PASSIONS – Sourdough & Learning

I am having an almost perfect day. I started the morning at 7 with kettle on the stove for a cup of tea. Then I got out the sourdough loaf that was chilling in the fridge. I dusted the inside of the cast iron Dutch oven with cornstarch before transferring the dough into it. Next, I scored the loaf, covered the Dutch oven and put it on top of my cast iron pizza pan. It all goes into the oven set at 450℉ for 55 minutes. That’s right. I started everything cold. No preheating anything. Saves energy and it turned out great. By 8 it was done and so was our breakfast.

The pizza pan underneath the Dutch oven somehow prevents the bread from sticking. The loaf came out pretty slick and allowed to chill. It made for a healthy tasty afternoon snack. It is my most successful sourdough. It is my first white flour loaf. Next one I try will be half white/half brown.

Baking bread is a wonderful to start the morning. The chill of the morning is warmed by the oven and aroma of bread baking. It was a perfect setting to receive my first online class titled: From First Among Equals to Elected Dictator: A Political History of. Canada, 1867- Present. Instructor: Dr. Jason Zorbas. Dr. Zorbas is an awesome lecturer. His classes are always filled. It is an in-person one as well as being on-line. On-line is a good option for me. I don’t have to run to catch a bus to the university. Parking on campus is difficult. I am finding, to my surprise, that Canadian history is très interesting.

EVERY OTHER DAY

August 16 and 16th day of the Ultimate Blog Challenge. It seems I can only show up every other day. Even that is difficult though I have so much good intentions. Now I’m showing up every 3rd day. The heat of this summer is very tiring. I try to do my best to show up where and when it is most important. I was sorely tempted not to show up for my exercise class today. But keeping fit is important for staying active. The class was in the morning and a good way to start the day. It would limber me up for work in the garden after. I bit the bullet, pack my bag and got in my car and went.

Hard things are not quite so hard when you have developed good habits/routines. I have been going to the YWCA for my aerobic class and swimming regularly for years. I know from experience that even though I start off feeling tired and not excited, I end up feeling great after. I have established set grooves which I can slip back into after falling off the wagon. I was glad I made the effort. It was a good class and an opportunity for a bit of socializing, an important thing in these times. It got me out of the house and onward to my day.

I have to admit I have periods of despondency with Covid and climate change. It doesn’t make me feel better knowing that we are all in this together. However, since this is what’s here and there’s nowhere to run, I am facing and accepting. There’s no alternative except to do the things I love and are passionate about. I am a minimalist by nature. I like to ‘make do’ and live frugally. Perhaps it’s from our life in Canada as an immigrant. We didn’t have alot of money. My father had to borrow money to bring my mother, sister and I over from Hong Kong. The money was like an insurance that we would not be a burden on the government.

We/I have always been self sufficient. My mother always had and still have a garden. I got the bug and other things from her. I love experimenting and trying new plants and ways of growing. They are endless. I get tired but I never get bored. I am often excited and awed by the wonder of growing things. It is so rewarding to see some of our harvest.

THE CELEBRATION OF LIFE

 

I’m still plugging away here, snacking on sour grapes off the vine and sipping tea. Not a great combo but it will have to do. I’m feeling a spark of better though last night’s news didn’t help at all. What is happening to young people today? Two teens were killed in two separate incidents. In Canada! Maybe sour grapes will clear the bad taste of life now gone wrong.

I mustn’t despair at the state of our world. I like to think that there is hope for humanity and for our planet though things look bleak. I have to concentrate on doing what gives me meaning and pleasure. I still have a desire to pursue excellence, love and what I love to do. I lose my way now and again. But I always return to my passions – of writing, reading, gardening. I am intoxicated by all the little things of this ordinary life. I mustn’t waste time despairing. I must indulge and celebrate living.

So let us sing the Anthem with Leonard.

FEARS, CURIOSITIES AND PASSIONS

January 6, 2019  6:44 pm

I’m late to the keyboard and hardpressed for words. I’m too full of the day’s activities. My head is full of ‘stuff’. I’m trying not to multi task, doing too much in one day. But when the going is good, when there is flow, I hate to stop. So here I am, a bit stuck and tongue tied. I just need a few minutes and a couple of taps and I’ll be ready to go.

Shortly before Christmas, I accidentally stumbled onto Suddenly Mad, Minna Packer’s blog about her early onset Alzheimer’s. It’s a fascinating and educational read for me. I somehow could relate to some of what she has gone/is going through. I don’t have the disease but her anxiety was familiar to me. I have a great admiration for her effort to put it out there for us. It not only helps me understand the disease more but it’s teaching me to live a better life. Have a read to see if it does the same for you.

I have always have a curiosity and passion for the mind, body and spirit. Minna has given me an even stronger desire to understand our brain and how to keep it healthy and strong. I suppose I had this sense of invincibility in my youth. I stayed up late, drank tons of coffee and smoked. This was even before I was a nurse. When I became a nurse, I was even worse, though I did stop smoking. It is surprising how much abuse our body can take.

Things caught up to me in retirement. I had time to fall apart then. It was a very difficult couple of years. I’m on the other side now. It does feel like I’ve stepped out of the cloud into the light. Now I can feel ease and pleasures whereas before I only felt anxiety and fear. I have a greater appreciation of my time here on earth.

I take care that I get enough sleep. I do get an occasional sleepless night. I’m learning not to stress too much about it when it happens. Aerobic exercise has been my best friend. It cleared my brain fog after a couple of weeks. Helps me sleep better, too. I’m still working on my emotional health. I’m such a reactonary. I need to be a responder instead. Life is not static. No matter where on the road we are, there’s learning always.

It is getting late. I have to close for this 6th day of the Ultimate Blog Challenge. I’ll be back tomorrow. Good night.

EARLY MORNING MUSINGS

IMG_5160Hurray, it is 6:30 am and the sun is up and so am I.  The house is suffused with the quiet and soft light of early morning.

I love this time of the day when the city is still asleep.  Traffic is sparse and slow.  It is quiet and peaceful.  I can think.  I can feel.  This is my favourite vantage point, in my sun room, looking through the dining room into  the living room.  The lines and spaces are very pleasing to the eye.  I feel pride in myself for having created it all by myself.

We must acknowledge and feel pride at our accomplishments.  They fuel our passions….to live and to build.  Passions need not always be fiery and grand.  Sometimes they show up in our quiet moments.  Our creative flair can appear in the soups, bread, pastries and snow forts we build on a whim.

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PASSIONS AND SUCH

IMG_5192Some mornings are hard for bouncing out of bed, like yesterday.  I see the snow-covered lawn when I open the blinds.  Some days are difficult to talk about passions, what you love.  You feel this lethargy down to your toes.  Much easier to just languish, rest on my duff and read someone else’s  words of passion.

I had high hopes for today.  The morning started with sunshine, no fresh snow on the ground.  We talked about politics over breakfast, of charismatic leaders like Tommy Douglas, Pierre Eliot Trudeau, Jack Layton, etc.   I thought about how passionate these men were, in the way they talked and in the way they carried themselves.  I bemoaned our present day lack of such politicians.  I was suffused with a desire to write of my own passions.

But now, here I sit.  Words are difficult in coming.  I get up to make a pot of coffee.  Passions – where are they?  What are they?  Do I have any fires to light?  I do know that I love words.  But they are failing me now.  They are not falling off my fingertips.  It is a struggle to find them.

Struggle is something that is familiar to me.  It permeates my life.  It is not a good way to talk and I am making a conscious effort to re-frame my vision, my words – so that I see life as a challenge of effortless ease and not a struggle.  After all, what is life without effort, without thought?

I thought about the challenges of my childhood.  The things that rubbed on me was I didn’t know how to swim or to ride a bike.  My parents did not allow me to have a bike nor to take swimming lessons.  I did not understand why at the time. Perhaps it was they couldn’t afford to.  But those two things left a big hole in me.  Funny.  I felt I was less of a person, lacking confidence.

The lack did me no harm.  That lack pushed me onward as a adult to fill that void.  Perhaps it taught me the beginnings of passion.  I was well into adulthood before I could ride a bike or swim.  But I was determined and I succeeded.  My first bike was a second hand manual one that cost $7.00.  They delivered it since I did not have a car and I didn’t know how to ride it home.

Can you believe that it took me a whole summer to learn how to float?  Every day off, I would pack up my suit, cap, goggles and towel and head to the YWCA pool.  It was monotonous and I was depressed as hell, but I persevered.  I had already completed THE ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIED course but still couldn’t float.  Slowly, slowly I floated and swam, not like a mermaid perhaps, but I could do ten laps once upon a time.  And it has been a few years since I have ridden a bike with confidence.  So now I need to get back on that horse again without fear of falling…and failing.

In my mature years, my challenge was Sheba.  And what a challenge.  People was surprised and asked:  Why did you get a baby at your age?  I was puzzled myself for I was not at all a dog person.  The only answer I have is that she was meant for me.  And what a challenge she was/is.   We are together still.

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