For the love of it

Have nothing in your house that you do not know to be useful, or believe to be beautiful.

~ William Morris

This quote is so well-known I hardly need to write it out. I could have just referenced it and you'd all have been nodding your heads but what the heck...I like the look of it. And it's useful. Double whammy on the Morrisometer.

It kept coming into my head yesterday as I thought more about my posts this week and even more about your great responses. I thought about how this theory applies to life and how encompassing the terms 'useful' and 'beautiful' can be.

For example...my constant bitching to myself about how I need more time to do what I want and how I'm useless and disorganised and lazy and effing endlessly interrupted...is that beautiful? I'll tell you now, it's UGLY. Is it useful? Oh don't make me laugh; it's a downward spiral into the legendary Vortex of Suck and it makes nothing better. It inspires only worse feelings.

I'm not going to rehash the details here - it seems many of you know where I'm coming from anyway - but yesterday evening I thought,"That's it. It stops. If I want to do something positive for me and my family I need to forget about making a few quid online (and never doing it) and focus on the quality of our lives. If anyone knows that this is not about money, it's me."

That's a beautiful concept. That's a useful concept.

I'm also loving the comments made by Jennlui and Tracie about 'tiny' work and tiny chances to work. As I've said, I'm not good at that. I like to zone out and drift but maybe I just need to give the tiny idea a go. No pressure. I'm all about the no pressure now. I get enough pressure elsewhere.

I want to do something for the love of it.

Media_httpjohanlonmoo_gioat

This exact time last year: sunshine, barefeet, chalk & water painting on the well cover. That would be nice this weekend.

 

x

Posted
 

Crowing*

Well it's 11 months since I wrote this post and finally, with pounding heart and more adrenalin than can be healthy, I am ready to launch the Shapeshifting etsy store.

It's a small affair to start with but has huge significance in my life and I believe that with this first step taken, I'll be walking this path more often during the coming year.

* do ya see what I did there?

 

Posted
 

Happy New Month

After confessing my new year overwhelm I felt like a bit of a loser. I know, the point was not to feel that way but still, I did. And it was a good thing. It made me step back and see that I've really been sliding into the gloom since the snow melted and I lost the big buzz I was undoubtedly getting from the bouncing light.

I have a serotonin issue. I know this and should be prepared. Migraine, PMS, seasonal depression..all serotonin stuff. I take a daily dose of an SSRI to help with that but at this time of year I need to either up my dose (and I don't want to do that) or take other action. So I decided, I may not be able to plan for a year but I can certainly come up with some ideas for the next month.

  • Step one was to procure a lightbox. I didn't plan ahead and get one in October but that doesn't mean that the next two months have to be utter misery. Lightbox rental is an awesome option and hopefully mine will arrive tomorrow. Not as pretty or as natural as snow, but hey, way more practical.
  • Step two is already underway and I'm doing daily Reiki meditations and self-treatment.
  • Step three involves a hoop and finding somewhere to practice indoors because it's bloody cold outside. In our cottage the rooms are v. tiny and the ceilings v. low but I think I can do some basic hooping in the kitchen.
  • Step four is making use of guided meditations. I have this book by Steven Farmer and really like the first two on the CD. For Reiki people, the Reiki Evolution meditations are very good.
  • Step five is to cut back on the coffee. I'm going to try to limit my intake to two a day and the rest of the time I'll stick to redbush or - an old favourite from years back - white tea.

Media_httpjohanlonmoo_njjrq

So nothing earth-shaking but strong, positive things that will help me move forward. I also really need to get this back on track because a barrel of personal issues and, dur, the lack of light in which to run around here in the Winter (we don't do streetlights out here) either before or after work, meant I completely missed my target. I was so very grateful for the donations made towards my fundraising for BCDH and I'm ready to gently get back to meeting my challenge.

I think that will do for now. I have something quite exciting lined up for March but I know anything could happen between then and now so I'll keep it under my woolly hat.

x

Posted
 

The August Break That Really Was

So I completely dropped the ball on the August Break. How predictable was that? If I felt the need to defend myself I'd say I got sick, cos I did but I don't. Heh.

Luckily, although my lungs nearly leapt out of my chest via my incredibly sore throat and I was incapable of speech for several days (yes, thanks for the cheering, @WiltsNature, revenge will be mine)I was able to get stuck into getting copy up on my new site.

I get the feeling that those of you who know me beyond this blog are sick to the back teeth of me and my new sites and I wouldn't blame you for that. It's true, there's been a few of them. But I'm a great believer in trying things out. I believed I didn't like tomatoes until I actually tried one, aged eight, and it taught me a lesson I've never forgotten - how do you know until you try? Lessons Learnt From Vegetables That Are Actually Fruit....hmmm, could be a blog...

I've gone on and on and oooooon about how much life has changed in the last year, how much we've changed, how it wasn't the change we I semi-planned, the stresses it's put on us and the work we've done to grow from the experiences blah blah and indeed...blah. Not to belittle that  process, which has been intense, but I'm done with writing about it. I'm almost done with living it. We're ready for Phase II. Us 2.0 if you will.

The lovely Leonie Wise was at my kitchen table for reals yesterday (sigh) and we talked about Those Days. The Ones With The Fear. The feeling of not being enough or worthy or useful or 'as good as'. All that shit. And how it seems sometimes that they get more intense, more frightening and convincing the closer you get to your truth. I know that's not a new concept but as ever, it feels more real once you've had personal experience.

I have big old butterflies right now about my plans but I also know that on the other side of the wall o'fear is the place I've glimpsed recently. The place that allowed me to visit for long enough to know that it is my element. I want to be back there permanently, professionally, with commitment and plans and love.

With this commitment in mind I've been practicing daily reiki meditations which are powerful things! Not really thinking it through (moi???), I've been doing them just before bed as that's when I tend to have some quiet time. Big mistake, as Julia Roberts once said. Huge. I get so reiki-ed up that I can't sleep until 2 AM. Yeah I'm properly smart, me. Bring me your animals. At 3 in the morning.

Insomnia aside, all is good. There's a bank holiday weekend ahead and then my baby girl gets ready to start school on Thursday. Somewhere between the two, the new site goes public, I send out my press release and start putting the word out.

There go those butterflies...

Posted
 

How does your garden grow?

The gingerbread house that we live in is built on a slope so the kitchen is on the ground floor and the back half of it is underground. Outside is a 25ft x 25ft-ish patch: half cobbled and half...er...not. It’s tempting to use blogger’s licence and refer to the rest as lawn but really there’s a little rough grass, a lot of wild plants and a Virginia creeper with a strong desire to take over the world. There’s an unused vegetable bed thick with the result of months of scattered birdseed. Shrubs and small trees separate the garden from our neighbour’s on two sides - overgrown in theirs and ours; the third side is the old stone wall that encloses the manor garden. It’s south facing and as hot as hell on even a mild day. Dry as a bone during the summer and sopping, boggy wet for the rest of the year.

There are steps that link this area to the ‘top garden’. They go up the side of the cottage to meet the little porch area outside the front door and the doors to the laundry room (once an outside bathroom) and a log store. The top garden is long and laid mostly to lawn that is in turn mostly clover. There are three flower beds, two small apple trees, a pear tree, a vine, a cherry tree and a silver birch. The biggest buddleia ever is in the far corner and wild clematis that grows unchecked, linking the lower trees and shrubs with the huge yew that stands just beyond our fence, its extremities dipping down to provide some dappled shade for the chickens as they excavate the ground beneath. There’s a thick tall hedge down one side, the continuing manor garden wall along the other.

A large gravelled area halfway up the garden, next to the wall, was claimed as my veg garden. I filled two plastic raised beds with compost and planted young veg plants and the seedlings I’d grown in the greenhouse. I had potatoes planted in sacks. There are herbs in containers and peas growing up a willow pyramid. The chicken run (always open to the garden) is tucked away next to the veg patch with the buddleia towering over it.

Sounds awesome doesn’t it? Oh the plans I had for this garden. There would be beautiful, but old recycled containers full of flowers, found curios would hide in shady corners. the lawn would be green and soft and perfect for a small child. Herbs and scented flowers would fill the air with evocative scent and we would eat delicious veg that we had grown ourselves, marvelling at how much better it would taste than anything we’d bought. We’d be all sustainable and shit.

I know. I grew up in this place and I’m still an idiot.

Here’s the truth. Yes the garden is still beautiful and we are beyond lucky to live here. That said...we’ve had weeks of no rain. The ground is cracked and dusty. Empty patches have been kicked and kicked all over the place by Idgie and Ninny who seem convinced they’re about to discover a series of small Roman-built walls and possibly some high status jewellery from the 1st century CE.

Media_httpjohanlonmoo_drbof

See that? That, my friend, is an early Saxon egg poacher or I'm a Buff Orpington.

So far they’ve only succeeded in killing off a selection of snapdragons, some golden rod seedlings, a couple of lavender bushes and my lemon mint. Give ‘em time. They’re on it.

The lawn is now a mix of parched-looking clover and brown dust that was once grass. But it’s okay. Once I’ve done a poo patrol and cleared up after, yes, those chickens again.

The greenhouse has one roof pane missing from when a high wind popped it out last autumn, leaving huge shards of glass stabbed into the lawn like a scene from The Omen. It has no door because I accidentally pulled it off with the lawnmower. Ditto with the glass. It has some weird plant growing in the bed in there that I think may have arrived as a spore on a comet. Whatever it is, I haven’t the heart to pull it up and anyway it may bite. There are also four tomato plants which go from Bright! And Perky! to Oh FFS about three times a day. There’s no irrigation in there. Unless you count the hole in the roof but like I said, no rain.

The potatoes got their leaves eaten and the spuds we rescued were like marbles except for about half a dozen sweet little baby spuds. I had to unearth them waaay too early.

The courgettes I planted in one bed alongside carrots and french beans are taking over the world and while I love their bright yellow flowers, I feel very sorry for the other plants struggling beneath their leaves.

The beetroot got eaten by whoever ate the spuds. We had some lovely lettuce but didn’t eat them and now they’re all nibbled and overblown.

The sprouts are doing well but the peas suffered from from dehydration and yesterday a strong wind blew over the willow pyramid and most of them snapped off at the bottom.

My lovely geraniums got battered by wind and rain (yay! rain! boo! rain!) yesterday and now they look like crap.

The kitchen garden looks abandoned and despite the days when I break my back and shrivel in the sun to pull weeds out of the cobbles, they just. keep. coming back.

Jackdaws have filled our chimney with sticks until the ones resting at the top formed a nest for them. That’s four storeys and a roof space in height. Of sticks.

You see? A mirror for life. I moved here with huge plans of growth and health and beauty and nature and nurture and sanctuary and enrichment. I had a vision in my head.

The reality somewhat resembles that vision but it’s been battered and starved and dessicated by exterior influences. Before this week’s rain it looked like everything was just going to shrivel up and die. I’ve buzzed around trying to keep it tended and cared for but I took on too much and without thought of how little I knew about the task I was undertaking. I looked at what others had done and thought I could fit it in alongside everything I already had and wanted to keep and I guess this could be seen as a negative thing.

Only it’s not.

I look at my garden now and I see that it’s beautiful. It looks established and yet allowed to run wild in many places. There are weird things in there that shouldn’t fit and yet they’re at home. The new and the old are winding together. There is a rich diversity of wildlife right here alongside us, sharing our address.

I have learnt a lot from what’s happened. I’ve learnt that you can have all sorts of wonderful things growing alongside each other as long as you’re mindful of how you arrange them. That you need to give things time to grow and then appreciate them once they have.

I’ve learnt that a garden is not all about toil and it’s also not just about sitting back and relaxing. The beauty happens when you find the balance. No complacency and yet no panic. Yes, you need to put in some work most days. Also to observe, nourish, feel and just sit and be. Some of it is out of your control and so it should be if you want the real thing.

This is nature. This is life. And its seasons roll round and around.
Posted
 

The Norman Conquest

<o:smarttagtype name="City" namespaceuri="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" style="font-family: Verdana;"></o:smarttagtype><o:smarttagtype name="place" namespaceuri="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" style="font-family: Verdana;"></o:smarttagtype>

Fear, self-doubt, imposter syndrome, inadequacy…you know the sort of thing I’m talking about. The feelings that stop you – me – from following our intuition and our ideas. These feelings, I’ve decided, with some advice and prompting from literary wise women, are the life blood of our inner critic and in order to fight back I have to give him a face and name. <o:p></o:p>

<o:p></o:p>Knowledge is power and now that I know him I can whip out my wild woman superpowers and kick his arse.<o:p></o:p>

<o:p></o:p>He looks like this only more weasley.

Media_httpjohanlonmoo_dwfeh

 

His name is <st1:city w:st="on">Norman</st1:city> (apologies to any cool <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Normans</st1:place></st1:city> out there but me and your name have some history and it really works for me).<o:p></o:p>

<o:p></o:p>Frankly Norman, you’re a joke.<o:p></o:p>

<o:p></o:p>While I wasn’t changing the locks on old Normy this weekend I was busy thinking about how I could help myself, and maybe others, remember their wildness. These are what I came up with.<o:p></o:p>

<o:p>
Media_httpjohanlonmoo_jjdqe
</o:p>

<o:p></o:p>

<o:p> </o:p>They’re prototypes, unvarnished and unpackaged as yet, but they will be available before long. They’re <st1:city w:st="on"><st1:place w:st="on">Norman</st1:place></st1:city>’s kryptonite (although I don’t recall him ever looking good in a leotard and tights).

Happy Monday

x
<o:p></o:p>

Posted
 

Crafty

I just bought this:

Media_httpjohanlonmoo_nvpef

And then I bought this:
Media_httpjohanlonmoo_hozkf

And one of these,
Media_httpjohanlonmoo_xcohj

and a roller and some lino blocks and some fabric paints. Guess what I'm going to be doing?

Oh and just for fun, I bought one of these each for me and Alisa:

Media_httpjohanlonmoo_zwdox

There goes my disposable income until next month. But who knows, maybe I'll make some more. Hmmm.
Posted
 

Pij

Where was I? Sleep. Lack of etc.Thanks so much for your kind and supportive comments, both on here and by email. We’ve been doing better. Evie has a little bed at the side of ours and falls asleep most nights after 3 stories and a cuddle. This is a huge improvement and clearly a lot of her problems are anxiety-based. She was getting cuddles and stories before but in her own bed, in her own room which is now on a different floor from ours. We have another couple of things to add to the mix to help her stay asleep because that’s not happening yet and maybe they’ll reward us all with some good nights.<o:p></o:p> But yes, it’s way better. Evie is back to being her good sweet self most of the time and that’s marvellous. Sadly I’m still crabby as hell by the afternoon but I’m working on it.<o:p>
</o:p>

Sleep was my Mondo Beyondo List #2. Once I’d gone some way to achieving that particular dream I found I was thinking very differently about that original list. Although Andrea said, “Hey don’t you go changing that list and cutting stuff out!” of course I did. I already had. In fact, true to my ongoing ‘but I have everything I need’ thoughts, I wanted to discard the whole thing and just stop wanting and dreaming and thinking of what ifs and the future and alternatives and Other Lives. Good grief, I have a really nice life already. Why not simply enjoy that? Wasn’t all this just creating an atmosphere of dissatisfaction and want and the grass is always greenerness? And wasn’t it all just hideously self-indulgent anyway? Who has the time for all this self-absorption? I don’t. I just get frustrated and resentful because I have no time to think about myself. HA. Stop it and suddenly I’m happy. Magic!<o:p></o:p>

About this time Pij appeared. That’s Pij on the banner. A homing pigeon who had lost her way, been blown off course, or just got too tired to go on. She came to live on our little commune of three cottages for a while and I became obsessed. Obsessed I tell you. I was feeding her, watering her, watching her, trying to prove to her I was harmless. Despite being able to read her ring ID number, I couldn’t report her to the relevant association because they don’t want to know unless the bird is contained. I read stories of how stray homing pigeons are often culled because clearly they’re no good at their job. So Pij stayed free.<o:p></o:p>

While gazing out of our bedroom window across the roofs and waiting for Pij to come in to feed in our somewhat neglected and overgrown kitchen garden (the grass/weed cover had grown back and the cracks in the cobbles were also full of weeds again after my marathon clearing session a few weeks ago.) I suddenly saw what I wanted to do with the area. It’s only small but very lovely and has a 15’ x 8’ bed in it that was used as a veg patch. I told myself that I was unlikely ever actually to grow vegetables and if I did, I could do it on a patch in the manor’s walled kitchen garden. Instead I’d fence off the bed from the dogs and cat, fill it with beautiful plants for bees, butterflies and other garden life, keep (and add to?) the bird feeders out there and generally make it a little tiny patch of loveliness. The surrounding grass is improving as I keep it short; the cobbles and steps and wall are beautiful anyway and with some carefully arranged containers...nice. I worked hard for two or three days in unseasonably hot weather. It was glorious.<o:p></o:p>

<o:p></o:p>I found myself sitting with Pij and seeing her visit as a sign. She’d got too tired to keep racing. She stopped in a restful, beautiful place and decided to stay a while. Get her strength up. She’d got lost on her journey and needed simply to stop, reassess and then head for home again. I began to think that this was what I was doing. Not giving up on the journey, just seeing clearly that the first step was to rest, relax and rediscover my bearings. She stayed for about two weeks and then disappeared. <o:p></o:p>

I’m still resting. I dream about Pij and about deer. Sitting like a statue while Pij ate at my feet and got her direction back. I associate deer with sitting in the woods; again quiet, still, hand extended, waiting for them to come to you. So that’s what I’m doing with my List O’Dreams. Sitting still. Waiting for it to come to me instead of chasing my tail the whole time looking for something I can’t name or identify. Being open to possibility including the one that says everything I need is already here.<o:p></o:p>

Meantime I’ve done the MB Core Values lesson. This gives you a quick, enjoyable and very doable way to identify your values are and from there, you can use them as an emotional/spiritual navigational aid. It sounds like an obvious thing that we do all the time but I think I’d lost touch. I came up with 5 words. No messing, no obsessing, just did it. They’re simple but powerful for me and already I’m looking at tasks, relationships and ideas with these values to the fore. I like it. <o:p></o:p>

Reading through the MB materials I found Jen and Andrea talking about stages. I’ve been following the MB path pretty closely it seems. I’ve dropped dreams, I’ve rebelled against the whole idea – mostly in fear (that’s a whole other post), I’ve learned the value of looking after myself and not pushing too hard to control what the Universe has available for me and I’ve mentally and physically made a clearing. Clearing is good.<o:p></o:p>

I just noticed that on the original MB List I wrote ‘create a beautiful garden’.<o:p></o:p>

Well, well, well.<o:p></o:p>

Posted
 

In my back yard

Yes. So. There was and is the 3YP (3 Year Plan). It still stands in a much improved form. Some of it has been achieved, some of it [ that should have been] hasn't. Some of the steps are taking longer than others, mainly because the the bits that have been achieved were achieved more quickly than we could have imagined and I'm still spinning a little. As is clear in the completely muddled intro to this post.

After we'd been here about a month I started to feel edgy. It seemed that we/I had lost all the focus that had propelled us through the previous couple of months and I was scared that we'd fall back into bad habits: talking the talk but never, ever walking the walk.

I remember reading an interview or seeing a TV show or something where an aspiring actor spoke about heading for LA and taking a job as a waiter while looking for his big break. He said that some people make it and some just keep waiting, in both senses. And after a while, you're no longer an aspiring actor, you're just a waiter. That has stayed with me for years. 

My response to this was to get moving with some regular setting of teeny, tiny goals. Baby steps that are so small that even I can't slide under them into procrastination. Of course these things work better when you're being supported by someone else so I do fortnightly planning and reporting with Jackie, here in real life, and daily 'I did something good today' check-ins with Alisa. Finally using IM to discuss something other than the Fug Girls and power-crazed three year olds. Dude.

We split things into areas of activity. For example, some of mine are Photography, Family/Home, Etsy, Crappy Admin (I hate paperwork and avoid it at any opportunity thus causing myself great and unnecessary stress) and Me (the much vaunted 'personal care' type stuff, be it a long hot bath, a long cold walk or a short, sharp talking to. Me time.)

I have things to do within a week, two weeks, 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year, 3 years and 5 years. Hardly revolutionary I know, but I've never done it before. The short term things are the teeny, tiny steps; the 5 year goals are the Big Dreams. I like this because I tend to spend so much time thinking about what exactly the Big Dreams might be that I don't actually take any tiny steps. This way, I'm sorted on the Big Dream front. They're written down in b&w. Waiting. I don't need to keep thinking about them.

Now, a major part of the 3YP (AKA the 5YP in some areas) is my work. I've already said that I want to do dog photography, eventually have it take over from my current part-time work and then overtake it in terms of income.

I have been thinking of the photography as My Big Creative Dream. The thing that my whole life I've been hunting: my passion (anyone else seeing Steve Martin as a 'poor black kid', musing on his Special Purpose?). Why did I not have a passion? My god, I've spent my whole life looking for my damn passion only to find 101 Things I Love (But That Aren't My Passion). Where was the thing that would have me pacing the floor? Not sleeping for days as I "create"? Feeling fulfilled in a way I'd never even imagined I could be? Yeah, yeah, yeah...

And guess what, over the last few weeks of adjusting to our new life, I was beginning to think,"Hmmm, dog photography. Why haven't I knocked over old people and a couple of toddlers in my scramble to start doing this yet? Maybe it's not my passion!"

Noooooooo! I heard the click! I did! 

I put it down to adjusting. Gave myself some time. Some more time.

This last weekend I spent working on our home. Saturday morning was cleaning and tidying and fluffing the house from top to bottom. Saturday afternoon and evening were the front garden. All day Sunday was the kitchen garden. At this time of year and with no financial resources, it was all about beautifying what we already have and we suddenly have a lot.

Evie happily helped, played or read or chatted or snacked alongside me for most of both days. The animals dozed in the sun or played Cat Beats Up Dogs. The neighbours had fabulous sitar music playing all day that drifted over to caress my ears and I worked hard. I was physically exhausted and it felt fantastic. Our home looked gorgeous and that felt fantastic.

Since then I've had cause to think more on something I'd said to Jackie in our first planning meeting. I'd said, tongue in cheek, that if we had enough money to carry on as we are into the future then I wouldn't care about doing anything else. Since we've moved I have my ideal home, my ideal environment. I love my family. I love my animals. I love my life. (Yes, I'm that lucky and I never forget it.) I'm only thinking about getting out there and starting something new because we need the money.

And it's true. I realised this is true and that it changes many things. It's taken me a while to work out in what way they've changed and I'm still processing but here's what I've got:

I love photography and I adore dogs, so dog photography would be an awesome thing to do.

We need me to work. When Evie goes to school in Sept 2010, either I try to go full-time at my current employment or I get a full-time job elsewhere and spend even more time away from home.

Or I build a business between now and then. See: The 3YP

So if I have to work, let it be at this thing that I'll love.

But...

It's not my passion. It's a wonderful job but it's a job. It's a business and I need to respect that. I need to be practical and plan things and have financial targets, business goals and a grown-up attitude alongside the 'oh your dog is so handsome and I get to spend the day with you talking about dogs and taking his picture' stuff. Also, and this is very liberating for me, I can stop being precious about the idea. I can chuck it around a bit. Knock the corners off. Throw it in the back of the car. Have bad days. Swear about it. Scream with joy about it. Be real about it and not feel I have to hold it carefully cupped in my soft focus hands. I love this realisation because  at heart, as I've said before many a time, as much as I love the whole floaty-skirted, dreamy, creative vibe (and I really do), for me it's not authentic. For me authentic is jeans and boots and very old t-shirts. Eyeliner and tattoos and a surfeit of dog hair on my clothes. I'm 100 times more likely to be watching 'Desperate Romantics' on TV than being desperately romantic myself.

My passion? Well, well, well...it was in my back yard all along. In fact is is my back yard. Now that I live somewhere I really love with people I really love, I find that my passion is here with them. What I work to maintain is not my 'creative destiny' out there in the world, it's my home. I don't mean in a 50s Housewife kind of way - not that there's anything wrong with that if that's your thing - I mean in a really profound way. In caring for and working creatively with my home I am physically very active and outside a lot. Both of these things are extremely important to my well-being physically, emotionally and yes, spiritually. The results are both instant and ongoing, internally and externally. It strengthens the bond between the three of us. It connects me with the land and a building that is so old it feels that it has become part of that land - it is a real boy now! And it creates a place that is aesthetically pleasing to me and that, almost more than anything apart from my family, makes me feel alive and joyful and grateful.

Media_httpjohanlonmoo_chvid
 

On Wednesday I had the most stressful day I've had in years. A catalogue of bad luck, bad timing, forgetfulness and cumulative stress meant the whole gloriously sunny day was wasted on me as I lurched from one panic to another. Central to the melodrama was the loss of my purse (as in small thing that holds money and cards, not as in handbag). When at 6pm I surrendered and gave up the search - beside myself with what this was going to mean for short term financial issues - I took a  deep breath and headed to my sister's across the garden. There in front of me, sitting in full view, was my purse.

In my back yard, the last place I'd looked.

And that, is the Universe at work if ever I saw it. Okay already. I get it.

Posted