Tag Archives: A Man in her Arms & other stories by Marilyn Jaye Lewis

Getting better by the minute!

Wow!

Not only an actual day off, but the bearable weather continues — which means my brain is still working! Yay!!

AND — the Summer Sale over at Smashwords starts today, gang, and continues through the month of July.

All the info and direct links are on my substack page. The sale includes free downloads of Freak Parade and The Muse Revisited: Volumes, 1,2, &3.

The sale is for my eBooks only. And these books, as always, are intended for ADULT READSERS ONLY. Thanks!!

I don’t USUALLY look like this, but just for today, I look like this…

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In other great SALE news!!

Cave Things started a summer sale today, too!

All kinds of cool things are on sale over there to help you beat the heat, or whatever it is you’re trying to beat….

Yet again, some of my favorites are on sale!! Including, but not limited to;

The Hotel Girls Notebook — $12.00 (plus tons of shipping to the USA) (Only adults can look at the image below, thank you very much for your cooperation)

The fantastic Happy Tea Set, the whole set, or separate pieces of it! The Happy Tea Pot, $68.00 (plus all sorts of overseas shipping fees!)

Up Jumped the Devil Milk Jug! $40.00 (no shipping Oops! Tons of shipping there, too!)

That milk jug commemorates one of my absolute favorite Nick Cave songs of all time!!!

“Up Jumped the Devil”, Nick Cave & the Bad Seeds, 1988, from the incredible album, Tender Prey.

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Here’s this!

Not only because I love this photo so much, but also because my great-great grandmother was a full-blood Blackfoot Indian, and judging by the date listed below, she very well might have known Chief Two Guns White Calf! I think that is so cool.

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And speaking of guns…

I am really, really thinking I will have to cancel my monthly membership at the shooting range, gang. I am only getting one day off a week these days, and it is going to continue for the rest of the summer.

I’m going to call over there today and see if maybe I can just temporarily suspend my membership until Fall. We’ll see. I hate to do it, but I have` absolutely no time. And I just keep paying and paying and paying…

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Okay, well. have I had some intense shifts the last couple of days. In a good way, but still intense.

I saw the retired Minister and his wife on Sunday evening and it was great. He is making such great progress. He was lucid the entire time I was with him, and he talked a lot about his ministry, as well as when he first decided to become a Christian when he was in his teens (he is 80 now).

It was an amazing evening, but as usual it sort of wiped me out emotionally.

Ditto, my shift with my favorite client who is back from Florida. For different reasons, although she is a retired Chaplain, so it was all in the same vein.

I still don’t understand WHY ON EARTH I decided to return to this type of work, but clearly, all of this is on my path right now for a reason.

Oh, and oddly enough!! In my novel-in-progress, The Curse of Our Profound Disorder, that I am working on after a 26-year hiatus… the father in the story is a retired Minister. And the upcoming remainder of the novel is primarily about HIM.

Hmmm…….

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On the home front —

I downloaded all the forms I need to fill out in order to apply for that USDA home-improvement loan/grant for low-income seniors living in rural areas.

We’ll see if I can get those filled out before I leave for NYC, but something tells me it would be pushing my luck. I have some stuff I need to do on the play today, and today is my only day off.

But at least I have the forms!!

Home improvement in the Hinterlands!

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And I think that’s it for now!

I have to finish doing the laundry then get focused on “The Guide to Being Fabulous”!

Have a terrific Tuesday, wherever you are in the world!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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Yes, the Annie Murray kick continues around here!

How can you NOT love this one, gang??? One of her first hits — “Snowbird.”

Anne Murray, “Snowbird”, 1969. From her album, This Way is My Way. Enjoy, gang!!

“Snowbird”

Beneath this snowy mantle cold and clean
The unborn grass lies waiting
For its coat to turn to green
The snowbird sings the song he always sings
And speaks to me of flowers
That will bloom again in spring

When I was young
My heart was young then, too
Anything that it would tell me
That’s the thing that I would do
But now I feel such emptiness within
For the thing that I want most in life’s
The thing that I can’t win

Spread your tiny wings and fly away
And take the snow back with you
Where it came from on that day
The one I love forever is untrue
And if I could you know that I would
Fly away with you

The breeze along the river seems to say
That he’ll only break my heart again
Should I decide to stay
So, little snowbird
Take me with you when you go
To that land of gentle breezes
Where the peaceful waters flow

Spread your tiny wings and fly away
And take the snow back with you
Where it came from on that day
The one I love forever is untrue
And if I could you know that I would
Fly away with you

Yeah, if I could you know that I would
Fl-y-y-y-y away with you

c – 1969 – Gene MacLellan

Just Like I Said It Would be!

Yes, all those thunderstorms we were supposed to have yesterday, and the “cooler” temperatures and less humidity….(that I predicted were not really going to come!)

We got maybe a handful of rain, around 8PM. And of course the temperatures soared back into the mid-90s Fahrenheit. Bright sunshine EVERYWHERE. Another ungodly hot & humid day yesterday.

Somehow, I managed to get all the groceries and cat food, etc. (a total of 5 stores) yesterday after my shift. I got everything that needs to be here while I’m in NYC.

And I got everything put away, all the litter boxes cleaned, various cats got fed, I watered all the flowers outside (roses are BLOOMING!!), in time to call Sandra right at 5PM…

But my brain was fried. It was so fucking HOT.

Sandra: “Really? You’re having a heatwave there? It’s been really nice around here. Mid-70s every day.”

Just hearing that made me want to faint…

Anyway.

I don’t know how everything gets done here, because I am almost brain-dead. And even the house is clean. Like, I mean, the whole house. I look around and I barely remember doing that. On top of the heatwave, my shifts increased like crazy the past couple weeks. So I feel like I’m never even home. But apparently I am, and I am still on top of everything. (That thought is exhausting, right there.)

But guess what happened last night??!! I was already in bed, drifting to sleep in the oppressive heat when it started:

YES!

Last night was the 4th of July fireworks over at the ballpark. I missed the whole thing. I was under the impression the fireworks were going to be on Monday, June 30th, and I was really excited because I’ll have the whole evening off as well as the following day, but, alas, that was the “rain date” in case they got rained out last night (LOL).

That really disappointed me, gang. And I was too wiped out to even think of getting out of bed, getting dressed, and going out to the yard to watch them.

BTW — in all the smaller towns and villages around here, they don’t do the fireworks on the actual 4th because they can’t compete with the HUGE “Red White & BOOM!” celebration that goes on in downtown Columbus, over the river, on the actual 4th of July.

Anyway. It’s over. And I missed them.

My life feels so weird these days that it actually feels creepy. Like it isn’t even my real life.

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I hate to maybe jinx it, but today is SUPPOSED to be a nice day. Much lower temperatures, less humidity. So far, it is a really really perfect summer day but the day is young….

We’ll see.

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So I have only ONE DAY off before I have to leave for NYC next Sunday.

I do have some minor edits that I need to do on the play before I leave town. But other than that, I’m ready to go. Money, credit cards, new clothes, stocked up on all my supplements, the Ubers are reserved, the cat-sitter is triple checked!

It’s really interesting to see how my brain actually does work even when it feels “dead” from all the heat. (The heat wave is supposed to be over as of tonight.)

So now, all I really need to do is breathe and let myself get excited about the PLAY!

You know, as far as my career goes, I have zero complaints. I have done everything I ever wanted to do as a writer, and then some. And especially after I quit the music “business” and got into publishing in NYC, I had a really wonderful career — as a writer, editor, publisher, teacher. I really have no complaints.

Even considering how the traditional publishing world that I worked in completely disappeared after self-publishing and eBooks took over, I don’t at all lose sight of the fact that I had a really, really great career in traditional small-press publishing while it existed.

And I really love that I was a big part of that world while it existed. And I met and worked with such amazing people, from all over the world.

I have wonderful memories and no complaints.

That said, though — WOW! The fact that our play is finally heading to Off-Broadway, even while it was never an actual goal of mine when I first moved to NYC, it just blows me away, gang. I honestly can’t believe it. I love theater so much. And I just really, really want to have some FUN now. I can’t believe that pre-production stuff gets underway in just about a week. Wow.

So I have to remind myself to take some time to breathe and be happy.

I might actually do that today!!

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Okay, I think that’s it! I better scoot and get ready to head to town for my shift.

I hope you have a fun Saturday, wherever you are in the world.

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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Here’s a blast from the past!

Another one of those songs that I totally forgot about but which I used to love!!

Carly Simon, “That’s the Way I’ve Always Heard it Should Be”, 1971 (!! — okay, so why was I listening to & loving depressing songs like this when I was 11??). And at age 65 now, I have 2 marriages done and long gone. Too late now to “change my tune”!! All right. Enjoy, gang!

That’s The Way I Always Heard It Should Be

My father sits at night with no lights on
His cigarette glows in the dark
The living room is still
I walk by, no remark
I tiptoe past the master bedroom where
My mother reads her magazines
I hear her call sweet dreams
But I forgot how to dream

But you say it’s time we moved in together
And raised a family of our own, you and me
Well, that’s the way I’ve always heard it should be
You want to marry me, we’ll marry

My friends from college they’re all married now
They have their houses and their lawns
They have their silent noons
Tearful nights, angry dawns
Their children hate them for the things they’re not
They hate themselves for what they are
And yet they drink, they laugh
Close the wound, hide the scar

But you say it’s time we moved in together
And raised a family of our own, you and me
Well, that’s the way I’ve always heard it should be
You want to marry me, we’ll marry

You say we can keep our love alive
Babe, all I know is what I see
The couples cling and claw
And drown in love’s debris
You say we’ll soar like two birds through the clouds
But soon you’ll cage me on your shelf
I’ll never learn to be just me first
By myself

Well O.K., it’s time we moved in together
And raised a family of our own, you and me
Well, that’s the way I’ve always heard it should be,
You want to marry me, we’ll marry
We’ll marry

© 1970 Quackenbush Music Ltd. / Kensho Music, ASCAP

Music by: Carly Simon/ Lyrics by: Jacob Brackman

“You’d think she’d be better at this, right? I mean, I’m just saying…”

Glory hallelujah, gang! As if I didn’t need more on my plate!!

“Yes, please, I’ll have some more!”

Something caught my eye this morning that alerted me to these new facts:

Bobbi Jo is, in fact, Bobby Joe.

And Betty Jo needs a new name…. Arrrgggh!

Since my beloved 2-legged Billie Jo is still indeed a female, I guess I have to give her name to Betty and now Betty will be Billy Joe. (Or I could just call them all by the same name. I don’t think they will ever know the difference.)

But there we have it! I’m going to have a summer full of expensive visits to the new veterinarian! And here I’d thought I only had one (neutered) male in the house and could take all the time I wanted…

“Why does it take so long for those 2 little things to show up?”

Oh, and another happy thing!!!

My upstairs bathtub drain is completely backed up. Nothing accents a house full of overwhelming heat and humidity like a tub full of stagnant water!!

Well, I’m planning to remove the water. But I really, really, really don’t want to call a plumber…. I ordered a Zip-It. So we’ll see, although I don’t feel too encouraged. A (hopefully really, really good-looking) plumber is likely in my immediate future, too.

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Good news, though! Yay!

After posting that photo I took of the poor heat-stroked kittens (see the end of yesterday’s post), I did finally open the bedroom door yesterday. I propped a box fan in the doorway, and stacked some hard cover books precariously on top of the fan, in the event that any cats wanted to try sailing over the top of the fan, in either direction.

Well, it worked! I only had one cat try to get into my room yesterday afternoon, and the books and fan tumbled noisily to the floor and it scared the bejeezus out of him — and all the other cats & kittens! And so that took care of that. No one else tried it.

Now, the kittens and the Mommy-cat stay in the room, and the other cats stay out. And we all get some air circulating in here, finally!!

Today is supposed to be the final day of the actual heatwave. And I have to say, gang — you know me and my conspiracy theorist friends!! There is something truly strange about this heatwave. 93 degrees Fahrenheit isn’t usually this unbearable.

The summer temperatures here have always gone into the 90s at some point, but it never felt like this. (And, add to that, the White Hat WWIII scenario, pushing people to the “boiling point”… hmmm.)

Anyway. It’s not just me thinking stuff like this.

Valerie in Brooklyn texted yesterday and said, “What the fuck is going on with this weather?? What are they doing to us now?? We always have heat in NYC in the summer, but it’s nothing like this. I can’t even breathe.”

Well, I digress a bit.

Today is the final day of the heatwave, although the weather won’t be really enjoyable until the middle of next week. But just getting these temperatures out of the 90s will be such a relief. (And I’m not talking about music or fashion, because, you know, the 90s were kinda cool — if I can mix metaphors all over the place.)

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Okay!

The shooting range sent out an email this morning, a reminder that a new shooting club starts there today. So I won’t be going to the range today, either. All the lanes will be filled up during the time when I usually go.

And it means I won’t be going to town to visit those clients who are in rehab until maybe Thursday.

Which means ANOTHER day to sit and work on the novel!! Yay!!

What a blessing, gang. To suddenly have all this time (unbearably hot as it’s been) to sit and work on the novel. It has been such a long time. And FYI — all the sections and songs we will be working on for the rehearsals of the play (in 2 weeks!!!) are already completed. So I get to just truly focus on the novel. It feels so great.

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Nick Cave sent out a really incredible Red Hand File this morning. At least, it moved me a whole lot. Even though he was referencing what he does spiritually to prepare to go on stage (and then blow people the fuck away!), it resonated with me so much — how it feels to go into my clients’ homes and face life, mortality, love, loss, the quality of being human — and all the people from my own past and from my clients’ pasts who “show up” in spirit and spend time with us while I’m there.

He said, in part:

“…I appeal to these individuals, and many more, much like a devout person might petition the saints for assistance. I remember all these people and I feel a deep spiritual empowerment, so that when I take to the stage, I am carried along by this unearthly fraternity and their special powers. For me, this is an immense strength – an energy that illuminates what is truly meaningful and what is not. Communing with the dead is, in that respect, as clarifying an exercise as anything can be. We are quickly reminded of what matters and what does not. …”

You can read it in full here.

[Below, a photo of an old friend of Nick’s who just passed away.]

David “Dud” Green

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All righty!

Laundry got done yesterday. And the light housecleaning got done, too! And the backed-up water can sit in the tub for now (I have another shower downstairs), so this means I’m going to get back to The Curse of Our Profound Disorder.

Have a terrific Tuesday, wherever you are in the world!!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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Blast from the 90s past, gang!

“Pass the Dutchie”, 1995, from the album Thump’ N Reggae Jamz by Musical Youth. Stay cool and enjoy, gang!!

Beating the Heat!!

Sort of, anyway.

I took some of those freezer-pack thingies from the freezer last night, wrapped them in cotton tea towels and brought them up here for the kittens to sleep on top of and they love them.

So that makes me feel a lot better. They were really suffering from the heat in here.

Luckily, I have a ton of those freezer-packs. I get them whenever I buy something perishable from my favorite local health food store !!!

Comfrey Corner of Heath

Also, just to keep the kittens occupied during the heatwave–

I moved a baby grand piano into my room. They love playing on it!! And I get to listen to some really soothing music while I work on the novel…

Anyway.

Yes, it’s fucking HOT. But somehow, I’m dealing with it. I currently have 3 fans in here.

And what’s frustrating is that, the minute you leave this room, the rest of the house is not that bad — 17 open windows, and ceiling fans; the air really circulates. I did my yoga out in the hallway yesterday and it was fine.

I am so tempted to just open the bedroom door and see what Little Blackie would do — would she keep on attacking the other cats, now that the kittens are a lot older? If she does, it’s just too hot right now to deal with the pandemonium that would ensue so I’m afraid to find out.

“Oh no! Not again!!”

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Well, yesterday was really something.

I had that new client who is a retired minister. He has cognitive impairment, along with some other intense health issues. But the wife was there the entire time, taking care of him. They were both really nice people.

And of course it broke my heart — the wife’s full-time occupation now is taking care of her husband. They have a beautiful home but since she has no time for anything else, the house is sort of an absolute wreck. (I see that all the time now, too.) And I can’t help but think of what the house was like when they first moved in — when they were younger, celebrated holidays with family, etc. It must have been so beautiful in that house.

And things like that always make me wonder what will happen to my own house as I get older and older; will I stop being able to take care of it?? And then I miss the days when I was younger, whether or not I was married, I always had dinner parties. Always entertained. That part of my life is already over.

So it was another one of those emotionally intense evenings for me, since, as always, God stepped in.

The wife had also studied at a seminary (a very well known one in Ohio), so we had some conversations about Biblical Archeology and other unexpected topics, since all three of us had studied for the ministry in one capacity or another.

Then midway through my shift, she asked if I minded watching the movie, “Fiddler on the Roof.” I was absolutely fine with it! I love that musical — it was a favorite of mine when I was growing up, since it’s a thoroughly Jewish musical.

But I wasn’t prepared for how it would make me feel — the memories it would bring back — watching that movie all these years later. I’ve seen the play many times, but I only saw the film once — with my family, back when it opened in theaters in the fall of 1971 (!!).

A time when my entire extended family was still very, very Jewish. But my parents were already constantly fighting with each other, and I was already getting deep into my own private world. Constantly retreating into it, because my mother’s rage was pretty much off the charts all the time back then.

And yet… all these years later. Just the memory of being in the car with my family, as we drove home from the movie — a movie I had absolutely loved, since I already knew all the songs by heart.

And now, basically everyone in my family is dead. This was over 50 years ago (!!). how does it happen, gang? The flying of time.

I kept these feelings to myself while watching the movie, because I am there strictly for their needs, not to burden them with my own drama.

But when this scene (below) came on — it floored me. I still know this song by heart, and I played it a lot on our record player when I was a little girl but I hadn’t thought of it in years. Not only that, but our family– the entire extended family — always honored the Sabbath by lighting the Shabbat candles back then and saying the Hebrew prayers.

I got really choked up while watching this and I had to of course act like nothing was wrong at all– “Sabbath Prayer”:

And when this song came on — forget about it!! Luckily, it’s just a really moving song, whether or not you’re Jewish, and even the Minister and his wife got a little choked up, too — “Sunrise, Sunset”:

Well, one of the many feelings I was feeling as I left their home last night, was how grateful I was that when my dad died, he had no cognitive impairment at all. He remembered me right up util he went into the coma.

His last words to me on the phone were: “Don’t come today! I’m not feeling very well.”

Later that day, he was in the coma and the hospice nurse was telling me that I’d better get there as soon as possible…

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Okay.

Today, I think I will stick around the house, enjoy the oppressive heatwave and work on the novel — and also get some light housecleaning done.

Tomorrow, the Agency would like me to stop in at the rehab and visit those 2 clients of mine who are in there because it looks like they’ll be in there a long time… The shooting range is on the way to the rehab, oddly enough, so I guess tomorrow will be about that.

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Oh my god!!

I just turned around and saw this! The poor little things. It is really HOT.

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Last night in Hamburg! Several photos this time from the 2nd night of sold out shows. Nick Cave and Colin Greenwood.

The next show is on Wednesday, in Rochefort, France. Tickets are still available for that one. Buy them here.

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Enjoy your Monday, gang, wherever you are in the world!

Thanks for visting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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I leave you with another great one from “Fiddler on the Roof” !!

“Miracle of Miracles”. Enjoy, gang.

“Miracle of Miracles”

Wonder of wonders, miracle of miracles-
God took up Daniel once again,
Stood by his side and- miracle of miracles-
Walked him through the lion’s den!

Wonder of wonders, miracle of miracles-
I was afraid that God would frown,
But like he did so long ago, at Jericho,
God just made a wall fall down!

When Moses softened Pharaoh’s heart, that was a miracle.
When God made the waters of the Red Sea part, that was a miracle too!
But of all God’s miracles large and small,
The most miraculous one of all
Is that out of a worthless lump of clay,
God has made a man today.

Wonder of wonders, miracle of miracles-
God took the tailor by the hand
Turned him around and- miracle of miracles- Led him to the promised land!

When David slew Goliath (yes!), that was a miracle.
When God gave us manna in the wilderness, that was a miracle too.
But of all God’s miracles large and small,
The most miraculous one of all
Is the one I thought could never be:
God has given you to me.

c- 1964 – Jerry Bock, Sheldon Harnick

Okay, yeah, well, the heat IS kinda getting to me…

Wow, gang.

It’s not so much that the heat is off the charts, or anything. It’s that I can’t open my bedroom door, yet, because of the kittens and Mommy-the-Attack-Cat still being in here. So the air just can’t circulate.

The rest of the house is a lot better than my room is – even with all 3 windows open and the turbo fan going full blast in here.

However. I don’t have to be at my new client’s house until 3PM, so I have quite a few hours here to work on the novel. So I’m drinking coffee and trying to keep the brain working. I don’t want to waste the day, melting into a brain-dead heap on the bed.

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This was interesting. About the Nazareth inscription — an ancient tablet thought to be an edict by the Emperor Claudius. Even considering it might have absolutely nothing to do with Jesus’ tomb, it is still very interesting.

Ancient Engraving: Jesus’ Resurrection Clue? (12 mins):

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This was from the sold out show last night in Hamburg.

The theater looks like a real architectural gem, but performing in it seems like it would be sort of creepy. Since, like, if anyone opened fire on you there would be absolutely nowhere to run…(It’s a complete circle of the audience surrounding the stage.)

Anyway! Nick Cave is that tiny dot at the piano, “dead” center!

Tonight’s show in Hamburg is also sold out. But as of now, there are still tickets available for Wednesday’s show in Rochefort, France. Check here. (Then you’re out of luck until mid-July, in Italy.)

And here’s this, because I am so tired of life right now, but I still love this song…

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Well, yesterday was kind of amazing, gang. Both of my favorite clients, back to back — and they couldn’t be more different from each other. But it wiped me out.

I spent 3 hours first thing in the morning with that favorite client who is back from Florida and we had another really great time. We did not stop talking. Time flew by again. And she said, “I love your intellect! You have a mind like a steel trap! When I talk with you, I feel the cobwebs coming off of my own intellect. It feels so good to really TALK with someone again.”

And of course that made me feel really good because I feel the very same thing about her (we talk a lot about Christian theology, etc.).

But she went on to say that she wants me to be scheduled with her regularly, but I have no control over that. She has to be the one to call the Agency and specifically request me (which I think she will, but I wasn’t supposed to tell her that because it’s considered taking shifts away from other caregivers). Anyway, I told her I would speak to my supervisor Monday morning and ask if they can please rearrange my schedule to include her.

Which I am definitely going to do, but when I looked at my schedule this morning — except for next week and the week I’m in NYC, my schedule is BOOKED SOLID through mid-August and except for July 4th, she is NOWHERE on my schedule and I just don’t understand why they did that. But also, my schedule is booked solid with clients who have cognitive impairments. Meaning, no conversations of any real depth for the next 2 months…

Even though I care about all of my clients, it gets to be overwhelming — especially when here is this client that I get along with so great who has no cognitive impairment whatsoever.

Well, I’ll see what I can possibly do tomorrow to change that.

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Another thing she said that really hit home for me–

She is also good with guns. Her husband was an expert marksman. His rifle collection is still upstairs, and all his medals and honors and plaques are over the fireplace. He taught her how to use a gun a long time ago, and she was surprisingly good at it, too.

I told her about my sudden impulse to go to the shooting range and learn how to use a handgun back in December — and then discovering that I was actually really good at it

Very matter-of-factly, she said, “That was God. You’d better listen. Keep at it.”

And then that feeling I’d been having lately, that I should give up my membership at the shooting range to save money, completely evaporated. I saw this endeavor of mine in a whole new light.

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Other than that — this fatigue from the heat and lack of air; this fatigue from constantly caring for people and for cats and for plants and for everything that can be considered a living thing… And missing all the ones who have already passed on…

Yes, I feel just unbelievably tired and, with that feeling, I get tired of living. Like, life just goes on and on and on, and all those things I used to love about living life everyday — the older I get, the more gone those things are.

And then I spend my days with people who are truly in the final chapters of their lives, who have outlived almost everything they knew, and I don’t even know what to think anymore. I just want everything to stop.

However.

I am really happy about where the novel is going. This feeling that it’s a miracle that, 26 years later, I know how this novel needs to end. And that’s exciting. So that keeps me going.

And even though I’m worried about how things will go with the cat sitter and all these cats everywhere while I’m in NYC (and the need to make sure KonTiki gets enough food outside, too, because the raccoons eat ALL of her food at night.)

Anyway, aside from worrying about that, whenever I think about the trip to NYC, and being in the rehearsal room, finally working on “The Guide to Being Fabulous” the way we intended it to be — and NOT being alone, for a change!!!

Well, I get happy about that. So I keep going.

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And oddly enough — this just came in:

From Rick Rubin’s substack:

Honor the Inspiration

We honor the inspiration for its own sake, not for any specific outcome.

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And on that glorious note–

I’m going to get back to the novel now.

Enjoy your Sunday, wherever you are in the world.

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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I leave you with this!

Something beautiful from yesteryear–

Kris Kristofferson, “Help Me Make it Through the Night”. 1969. Enjoy, gang.

Getting Ready for a Happy Solstice Around Here!

We are finally back to some gorgeous weather around here — after a couple of days of rain, thunderstorms, and those ridiculous high winds.

[Picture moi: at 2AM, in my summer nightgown and my raincoat and flip-flops, out in the high winds and driving rain, trying to keep everything on my porches from blowing clear down the road…]

It’s over now!!

However… a heat wave is on it’s way.

Yes. Relentless sun and temps in the mid-90s Fahrenheit for the next several days. But I’ll take it.

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Yesterday was a great day, disregarding the weather.

I spent 5 hours (!!) with that wonderful client who is back from Florida now. She and I had such a great afternoon. I just love the conversations that she and I have. She is so passionate, funny, smart, well-traveled — and she’s 88 and has seen so much of life (she was a chaplain until she retired).

Really, the time just flew. I have no idea if the Agency will be putting her on my schedule again or not. I sure hope so, but we shall see.

(They’re starting me with a new client on Sunday evenings — a retired minister. United Church of Christ. Only minor cognitive issues and his wife will be there the whole time, which always makes the job easier. Should be very interesting.)

When I got home yesterday, it was still early afternoon, so not only was I able to do yoga again, for a change, I was also able to work on the novel for a few hours.

It felt incredible — to just be able to get lost in the writing again.

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Okay. There is not much to post about today. But here’s this!! Yay!

Tomorrow, the tour resumes in Hamburg, Germany. Tickets are sold out. But there’s a show on Wednesday in Rochefort, France that still has tickets available!!

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And I think that is it. I have a phone appointment scheduled with Social Security here in a few minutes. (They’re trying to take all my retirement money away, so you can guess I’m pleased as punch about that!)

After that, I gotta scoot to town and see my favorite 94-year-old Japanese man!!

Enjoy your Friday, wherever you are in the world.

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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All righty!!!

Yesterday’s driving-back-from-town music!!

I absolutely LOVE this song, gang. Never get tired of it! I have a crystal clear memory of hearing it on the school bus radio in Cleveland, back in 1969. Not that I liked it or didn’t like it when I was 9, but it was such a memorable song….

Anyway!! It’s a great song for driving along those backroads now.

Merle Haggard, “Okie From Muskogee”, 1969. Enjoy, gang!!

“Okie From Muskogee”

We don’t smoke marijuana in Muskogee;
We don’t take our trips on LSD
We don’t burn our draft cards down on Main Street;
We like livin’ right, and bein’ free.

We don’t make a party out of lovin’;
We like holdin’ hands and pitchin’ woo;
We don’t let our hair grow long and shaggy,
Like them hippies out in San Francisco do.

I’m proud to be an Okie from Muskogee,
A place where even squares can have a ball.
We still wave Old Glory down at the courthouse,
And white lightning’s still the biggest thrill of all.

Leather boots are still in style for manly footwear;
Beads and Roman sandals won’t be seen.
And football’s still the roughest thing on campus,
And the kids they still respect the college dean.

And I’m proud to be an Okie from Muskogee,
A place where even squares can have a ball.
And we still wave Old Glory down at the courthouse,
And white lightning’s still the biggest thrill of all.

We still wave Old Glory down at the courthouse,
In Muskogee, Oklahoma, USA.

c – 1969 – Merle Haggard, Roy Burris

I’m not complaining!!

I love having my life back!!

I love sitting at the laptop all day and working on the novel — it’s been a long time since I was able to sit and focus like that (since COVID, actually, after which, everything in my life changed).

It takes some adjusting, though, to be closed up in my room now with 4 extremely frisky kittens and a Mommy-cat, in such high humidity — and not be able to even open the door.

But it’s temporary. It’s all temporary, in fact, when you think about it… Life.

Anyway.

Once I get back from NYC, I can focus on letting the kittens get out and roam the house a little. But I was informed that I can’t get Little Blackie spayed until at least one month after the kittens are completely weaned.

So on we go. Until then, we’re all in this room together.

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Oh! Here’s one nice thing the kittens did for me yesterday, while I was having a quick chat on the phone with Sandra about the play!!

They relieved me of that pesky Himalayan salt lamp that I absolutely LOVED!

Looks so much nicer now than it used to look, doesn’t it, gang??

Anyway. Just a long line of things that I have to let go of around here, between the kittens and the foster cats. (I can’t tell you how many times a day I find myself saying , “You didn’t just do that, did you?? Oh my god!!”)

But onward.

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Before I forget, my eBooks that are published on Smashwords will once again be FREE to download during their Summer Sale for the month of July.

This will include: Freak Parade, and The Muse Revisited Volumes 1, 2, & 3.

eBooks only and on Smashwords, only. And these titles are absolutely for Adults Only. Thank you!!

I will remind you when July 1st rolls around.

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So, I have my plane ticket to NYC . Out hotel rooms are booked. The rehearsal space is booked and the rehearsal schedule has been sent to all involved. And I’ll be seeing Wayne probably a couple of times while I’m there, and Valerie from Brooklyn will be meeting me for dinner on Tuesday, July 9th.

The cat-sitter has been confirmed and doubly confirmed. I have THREE new sundresses — plus a couple more that are almost new.

AND I’ve reserved about 7 trillion Uber rides.

So it’s safe to say that I’m ready and the trip to NYC is right around the corner, gang. And the much beloved play, “The Guide to Being Fabulous” officially starts its journey to Off-Broadway.

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Okay, here’s this!!

From the photographer Peter Anderson’s Instagram account — Nick Cave, back when he was with The Boys Next Door:

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And, honestly, that is really it.

I have to see my favorite 94-year-old Japanese man today — it’s Sushi-Sashimi day, if he’s up to it!! So I gotta scoot.

Enjoy your Wednesday, wherever you are in the world.

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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Another one from Steve Earle!

“Hillbilly Highway”, 1986. From the album Guitar Town. Enjoy, gang.

“Hillbilly Highway”

My granddaddy was a miner, but he finally saw the light
He didn’t have much, just a beat-up truck and a dream about a better life
Grand mama cried when she waved goodbye, never heard such a lonesome sound
Pretty soon the dirt road turned into blacktop, Detroit City bound

Down that hillbilly highway
On that hillbilly highway
That old hillbilly highway
Goes on and on

Now he worked and saved his money so that one day he might send
My old man off to college, to use his brains and not his hands
Grand mama cried when he said goodbye, never heard such a lonesome sound
Daddy had himself a good job in Houston, one more rollin’ down

That old hillbilly highway
That old hillbilly highway
That old hillbilly highway
Goes on and on
On and on, on and on, here it goes

Granddaddy rolled over in his grave the day that I quit school
I just sat around the house playin’ my guitar, and Daddy said I was a fool
My mama cried when I said goodbye, I never heard such a lonesome sound
Now I’m standin’ on this highway and if you’re going my way

You know where I’m bound
Down that hillbilly highway
On that hillbilly highway
That old hillbilly highway
Goes on and on

Hmm, yeah, that’s the road I’m on

Hillbilly highway

Hillbilly highway

c- 1986 Steve Earle, Jimbeau Hinson

“Handling it just fine!!”

The humidity is just god-awful around here today, gang. The heat’s not so bad, but being closed up tight in this room — even with all the window’s open, there’s just no AIR!!

But it’s my final day off until next Monday, and I want to get this novel DONE as soon as I can, so I’m just going to deal with it.

Me SOMEONE dealing with it just fine…

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Before I forget!!

Wow, did I have a wonderful time with my client yesterday. (I hadn’t seen her in 8 months.)

She was in great spirits. She looked fantastic. We had a whole afternoon of great conversations, and as I was leaving, she said, “It was so great seeing you again! I had such a nice afternoon.”

That kind of thing just makes my day, gang.

And being back in her home again — wow, what a feeling. She lives way out in the country and her home is a HUGE old farmhouse (14 rooms), built in 1839. Surrounded by hills, trees, a small lake, a couple of small barns. And the house is absolutely filled with love — you can feel it the moment you walk into it. She and her husband were married 63 years before he died (during COVID, but not from it), and they lived on that property the whole time and raised a really happy family there.

It was just so great to be back there, with her.

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And for whatever reason [HINT: novel-in-progress} I am feeling really wiped out emotionally today.

Although, while I was doing all that driving yesterday, I started to get little inspirations — primarily that there needs to be a Part 3 . A very short Part 3.

And I know what needs to happen in it and I felt really excited about that.

But meanwhile, I am working on completing Part 2. It feels so strange to just pick up the story where I left it, 26 years ago…

And Part 1 is 152 pages long and, in essence, takes place during one day — the protagonist’s 24th birthday. But, of course, it’s full of flashbacks, memories, thoughts.

Part 2 is similar — it takes place 2 years later, on the evening where the protagonist has to turn over the funeral urn with her lover’s ashes in it to his brothers, and then flashbacks, memories, and thoughts ensue for 100 more pages.

So I’m guessing what I have here is a novel that will be about 300-ish pages, that unveils a young woman’s lifetime over the course of 2 specific days. Well, 3 — since there will be a Part 3.

It takes so much weaving and weaving and weaving, and making sure you aren’t leaving any lose threads.

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Okay, enough!!

Here’s this!!!

One of several great photos posted to Instagram by Marlon Richards’ wife on Father’s Day:

Keith and Marlon Richards

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And here’s this!

The decision was finalized last night, at about 9PM, while I was lying in bed, chatting on the phone with Sandra!

We’ll be staying at this hotel in NYC in July:

The Empire Hotel, across the street from Lincoln Center.

And our rehearsal studio is only 4 blocks away, so it should be a really great trip.

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From James Tabor —

Mystery Solved–Here’s How the Shroud of Turin Was Produced! (2 hrs):

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And I think I better get started around here today!!

Have a terrific Tuesday, wherever you are in the world!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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As promised!

Another great one from Steve Earle.

I think this song was probably everybody’s first exposure to his music, back in 1986. Well, it was his first single released, anyway, and it was a huge Billboard hit.

I loved this song!

“Guitar Town,” Steve Earle. Enjoy, gang!!

“Guitar Town”

Hey pretty baby, are you ready for me
It’s your good rockin’ daddy down from Tennessee
I’m just out of Austin bound for San Antone
With the radio blastin’ and the bird dog on

There’s a speed trap up ahead in Selma Town
But no local yokel gonna shut me down
‘Cause me and my boys got this rig unwound
And we’ve come a thousand miles from a Guitar Town

Nothin’ ever happened ’round my hometown
And I ain’t the kind to just hang around
But I heard someone callin’ my name one day
And I followed that voice down the lost highway
Everybody told me you can’t get far
On 37 dollars and a jap guitar
Now I’m smokin’ into Texas with the hammer down
And a rockin’ little combo from the Guitar Town

Hey pretty baby don’t you know it ain’t my fault
I love to hear the steel belts hummin’ on the asphalt
Wake up in the middle of the night in a truck stop
Stumble in the restaurant wonderin’ why I don’t stop

Well, I gotta keep rockin’ why I still can
Got a two pack habit and a motel tan
When my boots hit the boards I’m a brand new man
With my back to the riser, I make my stand

Hey pretty baby, won’t you hold me tight
I’m loadin’ up and rollin’ out of here tonight
One of these days, I’m gonna settle down
And take you back with me to the Guitar Town

c- 1986 – Stephen F. Earle

Everything from now on is gonna be weird!!

My life has just gotten so strange, gang. But not in a bad way.

It stems mostly from joy. So much beautiful stuff in my world right now, but the “weird” part is that I had to get old before any of this could happen.

Well, most of it.

This first thing has nothing to do with age — the Agency texted to say that my favorite client, the woman who is now back from Florida and who has all those Theology Degrees from Yale Divinity School, has an open shift for today and did I want it?

Yes!! Thank you!!

So, even though it’s my day off, and even though I will also be seeing her on Thursday, I was more than happy to get started seeing her again as soon as possible.

So I’m spending the afternoon with her today, for the first time in 8 months. She has physical issues, obviously, or she wouldn’t need a caregiver round-the-clock, but it’s her mind that I really, really love. So we will soon see how it goes!

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Okay!

It is, of course, the novel-in-progress that is primarily consuming my life right now. And after working on it yesterday (The Curse of Our Profound Disorder) I realized two important things:

  1. I absolutely could not have written this novel if I had started it today because I wouldn’t have had any clear memories of most of the stuff that is the crux of this book.
  2. I couldn’t have COMPLETED the novel 26 years ago — when I first began writing it. Because I needed to get this far in life to be able to stand back and discern how it needs to end.

And since I believe both of those statements to be true, it makes me wonder “who” is really behind this novel? Me? A younger me? An older me? A “me” that’s set apart from anything physical that ages at all?

It’s a really profound feeling, whatever it’s pointing to. And in a way, it almost feels like I was in a whole other realm of existence these last 26 years, and now I’ve suddenly “come back”.

Whatever is going on here, it is a really beautiful thing. It gives me a chance to look at my entire life in a different way.

And, oddly enough, there is an undercurrent to the novel that is similar to “The Guide to Being Fabulous.” Even though, that play, is the story of Sandra’s life, not mine.

I can’t really put my finger on it yet, but there is just something really beautiful going on here, creatively, with both of these intense projects, after all these years, landing on my plate again at once.

[There is a new excerpt from The Curse of Our Profound Disorder on my substack page today, if you are interested. Mature readers only.]

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Nick Cave sent out a really beautiful Red Hand File this morning. He answers a few different questions this time, but all of them address that quality of being human in some way. I really loved it. It’s hard to really quote from it without reposting the entire thing! But here’s this:

“…Certain music has the ability, at least temporarily, to fill that void, making us feel whole and less abandoned. We feel complete when we listen to music we love, while being guided towards the goodness of things…”

You can read it in full HERE.

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Okay. That’s really it for now. I want to get a few things done before heading out to my client.

I hope you enjoy your Monday, wherever you are in the world!!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys, See ya!

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After posting that video yesterday of Joan Baez singing the Steve Earle song, “Jerusalem”, it reminded me of how much I used to love Steve Earle’s music!! I used to play his CDs all the time in NYC!!

I am conflicted, though! Which one to post here??? So I will probably post a few of them this coming week.

For now — “The Devil’s Right Hand”, from the album Copperhead Road, 1988. How many times have I played this song in my wee bonny lifetime??? I have no clue!! What a great song.

Enjoy, gang!!

The Devil’s Right Hand”

‘Bout the time my daddy left to fight the big war
I saw my first pistol in a general store
In a general store, when I was 13
Thought it was the finest thing I ever had seen

Asked if I could have one someday, when I grew up
Mama dropped a dozen eggs, she really blew up
She really blew up, I didn’t understand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”

The devil’s right hand, the devil’s right hand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”

My very first pistol was a cap and ball Colt
Shoot as fast as lightnin’, but she loads a mite slow
Loads a mite slow as I soon found out
It can get you into trouble, but it can’t get you out

So then I went and bought myself a Colt 45
Called a Peacemaker, but I never knew why
Never knew why, I didn’t understand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”

The devil’s right hand, the devil’s right hand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”
The devil’s right hand, the devil’s right hand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”

Well, I got into a card game, in a company town
Caught a miner cheating, I shot the dog down
Shot the dog down, I watched the man fall
Never touched his holster, never had a chance to draw

My trial was in the morning, and they dragged me out of bed
Asked me how I pleaded, “Not guilty, ” I said
“Not guilty, ” I said, “You’ve got the wrong man”
Nothing touched the trigger but the devil’s right hand

The devil’s right hand, the devil’s right hand
Mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”
The devil’s right hand, the devil’s right hand
Nothing touched the trigger but the devil’s right hand

My mama said, “The pistol is the devil’s right hand”

c – 1983- Stephen F. Earle

Happy Dad’s Day, Everybody!

Unfortunately, it is rainy and humid today in the Hinterlands, so dads around here are not going to get to do what they do best!! (i.e., work really hard out in the blistering hot sun all day, then cook over a blazing fire…)

Here is a photo of my dad that I really love. It hangs on the wall in my family room.

This was taken of him before he got sick, right after he moved into his new Senior Living apartment building, after my stepmom had passed away:

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And this has nothing to do with Father’s Day, but it will finally explain to you why printers were created!

Bobbie Jo and Calico just now

Today’s going to be a big day for them — I’m moving the kitten playpen thingie out of the bedroom. Mostly, I want them to get used to it not being in here anymore, even though they love climbing all over it. But it will be easier for the cat sitter to feed them and clean up after them, without the playpen getting in the way.

Meanwhile, all 4 of them have already started trying to get out of the room the minute the door is open. But as soon as they encounter one of my full-grown curious cats out in the hall, they come running back in.

But we’re getting there… They are 9 weeks old already. They need to explore. My main concern is still Little Blackie (the mom) getting out and attacking my other cats, so I’m taking everything a moment at a time.

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Well.

Yesterday was sort of a weird day for me. And it all stems from my novel, The Curse of Our Profound Disorder.

As I read over it, I’m astounded that it essentially needs no revising, and there have been an absolute minimum of typos. Clearly, I had already spent a ton of time editing it, 26 years ago.

And even though I certainly remember that I wrote this book, I have no recollection of actually sitting at my desk in our apartment at 777 West End Avenue–

Our apartment was the 5th building in on the left — the shorter building

— and literally writing it. Whereas, I have clear memories of every aspect of writing or editing all of my other novels and books (a total of 38, including stories I wrote specifically for other editors’ books).

So I find it really odd that I have no memories like that for The Curse of Our Profound Disorder. I can remember submitting it to the various writing competitions back then and how happy I was when it would win something (it actually won something in each competition I entered it in).

But, as I said in a recent blog post, it is a little unnerving to read over it and readily see who certain characters were based on, and which events were from my own life, and which from other girls I knew — often a very long time ago.

What made yesterday difficult was coming across a few passages where I was clearly contributing my own feelings, about something that had happened to me, to one of my characters. So it was like unexpectedly encountering myself in a novel that I don’t remember writing.

And yesterday was the 50th anniversary of me having seen the Rolling Stones in concert for the first time and, even though it was a HUGE event in my life, I found that I was unable to really even think about it yesterday — because a couple of weeks after the concert, I had my first suicide attempt and was then committed to the mental hospital.

And so all of the characters in my book, and all of my experiences of my early life, have been converging. Some of it is devastating.

Meanwhile, I’ve also been listening to Exile on Main St. — a lot. Which is kind of the soundtrack to all of this stuff, since it was my first Rolling Stones album and it absolutely blew me away. (The summer I turned 12.)

It’s hard to pick a favorite song from it now, there are so many I love, but I remember clearly that when I very first bought it and started listening to it on the record player up in my room, this was the song I loved the most. I played it over and over and over:

When I listen to it down in the kitchen now, while either making breakfast or dinner, I still remember every single word (to every song) — and it seems sort of amusing to me that I knew all these words when I was twelve (!!), for Christ’s sake. Although I really didn’t understand, yet, a lot of what they were singing about.

I sure do now.

And, obviously, I also have memories of my own life now. And now I know, from experiencing it, how (mostly) unhappy it was.

And then I wonder to myself what it would have felt like at the age of 12, if I knew I’d be listening to this same album alone in my kitchen when I was 65, still knowing every word…

Anyway, yesterday, a lot of this converged. And then add to it that I knew today was going to be Father’s Day.

And The Curse of Our Profound Disorder deals a lot with who I was and what life was like before I finally found my birth father (at age 28).

The novel is fictionalized — but not too much.

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It is fascinating to read it and I am determined to just not flinch and let it all see the light of day, finally.

And it helps SO MUCH, knowing that a publisher (a woman, no less) is out there, waiting to read it. Wanting to like it. And also wanting to see it reach the light of day.

It’s an incredible incentive. An incredible feeling. So I keep at it, from the moment I get home from my shifts in the late afternoons, up until the early evenings, when I sort of collapse and make dinner — and listen to the Rolling Stones and remember my whole effing LIFE…

Well, yesterday, after I closed down the laptop for the evening, feeling sort of jumbled up inside, a little raw, but also really glad that I was doing this, I quickly checked my phone before heading downstairs and there was an unexpected email from the publisher, simply saying that she is really looking forward to seeing the whole manuscript.

Which, of course, makes everything feel like it finally makes sense.

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In case people are wondering — I won’t go into it on the blog — but 2 weeks ago, I left the TV project behind. It had become just an enormous amount of nonstop typing, it wasn’t creative for me, and I had no life left and no time for the play or the novel, which both need my complete creative attention.

So I do feel right now that everything in my world is finally making sense.

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Okay!

I think that’s it for now!!

Even though Nick Cave is Australian and lives in England, so it isn’t officially Father’s Day over there, I was going to include a photo of him with his sons. but trying to find a photo that included all 4 of them just became sort of really sad.

So here’s this!! Nick Cave with his grandson, Roman!

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And of course, here’s this! Although there are quite a few more babies in the bunch now!

Keith’s family

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Okay!

Enjoy your Sunday — or Father’s Day — wherever you are in the world!

Thanks for visiting.

I love you guys. See ya!

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I’ll skip the daily feature for today, but I leave you with this!!

James Tabor posted this video to his private group several days ago.

Joan Baez’s version of Steve Earle’s song, “Jerusalem.” Beautiful. Enjoy, gang.

“Jerusalem”

I woke up this mornin’ and none of the news was good
And death machines were rumblin’ ‘cross the ground where Jesus stood
And the man on my TV told me that it had always been that way
And there was nothin’ anyone could do or say

And I almost listened to him
Yeah, I almost lost my mind
Then I regained my senses again
And looked into my heart to find

That I believe that one fine day all the children of Abraham
Will lay down their swords forever in Jerusalem

Well maybe I’m only dreamin’ and maybe I’m just a fool
But I don’t remember learnin’ how to hate in Sunday school
But somewhere along the way I strayed and I never looked back again
But I still find some comfort now and then

Then the storm comes rumblin’ in
And I can’t lay me down
And the drums are drummin’ again
And I can’t stand the sound

But I believe there’ll come a day when the lion and the lamb
Will lie down in peace together in Jerusalem

And there’ll be no barricades then
There’ll be no wire or walls
And we can wash all this blood from our hands
And all this hatred from our souls

And I believe that on that day all the children of Abraham
Will lay down their swords forever in Jerusalem

c – 2002 – Steve Earle