her bottom any
more. I took her to the vet and she had
an infected anal sac. Yuck. He gave her a shot and an ointment to be applied
twice a day (think doggie Desetin) and she is much happier now.
I am even thankful I was required to attend teacher
collaboration meetings all day Friday, regardless of the fact that NONE of it
applied to me as it was all about next year’s schedule and I won’t be around. However, I had the foresight to
bring my knitting so I just sat, listened, and knitted and finished stage one
of my felting project. I hope to work on
stage two today (the actual felting process).
Weirdly enough, I was pretty peaceful to just knit although I left both
the morning and afternoon meetings a bit earlier than everyone else. All agreed that I didn’t really need to be
present.
I watched “Maze Runner” on Thursday night. It was OK.
I won’t read the books, though. I
just skimmed the Wikipedia synopsis of all three and that is enough for
me.
So many things to be thankful for.....
Sunday, February 8, 2015
This was a great week
When I stop to compare last week with this week, I can't believe the difference. Last week, at MMEA, seemed like the longest ever. I really didn't want to be at Tan-Ta-Ra (isn't that strange?) and the time just plodded along. This week, I have been able to spend a small amount of time each day doing things I love - practicing, family history, working on a Blurb book, art, reading - and the week has flown by.
It started out with a SNOW DAY! for absolutely no reason. How bad can 3/4 inches of snow be, for crying out loud? But, I was not going to argue with the board office. I loved my day off. And, Steve and I watched Groundhog Day that night.
Wednesday night was to have been a concert with the Rock Bridge orchestra and the eighth grade orchestras from Gentry and Jefferson Middle Schools. A recruiting-for-high-school-orchestra event. The middle school kids would get to play in the performing arts center side by side with high school kids - what could be cooler? Well, a fast-moving snow storm, that's what. It hit around mid-afternoon but, even before a snowflake began to fall, all the middle schools in town cancelled their after-school/evening events. Which meant they wouldn't be coming to RBHS. Concert off. I must secretly confess I was not upset by this. I drove home in this "raging" snowstorm (admittedly, the trip took me twice as long as usual), put on my comfy clothes, and I had a lovely evening puttering and practicing.
Thursday started out so cold that school had a late-start day (didn't impact me since I didn't teach that day). Not surprising for early February. But, Friday and yesterday, temperatures climbed almost to 70 degrees! Is this just the craziest week for weather ever???? And, of course, with the precipitation and the thawing, we have been wiping a lot of paws this week. Oh, dogs.....
Look at how Bones is sleeping right now as I type this.... It is really hard to not love this hairy, disobedient-to-me dog.
A lot of shopping went on this week; first of month stuff. Friday night, Steve and I watched Guardians of the Galaxy after attending a CES "Evening With A General Authority" and heard Jeffrey Holland speak. We had a Mid-Missouri Community Orchestra rehearsal (a.k.a. RTO) Saturday afternoon followed by a birthday celebration in Centralia for a good friend that night.
It started out with me teaching him cello in his late teens using an instrument that belonged to his grandfather. He is one of six children and I soon met his sister who plays violin. Both play piano - and, in fact, the whole family is very musical. Parents, Paul and Jean, are the nicest people. Over the years since then, the Couture family and we have had many interactions. Elizabeth is in MMCO - Josh is too, when he has time. Elizabeth is also in CCO and studies violin with Siri. They are avid supporters of the local classical music scene.
Here is Josh with one of the balloon bouquets on his head. Elizabeth is in the background.

The evening's activities also included some dancing - English court dancing (think a la Pride and Prejudice). Steve and I just watched Apparently, this group gets together once a month to do this kind of dancing. It looked really fun.

It started out with a SNOW DAY! for absolutely no reason. How bad can 3/4 inches of snow be, for crying out loud? But, I was not going to argue with the board office. I loved my day off. And, Steve and I watched Groundhog Day that night.
Wednesday night was to have been a concert with the Rock Bridge orchestra and the eighth grade orchestras from Gentry and Jefferson Middle Schools. A recruiting-for-high-school-orchestra event. The middle school kids would get to play in the performing arts center side by side with high school kids - what could be cooler? Well, a fast-moving snow storm, that's what. It hit around mid-afternoon but, even before a snowflake began to fall, all the middle schools in town cancelled their after-school/evening events. Which meant they wouldn't be coming to RBHS. Concert off. I must secretly confess I was not upset by this. I drove home in this "raging" snowstorm (admittedly, the trip took me twice as long as usual), put on my comfy clothes, and I had a lovely evening puttering and practicing.
Thursday started out so cold that school had a late-start day (didn't impact me since I didn't teach that day). Not surprising for early February. But, Friday and yesterday, temperatures climbed almost to 70 degrees! Is this just the craziest week for weather ever???? And, of course, with the precipitation and the thawing, we have been wiping a lot of paws this week. Oh, dogs.....
Look at how Bones is sleeping right now as I type this.... It is really hard to not love this hairy, disobedient-to-me dog.
A lot of shopping went on this week; first of month stuff. Friday night, Steve and I watched Guardians of the Galaxy after attending a CES "Evening With A General Authority" and heard Jeffrey Holland speak. We had a Mid-Missouri Community Orchestra rehearsal (a.k.a. RTO) Saturday afternoon followed by a birthday celebration in Centralia for a good friend that night.
It started out with me teaching him cello in his late teens using an instrument that belonged to his grandfather. He is one of six children and I soon met his sister who plays violin. Both play piano - and, in fact, the whole family is very musical. Parents, Paul and Jean, are the nicest people. Over the years since then, the Couture family and we have had many interactions. Elizabeth is in MMCO - Josh is too, when he has time. Elizabeth is also in CCO and studies violin with Siri. They are avid supporters of the local classical music scene.
Here is Josh with one of the balloon bouquets on his head. Elizabeth is in the background.

The evening's activities also included some dancing - English court dancing (think a la Pride and Prejudice). Steve and I just watched Apparently, this group gets together once a month to do this kind of dancing. It looked really fun.

Sunday, February 1, 2015
MMEA
I spent most of last week at Tan-Ta-Ra Resort at Lake of the Ozarks for the Missouri
Music Educator’s Conference. Three of my
Rock Bridge High School Chamber orchestra students made it into the All State
Orchestra
![]() | |
| me, Arnold Chen (violin), Joanna Yu(viola), Alice Yu (violin) | (the girls are not related) |
and that is truly the only reason I attended. Margaret Lawless, the Hickman orchestra
director (and the violist in Prairie Strings) also had three students in the
orchestra so she and I shared a room again – this was our third year.
First year, she didn’t make reservations
early enough to get into Tan-Ta-Ra so we had to room in an off-site hotel that
was sort of a dump. So, for 2014, she
called in time for a room on site but we were put at the top of four flights
of stairs (no elevator) and, if we wanted to stay out of the bitter cold (which
was the weather a year ago) we had to hike about a quarter mile of connecting
walkways to get to the main events. So, for
this year, as soon as reservations could be made, Margaret called and booked us
a room. AND, she pulled the “old lady” card stating that we could not handle
stairs (my sprained Achilles tendon – which I had last September/October and is still
swollen – came into play) so we got a perfect room – literally 100 steps and
an elevator ride away from all the main events.
Since this is my last year of teaching orchestra, I
really had no interest in the small number of orchestra workshops that were
offered. I did attend one for bass
playing but came away unsatisfied because the presenter had opposing views on
bass bows and on sitting vs. standing while playing. I attended all the orchestra performances
that were offered. I am not sure if I
mentioned that last spring, I submitted a CD of Rock Bridge Chamber Orchestra
to be considered for a performance slot this year at MMEA. After the performances I heard this year, I am
not sure if RBHS could EVER be invited. I
heard amazing concerts – and all the schools were from St. Louis – a virtual juggernaut
when it comes to string players. In
fact, I did some calculations and over 80% of the All State Orchestra members
were from St. Louis schools. And, I am
actually relieved we did not get accepted because the RBHS Wind Ensemble did get
invited and Steve Mathews, their director, has been going nuts ever since. I know he is glad this past week is
over.
I used most of my time at Tan-Ta-Ra to relax and rejuvenate
– I took a walk every morning.
I watched
movies I brought (Hotel Transylvania –
really cute; The Lunchbox – an Indian
film that was beautifully done but had a less-than-satisfying ending. UGH!;
and a documentary called The Fog
of War that was very interesting). I
lost some brain cells when Margaret watched episodes of Dr. Phil and Love, Lust, or
Run. I read. I knitted.
I napped. And, by Saturday, I was
REALLY ready to be done with music education stuff. Because it was my 40th wedding anniversary! When I got home around 5:30, Steve and I went
to dinner at Applebees (thanks to a gift card), dessert at Coldstone (thanks
Kirsti and Ryan), and we bought ourselves a soup toureen for our anniversary gift.
We woke up to a smattering of snow this morning although
parts of Missouri got quite a bit more.
And, I will end with a photo of Sadie during naptime this afternoon.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)














.jpg)