I will be gone until Monday — camping. Have a lovely week!
Month: July 2008
The Simple Summer Fling — Day 6

The Simple Summer Fling Day 6 – I have two windows in my office with deep sills and they end up accumulating stuff. This is the “pile from hell” that landed on the second window.
here is the result so far.
Still needs some cleaning, but this is a great start.
My Lemon Bars
My wonderful Lemon bars are easy to make and a big hit with everyone.
For a 9″x13″ pan:
For shell:
2 sticks (8 ounces) butter
2 cups flour
1/2 cup confectioners’ sugar
Preheat oven to 325°.
Blend butter, 2 cups flour and 1/2 cup confectioners’ sugar until a smooth paste.
Press into ungreased 9″x13″ baking pan.
Bake for 18 to 20 minutes. Or until set not brown.
Filling:
4 eggs
2 cups sugar
4 tablespoons flour
1/4 cup lemon juice
1 tablespoon Lemon zest (optional)
Beat together eggs, sugar, 4 tablespoons flour, and lemon juice until light and frothy.
Pour over hot shell sprinkle with lemon zest. Return to oven – bake at 325° for 20 minutes. While hot dust with powdered sugar. Cool, cut into bars.
The Simple Woman’s Daybook – July 7

the Simple Woman’s Daybook
is hosted by Peggy at the Simple Woman.
Thank you Peggy, this is so much fun!
FOR TODAY July 7, 2008
I really have to laugh at myself. I thought I had this all nicely formatted and ready to go and then I looked at it and I had saved it all funny. One of these days I might be able to function WHILE my coffee is brewing. 🙂 Today is obviously NOT that day.
Outside My Window… The sun is just starting to rise and there is a soft cool breeze blowing the dampness from the grass through the window. We have had intense weather this summer, very cold, then hot, some good thunder storms. Today is normal, dew on the grass, little bit of a marine layers that will burn off as soon as the sun is up full.
I am thinking… I have so much to do this week. I need to go to the library, shop for the trip, make sure we have everything set to go, pack, load the car. But I am also very excited to be taking the kids camping.
I am thankful for…So many kind people at our parish. The camping trip is with the homeschool group and people have been so helpful. We have even been loaned a bike rack so I can bring the children’s bikes. Kyle can’t come down for a couple day after I leave and there have been offers from the guys who will be there — I know the tent will get up at least.
From the kitchen…I did some baking over the weekend for the forth. The children decorated cupcakes
I am wearing… Pink sweater and brown capris. Bare feet, I usually have bare feet inside, either that or my soft, blue slippers. I think that is part of why I failed flylady. The whole “dress to the shoes” thing made the petulant girl in me stick out my tongue and say “Oh, yeah, that’s stupid”. Though I do have to laugh. When I first saw her “thing” it included putting on shoes AND make-up. Since I own a grand total of one lipstick you can imagine how seriously I took it all.
I am creating… The Camping List. I have the basic list done, the one that I check off that we actually own enough sleeping bags and such. This list needs to be the packing list, I need the menu list. I love lists. My dad taught me the usefulness of lists when I was a child. He is a grand master list maker… I am a novice compared to him.
I am going… Camping this weekend. This is the first time in years that I have been tent camping and I am looking forward to it. (did you guess that yet?)
I am reading… Laundry, Jonathan Strange and Mr Norell and It’s All Too Much. A new book has made its way to the list this week: George Will’s, One Man’s America. I was thrilled to see the Anchoress recommending him the same time the book finally got to me (I had it on hold at the library) I love the video she has of George Will & Stephen Colbert, in fact that was what inspired me to get the book in the first place.
I am hoping… That I don’t start stressing out the next few days.
I am hearing… There is a bird squawking. I think it is one of the birds nesting in our tree in the yard.
Around the house… I have camping gear everywhere. It is starting to get to me. I am tripping over stuff and that increases the stressed feeling that I won’t get it all in the mini-van.
One of my favorite things… My great grandfather’s ice-cream churn. I still have it and it still works, but it needs a little work. Where does one get a 1928 ice-cream churn worked on?
A Few Plans For The Rest Of The Week: The camping thing woo hoo. Yeah, I know I have been going on about it. I know though that the second I leave the city limits I will relax and have fun. Till then I am trying to enjoy the moment, watching the kids get a bit more excited every day and just glad to have the chance to do this sort of thing.
Here is picture thought I am sharing…

Hannah at the park when she was very small
Those are band-aids on her forehead covering the stitches from the time she ran smack into the corner of the doorway leading into the kitchen. I thought is might slow her down, make her more cautious… no…..
Yummy treats for the forth
Yesterday we made some good eats to take with us to my parents:
A fun cake:
Inspired by the good eats shown at Woman Honor Thyself.
Happy Forth of July!
One of my favorite holidays! Enjoy your forth!

John Trumbull – Declaration of Independence
I saw this over at Happy Catholic and have to share.
Celebrate America.
The Simple Summer Fling — Day 5

The Simple Summer Fling Day 5 – I have two windows in my office with deep sills and they end up accumulating stuff. While I started cleaning the first one off I ended up thinking that the curtains seriously needed washed, but I can’t wash just one curtain in the room – bad habit of mine – getting side tracked into bigger projects than I started with. So I took all the curtains down and tossed them in the washer. This made my window a two day project… yeah me (eye roll).
here is the result so far.
Charge now! Think later.

Peter Nicolai Arbo – Valkyries
My mother pointed out this letter to the editor in the Oregonian this weekend.
Misjudging a meltdown
My child was having a meltdown at a Target store one recent day. A man walked past us, shaking his head. He turned around, stared at us and rolled his eyes. He was probably thinking, “What kind of parent puts up with that terrible behavior?”Let me tell you what kind of parent I am. I am the mother of a daughter with autism. Stores are a challenge for my daughter. She does her best to “behave” and I do my best to help her cope.
This man saw me attempting to calm a child who was crying and running away. He misjudged the situation.
I will not lock my child away to avoid getting dirty looks from people like him. He made my day more unpleasant, but he will never make me ashamed of my child. He should be ashamed. LISA S. COOK Southeast Portland
We all talked about it for a while. My mother’s take was interesting; on first glance she said that she really felt for the woman in the letter. She and my father have been with Rachel when she was having a meltdown. A particular situation happened in Baskin Robins one day when they had to take her out of the shop because she wanted cake instead of ice-cream and had a complete meltdown. But, then my mom said she started to feel sorry for the guy too. Yes, it is awful to have people stare at your child, to see that look of disdain as they turn away smug that they wouldn’t put up with that behavior. But the reality is they just don’t understand. They function in a world where autism is something you hear about on the news, or they know that a co-worker or neighbor’s child is autistic and that child doesn’t act-up so horribly. She felt the letter in the end had been written with the hope that the offending gentleman would read it and be embarrassed by it.
My husband and I are both sympathetic, but our response was more along the lines of “Poor Ms Cook, just wait until her daughter is a little older. Those rolled-eyed, ‘what a bad parent you must be’ looks are absolutely nothing compared to the looks you get when you have to physically drag your pre-teen out of a public place.” When you are packing an eleven year old girl out of the mall with her kicking and screaming you are far, far more concerned about what you are going to say to security when they stop you then you are the thoughts of random people staring. Of course we have to laugh looking back at how many times we have wanted to say something to the people who stare or maybe just melt into the floor because the situation has gotten embarrassing. So we really do feel for this lady and we hope that her daughter out-grows the tantrums. Until and unless that happens, really, what can you say – people are going to stare at some point you have to come to terms with it.
Assuming that Ms Cook’s assessment of the man’s thoughts is accurate the title is correct he misjudged a meltdown. But, in his defense it is pretty easy to do. Autistic kids don’t look different. In fact, unless you actually know what to look for (that far away look in the eyes, the repetitive movement, and sometimes very subtle little signs) there is no way to tell. How do you tell a tantruming four year old who is autistic from a tantruming four year old who isn’t? I don’t know and I have a good bit of experience with both autistic and non-autistic tantrums. So I guess personally I am willing, in principle, to cut the random stranger some slack.
Now I say in principle because I happen to have not always exactly lived up to my live and let live philosophy. Once, when Rachel was about five, we were in a Fred Meyer’s store (sort of like a cross between a Safeway and a Target for those not in the Northwest) and Rachel had a complete meltdown over this ugly, yet expensive, metal Halloween pumpkin decoration that I was not going to buy. She cried and fell on the floor and was just having an all out tantrum of the first degree. I was tired, frustrated, embarrassed and this woman with her teenage daughter walked by. “I never let you act like that when you were that age!” she said in sotto voce designed for me to hear yet giving her the illusion that she was trying to be discrete. I let her have it. As in I LET . HER . HAVE . IT. I turned on her with murder in my eyes and in as controlled and flat and furious a voice as I could manage I said something like, “Oh, yeah lady, well my kid is autistic and you have no bloody idea what you are talking about, I am doing the best I can. If you would like to get over here and show me how to parent my child better then I do be my guest! Other wise don’t be such a jackass.” Not my finest moment, I will admit. I think I scared the woman half to death, she was about a foot shorter than me, a good ten to fifteen years older and not in anywhere near the physical condition I was in. I probably looked like I was ten seconds or less from beating someone to a bloody pulp and she was the nearest, handy person. She looked very upset and shocked and stammered, “Oh no, no, I’m really sorry, you are doing really great – really!”
That is one of those moments in my life that I really am conflicted about. On one hand I am sort of proud. I said it and at the time I meant it. I put the woman in her place, she was being rude and I think I had a valid point. On the other hand I am also rather shamed by it. I was embarrassed, stressed, upset and emotionally unhinged at the time – none of that had anything to do with her, it had to do with the situation and it was wrong to take all that out on her the way I did over her ignorant, self congratulatory statement. I find it amusing that I can feel both emotions simultaneously. It was definitely a moment where I spoke first and thought second, but sometimes ‘mommy rage’ charges ahead even against our better natures.
Carol Race — the restraining order stands
Adam Race, an autistic teenager, will not be allowed to attend mass at The Parish of St. Joseph In Bertha, Minn. The judge ruled that Adam’s behaviors constituted harassment towards the parish.
You can read the news articles here. I am not surprised by the ruling, but it is sad that it got to this point.
The greatest of these is love.

Ivan Constantinovich Aivazovsky – Figures In A Coastal Landscape At Sunset
On reflecting on what she looked forward to in heaven St. Therese of Lisieux said: “Oh! it is LOVE! To love, to be loved, and to come back to earth to make LOVE loved.”
Reflecting on this I see that so often love is not loved. Too often it is seen as a weakness or maybe even a commodity. For some people love becomes a severing quest for personal gratification. Cutting us off from each other and God. But in reality we are all connected. Each and everyone of us is of infinite worth and incalculable beauty. One of my favorite quotes is from Thomas Merton, his famous “Fourth and Walnut” epiphany “I have the immense joy of being man, a member of a race in which God Himself became incarnate. As if the sorrows and stupidities of the human condition could overwhelm me, now that I realize what we all are. And if only everybody could realize this! But it cannot be explained. There is no way of telling people that they are all walking around shining like the sun. ”
It is these types of reflections that make me thankful for the community of saints and the faith that they and I share. That we are all in our muddy, ramshackle brokenness beautiful to God, it is only our own fears and despair which pull us away from Him and each other. We are made, crafted by God, to love and to be loved. Our beginning and our end should be entirely wrapped in love for one another and for God.







