Life at the Spice of Life Greeting Cards warehouse was anything but living for Bentley Wordsworthy. Driving the same old forklift day after day, year after year, of what would soon be over two decades of spiceless boredom had eroded the mind, if not the soul of Bentley. Bentley Wordsworthy, the dreamer who longed to be a coiner of phrases, even a bard of adages. If only he could get recognition from just one of the Spice of Life Greeting Card Editors.
But alas, Bentley Wordsworthy possessed no wordsmith flair. Seldom is a kind way of saying never did Bentley Wordsworthy surpass the rudimentary roses are red, violets are blue level of poetic expression. And worse, Bentley was the untalented failure of the Wordsworthy family, which included over two centuries of poets, authors, editors and publishing house masters. Indeed Bentley himself often sighed, "I'm the last and the dead end of the Wordsworthy clan. That's me, just being all a failure can be." Be...
Until one faithful day... the boredom bent mind of Bentley over indulged in an oft visited daydream. High through the sky, Bentley Wordsworthy did fly, super hero of the greeting card world. From his shoulders fluttered the cape of bard-dom and across his chest emanated the magnificent letter "A," standing for ADAGEMAN!! Actually the letter "A" should have been two letters, A.D., standing for ATTENTION DEFICITMAN. Driving a forklift laden with crates full of greeting cards is no time to dream, let alone fly around a corner a tad too sharp. From forklift seat ADAGEMAN stomped on the brake a bit too late. The crates on the forklift remained stable, but the mile high stack the forklift bumped into shook violently. Bentley's hardhat fell off as he craned neck back to see the last rock of the teetering crate on top. Bentley gasped, "Jesus, save me!!!" Down plummeted that faith guided missile right between the safety glass wearing eyes of Bentley...
"Is he dead?" asked foreman Fred.
No one wanted to know more than Bentley. So from the concrete floor, flat on his back, Bentley Wordsworthy opened his mouth and instantly breathed out greeting card gold, "Life is like a box of chocolate armadillos: all slippery, scratchy and none too happy about being dipped in molten chocolate."
Bentley wrote it down. Bentley turned it in to the editors of Spice of Life Greeting Cards. Bentley garnered a new gig. A coiner of phrases he had become. ADAGEMAN... MAN... MAN... AN... AN... N born! Yet, died...
For the Lord above had up-up-and away far greater heights for Bentley Wordsworthy to fly. Not only did Bentley live to master the seemingly absurd and funny side of greeting cards, but there were sympathy cards, get well cards, birthday, wedding, friendship, Mothers Day, Fathers Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas cards to compose. Indeed His favorite of all were scripturally inspired. Cards like: Better a hole in the sock; than a hole in the soul. Cards like: The flames of youth, the ashes of regret, the if only of what can never be... Jesus heals it all...
Yes, ADAGEMAN had died, but Bentley Wordsworthy reigned alive and well as the bard of Spice of Life Greeting Cards. He even authored a few novels. But in the life of Bentley, the waters of success never flooded over the banks of humbletude. "Don't be too proud;" Bentley would say, "the chocolate coating of riches does not a life make; for of faded wisps, once whirlwinds, the dust whispers without thirst." He more than often added, "The spice of life, the very essence of living: Love the LORD continually; share his love with all; enjoy his every gift. For who else can turn even a bump on the head into blessing."
Oh, and in the chair of the bard, the new fantasy of Bentley twas a job well done, driving a forklift...
(Mark 8:36; Isaiah 29:4) (James 1:17; Colossians 3:17) (Romans 10:13)
Saturday, August 12, 2017
Saturday, August 5, 2017
WHERE THE WHITE FLOWER GROWS
Squeals of children playing sang through kitchen window of the old farm house. Inside Grammy and Pawpaw sat at oaken table, listening, watching, drinking a not usual afternoon mug of coffee.
"Thank the Lord for coffee," Grammy took another sip.
"Yep," Pawpaw reflected. "Caffeine is about the only way to fend off our normal afternoon snooze. Sure could use a nap, but we need to keep tabs on those little rascals." He chuckled. He and precious wife held hands cross that table, turned gaze from each others eyes thru window to the children outside.
At the edge of the yard, little Christin pointed past fence up the hill. "Flower," she tugged on older cousin Kirk's sleeve. "Flower," she repeated.
The good Kirk smiled. Since her birth, Kirk had loved his little cousin. Her whim had always been his command in deed. He followed her finger pointing. Saw what he thought was the most beautiful white flower on the hill between white picket fence and the cross of snow on the mountain beyond.
"Flower," little Christin urged.
Kirk hopped the white picket fence, raced up the hill...
Pawpaw had just taken deep sip of too hot coffee. He swallowed fast and hard, yelled out kitchen window, "Kirk, stop!!!"
The flower possessed the eyes of Kirk, closed his ears by its pretty. For the only sound Kirk heard was the whisper of white flower's beauty, "Pick me... for I am the jewel of all delights. Pick me... little Christin awaits..."
Kirk reached out to possess the possessor, grasped white flower's stem tight. From his palm the pain screamed up his arm, tore through spine, seared brain, roared from throat...
Pawpaw turned over chair, tore out the kitchen door. With resolute purpose Grammy rose, went to the pantry, prayed, "The poultice most be prepared. Please bless it and bless Kirk, dear Heavenly Father; I ask in Jesus precious name..."
At the table Grammy sat stirring baking soda into honey with tad of water, as Pawpaw carried a whimpering Kirk through kitchen door. A train of grandkids followed. Pawpaw sat Kirk in chair next to Grammy. Grammy waited for her husband to retrieve duct tape from lower cabinet. She gently placed Kirk's hand palm up on the table. As Pawpaw applied the duct tape to the wound, all six of the other grandchildren gathered round. Little Christin held on tight to Kirk's arm.
To the children Pawpaw explained, "The tape will pull out the poisonous hairs of the bull nettle." Pawpaw peeled off the tape from the palm of Kirk's hand and out came the thin hair like spears of the bull nettle in the stick-um. Grammy began applying the cool poultice of honey and baking soda. With each dab the whimpering of Kirk subsided.
"A lesson for us all," Pawpaw taught. "not all... that is beautiful... is harmless." The ears of the children's hearts opened wide. "Long, long ago in heaven above, a certain angel thought himself so beautiful that he sought to steal the throne of God. For this, he and the angels on his side were cast out of heaven. Ever since he has seethed hate and trod the earth seeking to trap away any he can from our Heavenly Father. One of his favorite tricks is to disguise himself or one of his servants as attractive or good or moral. This evil prince of darkness even at times disguises himself as an angel of light, perhaps as a politician or false person of religion or false teacher, or even just one of us. So do his servants also, as they have learned from him. ...And such is through yon kitchen window, 'where the white flower grows,' but a hill of stinging bull nettle, that tries to separate those within the white picket fence from the cross of snow on the mountain beyond."
All eyes of the children peered through kitchen window past white picket fence ...to where the white flower grows. Scarcely had they noticed the exit of Pawpaw, till they saw him carrying the hoe up that hill...
2nd Corinthians 11:13-15 (Satan and his servants masquerade as an angels of light.)
Without our Heavenly Father we are like children without guidance, who play in the nettles that sting...
Allegory & Scripture
pawpawcorner.blogspot.com
"Thank the Lord for coffee," Grammy took another sip.
"Yep," Pawpaw reflected. "Caffeine is about the only way to fend off our normal afternoon snooze. Sure could use a nap, but we need to keep tabs on those little rascals." He chuckled. He and precious wife held hands cross that table, turned gaze from each others eyes thru window to the children outside.
At the edge of the yard, little Christin pointed past fence up the hill. "Flower," she tugged on older cousin Kirk's sleeve. "Flower," she repeated.
The good Kirk smiled. Since her birth, Kirk had loved his little cousin. Her whim had always been his command in deed. He followed her finger pointing. Saw what he thought was the most beautiful white flower on the hill between white picket fence and the cross of snow on the mountain beyond.
"Flower," little Christin urged.
Kirk hopped the white picket fence, raced up the hill...
Pawpaw had just taken deep sip of too hot coffee. He swallowed fast and hard, yelled out kitchen window, "Kirk, stop!!!"
The flower possessed the eyes of Kirk, closed his ears by its pretty. For the only sound Kirk heard was the whisper of white flower's beauty, "Pick me... for I am the jewel of all delights. Pick me... little Christin awaits..."
Kirk reached out to possess the possessor, grasped white flower's stem tight. From his palm the pain screamed up his arm, tore through spine, seared brain, roared from throat...
Pawpaw turned over chair, tore out the kitchen door. With resolute purpose Grammy rose, went to the pantry, prayed, "The poultice most be prepared. Please bless it and bless Kirk, dear Heavenly Father; I ask in Jesus precious name..."
At the table Grammy sat stirring baking soda into honey with tad of water, as Pawpaw carried a whimpering Kirk through kitchen door. A train of grandkids followed. Pawpaw sat Kirk in chair next to Grammy. Grammy waited for her husband to retrieve duct tape from lower cabinet. She gently placed Kirk's hand palm up on the table. As Pawpaw applied the duct tape to the wound, all six of the other grandchildren gathered round. Little Christin held on tight to Kirk's arm.
To the children Pawpaw explained, "The tape will pull out the poisonous hairs of the bull nettle." Pawpaw peeled off the tape from the palm of Kirk's hand and out came the thin hair like spears of the bull nettle in the stick-um. Grammy began applying the cool poultice of honey and baking soda. With each dab the whimpering of Kirk subsided.
"A lesson for us all," Pawpaw taught. "not all... that is beautiful... is harmless." The ears of the children's hearts opened wide. "Long, long ago in heaven above, a certain angel thought himself so beautiful that he sought to steal the throne of God. For this, he and the angels on his side were cast out of heaven. Ever since he has seethed hate and trod the earth seeking to trap away any he can from our Heavenly Father. One of his favorite tricks is to disguise himself or one of his servants as attractive or good or moral. This evil prince of darkness even at times disguises himself as an angel of light, perhaps as a politician or false person of religion or false teacher, or even just one of us. So do his servants also, as they have learned from him. ...And such is through yon kitchen window, 'where the white flower grows,' but a hill of stinging bull nettle, that tries to separate those within the white picket fence from the cross of snow on the mountain beyond."
All eyes of the children peered through kitchen window past white picket fence ...to where the white flower grows. Scarcely had they noticed the exit of Pawpaw, till they saw him carrying the hoe up that hill...
2nd Corinthians 11:13-15 (Satan and his servants masquerade as an angels of light.)
Without our Heavenly Father we are like children without guidance, who play in the nettles that sting...
Allegory & Scripture
pawpawcorner.blogspot.com
Sunday, July 30, 2017
GEEZER MESA
Nestled in ethereal mist twixt Texas hill country and Geezer Mesa lay the sleepy dwellings of Geezerville. Geezerville, a town transitioning much like its geography. Geezerville, on the very edge of the dessert an oasis of natural springs, a valley of water abundant, a plethora of flora and fauna, and this very evening, as most evenings, a town in motion, all be it, slow motion. The heat of Texas day did dictate this daily ritual. Not many of the towns elderly residents functioned well in hundred degree mid-day heat, but late evening, each late evening for years and decades and even over a century, as the sun drifted low behind lofty Geezer Mesa, the mesa from which the town got its name, in the fingers of the mighty mesa's cool shadow, life began to move. Few of those movers were not elderly. Geezers they were, with canes, with walkers, men and women slowly moving, shuffling along in a sidewalk waltz, transitioning to last tango in Geezerville.
All crawled along splendidly well in Geezerville. Well until the town's unwell and only pastor passed away. A replacement had to be found. So with non-denominational geezerdom prerequisite the town of many faiths, but only one church, sought and found their spiritual compass. Or so they thought. For this preacher, name of Rev. Bell Ringer, unexpectedly had change on the brain. Change: only a good word to geezers when applied to contents of the pocket, not change on the sidewalk where one must actually bend over to pick it up, and especially not change of direction.
Oh, there were groans and there were moans from the congregation when Pastor Bell Ringer preached; but certainly no open rebellion from folks just too tired to rebel. Besides, most conceded, although a tad reluctantly, that yes, they did need to redirect their slow moving, their shuffling along, even that last tango.
"No one!" Pastor Bell Ringer preached, "No one should shuffle off the edge of Geezer Mesa without Jesus. In service to God and in service to one another spread the way, the truth and the life. His name is Jesus. With every last shuffle we got left in this dance called life, in joy shine forth the light and love our Savior."
And that very Sunday morn, soaring oer the clearing mist, an eagle eye did see new life in the valley below. Life blessed, life with purpose, even one time geezers sprouting wings to share the air above Geezer Mesa.
From whence it came: Ecclesiastes Chapter 12; Isaiah 40:21-31; John 14:6
All crawled along splendidly well in Geezerville. Well until the town's unwell and only pastor passed away. A replacement had to be found. So with non-denominational geezerdom prerequisite the town of many faiths, but only one church, sought and found their spiritual compass. Or so they thought. For this preacher, name of Rev. Bell Ringer, unexpectedly had change on the brain. Change: only a good word to geezers when applied to contents of the pocket, not change on the sidewalk where one must actually bend over to pick it up, and especially not change of direction.
Oh, there were groans and there were moans from the congregation when Pastor Bell Ringer preached; but certainly no open rebellion from folks just too tired to rebel. Besides, most conceded, although a tad reluctantly, that yes, they did need to redirect their slow moving, their shuffling along, even that last tango.
"No one!" Pastor Bell Ringer preached, "No one should shuffle off the edge of Geezer Mesa without Jesus. In service to God and in service to one another spread the way, the truth and the life. His name is Jesus. With every last shuffle we got left in this dance called life, in joy shine forth the light and love our Savior."
And that very Sunday morn, soaring oer the clearing mist, an eagle eye did see new life in the valley below. Life blessed, life with purpose, even one time geezers sprouting wings to share the air above Geezer Mesa.
From whence it came: Ecclesiastes Chapter 12; Isaiah 40:21-31; John 14:6
Thursday, July 20, 2017
SHORTCUT TO FORGOTTEN
Some will argue... there are no shortcuts to Forgotten...
"The surgery will be canceled." Javan white knuckled steering wheel, pressed accelerator near floor. As the dark road chariot of SUV sped down I-33, he lamented, "After fixing that flat tire, no matter how fast I drive, we are not getting to the hospital in time."
"Sometimes," the slender neck of Svana DeGenade turned her eyes to face husband, "sometimes," she reached out, ran fingers thru his silver peppered hair, "sometimes, on the road... we meet more than expected."
Even as worried as he was, even in the hurry of all his life, Javan calmed in what he had come to know as the 'Svana effect.' He let off accelerator a tad, reminisced, "I remember, remember not so long ago, our chance airplane seating, our first meeting. There sat my Svana with skin like silk, the color of milk, and hair like eiderdown, pure as snow. I had thought you an albino until that graceful neck of yours turned green emerald eyes to meet mine. Sometimes in the air we meet more than ever expected."
"We shall see." Svana smiled. "Often does the way remind: before the shadow... shines the light."
"Shortcut, Daddy." The wee voice of Epiphany DeGenade, Epi for short, spoke from dark leather rear seat. Wee and weak the voice came from one whose growth only grew more crooked her precious little body, til only wee and weak she could speak.
"Yes," Javan grasped hope. "We can take Old Narrow Lane, the once main road to Forgotten lies near ahead."
Soon Javan commanded the helm right, right on to Old Narrow Lane, passing under hanging moss of oak, passing over fallen down and faded sign: Road Closed. Yet, on both sides of road beckoned the blue of forget-me-nots, wild flowers licked by inky swamp. And lo that neglected lane forced Javan to go against his hie hurry grain, drive slow and punctuate with unsteady refrain, "Aptly named, this road, this Old Narrow Lane."
And so on they drove, chasing from dry road perch more than one sliding gator, filthy claws ripping up by roots sad blue forget-me-nots, dragging flowers screaming neath dark waters swamp. Til before bayou bridge, the sign not fallen over read: Bridge Out.
"Now what?" Javan bridged not frustration. "The road is way to narrow. I can not turn around."
"Back up Daddy," Epi epiphanied again. "We won't be late. We are right on time."
Svana saw the tears well in Javan's eyes. She placed hand upon his thigh, squeezed out assurance, "From the mouths of babes... remember what Jesus said."
The Dad in Javan shifted gear to reverse. He shifted in seat, turned head, saw so very far behind the sparkling sunlit reflections of vehicles as they passed by the head of the cross, where Old Narrow Lane met the outstretched arms of I-33. He backed. He backed up some more. He backed up, but the intersection grew no closer. He backed more, a whole lot more, then some more. The further he backed, the further away I-33 seemed. And yet, Javan backed the more.
"Daddy," Epi labored to breathe..
"Yes, sweetie," Javan answered.
"Daddy be still; and know our Daddy," the wee weak voice of Epi whispered.
Javan stopped SUV.
On the shortcut to Forgotten, Javan was reminded to pray. Daddy and Mommy reached into back seat, and held hands with precious daughter... And after prayer to Heavenly Father, asking in his son Jesus' precious name, Javan unbowed his head and beheld that Old Narrow Lane somehow seemed much broader now, even no longer a lane, but highway main. He turned SUV around, soon passing under hanging moss of oak, passing over fallen down and faded sign at the head of the cross, where Old Narrow Lane joins the outstretched arms of I-33...
...The fallen lavender of crepe myrtles covered the concrete path from parking lot to the hospital. Svana and Javan each held Epi hand... scarcely noticing that time right on time... scarcely noticing that healthy up and down of skipping between them, until child's strong voice road the wind of the near Forgotten... "I hope they got ice cream."
Jeremiah 33:3... Call unto me, and I will answer thee, and shew thee great and mighty things, which thou knowest not...
Some will argue, there are no shortcuts to Forgotten... less there be flat tire...
Not every life story ends in Epi miracle, but for those who love Jesus... even when this life ends... glorious life in heaven begins... Unbound... in the out bound lane...
To understand this little story please read and be blessed by the totally awesome Bible readings: Psalm 46:10 with John 14:6 with Isaiah 35:8 then all Isaiah 35:1-10... Jesus loves you...
What's in a name: Svana DeGenade - Svana is Icelandic for Swan; De in French & Spanish means 'from' or 'of', and Genade is Dutch for Grace. (Proverbs 3:3-4 & 3:19-22)
Only one path exists for our short comings to be forgotten... to be forgiven... Jesus
...Grace unto thy neck... Life unto thy soul...
"The surgery will be canceled." Javan white knuckled steering wheel, pressed accelerator near floor. As the dark road chariot of SUV sped down I-33, he lamented, "After fixing that flat tire, no matter how fast I drive, we are not getting to the hospital in time."
"Sometimes," the slender neck of Svana DeGenade turned her eyes to face husband, "sometimes," she reached out, ran fingers thru his silver peppered hair, "sometimes, on the road... we meet more than expected."
Even as worried as he was, even in the hurry of all his life, Javan calmed in what he had come to know as the 'Svana effect.' He let off accelerator a tad, reminisced, "I remember, remember not so long ago, our chance airplane seating, our first meeting. There sat my Svana with skin like silk, the color of milk, and hair like eiderdown, pure as snow. I had thought you an albino until that graceful neck of yours turned green emerald eyes to meet mine. Sometimes in the air we meet more than ever expected."
"We shall see." Svana smiled. "Often does the way remind: before the shadow... shines the light."
"Shortcut, Daddy." The wee voice of Epiphany DeGenade, Epi for short, spoke from dark leather rear seat. Wee and weak the voice came from one whose growth only grew more crooked her precious little body, til only wee and weak she could speak.
"Yes," Javan grasped hope. "We can take Old Narrow Lane, the once main road to Forgotten lies near ahead."
Soon Javan commanded the helm right, right on to Old Narrow Lane, passing under hanging moss of oak, passing over fallen down and faded sign: Road Closed. Yet, on both sides of road beckoned the blue of forget-me-nots, wild flowers licked by inky swamp. And lo that neglected lane forced Javan to go against his hie hurry grain, drive slow and punctuate with unsteady refrain, "Aptly named, this road, this Old Narrow Lane."
And so on they drove, chasing from dry road perch more than one sliding gator, filthy claws ripping up by roots sad blue forget-me-nots, dragging flowers screaming neath dark waters swamp. Til before bayou bridge, the sign not fallen over read: Bridge Out.
"Now what?" Javan bridged not frustration. "The road is way to narrow. I can not turn around."
"Back up Daddy," Epi epiphanied again. "We won't be late. We are right on time."
Svana saw the tears well in Javan's eyes. She placed hand upon his thigh, squeezed out assurance, "From the mouths of babes... remember what Jesus said."
The Dad in Javan shifted gear to reverse. He shifted in seat, turned head, saw so very far behind the sparkling sunlit reflections of vehicles as they passed by the head of the cross, where Old Narrow Lane met the outstretched arms of I-33. He backed. He backed up some more. He backed up, but the intersection grew no closer. He backed more, a whole lot more, then some more. The further he backed, the further away I-33 seemed. And yet, Javan backed the more.
"Daddy," Epi labored to breathe..
"Yes, sweetie," Javan answered.
"Daddy be still; and know our Daddy," the wee weak voice of Epi whispered.
Javan stopped SUV.
On the shortcut to Forgotten, Javan was reminded to pray. Daddy and Mommy reached into back seat, and held hands with precious daughter... And after prayer to Heavenly Father, asking in his son Jesus' precious name, Javan unbowed his head and beheld that Old Narrow Lane somehow seemed much broader now, even no longer a lane, but highway main. He turned SUV around, soon passing under hanging moss of oak, passing over fallen down and faded sign at the head of the cross, where Old Narrow Lane joins the outstretched arms of I-33...
...The fallen lavender of crepe myrtles covered the concrete path from parking lot to the hospital. Svana and Javan each held Epi hand... scarcely noticing that time right on time... scarcely noticing that healthy up and down of skipping between them, until child's strong voice road the wind of the near Forgotten... "I hope they got ice cream."
Jeremiah 33:3... Call unto me, and I will answer thee, and shew thee great and mighty things, which thou knowest not...
Some will argue, there are no shortcuts to Forgotten... less there be flat tire...
Not every life story ends in Epi miracle, but for those who love Jesus... even when this life ends... glorious life in heaven begins... Unbound... in the out bound lane...
To understand this little story please read and be blessed by the totally awesome Bible readings: Psalm 46:10 with John 14:6 with Isaiah 35:8 then all Isaiah 35:1-10... Jesus loves you...
What's in a name: Svana DeGenade - Svana is Icelandic for Swan; De in French & Spanish means 'from' or 'of', and Genade is Dutch for Grace. (Proverbs 3:3-4 & 3:19-22)
Only one path exists for our short comings to be forgotten... to be forgiven... Jesus
...Grace unto thy neck... Life unto thy soul...
Friday, July 7, 2017
BABUSHKA LULLABY
"A wacko a day keeps the shrink in pay," stealth in his mind sung the words to Dr. Adams audible hum. He raised left eyebrow, flipped to blank second page of new patient history. Why had the young woman, sitting before him, refused to fill out the form? "What a way to start a New York Monday," escaped his lips. He leaned a tad back in seat, flipped back to page one, stared at the one and only blank filled in. "I see you listed your name as Apple, no middle name, no last name, jussst Apple."
"Yes!!!" From toes to nose, Apple's whole body vibrated answer.
"Are you a one name celebrity?" Dr. Adams did not smile.
"Oh, no sir," Apple shook head. "Just the messenger," she wide eyed nodded.
Dr. Adams thought, "I'd like to shoot the messenger for not filling out this form!" He could not just let it go, internally revenged, "This Apple got worms for brains." He almost giggled past professional facade, but what he said was, "Messenger, in what way?"
"Yes..." Apple's entire being danced in tune with the nod of her head, "yes, the messenger of dream, a reoccurring dream."
"And in this dream?" Dr. Adams led, while mind inside sighed, "Not another dream!"
"For three months now, in the dream I see myself sleeping, and in this sleep dreaming a dream... of insomnia. I dream of rest... with no rest. I dream of sleep... with no sleep. I dream of you, Dr. Adams. I dream of you, Dr. Alexsie from the Ukraine."
As his diagnosis raced to obsessional delusion and probable schizophrenia, Dr. Adams brain screamed, "We should have checked her purse for sharp objects." But his mouth carefully phrased, "And how do you know who I am and where I am from?"
"By the dream within a dream of your insomnia, I see you in the Ukraine. I see you as a child afore bed. I see your Babushka rub her grandson's feet, sing sweet lullaby till he sleep. And then I see your sleepless nights of now... how your thoughts have often been... if only I could... rewind the wind..."
"But how did you know I changed my name, know of my insomnia... my Babushka? Are you a psychic?" More than a tad of his inside shaking vibrated to the outside of Dr. Adams' skin.
"No dark side here... only Jesus light... when you pray for answer... answer is God's delight..." Apple stretched arms, smiled sweet. "How many the times... have your times been... sleepless daydreams of often when..." As in the dream her arms drew to breast, cradled unseen child before her. Her body rocked to old Ukraine Babushka lullaby... as Apple sang: "Dream O dream within the window. Rock warm to sleep sweet child. Sleep O sleep little sparrow so mild. Rest and grasp the snow without the window..." From cradled arms Apple raised her eyes to Adam's...
With tear in eye, the Doctor did reply, "And then, when she laid me down, when she tucked me in, my Babushka kissed my ear and whispered sweet breath so warm: 'All who rest... rest in Jesus...'" And Dr. Adams relaxed for the first time in a very, very long time.
Find rest even unto your very soul... with Jesus... Matthew 11:28-30...
"Yes!!!" From toes to nose, Apple's whole body vibrated answer.
"Are you a one name celebrity?" Dr. Adams did not smile.
"Oh, no sir," Apple shook head. "Just the messenger," she wide eyed nodded.
Dr. Adams thought, "I'd like to shoot the messenger for not filling out this form!" He could not just let it go, internally revenged, "This Apple got worms for brains." He almost giggled past professional facade, but what he said was, "Messenger, in what way?"
"Yes..." Apple's entire being danced in tune with the nod of her head, "yes, the messenger of dream, a reoccurring dream."
"And in this dream?" Dr. Adams led, while mind inside sighed, "Not another dream!"
"For three months now, in the dream I see myself sleeping, and in this sleep dreaming a dream... of insomnia. I dream of rest... with no rest. I dream of sleep... with no sleep. I dream of you, Dr. Adams. I dream of you, Dr. Alexsie from the Ukraine."
As his diagnosis raced to obsessional delusion and probable schizophrenia, Dr. Adams brain screamed, "We should have checked her purse for sharp objects." But his mouth carefully phrased, "And how do you know who I am and where I am from?"
"By the dream within a dream of your insomnia, I see you in the Ukraine. I see you as a child afore bed. I see your Babushka rub her grandson's feet, sing sweet lullaby till he sleep. And then I see your sleepless nights of now... how your thoughts have often been... if only I could... rewind the wind..."
"But how did you know I changed my name, know of my insomnia... my Babushka? Are you a psychic?" More than a tad of his inside shaking vibrated to the outside of Dr. Adams' skin.
"No dark side here... only Jesus light... when you pray for answer... answer is God's delight..." Apple stretched arms, smiled sweet. "How many the times... have your times been... sleepless daydreams of often when..." As in the dream her arms drew to breast, cradled unseen child before her. Her body rocked to old Ukraine Babushka lullaby... as Apple sang: "Dream O dream within the window. Rock warm to sleep sweet child. Sleep O sleep little sparrow so mild. Rest and grasp the snow without the window..." From cradled arms Apple raised her eyes to Adam's...
With tear in eye, the Doctor did reply, "And then, when she laid me down, when she tucked me in, my Babushka kissed my ear and whispered sweet breath so warm: 'All who rest... rest in Jesus...'" And Dr. Adams relaxed for the first time in a very, very long time.
Find rest even unto your very soul... with Jesus... Matthew 11:28-30...
Saturday, June 17, 2017
HEAR THE OLIVE SCREAM
"Never fails," Kaffee mused, "always got to be at least one escapee in the bunch." Helplessly she watched errant olive roll across gray marbled counter top to edge, titter a tad, then plunge screaming toward red tile floor below. "AAAaaaahh!" Kaffee mocked, for no way could she save it from perilous plummet without spilling and scattering the tablespoon full of other olives in hand.
"Just one of making dolmas little mishaps," Kaffee matter of facted as she dumped spoonful of olives into bowl next to knife and cutting board, the ill-fate of non escapee olives. The Mediterranean skin tone of her arm and hand nearly matched that of the doomed olive, that she reached down to recapture; but orange claw and paw beat her to it, slapped tan green olive across red tile floor.
"Duff, you silly cat, bring that olive back to me this instant!" Kaffee laughed. As the olive rolled, Duff chased then swatted, belly scooted and slid, til round corner of kitchen island.
"From cutting board to cat attack, that poor olive just can't win," Kaffee smirked. Then as oft the habit, she tilted and turned her head, flicked long dark hair from bosom to back. She returned attention to food prep plan. "Let's see, in the mixing bowl already added we have: sauteed ground lamb with herbs, boiled rice, dill, mint, pepper, sea salt, lemon, olive oil, and soon to be smidgeon or two of diced ripe olives."
Kaffee sliced, she diced, she added olives, she stirred, sat down bowl to left of cutting board... "Let the dolma stuffin' begin." She smiled, set plate of palm sized grape leaves to the right of cutting board, selected top grape leaf, tested texture. "Parboiled to perfection, pliable but not too soft, just right to plop the mix onto and roll without tearing." And on the cutting board she laid leaf out, dolloped on the mixing bowl mix and rolled then tucked in the ends, rolled and tucked, rolled and tucked until... there a tight little package of gastronomical delight lay, the dolma. "One down, and only about a hundred or so to go." Kaffee sighed, placed first dolma in serving dish, a dish she would add layer after layer of dolmas to, brushing each layer with olive oil and lemon juice.
And that night with dolma platter in hand, Kaffee did go to a mixer of the human kind, sponsored by lifelong protector and older sister, Alyx. Alyx, who coaxed little sis, "Kaffee, stop hugging the snack table and find a manly arm to hug."
"Oh, I've got plenty of time for that," Kaffee mildly protested. "The night is young," she added wisp of wist.
"But..." under arm Alyx gathered Kaffee to side, "but some folks are entering that stale bread stage, just before turning moldy."
"I am only thirty-two." Up and side-ways Kaffee's eyes mirrored into sister's.
"Exactly!" Alyx nodded, then added, "Just sayin', you're not quite swimming up the rapids to spawn for the very last time, but those rocks and boulders are taking a toll..."
"Get away from me!" Kaffee growled, "I am not a dying fish."
"OK," Alyx pulled arm away. "Sorry, I ruffled your scales."
"Ruffled my scales?" Kaffee burst out laughter in spite of hurt feelings.
"That's the spirit, old girl. Now swim out and find a fellow scaley man to share it with." Alyx fled before getting punched in the arm, a well remembered to avoid childhood Kaffee coping mechanism.
Kaffee took deep breath, unclenched fist, let go ire mixed giggles, "That's my sis." She shrugged, lamented thought, "Not like I don't pray every night for a God fearing man to take my hand."
Twas then that Kaffee activated yet another all too familiar coping mechanism... reached for food... clutched a pimento stuffed olive twixt index finger and thumb. "How long," Kaffee sighed, raised olive to eye level inches from nose, contemplated, "how long before my olive skin begins to sag, can no longer pushin-z-out zee baby?" She squished the olive just enough to make pimento baby pooch out before the whole olive squirted out of fingers onto table top and... "Roll baby roll," Kaffee accepted olive fate. She watched it roll to table edge, titter a tad, then plunge screaming toward floor below, "AAAaaaahh!" Kaffee mocked. Yet was it reflex or hope that her hand shot out to save olive from perilous babyless plight...
...No olive did Kaffee catch... but the hand of a man who rescued olive in the palm of his hand... A gentle God fearing man, who said, "Night after night have I prayed to find you..."
Psalms 128
"Just one of making dolmas little mishaps," Kaffee matter of facted as she dumped spoonful of olives into bowl next to knife and cutting board, the ill-fate of non escapee olives. The Mediterranean skin tone of her arm and hand nearly matched that of the doomed olive, that she reached down to recapture; but orange claw and paw beat her to it, slapped tan green olive across red tile floor.
"Duff, you silly cat, bring that olive back to me this instant!" Kaffee laughed. As the olive rolled, Duff chased then swatted, belly scooted and slid, til round corner of kitchen island.
"From cutting board to cat attack, that poor olive just can't win," Kaffee smirked. Then as oft the habit, she tilted and turned her head, flicked long dark hair from bosom to back. She returned attention to food prep plan. "Let's see, in the mixing bowl already added we have: sauteed ground lamb with herbs, boiled rice, dill, mint, pepper, sea salt, lemon, olive oil, and soon to be smidgeon or two of diced ripe olives."
Kaffee sliced, she diced, she added olives, she stirred, sat down bowl to left of cutting board... "Let the dolma stuffin' begin." She smiled, set plate of palm sized grape leaves to the right of cutting board, selected top grape leaf, tested texture. "Parboiled to perfection, pliable but not too soft, just right to plop the mix onto and roll without tearing." And on the cutting board she laid leaf out, dolloped on the mixing bowl mix and rolled then tucked in the ends, rolled and tucked, rolled and tucked until... there a tight little package of gastronomical delight lay, the dolma. "One down, and only about a hundred or so to go." Kaffee sighed, placed first dolma in serving dish, a dish she would add layer after layer of dolmas to, brushing each layer with olive oil and lemon juice.
And that night with dolma platter in hand, Kaffee did go to a mixer of the human kind, sponsored by lifelong protector and older sister, Alyx. Alyx, who coaxed little sis, "Kaffee, stop hugging the snack table and find a manly arm to hug."
"Oh, I've got plenty of time for that," Kaffee mildly protested. "The night is young," she added wisp of wist.
"But..." under arm Alyx gathered Kaffee to side, "but some folks are entering that stale bread stage, just before turning moldy."
"I am only thirty-two." Up and side-ways Kaffee's eyes mirrored into sister's.
"Exactly!" Alyx nodded, then added, "Just sayin', you're not quite swimming up the rapids to spawn for the very last time, but those rocks and boulders are taking a toll..."
"Get away from me!" Kaffee growled, "I am not a dying fish."
"OK," Alyx pulled arm away. "Sorry, I ruffled your scales."
"Ruffled my scales?" Kaffee burst out laughter in spite of hurt feelings.
"That's the spirit, old girl. Now swim out and find a fellow scaley man to share it with." Alyx fled before getting punched in the arm, a well remembered to avoid childhood Kaffee coping mechanism.
Kaffee took deep breath, unclenched fist, let go ire mixed giggles, "That's my sis." She shrugged, lamented thought, "Not like I don't pray every night for a God fearing man to take my hand."
Twas then that Kaffee activated yet another all too familiar coping mechanism... reached for food... clutched a pimento stuffed olive twixt index finger and thumb. "How long," Kaffee sighed, raised olive to eye level inches from nose, contemplated, "how long before my olive skin begins to sag, can no longer pushin-z-out zee baby?" She squished the olive just enough to make pimento baby pooch out before the whole olive squirted out of fingers onto table top and... "Roll baby roll," Kaffee accepted olive fate. She watched it roll to table edge, titter a tad, then plunge screaming toward floor below, "AAAaaaahh!" Kaffee mocked. Yet was it reflex or hope that her hand shot out to save olive from perilous babyless plight...
...No olive did Kaffee catch... but the hand of a man who rescued olive in the palm of his hand... A gentle God fearing man, who said, "Night after night have I prayed to find you..."
Psalms 128
Thursday, June 8, 2017
JUST ANOTHER AVOCADO SUNRISE
Forearm gainst kitchen door jamb, back of wrist to forehead, Kim yawned. With hand that cradled swollen tummy, she pulled over sized t-shirt up to her little pug nose, breathed deep. Her eyes closed. His scent wafted warm. She opened eyes. "Well there he is the love of my life in the sunrise light." She smiled, but shook her head. "Every morning, every morning at that kitchen island," she sighed, "wearing another one of those kooky avocado t-shirts, cut-off jeans and that same frayed straw hat." She paused, pulled out the front of t-shirt from her bosom. Giant green avocado stared up at her. She frowned. "The man has got to be stopped!" She giggled.
Oblivious to the plot hatching behind his back, Bob at kitchen island danced to Caribbean beat on the radio, while adding finishing touch to extra-early morning brunch. "Simple, yet elegant, nothing like fresh avocado, lime, and..."
...Soft hands slid around his waist. Bob looked down. Something was boring hard under his right armpit. It felt like a rib being taken. Between arm and ribs, moppet haired head popped out. The attached nose crinkled, sniffed. Her lips declared, "Why does lime, avocado, and fresh homemade tortilla chips haf-ta smell so good!"
"Your craving, or baby's?" Bob smiled.
"Ooh, just one!" Kim reached out, snagged chip.
"Hey, you are eating my art!" Bob complained.
"It is pretty neat how you spiraled serving tray with chips, avocado and lime round poblano chiles." Kim offered misdirection compliment, seized opportunity to snatch another tortilla chip.
"You little sneak!" Bob clamped her in head lock, kissed moppet head.
Like a spotted owl twisting neck, Kim looked up at him, demanded, "On the lips, old man!"
Bob bent over to comply. Kim's warm breath caressed his face. His lips brushed hers...
...Kim snitched hand full of chips, escaped, scampered out kitchen to balcony table.
"You mischievous little twerp! You wrecked the spiral! It was gonna be my masterpiece on Chirpagram." Bob lamented, carried serving tray out to chip munching wife; sat down beside her.
"Bob, Bob, your whimpering is not silent. I can hear you." Kim teased. She bumped shoulder into his arm, added, "And since you are perturbed at me anyway, I might as well use this time to ask..." Kim halted speech; knew, that like all typical men, Bob could not let unfinished business lie.
Bob squeezed lime wedge over avocado slices and tortilla chips, combined the two. In mid munch he mumbled, "So, like what, Kim?"
"Sweetie, you know I love you..." Kim stopped again; hid half smirk with chip in hand; patted self on back with thought, "Mistress of manipulation, that's me."
"...But?" Bob bit.
"But sweetie, we are about to bring a little Bob or Kimette into this over sized beach hut. Should we not be a little more responsible? Say, maybe consider giving up childlike fixation on all things avocado? I mean, like are we going to dress our kid in avocado garb the rest of his or her life? Come on!" She tried to elbow a smile out of him... but Bob grew eerily silent, a tad too silent, tellingly silent, silence that screamed... "Bob! You didn't!" Kim whipped frayed straw hat from his head; frisbeed it from balcony into avocado garden below. "You already bought avocado outfits for the baby, didn't cha, Bob? How many, how many did you buy?" Tears began to well in Kim's eyes.
Bob hugged Kim close, rocked her in his arms, soothed, "Kimmie, let us never forget love is the best fertilizer for little avocados to grow in. Us papa and momma avocados just gotta wrap 'em up in our branches, hide 'em from them beaky birds and marauding possums, until it's time for avocado pod to peel open and assimilate... Resistance is fruitless..."
Kim burst into full blown fake sobbing... careened into belly laughter...
Bob chuckled, observed, "Doctorette of male psychology meets match."
"I have got to stop laughing before I pee myself!" Kim stifled chortle.
The baby kicked... Kim hugged her round tummy... Bob hugged Kim,,,
Kim sighed, "Not just another avocado sunrise..."
And looking east out over avocado garden and over the Caribbean waters beyond, Bob said, "Praise the LORD for three hearts beating as one..."
Genesis 2:22, "And the rib, which the LORD God had taken from man, He made into a woman, and brought her unto the man."
Oblivious to the plot hatching behind his back, Bob at kitchen island danced to Caribbean beat on the radio, while adding finishing touch to extra-early morning brunch. "Simple, yet elegant, nothing like fresh avocado, lime, and..."
...Soft hands slid around his waist. Bob looked down. Something was boring hard under his right armpit. It felt like a rib being taken. Between arm and ribs, moppet haired head popped out. The attached nose crinkled, sniffed. Her lips declared, "Why does lime, avocado, and fresh homemade tortilla chips haf-ta smell so good!"
"Your craving, or baby's?" Bob smiled.
"Ooh, just one!" Kim reached out, snagged chip.
"Hey, you are eating my art!" Bob complained.
"It is pretty neat how you spiraled serving tray with chips, avocado and lime round poblano chiles." Kim offered misdirection compliment, seized opportunity to snatch another tortilla chip.
"You little sneak!" Bob clamped her in head lock, kissed moppet head.
Like a spotted owl twisting neck, Kim looked up at him, demanded, "On the lips, old man!"
Bob bent over to comply. Kim's warm breath caressed his face. His lips brushed hers...
...Kim snitched hand full of chips, escaped, scampered out kitchen to balcony table.
"You mischievous little twerp! You wrecked the spiral! It was gonna be my masterpiece on Chirpagram." Bob lamented, carried serving tray out to chip munching wife; sat down beside her.
"Bob, Bob, your whimpering is not silent. I can hear you." Kim teased. She bumped shoulder into his arm, added, "And since you are perturbed at me anyway, I might as well use this time to ask..." Kim halted speech; knew, that like all typical men, Bob could not let unfinished business lie.
Bob squeezed lime wedge over avocado slices and tortilla chips, combined the two. In mid munch he mumbled, "So, like what, Kim?"
"Sweetie, you know I love you..." Kim stopped again; hid half smirk with chip in hand; patted self on back with thought, "Mistress of manipulation, that's me."
"...But?" Bob bit.
"But sweetie, we are about to bring a little Bob or Kimette into this over sized beach hut. Should we not be a little more responsible? Say, maybe consider giving up childlike fixation on all things avocado? I mean, like are we going to dress our kid in avocado garb the rest of his or her life? Come on!" She tried to elbow a smile out of him... but Bob grew eerily silent, a tad too silent, tellingly silent, silence that screamed... "Bob! You didn't!" Kim whipped frayed straw hat from his head; frisbeed it from balcony into avocado garden below. "You already bought avocado outfits for the baby, didn't cha, Bob? How many, how many did you buy?" Tears began to well in Kim's eyes.
Bob hugged Kim close, rocked her in his arms, soothed, "Kimmie, let us never forget love is the best fertilizer for little avocados to grow in. Us papa and momma avocados just gotta wrap 'em up in our branches, hide 'em from them beaky birds and marauding possums, until it's time for avocado pod to peel open and assimilate... Resistance is fruitless..."
Kim burst into full blown fake sobbing... careened into belly laughter...
Bob chuckled, observed, "Doctorette of male psychology meets match."
"I have got to stop laughing before I pee myself!" Kim stifled chortle.
The baby kicked... Kim hugged her round tummy... Bob hugged Kim,,,
Kim sighed, "Not just another avocado sunrise..."
And looking east out over avocado garden and over the Caribbean waters beyond, Bob said, "Praise the LORD for three hearts beating as one..."
Genesis 2:22, "And the rib, which the LORD God had taken from man, He made into a woman, and brought her unto the man."
Monday, May 15, 2017
THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER
Mr. I. B. Holder, born Ignatz Bertholemule Holder, Iggy, as his mother fondly called him, was for want of a better word, well let's just say it, not a handsome man. Indeed, Iggy often said, "I'm just an ugly duckling with a no swan future."
And yes, the face of Iggy was one, most did say only a mother could love. Iggy's father had one day gone for a pack of cigarettes and vanished in smoke. Iggy less often said, "The mirror image of his son, drove Dad to the other side of the mirror. Wherever that is?"
But Mrs. Holder loved him. The best Mom could do was only exceeded by the more she did for Iggy. "Thank you Lord, for a roof over our head and food to eat," twas familiar prayer at the Holder table. But a roof over the head and food to eat left little for a school kids wardrobe. Hand me downs and high water corduroy jeans became just one more excuse for classmates to clothe Iggy in the shame of ridicule. "Ugly Iggy," they dubbed him, "the king of icky."
The years passed by, and so had Mom. But Mom had lived long enough to see Iggy start a tire repair service in an old feed store. And as the town grew, so did Iggy's Tire Store from just repair to very successful sales also. It seemed things had turned around for Iggy, especially since right before him stood a tire buyer, a new comer to town, one with blond flowing hair and skin so fair. Molly she was and beautiful was her smile; for she liked the mild mannered and hard working man her 'eyes beheld.' Sure he was six inches shorter than her, and kinda scrawny, and especially sweaty with all that hard work and all; but there was something about those big ears and buck teeth and silly bashful grin that just rocked her world. Even at that very instant Molly fought the urge to hug him. It would seem that ugly duckling destiny had found swan future.
But lo, even alas, oh forsooth already, paradise interruptus: a years of yore school bully walked through the door. Four new tires he demanded, with yesterday his patience. But as clueless as the loud mouth was, even he picked up on the aroma of romance in Iggy's Tire Store. "Well my oh my," he laughed, "Do my eyes deceive me? Hot mama meets Ugly Iggy, the king of icky! Can you imagine that?"
Was it the disrespect to Molly? Was it the ridicule laughter? Was it the life time of abandonment? Was it the fact that this very bully was one in the same, who in school between each and every change of class room had wacked little Iggy's head with a textbook? What ever it was... a tire tool found home in the right hand of Iggy. And at high velocity that tire tool split air, halting only a fragment of an inch before the eye of the offensive beholder, who for a moment stood stiff, then stumbled backward, then fled out the door.
Molly tried to comfort a trembling Iggy. But he walked away into his office. Molly followed, but the door shut. Molly heard the lock click. Molly heard Iggy weep. And Molly knew...
The day was tomorrow. The day was Sunday. Iggy had found a pew. And in Jesus name as Iggy prayed forgiveness for himself, his vanished dad, even the bully; the preacher said, "King David sang to the LORD in Psalm 17:8 & 15 KJ, 'Keep me as the apple of the eye, hide me under the shadow of thy wings... As for me, I will behold thy face in righteousness: I shall be satisfied when I awake, with thy likeness." The preacher mused, "Who are righteous: but the forgiven, who forgive. How beautiful, the forgiven, are and shall be, in the eyes of The Great Beholder..."
And with eyes still closed in prayer, Mr. I. B. Holder, Ugly Iggy the king of icky, felt next to him the pew cushion stir neath the weight of a swan; felt a soft hand take his; felt fair blond hair caress his cheek; beheld to his ear the touch of whispering lips, "You are beautiful to me."
...The LORD provides for the apple of his eye...
Psalm 17:8, Psalm 84:3, Psalm 34:15 & Matthew 6:9-15
And yes, the face of Iggy was one, most did say only a mother could love. Iggy's father had one day gone for a pack of cigarettes and vanished in smoke. Iggy less often said, "The mirror image of his son, drove Dad to the other side of the mirror. Wherever that is?"
But Mrs. Holder loved him. The best Mom could do was only exceeded by the more she did for Iggy. "Thank you Lord, for a roof over our head and food to eat," twas familiar prayer at the Holder table. But a roof over the head and food to eat left little for a school kids wardrobe. Hand me downs and high water corduroy jeans became just one more excuse for classmates to clothe Iggy in the shame of ridicule. "Ugly Iggy," they dubbed him, "the king of icky."
The years passed by, and so had Mom. But Mom had lived long enough to see Iggy start a tire repair service in an old feed store. And as the town grew, so did Iggy's Tire Store from just repair to very successful sales also. It seemed things had turned around for Iggy, especially since right before him stood a tire buyer, a new comer to town, one with blond flowing hair and skin so fair. Molly she was and beautiful was her smile; for she liked the mild mannered and hard working man her 'eyes beheld.' Sure he was six inches shorter than her, and kinda scrawny, and especially sweaty with all that hard work and all; but there was something about those big ears and buck teeth and silly bashful grin that just rocked her world. Even at that very instant Molly fought the urge to hug him. It would seem that ugly duckling destiny had found swan future.
But lo, even alas, oh forsooth already, paradise interruptus: a years of yore school bully walked through the door. Four new tires he demanded, with yesterday his patience. But as clueless as the loud mouth was, even he picked up on the aroma of romance in Iggy's Tire Store. "Well my oh my," he laughed, "Do my eyes deceive me? Hot mama meets Ugly Iggy, the king of icky! Can you imagine that?"
Was it the disrespect to Molly? Was it the ridicule laughter? Was it the life time of abandonment? Was it the fact that this very bully was one in the same, who in school between each and every change of class room had wacked little Iggy's head with a textbook? What ever it was... a tire tool found home in the right hand of Iggy. And at high velocity that tire tool split air, halting only a fragment of an inch before the eye of the offensive beholder, who for a moment stood stiff, then stumbled backward, then fled out the door.
Molly tried to comfort a trembling Iggy. But he walked away into his office. Molly followed, but the door shut. Molly heard the lock click. Molly heard Iggy weep. And Molly knew...
The day was tomorrow. The day was Sunday. Iggy had found a pew. And in Jesus name as Iggy prayed forgiveness for himself, his vanished dad, even the bully; the preacher said, "King David sang to the LORD in Psalm 17:8 & 15 KJ, 'Keep me as the apple of the eye, hide me under the shadow of thy wings... As for me, I will behold thy face in righteousness: I shall be satisfied when I awake, with thy likeness." The preacher mused, "Who are righteous: but the forgiven, who forgive. How beautiful, the forgiven, are and shall be, in the eyes of The Great Beholder..."
And with eyes still closed in prayer, Mr. I. B. Holder, Ugly Iggy the king of icky, felt next to him the pew cushion stir neath the weight of a swan; felt a soft hand take his; felt fair blond hair caress his cheek; beheld to his ear the touch of whispering lips, "You are beautiful to me."
...The LORD provides for the apple of his eye...
Psalm 17:8, Psalm 84:3, Psalm 34:15 & Matthew 6:9-15
Saturday, April 29, 2017
THE TAIL OF BOOMERANG ROO
Cracked creek bed mud turned to dust neath rancher man's boot. In that hell of drought, death lay all about. Dehydrated skin stretched thin hid the dust of the dead within. "In the outback, thirst knows no difference between cattle nor animal kin," said rancher man Slim. And he wondered when 'the big dry' would ever end. He was just about to pray again, when the corner of his eye caught movement. Where had that movement been among the dead? And there he saw it again. The twitch of a tail. From the pouch of a dead momma roo, the bent tail of a joey stirred life. Without thought Slim pulled out that little bent tailed roo. In his arms Slim saw the cause of it all; the bent tail told the tale; bore the canine marks of a dingo chew. Slim said, "Bent like a boomerang, you poor little roo." And as helpless as Slim was in the drought and all, he helped the helpless. Carried little bent tail roo back to the truck. Put him in the seat. And from his canteen, water little roo did sip.
And months came. And months passed by in the one room home of Slim and roo. Most nights Little Roo, as Slim called him, slept curled up in his bent tail on Slim's lap. Rocking away in that old homemade chair, Slim minded hardly at all. For company in the outback, he had next to none at all. Solitary life and no wife, such was Slim's life a boat in the desert, but his oars never gave up straining against the burning sand. And as the 'the big dry' stirred dust, the heart of Slim stirred only closer to God above. Many a night Little Roo listened to soft spoken Slim reading the Bible. And Little Roo, although he understood not a word, still knew blessing, as he drifted off to hoppy land.
In the early morn and near sunset, Slim took care of barnyard chores. There was Naomi to tend, the goat from who knows where, who had just shown up the week before Little Roo. So as if part of God's plan, Slim had goats milk to milk. Milk for Little Roo to be fed from the finger of a glove tied to the end of a bottle. And there was Little Roo's rehabilitation. Rehab mainly consisting of hopping away from Slim in a lopsided arc, due to the off balance of that bent tail, then hopping back in a curve. And one such sunset evening Slim said, "The name Little Roo just will not do. For you are a special bent tail roo, and though you hop away, you always return, not straight away, but in an arc like the boomerang do. So do I dub thee, Boomerang Roo. But just Roo for short will most times do." And the newly dubbed Boomerang Roo stood looking up to his adopted dad; tilted head from side to side; and by his new name he did abide.
And late one night, Boomerang Roo in lap, the rocker slowed rocking. The voice of Slim in prayer grew tired. The Bible slipped from his hands. And Roo and Slim slept quiet... so quiet... they felt not the cool air roll slowly through their one room home. Heard not the solitary ping on the tin roof above, followed in a moment by another, then another, till the rain fell spanking that tin to cry new born baby life. Roo woke first. In fear Roo leaped from lap bounding off furniture and round the walls. Till Slim caught him or Roo caught Slim. Round Slim's right leg Roo wrapped arms and legs and boomerang tail too. Slim laughed and with Roo clinging on, shuffled up to and opened the porch door. There the nose of Boomerang Roo krinkled, breathed in for the very first time... the smell of rain. And standing in that porch door, Slim thanked the Lord, as the mist of living water washed over them.
The sun rose. With milk bucket in hand Slim made aim for the barn to visit Naomi the goat. But something was missing, the shadow of Roo. Slim just figured Roo didn't want mud on his paws. For where had been dust now was mud galore.
What possessed Roo to go out that morn on his own? In a long arc Boomerang Roo hopped and he hopped and he hopped... over a hill. And where Roo stopped, was where he stood. Maybe it twas the gunning of the truck motor Roo heard, or maybe the spinning of mud slick tires; but for sure twas the will of One with higher power: that Roo arrived at the very stuck truck of Ruth. Ruth saw Roo, gave up the futile slinging of mud, and exited the truck. And up to Ruth, Roo hopped. Ruth stammered, "Wha-what a-a-a cu-cu-cute little ra-ra-roo!" To Ruth's surprise Roo tilted his head and, looking up at her, took her hand in paw. Without thinking, Ruth was lead to the hill top, where down below she saw the house of Slim and the barn. "Da-a-a-down hill fra-from here," to her new friend Ruth talked.
And near the barn door, still holding Roo's paw, Ruth met Slim, carrying a pail of Naomi's milk. "M-m-m-my na-na-name is Ruth! I-I-I been la-la-lookin' fa-fa-for my ga-ga-ga-goa-goa-Naomi!!!" She said.
And Slim with smile sighed, "What few be about call me Slim, but my given name be Boaz." He lifted up the pail of milk and added, "I might just know the whereabouts of that old goat." And together Slim and Ruth and Roo walked hand in hand in paw; and entered the one room house called home... Ruth never stuttered again... And yes, the cows did come home, more than there were before... And from hearts of dust a garden grew from rain anew... And Slim praised the LORD!!!
Isaiah 58:10-11 KJ, "And if thou draw out thy soul to the hungry, and satisfy the afflicted soul; then shall thy light rise in obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noon day: And the LORD shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not."
Please share "The Tail of Boomerang Roo," with all who need a tail straitening. For a infinitely more awesome and true story, please read in the Bible the book of Ruth. Only cause we love you.
And late one night, Boomerang Roo in lap, the rocker slowed rocking. The voice of Slim in prayer grew tired. The Bible slipped from his hands. And Roo and Slim slept quiet... so quiet... they felt not the cool air roll slowly through their one room home. Heard not the solitary ping on the tin roof above, followed in a moment by another, then another, till the rain fell spanking that tin to cry new born baby life. Roo woke first. In fear Roo leaped from lap bounding off furniture and round the walls. Till Slim caught him or Roo caught Slim. Round Slim's right leg Roo wrapped arms and legs and boomerang tail too. Slim laughed and with Roo clinging on, shuffled up to and opened the porch door. There the nose of Boomerang Roo krinkled, breathed in for the very first time... the smell of rain. And standing in that porch door, Slim thanked the Lord, as the mist of living water washed over them.
The sun rose. With milk bucket in hand Slim made aim for the barn to visit Naomi the goat. But something was missing, the shadow of Roo. Slim just figured Roo didn't want mud on his paws. For where had been dust now was mud galore.
What possessed Roo to go out that morn on his own? In a long arc Boomerang Roo hopped and he hopped and he hopped... over a hill. And where Roo stopped, was where he stood. Maybe it twas the gunning of the truck motor Roo heard, or maybe the spinning of mud slick tires; but for sure twas the will of One with higher power: that Roo arrived at the very stuck truck of Ruth. Ruth saw Roo, gave up the futile slinging of mud, and exited the truck. And up to Ruth, Roo hopped. Ruth stammered, "Wha-what a-a-a cu-cu-cute little ra-ra-roo!" To Ruth's surprise Roo tilted his head and, looking up at her, took her hand in paw. Without thinking, Ruth was lead to the hill top, where down below she saw the house of Slim and the barn. "Da-a-a-down hill fra-from here," to her new friend Ruth talked.
And near the barn door, still holding Roo's paw, Ruth met Slim, carrying a pail of Naomi's milk. "M-m-m-my na-na-name is Ruth! I-I-I been la-la-lookin' fa-fa-for my ga-ga-ga-goa-goa-Naomi!!!" She said.
And Slim with smile sighed, "What few be about call me Slim, but my given name be Boaz." He lifted up the pail of milk and added, "I might just know the whereabouts of that old goat." And together Slim and Ruth and Roo walked hand in hand in paw; and entered the one room house called home... Ruth never stuttered again... And yes, the cows did come home, more than there were before... And from hearts of dust a garden grew from rain anew... And Slim praised the LORD!!!
Isaiah 58:10-11 KJ, "And if thou draw out thy soul to the hungry, and satisfy the afflicted soul; then shall thy light rise in obscurity, and thy darkness be as the noon day: And the LORD shall guide thee continually, and satisfy thy soul in drought, and make fat thy bones: and thou shalt be like a watered garden, and like a spring of water, whose waters fail not."
Please share "The Tail of Boomerang Roo," with all who need a tail straitening. For a infinitely more awesome and true story, please read in the Bible the book of Ruth. Only cause we love you.
Friday, April 28, 2017
SORROW FALLS
"How often ones road ends at Sorrow Falls," Josh mused, tossed yet another rock into that not so swift water. "Ends where it began. Cathy carted off the kids a year ago today. Today the divorce is final. And this very rock I'm sitting on is where I proposed to her. Talk about drowning in a sea of love." Josh picked up a bit too large rock, stood and tossed. The weight of that last rock was exactly what he needed, needed to pull Josh off balance into Sorrow Falls.
What were the odds his skull would meet up with that same rock in the cold shallow water? Not odd at all, even probable, Josh would have probably thought, if he were conscious. But conscious he was not, as he floated down Sorrow Falls, more a long and winding down hill stream... full of rocks...
...In campfire shadows the nose of Josh twitched; breathed bacon cooking air; savored caramelizing brown sugar in cast iron pot of baked beans. He felt almost toasty... "Where?" His brain fought the fog. "How," escaped his lips. A gentle hand lifted between his shoulders; semi sat Josh up, while other hand pushed backpack under head and shoulders.
"Names, Joy!" she huffed.
Even in the dim fire light Josh focused on no angel. His eyes traced each scar. That split lip must have really hurt a while back. So must that gash above left eye bled more than a bit. And that straight line across right cheek surely must have required stitches. Yet his warm yet fuzzy mind commanded his lips to repeat her name, "Joy, Joy, Joy..."
"Yeah, Joy," she said, added, "stop ogling me before you fall in love." She did not laugh.
"Sorry," was all Josh had.
In silence Joy spooned up a bowl of beans, poked a fork in it, and poked the bowl at him. Josh just stared. His head wobbled a bit. Joy shuffled closer, forked up a bite to feed him. The eyes of Josh followed that fork to the lips of Joy; and as she blew on the beans to cool them, Josh breathed in her sweet breath. Josh touched her face...
"You are a rose," floated from his lips.
Joy looked into his eyes for more than a spell. Spoke, "Yes, men desire me; and the scars, well the scars lead them to believe I'm attainable. But the look on your face is something else."
"You saved me," Josh almost cried.
"Maybe, after all I did drag your soggy hide out of the water." Joy smiled. "You don't know who I am, do you? I've sang and strummed the guitar in just about every dance hall, rodeo, county fair, saloon and shindig from Tulsa to Austin. My last name is Rydell and you Mr. Joshua Keeler, Mr. real estate tycoon, floated down Sorrow Falls right onto my ranch.
"How do you know me?" Josh wondered.
"Your wallet and contents are drying out on that log by the fire. Now eat these beans!" Joy explained, commanded. Josh's mouth flew open. Joy piled the beans in. His mouth flooded with baked bean and bacon heaven.
"After we get through playing momma and baby bird," Joy forked up another bite, cooled it with that sweet, sweet breath, fed it to Josh, "After we eat, I might just play you a tune." Joy smiled, forked up a heap of beans to her own lips, forgetting to cool them off first. Fast and furious she chewed while blowing to cool them too hot beans.
Josh giggled at her mild dismay. Joy punched him in the shoulder. Still chewing and blowing, Joy barked, "Save your skinny butt, and now you laugh at me!" Joy giggled. Momma and baby bird were getting along just fine.
After a time of some serious munching, punctuated with giggles, both were full of beans. With the back of her shirt sleeve, Joy wiped stray baked bean juice from her chin, reached over and retrieved guitar. "You might a wondered why I'm out here campfire and all. This place is my nest by the falls, where momma bird hatches most of her songs. And, where in the last year or so, I have come to feel closest to the LORD above."
Josh watched Joy tune up that beat up old guitar for a little more than a while, before ribbing, "Has the bird lost her song?"
"Did I hear a discouraging peep, baby bird? Save you from drowning, fill you full a beans, about to sing you a song... but yeah, am I stalling... or just employing pregnant pause?" Joy tuned a tad more, confessed, "The song is not finished and I'm supposed to sing it in the morning at Cowboy Church. Here goes:
Sorrow falls away
No matter how reckless I've been
Your wings gather me in
And sorrow falls away
Healing my scars of growing
Because You love me
Because You love me
Like the rose buds above the thorn
Like grass glistens in sunshine after rain
Risen above the storm
The light of the world
LORD, He is Your Son...
Thank You for the shower has come
Thank you for the living rain from above
LORD, He is your Son
Jesus loves me
Jesus loves me
Thank you Lord God Almighty
For Jesus' love
Thank you Lord God above
For Jesus' love
Holy, holy, holy
Lord God Father of Love
Sorrow falls away
No matter how reckless I've been
Your wings gather me in
And sorrow falls away
...And as Joy continued to sing, Josh thought, "How often ones road begins at Sorrow Falls...
Psalm 16:11; Isaiah 35:1; 2nd Samuel 23:4; Ezekiel 34:26; John 3:16; Psalm 17:8
What were the odds his skull would meet up with that same rock in the cold shallow water? Not odd at all, even probable, Josh would have probably thought, if he were conscious. But conscious he was not, as he floated down Sorrow Falls, more a long and winding down hill stream... full of rocks...
...In campfire shadows the nose of Josh twitched; breathed bacon cooking air; savored caramelizing brown sugar in cast iron pot of baked beans. He felt almost toasty... "Where?" His brain fought the fog. "How," escaped his lips. A gentle hand lifted between his shoulders; semi sat Josh up, while other hand pushed backpack under head and shoulders.
"Names, Joy!" she huffed.
Even in the dim fire light Josh focused on no angel. His eyes traced each scar. That split lip must have really hurt a while back. So must that gash above left eye bled more than a bit. And that straight line across right cheek surely must have required stitches. Yet his warm yet fuzzy mind commanded his lips to repeat her name, "Joy, Joy, Joy..."
"Yeah, Joy," she said, added, "stop ogling me before you fall in love." She did not laugh.
"Sorry," was all Josh had.
In silence Joy spooned up a bowl of beans, poked a fork in it, and poked the bowl at him. Josh just stared. His head wobbled a bit. Joy shuffled closer, forked up a bite to feed him. The eyes of Josh followed that fork to the lips of Joy; and as she blew on the beans to cool them, Josh breathed in her sweet breath. Josh touched her face...
"You are a rose," floated from his lips.
Joy looked into his eyes for more than a spell. Spoke, "Yes, men desire me; and the scars, well the scars lead them to believe I'm attainable. But the look on your face is something else."
"You saved me," Josh almost cried.
"Maybe, after all I did drag your soggy hide out of the water." Joy smiled. "You don't know who I am, do you? I've sang and strummed the guitar in just about every dance hall, rodeo, county fair, saloon and shindig from Tulsa to Austin. My last name is Rydell and you Mr. Joshua Keeler, Mr. real estate tycoon, floated down Sorrow Falls right onto my ranch.
"How do you know me?" Josh wondered.
"Your wallet and contents are drying out on that log by the fire. Now eat these beans!" Joy explained, commanded. Josh's mouth flew open. Joy piled the beans in. His mouth flooded with baked bean and bacon heaven.
"After we get through playing momma and baby bird," Joy forked up another bite, cooled it with that sweet, sweet breath, fed it to Josh, "After we eat, I might just play you a tune." Joy smiled, forked up a heap of beans to her own lips, forgetting to cool them off first. Fast and furious she chewed while blowing to cool them too hot beans.
Josh giggled at her mild dismay. Joy punched him in the shoulder. Still chewing and blowing, Joy barked, "Save your skinny butt, and now you laugh at me!" Joy giggled. Momma and baby bird were getting along just fine.
After a time of some serious munching, punctuated with giggles, both were full of beans. With the back of her shirt sleeve, Joy wiped stray baked bean juice from her chin, reached over and retrieved guitar. "You might a wondered why I'm out here campfire and all. This place is my nest by the falls, where momma bird hatches most of her songs. And, where in the last year or so, I have come to feel closest to the LORD above."
Josh watched Joy tune up that beat up old guitar for a little more than a while, before ribbing, "Has the bird lost her song?"
"Did I hear a discouraging peep, baby bird? Save you from drowning, fill you full a beans, about to sing you a song... but yeah, am I stalling... or just employing pregnant pause?" Joy tuned a tad more, confessed, "The song is not finished and I'm supposed to sing it in the morning at Cowboy Church. Here goes:
Sorrow falls away
No matter how reckless I've been
Your wings gather me in
And sorrow falls away
Healing my scars of growing
Because You love me
Because You love me
Like the rose buds above the thorn
Like grass glistens in sunshine after rain
Risen above the storm
The light of the world
LORD, He is Your Son...
Thank You for the shower has come
Thank you for the living rain from above
LORD, He is your Son
Jesus loves me
Jesus loves me
Thank you Lord God Almighty
For Jesus' love
Thank you Lord God above
For Jesus' love
Holy, holy, holy
Lord God Father of Love
Sorrow falls away
No matter how reckless I've been
Your wings gather me in
And sorrow falls away
...And as Joy continued to sing, Josh thought, "How often ones road begins at Sorrow Falls...
Psalm 16:11; Isaiah 35:1; 2nd Samuel 23:4; Ezekiel 34:26; John 3:16; Psalm 17:8
Thursday, April 20, 2017
LICK CHICKEN
Lick Chickeners would a named their little flock Finger Lickin' Good, but state law forbade three word towns; so Lick Chicken it was. And in small town Lick Chicken, Fat Pats was the place to be. "Just about the only place to be," locals liked to say bout what most Lick Chickeners considered second home.
"Like coffee with that cream?" Fat Pat giggled at Slim Jeno still a 4 am a dream with cream server a stuck a tilt. "Your cup runneth over, Hun." She giggled again at her dark haired Hungarian.
"What?" Coffee ran off diner counter top onto his apron. "Well, that's one way to get caffeine." Slim Jeno mumbled. As wife built napkin dam, he sat server down. Without stirring he bent over, mouth to coffee mug, slurped away coffee and cream surplus.
"My aren't we a little piggy this morn?" Pat snickered, elbow nudged struggling to awake hubby.
"Oink," Jeno punctuated with semi-giggle of his own.
From the kitchen they heard clank of pans. "The faithful staff arrives." Fat Pat sighed.
"Ah, faith, the substance of things hoped for; the evidence of that not seen," Slim Jeno quote, almost awoke.
"Ah, and Biblical too this beautiful morning. Was that Hebrews 11:1, King James no less? Who is this husband of mine?" Pat smiled, drew strength, for the a hungered hordes, they were a coming.
Jeno turned attention from morning brew. Took time to drink in the beauty before him, "Freckles of auburn, matching eyes and curls of a girl with svelte curves, how I love you." Slim Jeno gave wife lips to lips peck, rose from seat, stretched eyes wide, sighed, "Time to roll out the old szilvas gomboc," and headed for kitchen door.
As she did every morning, Fat Pat turned it over in her mind, and spilled out mouth one more time, "Szilvas gomboc, Hungarian plum dumplings, who knew?" She spoke of once struggling slapjack diner turned country wide sensation. For even 20 miles away the szilvas gumboc a hungered big city folks due north were deterred not even by predawn dark. "Lord, thank you for my husband," Fat Pat a tad misty eyed sat, and added, "and thank You too for the good folks of Lick Chicken."
Slim, not portly, local patrons had mis-dubbed Patricia Ann Foszakacs, Fat Pat. Portly, not slim, Jeno Foszakas had received similar mis-nomer, Slim Jeno. Perhaps the nicknames said more about the coiners than the recipients there of. For you see the folks of Lick Chicken were a nest full of affable good good eggs near always on the verge of hatching local peep of small town adage; all be it a bit scrambled.
"After all," so ran the oft misquoted Lick Chicken motto, "a licked chicken tastes better cooked." While the official town motto really twas, "A licked chicken tastes better tallow fried." Yet, even the for real town motto reflected name of Lick Chicken to be somewhat askew; seeing as how the areas main industry to be cattle and a tallow rendering plant. "Seems oft we ought trace the seams... of what seems to be..." Lick Chickeners were apt to often say.
But we digress, for while the non-fat Fat Pat tended cash register setup and the hundred other details of dining area; in the kitchen, as morning tradition, the staff huddled round one round Slim Jeno. Together they repeated morning prayer, "Dear Lord, in Jesus name we pray, the food we prepare this day, be blessed nourishment unto the least of these our bretheren." And with a big, "Amen," their hearts and hands sprang into action.
In little more than an hour, thru kitchen door wafted doughy cinnamon and brown sugary sweet szilvas gomboc. And no coincidence was it that in that same little more than an hour the first wave of a hungered hordes, well in they invaded. Some half asleep a mug of coffee needing to drain, some slapping old pal backs, more than a few greeted by crowd by name. And the newbees, well the door barely hit them in the behind afore the no chicken lips Lick Chickeners gave shout out, "Newbee Welcome!" Sometimes they sang this welcome tradition in unison, sometimes they sang it in echo ripple, but everytime every person got good greeting. For at Fat Pats, Lick Chickeners liked to say and do, "In Lick Chicken nobody... remains a nobody long..."
And those special somebodies began their mornings at Fat Pats with healthy homemade food, not a usual cuisine for an establishment that had started as slapjack greasy spoon. The menu and plates served abounded with fresh fruit and vegetables from garden green bean scrambled eggs to slapjacks fresh peach inlaid, and of course the number one requested Hungarian plum dumplings. The a hungered hordes ate that szilvas gomboc 'for here' and ordered 'for there' an extra dozen or two 'to go' for co-workers and family. More than a few called ahead to place special orders over two dozen.
But the peculiar people of the peculiar Fat Pats, Lick Chickeners and newbee honorary Lick Chickeners alike, had one more peculiar tradition... At exactly 7 am each morning Monday thru Saturday, Slim Jeno and faithful staff emerged from kitchen... And all listened to what Slim Jeno had to say, "In Matthew 25: 35 KJ, our precious Jesus said, 'For I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in..."
The meaning of this little story may be found in Matthew chapter 25 verses 31 thru 46, a parable by Jesus in the recipe of Life, the sweeter than honey Holy Bible. Key words are, "...an hungered... and ...the least of these, my bretheren..."
And I wonder, just wonder, bout the symbolic significance of them small town Lick Chickeners and even that szilvas gomboc... I just wonder... Could it possibly, not so much by chance, have a little something to do with the heart of every dumpling being plum filled with fruit... (fruit: verses 5 & 8 of John 15:1 thru 12)
...Food not only for lips of flesh...
"Like coffee with that cream?" Fat Pat giggled at Slim Jeno still a 4 am a dream with cream server a stuck a tilt. "Your cup runneth over, Hun." She giggled again at her dark haired Hungarian.
"What?" Coffee ran off diner counter top onto his apron. "Well, that's one way to get caffeine." Slim Jeno mumbled. As wife built napkin dam, he sat server down. Without stirring he bent over, mouth to coffee mug, slurped away coffee and cream surplus.
"My aren't we a little piggy this morn?" Pat snickered, elbow nudged struggling to awake hubby.
"Oink," Jeno punctuated with semi-giggle of his own.
From the kitchen they heard clank of pans. "The faithful staff arrives." Fat Pat sighed.
"Ah, faith, the substance of things hoped for; the evidence of that not seen," Slim Jeno quote, almost awoke.
"Ah, and Biblical too this beautiful morning. Was that Hebrews 11:1, King James no less? Who is this husband of mine?" Pat smiled, drew strength, for the a hungered hordes, they were a coming.
Jeno turned attention from morning brew. Took time to drink in the beauty before him, "Freckles of auburn, matching eyes and curls of a girl with svelte curves, how I love you." Slim Jeno gave wife lips to lips peck, rose from seat, stretched eyes wide, sighed, "Time to roll out the old szilvas gomboc," and headed for kitchen door.
As she did every morning, Fat Pat turned it over in her mind, and spilled out mouth one more time, "Szilvas gomboc, Hungarian plum dumplings, who knew?" She spoke of once struggling slapjack diner turned country wide sensation. For even 20 miles away the szilvas gumboc a hungered big city folks due north were deterred not even by predawn dark. "Lord, thank you for my husband," Fat Pat a tad misty eyed sat, and added, "and thank You too for the good folks of Lick Chicken."
Slim, not portly, local patrons had mis-dubbed Patricia Ann Foszakacs, Fat Pat. Portly, not slim, Jeno Foszakas had received similar mis-nomer, Slim Jeno. Perhaps the nicknames said more about the coiners than the recipients there of. For you see the folks of Lick Chicken were a nest full of affable good good eggs near always on the verge of hatching local peep of small town adage; all be it a bit scrambled.
"After all," so ran the oft misquoted Lick Chicken motto, "a licked chicken tastes better cooked." While the official town motto really twas, "A licked chicken tastes better tallow fried." Yet, even the for real town motto reflected name of Lick Chicken to be somewhat askew; seeing as how the areas main industry to be cattle and a tallow rendering plant. "Seems oft we ought trace the seams... of what seems to be..." Lick Chickeners were apt to often say.
But we digress, for while the non-fat Fat Pat tended cash register setup and the hundred other details of dining area; in the kitchen, as morning tradition, the staff huddled round one round Slim Jeno. Together they repeated morning prayer, "Dear Lord, in Jesus name we pray, the food we prepare this day, be blessed nourishment unto the least of these our bretheren." And with a big, "Amen," their hearts and hands sprang into action.
In little more than an hour, thru kitchen door wafted doughy cinnamon and brown sugary sweet szilvas gomboc. And no coincidence was it that in that same little more than an hour the first wave of a hungered hordes, well in they invaded. Some half asleep a mug of coffee needing to drain, some slapping old pal backs, more than a few greeted by crowd by name. And the newbees, well the door barely hit them in the behind afore the no chicken lips Lick Chickeners gave shout out, "Newbee Welcome!" Sometimes they sang this welcome tradition in unison, sometimes they sang it in echo ripple, but everytime every person got good greeting. For at Fat Pats, Lick Chickeners liked to say and do, "In Lick Chicken nobody... remains a nobody long..."
And those special somebodies began their mornings at Fat Pats with healthy homemade food, not a usual cuisine for an establishment that had started as slapjack greasy spoon. The menu and plates served abounded with fresh fruit and vegetables from garden green bean scrambled eggs to slapjacks fresh peach inlaid, and of course the number one requested Hungarian plum dumplings. The a hungered hordes ate that szilvas gomboc 'for here' and ordered 'for there' an extra dozen or two 'to go' for co-workers and family. More than a few called ahead to place special orders over two dozen.
But the peculiar people of the peculiar Fat Pats, Lick Chickeners and newbee honorary Lick Chickeners alike, had one more peculiar tradition... At exactly 7 am each morning Monday thru Saturday, Slim Jeno and faithful staff emerged from kitchen... And all listened to what Slim Jeno had to say, "In Matthew 25: 35 KJ, our precious Jesus said, 'For I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in..."
The meaning of this little story may be found in Matthew chapter 25 verses 31 thru 46, a parable by Jesus in the recipe of Life, the sweeter than honey Holy Bible. Key words are, "...an hungered... and ...the least of these, my bretheren..."
And I wonder, just wonder, bout the symbolic significance of them small town Lick Chickeners and even that szilvas gomboc... I just wonder... Could it possibly, not so much by chance, have a little something to do with the heart of every dumpling being plum filled with fruit... (fruit: verses 5 & 8 of John 15:1 thru 12)
...Food not only for lips of flesh...
Monday, March 27, 2017
DEW FOR DUST
"Well, is it official?" Thru dew of steam on bath mirror, Austin suburbanite Brooke Nineve searched reflection. With thumb and forefinger she parted wrinkles in left corner of eye, dared, "Watch the crows feet run." She let go; wrinkles recoiled like a snake bent on striking youth itself. "Yep, my smile lines are now officially crows feet." An involuntary, "Hymmmph," escaped her lips, sort a trailed off in a downward spiral.
Meanwhile back at the ranch, Kelby Tahl slapped warm water on whiskers and lathered up. As he opened medicine cabinet, his reflection slid to and off mirror edge. He retrieved the safety razor within, closed the mirror, began morning ritual. Third stroke in stopped short; razor in hand lowered. "Well, how bout that," Kelby sputtered thru foam on lips, spattered lather on mirror. He turned head a tad, wrought a too wide open right eye right up to mirror; pondered, "Just when 'did' that crow step foot in my corner of eye land?" Kelby smiled, the crow's-foot grew deeper. "Such is wisdom, paid for in the currency of youth." His eyes relaxed, yet smiled the wider.
Brooke and Kelby had dated for a while, well longer than a while, more than a few years while. But one of the things they had never done together was a picnic, and Kelby never before had shared a certain hiding place on his hill country ranch. So this special morning was separate spent, a cookin' country picnic fare, signature entrees to later share. Secret entrees for neither told other what they did prepare, so kept surprise up in the air.
A few hours later Brooke made the seventeen mile trip thru winding hills and lowland dales, till pulling up near ranch house front door step, where Kelby was a loading up his utility vehicle name of A-Lamb-A-Tote, as proclaimed on rear tail gate.
"Never have I ever seen a man's four wheel drive toy covered in such an idyllic scene." Brooke drew breath, added, "Those deer by the stream under the cypress look like I could pet them." She asked, "Who painted it for you?"
"Well," Kelby blushed just a little, confessed, "one day my left hand kind a asked right hand what's up?"
"What kind of man are you, Kelby Tahl?" Brooke gave him a peck on cheek.
His blush grew deeper, and he kept in his heart the thought, "Wait till she sees what's on the driver's side..."
And so it was that no sooner than gear and an old guitar were stowed aboard the ol' A-Lamb-A-Tote, the trip to promised picnic land began. And so be it along the way, a pungent odor, escaping one particular picnic basket bay, tingled olfactory nerve stimulation, induced drooling mechanism, of one Brooke Nineve. "I have never smelled anything quite like the 'whatever' you have cooked up in that basket." She hugged Kelby's arm tight. "Maybe we could sample just a bite along the way?"
Kelby smiled, "Am I the most blessed old cowhand in Texas or what? Got my pretty gal on my arm, and riding thru God's country to picnic heaven."
"Kelby Tahl," Brooke cut loose a healthy, "Hymph," nipped his arm with pearly teeth, and with accusing eye rendered protest, "I have not forgotten your lips are a master of the old deflected by the reflected game." She squirmed a bit in seat, but did not let go his arm, did a little reflecting of her own. "But I did like that you said I'm pretty... and your gal." Her smile grew, but as it did the mirror of earlier morning gave the corner of her left eye a crow's-foot pinch, deflated that smile to near sniffle. "It was sweet of you to say, but the mirror tells me otherwise."
The eyes of Kelby just smiled. He kept on a drivin', breathed, "You have no idea how beautiful you are, do you? You, dearest Brooke, who scents the breeze of my dreams with the flower of strawberry blonde hair, with freckles of marigold on nose that match the ones on the nape of your sweet neck, and those pink rose lips... But even if you had not these any at all, you'd still be beautiful to me."
Brooke hugged his arm all the snugger, "And just why is that, Mr. Kelby? Tell me more." So returned pink rose smile.
"Because the mirror of the face is temporary; but the mirror of the soul is forever. Because in due time the dew is as the dew of herbs, that wakes the dust... Whether old or whether dead in the dust, the dew from heaven wakes all to eternity, both the just and the unjust, to blessed place or to accursed other. Because at the crossroad of every life stands the cross. Because the cross is the crossroad of life. And you, little Brooke, have babbled many a dew time... the living water of Jesus."
"Wow, ask a guy a question! You got all kinds a cowboy of the cosmos there for a minute." Brooke giggled, but confessed, "But I do love Jesus." She smiled.
"Well, speaking of brooks, we are here and I'm about as hungry as you are." Kelby brought A-Lamb-A-Tote to a halt atop the rock over looking the brook. He fished, "Feel like getting your toes wet?"
"You are such a kidder." Brooke giggled like a tickled little girl.
"Well, there comes a time," Kelby put on his best sage, gray templed, cosmic look, repeated, "comes a time when all must pass over to the other side of the river, or brook as it be." He tried to stall the smile tugging at corner of lips.
"So we really are crossing the water?" Brooke sighed, yet with hazel eyes of trust looked up into sage face.
Boots off, jeans rolled up, guitar strapped to back, baskets dangling from left arm and hand, and Brooke hanging on to right arm, Kelby took first step into cool water. Brooke stepped in, giggled, "It tickles, feels so good after wearing those hot old boots." The clear ankle deep water rushed over smooth stone, and in between, "School girl toes!" She squeaked.
"School girl toes?" Kelby smiled. He loved to hear Brooke's little squeak.
"Yeah, in Austin after grade school during the summer, me and my best friend Bernie used to wade in the stream behind our house, let the minnows and baby bass nibble our toes. Ohh, what is that?" She squeaked again.
"That little fellow inspecting your toes is your native rainbow trout. He is as colorful as he is right on cue, isn't he? One of God's little planned coincidences, no doubt. Thank you Lord above." And Kelby knew this to be a day of sweet reckoning.
"Sunrise blue and pink with speckles, beautiful." Brooke admired the little swimmer.
"Just don't get too distracted," Kelby gently warned. "The arch we are on top of is only about seven feet wide."
"Arch?" Brooke puzzled.
"Yep, we are crossing right in the middle of a limestone arch. Ankle deep here, but on both sides six feet deep. The water passes over and under it. So do not slip." The seriousness of his face betrayed the gentleness of his voice.
If I go, we both go, Kelby Tahl." Brooke held tight to right arm.
"Just a few more steps to the shade of that cypress." Kelby stood in water edge, made sure Brooke's first step on stream bank secure, then stepped up himself.
Shortly the blanket was spread, the baskets and guitar laid out. two in love sat down, and the hunger astirred Brooke reached for Kelby's basket, reeking mystery aroma. His and hers hands met on basket handle.
"Uh-aah, you open your basket first," Kelby teased.
"No way," Brooke crinkled up freckles of nose and forehead. "That smell has been driving me crazy. I am so hungry, I almost gnawed off your arm on the way up here." She pulled basket to her and wrapped arms round it.
"Give it up." Kelby tugged basket and the attached Brooke to him, planted full kiss on pink lips.
Brooke's grasp loosened. Kelby gently picked up basket, sat it out of her reach. He gathered Brooke to his side, under arm. Her lips blushed, longed for more..." Open your basket first," He coaxed.
Brooke fluttered lashes, narrowed hazel eyes, and through askew blushed lips muttered, "Deflected by the reflected 'again'! Kelby Tahl, you are a bad, bad almost ex-boyfriend." She tried sneak attack around his waist to snag that basket handle. Kelby scooted it just out of reach, to which Brooke registered a Richter Scale seismic, "Hymmmph!"
"Your basket first," Like a flea in the fur, Kelby pestered away.
"One of these days, Mr. Tahl." She scooted away, folded arms for a sec, then reached out and retrieved her picnic basket, sat it between them, fumed, "Since it means more to you than me, here." With the palm of her hand she tried to hide the smile cracking faux pas miffed mug. Her giggle revealed...
"I love your natural born sweet marigold nature." Kelby kissed her temple, nuzzled nose in strawberry blonde hair.
"Sweet distraction... again." Brooke leaned a tad closer.
Kelby opened basket lid, "Let's see, fruit, nut and veggie salad," he took breath, "tossed in sweet raspberry vinaigrette, creamed peas, and your famous sour cream mashed tatters. Girl friend, done good!" Kelby bumped shoulder into hers.
"Open your cotton pickin' basket!" Brooke fumed, like heat escaping lava.
"Eh, what basket would that be?" Kelby treaded on volcanic ground.
"The stinking picnic basket right behind you, stinky man." Brooke pouted.
Kelby knew just how far to stretch Brooke's tolerance, before she stretched his neck, sat her basket away, replaced it with his.
For a few seconds Brooke refused to budge folded arms, but her freckled nose began to twitch with waft of thick aroma. "Ohhh," she opened basket, opened tin foil, "buttermilk biscuits? Yummy, but that's not what I smell." She popped open foil covering ceramic dish, the smell rose up, tickled her nose, forced her to dive forefinger into, "Gravy?" She tasted, she grabbed a biscuit and dipped, she bit and she ate. She dipped biscuit again. "It's got a reddish tint?" She took nother scrumptious bite.
"Red-eye gravy, an old southern recipe," Kelby volunteered.
"Red-eye gravy, oh my," Brooke dipped biscuit, chewed anew. "Rich, smoky, salty and meaty delicious, but what kind of meat?" With mouth full, twixt chewing, she asked.
"Critters," Kelby smiled.
Red-eye gravy stop sign halted munching. "What kind of critters?" Brooke's munching cautiously resumed.
"Well ya just sort a start with some wild boar smoked ham, fry it up in pan, take it out and add left over thick coffee to the drippins' and scrappins', and whisk in butter and bouillion cube." Kelby divulged recipe.
"So the meat is ham?" Brooke took nother bite.
"Naw, I ate that for breakfast, while I fried up the rabbit and squirrel."
"So I am eating rodents," Brooke did not stop eating.
"And duck and others of avian persuasion," Kelby nodded matter of factly.
"Other persuasion?" Brooke was too food enraptured to care.
"Yep, it's all fried, then thrown into the red-eye gravy, and the longer it simmers the tenderer it gets," Kelby basked in his culinary skills, then realized, "Hey, are you going to eat it all?"
"It's," Brooke hugged basket to her, dipped second biscuit into red-eye gravy, "it's your own fault." She took healthy bite, with mouth full mumbled, "Starve a girl half to death in the middle of nowhere, trick her at every turn, like there is really rabbit and squirrel in this gravy; then ya stuff her with the gravy, make life interesting, and..." She dipped biscuit, brought it almost to her lips, but then redirected it dripping gravy to Kelby's mouth, "And you share your recipe of life with me." Love and tasty red-eye gravy had soothed away the crow's-feet from her blue-green eyes.
And they supped... And Kelby burped, "Not bad manners, just good gravy." He laughed.
"Yeah, like that joke never gets old." Brooke poked elbow in his ribs, let out a little burpette of her own, giggled.
"You know what this means, don't you?" Kelby looked down into sweet blue-green eyes.
"Fraid so," Brooke reached back, retrieved old guitar, plunked it down in her lap, strummed a bit til in tune with the dancing water of the brook, then in the voice of an angel began to sing:
Drink of living water
Fresh from the Lord above
Blessed by the breath of the Dove
And filled with Jesus love
Drink of living water
Panteth like the deer
For streamlets cool and clear
The dancing waters hear
Brooke slowed the guitar pickin', let its song drift along with the water of the brook. And so did the deer appear, by the water so very near. And Brooke remembered the painting of the deer by the water, under the cypress decorating the passenger side of ol' A-Lamb-A-Tote. So her gaze ambled there to the other side of the stream, where upon the rock she now saw the other side of four wheel drive. The painting was the same except by the stream, under the cypress, on a picnic blanket sat a young woman playing a guitar in harmony with the living water of the brook. And beside her... kneeling on one knee was a man... And Brooke began to cry...
And the crow's-foot in the corner of Kelby's eye land grew deep... as he relaxed, yet smiled the wider... on bended knee...
The deer by the brook: Psalm 42:1-2 KJ
The dust of passage echos message... beware or rejoice... the dew is coming...
The dew of herbs: Deuteronomy 32:2-4 KJ
The dew of herbs and the dust: Genesis 2:7 KJ and "Isaiah 26:19 KJ" (All of Isaiah chapter 26)
The just and unjust: Please read Matthew 5:45 and understand because God loves all, he sent the light and the rain from heaven, Jesus; and gives opportunity to accept his son Jesus as savior. So must we also love all and share Jesus.
The Rock and His water: Deuteronomy 32:4 KJ; Numbers 20:8 KJ with 1st Corinthians 10:4 KJ and John 4:13-14 KJ
The deer by the brook: Psalm 42:1-2 KJ
Brooke Nineve... the brook and the lady of the lake
Marigold... flower of herb named in honor of Mary Mother of Jesus
Kelby Tahl... the place by the fountain spring and the dew
Sage... a medicinal herb mint... food flavoring... sound wisdom
Red-eye gravy: southern recipe embracing the gift of life...
Jesus... Son of God... our savior... the dew and the rain from heaven... the living water
Ezekiel 34:26 KJ... His season; Numbers 20:8 KJ... His water
John 3:16 KJ For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, '+that whosoever believeth in him+' should not perish, but have everlasting life.
Blessed place... or accursed other... eternity...
Meanwhile back at the ranch, Kelby Tahl slapped warm water on whiskers and lathered up. As he opened medicine cabinet, his reflection slid to and off mirror edge. He retrieved the safety razor within, closed the mirror, began morning ritual. Third stroke in stopped short; razor in hand lowered. "Well, how bout that," Kelby sputtered thru foam on lips, spattered lather on mirror. He turned head a tad, wrought a too wide open right eye right up to mirror; pondered, "Just when 'did' that crow step foot in my corner of eye land?" Kelby smiled, the crow's-foot grew deeper. "Such is wisdom, paid for in the currency of youth." His eyes relaxed, yet smiled the wider.
Brooke and Kelby had dated for a while, well longer than a while, more than a few years while. But one of the things they had never done together was a picnic, and Kelby never before had shared a certain hiding place on his hill country ranch. So this special morning was separate spent, a cookin' country picnic fare, signature entrees to later share. Secret entrees for neither told other what they did prepare, so kept surprise up in the air.
A few hours later Brooke made the seventeen mile trip thru winding hills and lowland dales, till pulling up near ranch house front door step, where Kelby was a loading up his utility vehicle name of A-Lamb-A-Tote, as proclaimed on rear tail gate.
"Never have I ever seen a man's four wheel drive toy covered in such an idyllic scene." Brooke drew breath, added, "Those deer by the stream under the cypress look like I could pet them." She asked, "Who painted it for you?"
"Well," Kelby blushed just a little, confessed, "one day my left hand kind a asked right hand what's up?"
"What kind of man are you, Kelby Tahl?" Brooke gave him a peck on cheek.
His blush grew deeper, and he kept in his heart the thought, "Wait till she sees what's on the driver's side..."
And so it was that no sooner than gear and an old guitar were stowed aboard the ol' A-Lamb-A-Tote, the trip to promised picnic land began. And so be it along the way, a pungent odor, escaping one particular picnic basket bay, tingled olfactory nerve stimulation, induced drooling mechanism, of one Brooke Nineve. "I have never smelled anything quite like the 'whatever' you have cooked up in that basket." She hugged Kelby's arm tight. "Maybe we could sample just a bite along the way?"
Kelby smiled, "Am I the most blessed old cowhand in Texas or what? Got my pretty gal on my arm, and riding thru God's country to picnic heaven."
"Kelby Tahl," Brooke cut loose a healthy, "Hymph," nipped his arm with pearly teeth, and with accusing eye rendered protest, "I have not forgotten your lips are a master of the old deflected by the reflected game." She squirmed a bit in seat, but did not let go his arm, did a little reflecting of her own. "But I did like that you said I'm pretty... and your gal." Her smile grew, but as it did the mirror of earlier morning gave the corner of her left eye a crow's-foot pinch, deflated that smile to near sniffle. "It was sweet of you to say, but the mirror tells me otherwise."
The eyes of Kelby just smiled. He kept on a drivin', breathed, "You have no idea how beautiful you are, do you? You, dearest Brooke, who scents the breeze of my dreams with the flower of strawberry blonde hair, with freckles of marigold on nose that match the ones on the nape of your sweet neck, and those pink rose lips... But even if you had not these any at all, you'd still be beautiful to me."
Brooke hugged his arm all the snugger, "And just why is that, Mr. Kelby? Tell me more." So returned pink rose smile.
"Because the mirror of the face is temporary; but the mirror of the soul is forever. Because in due time the dew is as the dew of herbs, that wakes the dust... Whether old or whether dead in the dust, the dew from heaven wakes all to eternity, both the just and the unjust, to blessed place or to accursed other. Because at the crossroad of every life stands the cross. Because the cross is the crossroad of life. And you, little Brooke, have babbled many a dew time... the living water of Jesus."
"Wow, ask a guy a question! You got all kinds a cowboy of the cosmos there for a minute." Brooke giggled, but confessed, "But I do love Jesus." She smiled.
"Well, speaking of brooks, we are here and I'm about as hungry as you are." Kelby brought A-Lamb-A-Tote to a halt atop the rock over looking the brook. He fished, "Feel like getting your toes wet?"
"You are such a kidder." Brooke giggled like a tickled little girl.
"Well, there comes a time," Kelby put on his best sage, gray templed, cosmic look, repeated, "comes a time when all must pass over to the other side of the river, or brook as it be." He tried to stall the smile tugging at corner of lips.
"So we really are crossing the water?" Brooke sighed, yet with hazel eyes of trust looked up into sage face.
Boots off, jeans rolled up, guitar strapped to back, baskets dangling from left arm and hand, and Brooke hanging on to right arm, Kelby took first step into cool water. Brooke stepped in, giggled, "It tickles, feels so good after wearing those hot old boots." The clear ankle deep water rushed over smooth stone, and in between, "School girl toes!" She squeaked.
"School girl toes?" Kelby smiled. He loved to hear Brooke's little squeak.
"Yeah, in Austin after grade school during the summer, me and my best friend Bernie used to wade in the stream behind our house, let the minnows and baby bass nibble our toes. Ohh, what is that?" She squeaked again.
"That little fellow inspecting your toes is your native rainbow trout. He is as colorful as he is right on cue, isn't he? One of God's little planned coincidences, no doubt. Thank you Lord above." And Kelby knew this to be a day of sweet reckoning.
"Sunrise blue and pink with speckles, beautiful." Brooke admired the little swimmer.
"Just don't get too distracted," Kelby gently warned. "The arch we are on top of is only about seven feet wide."
"Arch?" Brooke puzzled.
"Yep, we are crossing right in the middle of a limestone arch. Ankle deep here, but on both sides six feet deep. The water passes over and under it. So do not slip." The seriousness of his face betrayed the gentleness of his voice.
If I go, we both go, Kelby Tahl." Brooke held tight to right arm.
"Just a few more steps to the shade of that cypress." Kelby stood in water edge, made sure Brooke's first step on stream bank secure, then stepped up himself.
Shortly the blanket was spread, the baskets and guitar laid out. two in love sat down, and the hunger astirred Brooke reached for Kelby's basket, reeking mystery aroma. His and hers hands met on basket handle.
"Uh-aah, you open your basket first," Kelby teased.
"No way," Brooke crinkled up freckles of nose and forehead. "That smell has been driving me crazy. I am so hungry, I almost gnawed off your arm on the way up here." She pulled basket to her and wrapped arms round it.
"Give it up." Kelby tugged basket and the attached Brooke to him, planted full kiss on pink lips.
Brooke's grasp loosened. Kelby gently picked up basket, sat it out of her reach. He gathered Brooke to his side, under arm. Her lips blushed, longed for more..." Open your basket first," He coaxed.
Brooke fluttered lashes, narrowed hazel eyes, and through askew blushed lips muttered, "Deflected by the reflected 'again'! Kelby Tahl, you are a bad, bad almost ex-boyfriend." She tried sneak attack around his waist to snag that basket handle. Kelby scooted it just out of reach, to which Brooke registered a Richter Scale seismic, "Hymmmph!"
"Your basket first," Like a flea in the fur, Kelby pestered away.
"One of these days, Mr. Tahl." She scooted away, folded arms for a sec, then reached out and retrieved her picnic basket, sat it between them, fumed, "Since it means more to you than me, here." With the palm of her hand she tried to hide the smile cracking faux pas miffed mug. Her giggle revealed...
"I love your natural born sweet marigold nature." Kelby kissed her temple, nuzzled nose in strawberry blonde hair.
"Sweet distraction... again." Brooke leaned a tad closer.
Kelby opened basket lid, "Let's see, fruit, nut and veggie salad," he took breath, "tossed in sweet raspberry vinaigrette, creamed peas, and your famous sour cream mashed tatters. Girl friend, done good!" Kelby bumped shoulder into hers.
"Open your cotton pickin' basket!" Brooke fumed, like heat escaping lava.
"Eh, what basket would that be?" Kelby treaded on volcanic ground.
"The stinking picnic basket right behind you, stinky man." Brooke pouted.
Kelby knew just how far to stretch Brooke's tolerance, before she stretched his neck, sat her basket away, replaced it with his.
For a few seconds Brooke refused to budge folded arms, but her freckled nose began to twitch with waft of thick aroma. "Ohhh," she opened basket, opened tin foil, "buttermilk biscuits? Yummy, but that's not what I smell." She popped open foil covering ceramic dish, the smell rose up, tickled her nose, forced her to dive forefinger into, "Gravy?" She tasted, she grabbed a biscuit and dipped, she bit and she ate. She dipped biscuit again. "It's got a reddish tint?" She took nother scrumptious bite.
"Red-eye gravy, an old southern recipe," Kelby volunteered.
"Red-eye gravy, oh my," Brooke dipped biscuit, chewed anew. "Rich, smoky, salty and meaty delicious, but what kind of meat?" With mouth full, twixt chewing, she asked.
"Critters," Kelby smiled.
Red-eye gravy stop sign halted munching. "What kind of critters?" Brooke's munching cautiously resumed.
"Well ya just sort a start with some wild boar smoked ham, fry it up in pan, take it out and add left over thick coffee to the drippins' and scrappins', and whisk in butter and bouillion cube." Kelby divulged recipe.
"So the meat is ham?" Brooke took nother bite.
"Naw, I ate that for breakfast, while I fried up the rabbit and squirrel."
"So I am eating rodents," Brooke did not stop eating.
"And duck and others of avian persuasion," Kelby nodded matter of factly.
"Other persuasion?" Brooke was too food enraptured to care.
"Yep, it's all fried, then thrown into the red-eye gravy, and the longer it simmers the tenderer it gets," Kelby basked in his culinary skills, then realized, "Hey, are you going to eat it all?"
"It's," Brooke hugged basket to her, dipped second biscuit into red-eye gravy, "it's your own fault." She took healthy bite, with mouth full mumbled, "Starve a girl half to death in the middle of nowhere, trick her at every turn, like there is really rabbit and squirrel in this gravy; then ya stuff her with the gravy, make life interesting, and..." She dipped biscuit, brought it almost to her lips, but then redirected it dripping gravy to Kelby's mouth, "And you share your recipe of life with me." Love and tasty red-eye gravy had soothed away the crow's-feet from her blue-green eyes.
And they supped... And Kelby burped, "Not bad manners, just good gravy." He laughed.
"Yeah, like that joke never gets old." Brooke poked elbow in his ribs, let out a little burpette of her own, giggled.
"You know what this means, don't you?" Kelby looked down into sweet blue-green eyes.
"Fraid so," Brooke reached back, retrieved old guitar, plunked it down in her lap, strummed a bit til in tune with the dancing water of the brook, then in the voice of an angel began to sing:
Drink of living water
Fresh from the Lord above
Blessed by the breath of the Dove
And filled with Jesus love
Drink of living water
Panteth like the deer
For streamlets cool and clear
The dancing waters hear
Brooke slowed the guitar pickin', let its song drift along with the water of the brook. And so did the deer appear, by the water so very near. And Brooke remembered the painting of the deer by the water, under the cypress decorating the passenger side of ol' A-Lamb-A-Tote. So her gaze ambled there to the other side of the stream, where upon the rock she now saw the other side of four wheel drive. The painting was the same except by the stream, under the cypress, on a picnic blanket sat a young woman playing a guitar in harmony with the living water of the brook. And beside her... kneeling on one knee was a man... And Brooke began to cry...
And the crow's-foot in the corner of Kelby's eye land grew deep... as he relaxed, yet smiled the wider... on bended knee...
The deer by the brook: Psalm 42:1-2 KJ
The dust of passage echos message... beware or rejoice... the dew is coming...
The dew of herbs: Deuteronomy 32:2-4 KJ
The dew of herbs and the dust: Genesis 2:7 KJ and "Isaiah 26:19 KJ" (All of Isaiah chapter 26)
The just and unjust: Please read Matthew 5:45 and understand because God loves all, he sent the light and the rain from heaven, Jesus; and gives opportunity to accept his son Jesus as savior. So must we also love all and share Jesus.
The Rock and His water: Deuteronomy 32:4 KJ; Numbers 20:8 KJ with 1st Corinthians 10:4 KJ and John 4:13-14 KJ
The deer by the brook: Psalm 42:1-2 KJ
Brooke Nineve... the brook and the lady of the lake
Marigold... flower of herb named in honor of Mary Mother of Jesus
Kelby Tahl... the place by the fountain spring and the dew
Sage... a medicinal herb mint... food flavoring... sound wisdom
Red-eye gravy: southern recipe embracing the gift of life...
Jesus... Son of God... our savior... the dew and the rain from heaven... the living water
Ezekiel 34:26 KJ... His season; Numbers 20:8 KJ... His water
John 3:16 KJ For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, '+that whosoever believeth in him+' should not perish, but have everlasting life.
Blessed place... or accursed other... eternity...
Wednesday, March 8, 2017
JOSIE AND THE SPARROW
Imagine if you will the fading in and out of restless melody... a beat from old stereo turn table stuck in repeat-peat-peat... Josie needed not imagine...
"The bell rang, by door of mind sang, reflection of when, less bright than then." Josie poised qualm laden pen. The bell of door rang.
From desk Josie rose to the bell of call, passed from, "The scene of the crime," as she called her writers desk of late; passed thru dining room, thru the room of living, opened door of the great outside. Josie squinted into early east light. "No one, here?" Josie rubbed eyes, the consequence of the write most of the night. Thru yawn she sighed, "Time to go to bed," closed the door of the great outside.
But instead of bed, called the qualm laden pen. Josie lay not, but sat, and she wrote, "Awash in waves of pout, sinking in unworthy sea of doubt..." The bell of door rang.
From desk Josie rose to the bell of call, passed from, "O' Sea of Doubt," as she contemplated so naming poem; passed thru dining room, thru the room of living, opened door of the great outside. Josie looked and in the east light upon porch railing hopped hope. "A sparrow, here?" Josie eyes smiled an almost rewrite in the morning light. But thru corner of lips a dip she sighed, "So cute, yet so alone," closed the door of the great outside.
But instead of bed, called the qualm laden pen. Josie lay not, but sat, and she wrote, "O' raging sea of doubt, to Jesus' shore spit me out..." The bell of door rang.
From desk Josie rose to the bell of call, passed thru, "Foam of sea upon the sand," described her feet washed in living water, as she passed thru dining room, thru room of living, opened door of the great outside. Josie eyes floated with light a breeze twixt wisteria leaves. "The family, here?" Blue eyes wide, Josie saw the nest; Pa Pa and under Ma Ma wings three babys blessed. Thru lips Josie breathed sweet sigh, "A sparrow, not alone." And Josie no longer closed the door of the great outside.
Get out of the rut of doubt... with Jesus the door of the great outside... to God and His creation...
1) Door of the great outside: John 10:7&9 KJ, Jesus speaking, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, I am the door of the sheep. I am the door; by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture." See also: the beautiful Psalm 23 with Psalm 24:1.
2) Josie in Hebrew and French means: May Jehovah Add... addition to family...
3) Psalm 84:3 says that even the sparrow and swallow are welcome to come and nest and raise their young in the Temple of God. How happy are those singing to the Lord in his house.
4) Luke 12:6-7, Jesus says that You are of more value than many sparrows.
5) The time is near... Psalm 102:7 KJ, "I watch, and am as a sparrow alone upon the house top." Note: watch in Hebrew = sleepless lookout.
6) No time to waste... For in Matthew 24:27-31 KJ, because he loves us, Jesus warns, "For as the lightning comes out of the east..." Please read this all... God help us... be ready...
7) It's now or never... For as in the days of Noah's ark and the flood ... Matthew 24:37-39
...Heaven would not be heaven, if evil were let in...
...Jesus is the only way to be forgiven...
...The only way of salvation...
...Call upon Him now...
...Jesus...
"The bell rang, by door of mind sang, reflection of when, less bright than then." Josie poised qualm laden pen. The bell of door rang.
From desk Josie rose to the bell of call, passed from, "The scene of the crime," as she called her writers desk of late; passed thru dining room, thru the room of living, opened door of the great outside. Josie squinted into early east light. "No one, here?" Josie rubbed eyes, the consequence of the write most of the night. Thru yawn she sighed, "Time to go to bed," closed the door of the great outside.
But instead of bed, called the qualm laden pen. Josie lay not, but sat, and she wrote, "Awash in waves of pout, sinking in unworthy sea of doubt..." The bell of door rang.
From desk Josie rose to the bell of call, passed from, "O' Sea of Doubt," as she contemplated so naming poem; passed thru dining room, thru the room of living, opened door of the great outside. Josie looked and in the east light upon porch railing hopped hope. "A sparrow, here?" Josie eyes smiled an almost rewrite in the morning light. But thru corner of lips a dip she sighed, "So cute, yet so alone," closed the door of the great outside.
But instead of bed, called the qualm laden pen. Josie lay not, but sat, and she wrote, "O' raging sea of doubt, to Jesus' shore spit me out..." The bell of door rang.
From desk Josie rose to the bell of call, passed thru, "Foam of sea upon the sand," described her feet washed in living water, as she passed thru dining room, thru room of living, opened door of the great outside. Josie eyes floated with light a breeze twixt wisteria leaves. "The family, here?" Blue eyes wide, Josie saw the nest; Pa Pa and under Ma Ma wings three babys blessed. Thru lips Josie breathed sweet sigh, "A sparrow, not alone." And Josie no longer closed the door of the great outside.
Get out of the rut of doubt... with Jesus the door of the great outside... to God and His creation...
1) Door of the great outside: John 10:7&9 KJ, Jesus speaking, "Verily, verily, I say unto you, I am the door of the sheep. I am the door; by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go in and out, and find pasture." See also: the beautiful Psalm 23 with Psalm 24:1.
2) Josie in Hebrew and French means: May Jehovah Add... addition to family...
3) Psalm 84:3 says that even the sparrow and swallow are welcome to come and nest and raise their young in the Temple of God. How happy are those singing to the Lord in his house.
4) Luke 12:6-7, Jesus says that You are of more value than many sparrows.
5) The time is near... Psalm 102:7 KJ, "I watch, and am as a sparrow alone upon the house top." Note: watch in Hebrew = sleepless lookout.
6) No time to waste... For in Matthew 24:27-31 KJ, because he loves us, Jesus warns, "For as the lightning comes out of the east..." Please read this all... God help us... be ready...
7) It's now or never... For as in the days of Noah's ark and the flood ... Matthew 24:37-39
...Heaven would not be heaven, if evil were let in...
...Jesus is the only way to be forgiven...
...The only way of salvation...
...Call upon Him now...
...Jesus...
Thursday, February 23, 2017
KNEAD
"You sure are rough on it, Grammie." Jen Jen giggled. "Let me try! Let me try!" Doe eyes wide, flour powdered palms on floral apron, like sun lit daisy a dance in end of spring breeze, Jen Jen swayed to AM radio polka-eeze.
Next flour dusted counter top, with back of wrist Grammie dabbed forehead perspiration, took step aside. A step filled by grandchild Jen Jen, who with back of wrist dabbed forehead perspiration.
"A kolache just is not a kolache unless kneaded." Grammie smiled like a persimmon eatin' possum.
"But why, Grammie?" Jen Jen doe eyed wondered. "Oooh, it's so soft, yet heavy." Jen Jen partly answered own question.
"Cause the quality of the kolache lies in the texture of the dough." Grammie wiped hands on apron.
"How, Grammie?" Jen Jen kneaded dough like a kitten kneading milk.
"Kolaches is kind a like people. The warmth we put in is the warmth we get out." As grace of life she did impart, Grammie loved watching her little shadow happily knead dough. "Remember the list of ingredients: 3 packages dry yeast with 1/2 cup warm water, 1 tsp sugar; and 2 sticks butter with 3/4 cup of sugar, 3 egg yolks, 2 3/4 cups scalded milk, a tad over 7 cups flour and 3 tsp salt?"
"Like duh, I remember ever word you've ever said." Jen Jen kneaded merrily away.
"Lord help me, I hope not." Grammie chuckled.
"Every word, Grammie." Jen Jen tee-hee-ed.
"Getting back to the ingredients." Grammie looked to heaven for that help.
"Yeah, that's all good quality stuff." Jen Jen plowed a tad ahead of Grammie furrow of thought. "We get out what we put in. I would have no kolache dough to knead, had we not used the right stuff. And it takes effort." Jen Jen kind a trailed off into rhythm of kneading.
"That's right! A kolache just is not a kolache un..." Grammie almost finished refinished sentence.
"Unless kneaded." Jen Jen sneezed, kneaded and flour dusted her own pug nose with back of hand.
"Bless you," Grammie reflex responded, but rolled eyes and added, "good thing we will bake out all those Jen Jen germs later in the oven."
Jen Jen just giggled, rubbed nose again.
"Sooo, how did we get here... to the kneading part?" Grammie schoolmarm prodded.
"Well duh," Jen Jen kept on kneading, "first, in a tall glass we dessolved the 3 packets of yeast in 1/2 cup of warm water and sprinkled on top the tsp sugar, then set it aside to proof. While that was bubbling, we then in a large bowl creamed the 2 sticks butter with 3/4 cup cup sugar, then added 3 egg yolks, 3 tsp salt and mixed well." Jen Jen took a breath. "Then, like double duh, we added in the yeast sugar water and put the electric mixer to work, slowly mixing all that good stuff together."
"You amaze me. Grammie wishes she had your smarts." Grammie twern't a kidding.
"Yeah, like triple duh." Jen Jen bobbled head, sighed. "Oh, but we were not kneading dough yet! Then it was add the milk and gradually add in the remaining flour as much as could be mixed with a wooden spoon. Until, we be kneading this dough by hand on flour dusted counter top, til smooth and elastic, just like as in now."
"There is a difference between being smart and being a smarty pants, little sneezy duh girl!" Grammie side eyed smiled.
"Yeah, that's true. But you love me anyway." Jen Jen giggled, added, "Duh! Or as in this case: Dough!" She giggled again.
Grammie hugged her smirking shadow, asked, "So, like what's next?"
"Well this is the part where you usually make some analogy, like following a recipe in the kitchen is like following the Bible in real life, if you want to do it right." Jen Jen wide eye grinned. "So the recipe says we place the dough in a butter coated bowl, flip it to coat the other side, then cover with cheese cloth and let rise somewhere between an hour and an hour and a half."
"While that analogy is rising, we have time for some sweet tea sippin' in the swing outback." Grammie invited; under arm hugged that sweet little shadow again.
Under the oak, the kolache creating two kept swing in sync with the breeze rustling leaves, until Jen Jen ground heels in turf. "What is Cooter cat doing? Is he about to eat one of Grammie's chickens?"
Grammie chuckled. "Old black and white Cooter?" She chuckled again. "Those chickens are his sheep. Years ago in this very swing I sat Cooter in my lap, pointed to the chickens at my feet, and told him these are Grammie's babies. Watch over and protect them, I told him. Cooter has been faithful in his duties ever since."
"But he is crouching, as in cat attack?" Jen Jen still invisioned Cooter with mouth full of feathers.
"No," Grammie smiled, "Cooter is lying down like a border collie tending his sheep. But yes, he is ready to attack, attack any predator that messes with his chickens. Just last fall Grammie walked out kitchen door and wondered why all the chickens were clustered close behind Cooter's butt."
"You said butt." Jen Jen snickered like a cartoon hound.
"Yes, they had clustered in a bunch behind Cooter, who ready to pounce stared straight ahead." Grammie looked into Jen Jen rapt doe brown eyes.
"What did Cooter see?" Jen Jen wiggled in seat.
"A huge evil stray gray, he was, an enormous tom cat with brain a itching for a poultry lyching." Grammie paused her story of paws, loved making her smarty pants duh girl squirm.
"What happened?" Jen Jen slapped swing seat with both hands, shook shoulders, huffed. "Did Cooter fight the evil stray gray? Was he hurt? What happened!"
"Grammie screamed!" Grammie did not try to hide sideways lips a smirk.
"Tell me. Tell me!" Jen Jen whined.
"Paw Paw heard me. Came running out back door with broom in hand." Grammie took sweet ice tea sip.
"Did Paw Paw swat the evil stray gray?"
"Didn't get a swing. When he ran out kitchen door it spooked the stray gray. Cooter tore out after him hot on his tail. Paw Paw couldn't swing the broom for fear of hitting Cooter. So here they went, the three of them, one right after the other, running cross pasture toward the creek." Grammie took breath.
"Breathe later Grammie! What happened?" Jen Jen blurted.
"Do you want me to finish this story or not, smarty pants? Grammie feigned irk.
"Gotta love me." Jen Jen snuggled under Grammie arm. Gave her like the best doe eyed look ever.
"You little twerp, God bless, I do love you." Grammie hugged Jen Jen. "I remember like it was tomorrow forever, when you were a baby, how when you spilled milk or potted in drawers, you'd point that cute little baby finger straight at pug nose and offer the most precious excuse, 'Bebe-Bebe! Bebe?'"
"But you digress, Grammie. Evil stray gray, Cooter, Paw Paw, broom, chasing?" Jen Jen reminded.
"Oh, lucky for old Paw Paw the creek wasn't far or he'd a had a heart attack. That stray gray ran down to the creek bank and made mighty leap, but the opposing bank was just too far. Paw Paw said he would have splashed smack dab down in the middle accept fer..."
"Did he swat the stray gray? Did Paw Paw swat the stray gray in mid air?"
"Never got the chance. The stray gray landed square on the snout of a seventeen feet long dirty gray-green gator. City folks don't understand such is life on the ranch an every day struggle twixt the the eater and the eaten. At times even the eater gets eaten."
"That's really gross, Grammie. But chickens were saved; justice was done." Jen Jen tittered twixt the icky and profound. "Tee-hee-ed," her way back to smirk city.
Approximately one hour twenty-nine minutes, fifty nine seconds, 33.3 nano-seconds, and somewhat of a tad later, the tea sipping two rejoined kitchen.
"Time to punch some dough!" Grammie might a been a tad too enthusiastic.
"You sure got a violent streak, Grammie." Jen Jen laughed. "What did that dough ever do to you?"
"Made me to buy bloomers two sizes bigger." Grammie snickered.
Too much information!" Jen Jen arched left brow in Grammie direction. "How bout we administer some justice and punch down that dough. Although I am wondering why?"
"Remember we placed it in this greased bowl to let it rise. But kolaches at this stage require a deflated dough. So punch that dough little duh girl."
Jen Jen let out a few tennis serve grunts, aced the dough punching, more like dough squishing.
"Now we turn out our deflated dough onto lightly floured counter top," Grammie demonstrated, "then we pinch off egg sized pieces and using the palms of our hands roll them into balls, and then indent each one with thumb to make the heart of the kolache," Jen Jen copied Grammie, "and then we place each one on our butter coated baking pan."
A tad latter, "Mission accomplished!" Jen Jen, like lunar landing astronaut, said.
"Not quite, now my precious grandchild brushes dough tops with melted butter, then we cover again and let rise for about an hour."
"Sure is a whole lotta risin' goin' on," Jen Jen sang.
"That is one sad Elvis impression." Grammie chuckled like the cluckle of henhouse hen.
"So Grammie, time for more swing, sweet tea and a story?" Jen Jen wiggled like puppy dog tail.
"Hey, are we going to make kolaches or what?"
"There's more?" Jen Jen arched that left brow, raised right corner of lips, pointed her finger at own pug nose. "Bebe - Bebe!" Made excuse for break.
"No time to give up when the finish line, the poppy seed filling, is in sight." Grammie encouraged.
"I'm just a tired widdle girl." Jen Jen morphed doe eyes wide into liquid pools of soul.
"Kolaches done done in my little helper?" Grammie nearly caved, hugged her, kissed her forehead.
"Yeah, but I think I might be more hungry than tired. So what do we do with this bag of poopy seed?" Jen Jen tee-hee-ed.
"Poppy seed, not poopy seed, you little scamp!" Grammie giggled. Hugged Jen Jen gain.
"No time for hugging, Grammie. My tummy is growling. The recipe says we need 1 1/2 cup poppy seeds, 1 cup sugar, 2 cups milk, 1 tbsp flour, 2 tbsp butter. Let's do it!"
So they did: combine the poppy seeds, milk and sugar and cook till early thickening; then added the butter, then the dissolved in a bit of water flour. Grammie and Jen Jen took turns stirring as needed for near 30 minutes.
"Done?" Jen Jen sighed, hoped.
"Will be as soon as it cools a bit." Grammie sat it aside.
Jen Jen retrieved and set up Paw Paws desk fan from his study to expedite cooling.
"Smart girl." Grammie complemented.
"Starved girl." Jen Jen tummy g-r-r-r-gled.
In a tad of a while Grammie lifted cheese cloth, unveiled risen kolaches. "Ah the heart of the kolache needs filling. Just like all us little kolaches need Jesus."
"You fill my heart Grammie, but I may have to ask Jesus to feed me." Jen Jen almost was not kidding.
"You fill the hearts while Grammie prepares the posypka topping and we will get to the oven sooner." Grammie turned on the oven to preheat to 425 degrees.
While filling kolache hearts with poppy seed filling, Jen Jen kept learning eye on the Grammie-a-nator in fast forward.
"Let's see, 1 cup sugar, 1/2 cup flour, heaping tsp cinnamon, 2 tbsp butter, mix till resembling coarse meal. Viola, posypka!" Grammie eyes grew wide. "Oops, one little thingy."
"Let's bake 'em!" Jen Jen was one hungry critter.
"Just one more little thingy." Grammie smirked.
"Noooo! No more one little thingies! Bake 'em. Please bake 'em." Jen Jen wound down as if from lack of energy.
"But we must baptize the kolache poppy seed heart with posypka. Takes just a sec." Grammie sprinkled with zest, while Jen Jen clutching baking pan danced impatient polka. The sec Grammie ran out of posypka, Jen Jen almost got open oven door to pop kolaches laden pan in, when...
"Needs 20 minutes rising." Grammie apologetically explained, "The sugar in the posypka reactivates the yeast."
Jen Jen froze, eyes crossed, along with her legs.
"Are you ok?"
"Sweet tea on the swing!" Jen Jen sat down baking pan, hopped like a roo round kitchen corner to loo.
After the river rapids of time whizzed by, Jen Jen had barely re-entered kitchen, when pug nose went to twitchin' and she spied on kitchen table, "Oh yeah, freshly nuked leftover Czech goulash, praha heaven. Thank you Grammie. You are the best Grammie like ever."
"Maybe this will elevate Grammie to sainthood." Grammie glowed, as she sat down tall glass of cold milk on kitchen table; while gathering memories to savor forever.
In a tad less than a while Jen Jen had scarfed down the praha and, "Mm-mmm good," ed thru milk mustache, when...
Grammie interrupted, "Got time to pop these kolaches in the oven?"
"Does a wild grandchild pee in the loo?" Jen Jen hopped from seat.
"You scampered over here like a gerbil to cheese." Grammie smile sighed mixture of amusement and pure love.
In both hands Jen Jen grasped kolache laden baking sheet, Grammie opened oven. Jen Jen sat in baking sheet. Grammie gently closed door.
"How long?" Jen Jen still had that hungry squirrel drooling over an acorn look.
"At 425 preheated degrees, about 12 to 15 minutes till we polka down the Posypka Road to Kolache Land." Grammie teased.
Jen Jen groaned, took her arm, "Duh, your metaphors have slapped your similes silly, Grammie."
14 minutes, 53 seconds later, Jen Jen opened oven, released intoxicating fresh baked kolache aroma, Oven mitten clad Grammie reached in, pulled out, "Just a little bit of the promised land." She proclaimed. Jen Jen brushed on melted butter, then the mouth watering waiting to semi-cooling began.
One eye on kolaches, the other tending clean-up, Jen Jen and Grammie polka-ed from flour dusted mess to sparkling kitchen land, while sharing tasty tid bits of family history:
"You know it took your Mommy nine months to bake her little kolache in tummy oven."
"Duh, and she stirred in a whole lotta sugar to make me." Jen Jen was in mid tee-hee, when...
Screen door abruptly swung open, cap wearing head stuck in, "My kolache radar never fails."
"If you mean by radar that big old Paw Paw snoozola of yours." Jen Jen squealed, ran into his arms, knocked cap off his head, squeezed till Paw Paw eyes near popped out.
Jen Jen blessed his nose with kisses, hopped down, grabbed kolache in each hand, gave one to Paw Paw, one to Grammie, hopped back, grabbed two more and... took starving scarf out of each one. Poppy seed and posypka squished out mouth, ran down her chin.
Grammie praised, "Serving Paw Paw and me first; Jen Jen, you are so preciously unselfish."
"I'm no sailfish!" Jen Jen tee-hee-ed right into nother delicious kolache double bite.
"Did you see?" Paw Paw lovingly kneaded Grammie shoulder and neck.
"The kolache in each hand." Grammie felt it too.
"Think the Lord is telling us to tell her?" Paw Paw tad more than wondered.
"Tell me what?" Jen Jen took nother double bite.
Grammie and Paw Paw into each others eyes looked; took turn of tee-hee all their own.
"What?" Jen Jen mumbled thru mouthful of poppy seed posypka sweet kolache heart.
Grammie patted flour dusted apron over swollen tummy, gave blessed answer, "You may be getting a new aunt or uncle soon."
"Maybe one of each," Paw Paw eyes beamed.
As Jen Jen's kolache munching slowed, so grew her doe eyes wide... into liquid pools of soul... Jen Jen hugged her Grammie, said, "I thought you were just getting fat!" The giggling ensued.
"Lord help us all," Grammie laughed for joy, looked to heaven, "thank you Jesus."
The sweet heart of pillow soft supple dough... the kolache filled with fruit...
So should we be all... kneaded by the Creator... filled with Jesus...
Where did the inspiration for this little story come from? In the Bible, the adventures of 100 year Abraham and 90 year old wife Sarah are totally true and like totally awesome. Why would Sarah knead meal to cake? Why would she laugh within her heart? Were they at advanced age to have a son named Isaac, whose name meant laughter? And why? And why, O'My!!! Will you read and also laugh within your heart: Genesis 18:1-15; 21:1-5...
And why, O'MY!!! 2000 years later a certain descendant of Abraham and Sarah would be blessed with child. That young lady was and is Mary, whose name in Hebrew means: Wished For Child... Thank you Jesus...
...No thing is too difficult for the LORD...
Next flour dusted counter top, with back of wrist Grammie dabbed forehead perspiration, took step aside. A step filled by grandchild Jen Jen, who with back of wrist dabbed forehead perspiration.
"A kolache just is not a kolache unless kneaded." Grammie smiled like a persimmon eatin' possum.
"But why, Grammie?" Jen Jen doe eyed wondered. "Oooh, it's so soft, yet heavy." Jen Jen partly answered own question.
"Cause the quality of the kolache lies in the texture of the dough." Grammie wiped hands on apron.
"How, Grammie?" Jen Jen kneaded dough like a kitten kneading milk.
"Kolaches is kind a like people. The warmth we put in is the warmth we get out." As grace of life she did impart, Grammie loved watching her little shadow happily knead dough. "Remember the list of ingredients: 3 packages dry yeast with 1/2 cup warm water, 1 tsp sugar; and 2 sticks butter with 3/4 cup of sugar, 3 egg yolks, 2 3/4 cups scalded milk, a tad over 7 cups flour and 3 tsp salt?"
"Like duh, I remember ever word you've ever said." Jen Jen kneaded merrily away.
"Lord help me, I hope not." Grammie chuckled.
"Every word, Grammie." Jen Jen tee-hee-ed.
"Getting back to the ingredients." Grammie looked to heaven for that help.
"Yeah, that's all good quality stuff." Jen Jen plowed a tad ahead of Grammie furrow of thought. "We get out what we put in. I would have no kolache dough to knead, had we not used the right stuff. And it takes effort." Jen Jen kind a trailed off into rhythm of kneading.
"That's right! A kolache just is not a kolache un..." Grammie almost finished refinished sentence.
"Unless kneaded." Jen Jen sneezed, kneaded and flour dusted her own pug nose with back of hand.
"Bless you," Grammie reflex responded, but rolled eyes and added, "good thing we will bake out all those Jen Jen germs later in the oven."
Jen Jen just giggled, rubbed nose again.
"Sooo, how did we get here... to the kneading part?" Grammie schoolmarm prodded.
"Well duh," Jen Jen kept on kneading, "first, in a tall glass we dessolved the 3 packets of yeast in 1/2 cup of warm water and sprinkled on top the tsp sugar, then set it aside to proof. While that was bubbling, we then in a large bowl creamed the 2 sticks butter with 3/4 cup cup sugar, then added 3 egg yolks, 3 tsp salt and mixed well." Jen Jen took a breath. "Then, like double duh, we added in the yeast sugar water and put the electric mixer to work, slowly mixing all that good stuff together."
"You amaze me. Grammie wishes she had your smarts." Grammie twern't a kidding.
"Yeah, like triple duh." Jen Jen bobbled head, sighed. "Oh, but we were not kneading dough yet! Then it was add the milk and gradually add in the remaining flour as much as could be mixed with a wooden spoon. Until, we be kneading this dough by hand on flour dusted counter top, til smooth and elastic, just like as in now."
"There is a difference between being smart and being a smarty pants, little sneezy duh girl!" Grammie side eyed smiled.
"Yeah, that's true. But you love me anyway." Jen Jen giggled, added, "Duh! Or as in this case: Dough!" She giggled again.
Grammie hugged her smirking shadow, asked, "So, like what's next?"
"Well this is the part where you usually make some analogy, like following a recipe in the kitchen is like following the Bible in real life, if you want to do it right." Jen Jen wide eye grinned. "So the recipe says we place the dough in a butter coated bowl, flip it to coat the other side, then cover with cheese cloth and let rise somewhere between an hour and an hour and a half."
"While that analogy is rising, we have time for some sweet tea sippin' in the swing outback." Grammie invited; under arm hugged that sweet little shadow again.
Under the oak, the kolache creating two kept swing in sync with the breeze rustling leaves, until Jen Jen ground heels in turf. "What is Cooter cat doing? Is he about to eat one of Grammie's chickens?"
Grammie chuckled. "Old black and white Cooter?" She chuckled again. "Those chickens are his sheep. Years ago in this very swing I sat Cooter in my lap, pointed to the chickens at my feet, and told him these are Grammie's babies. Watch over and protect them, I told him. Cooter has been faithful in his duties ever since."
"But he is crouching, as in cat attack?" Jen Jen still invisioned Cooter with mouth full of feathers.
"No," Grammie smiled, "Cooter is lying down like a border collie tending his sheep. But yes, he is ready to attack, attack any predator that messes with his chickens. Just last fall Grammie walked out kitchen door and wondered why all the chickens were clustered close behind Cooter's butt."
"You said butt." Jen Jen snickered like a cartoon hound.
"Yes, they had clustered in a bunch behind Cooter, who ready to pounce stared straight ahead." Grammie looked into Jen Jen rapt doe brown eyes.
"What did Cooter see?" Jen Jen wiggled in seat.
"A huge evil stray gray, he was, an enormous tom cat with brain a itching for a poultry lyching." Grammie paused her story of paws, loved making her smarty pants duh girl squirm.
"What happened?" Jen Jen slapped swing seat with both hands, shook shoulders, huffed. "Did Cooter fight the evil stray gray? Was he hurt? What happened!"
"Grammie screamed!" Grammie did not try to hide sideways lips a smirk.
"Tell me. Tell me!" Jen Jen whined.
"Paw Paw heard me. Came running out back door with broom in hand." Grammie took sweet ice tea sip.
"Did Paw Paw swat the evil stray gray?"
"Didn't get a swing. When he ran out kitchen door it spooked the stray gray. Cooter tore out after him hot on his tail. Paw Paw couldn't swing the broom for fear of hitting Cooter. So here they went, the three of them, one right after the other, running cross pasture toward the creek." Grammie took breath.
"Breathe later Grammie! What happened?" Jen Jen blurted.
"Do you want me to finish this story or not, smarty pants? Grammie feigned irk.
"Gotta love me." Jen Jen snuggled under Grammie arm. Gave her like the best doe eyed look ever.
"You little twerp, God bless, I do love you." Grammie hugged Jen Jen. "I remember like it was tomorrow forever, when you were a baby, how when you spilled milk or potted in drawers, you'd point that cute little baby finger straight at pug nose and offer the most precious excuse, 'Bebe-Bebe! Bebe?'"
"But you digress, Grammie. Evil stray gray, Cooter, Paw Paw, broom, chasing?" Jen Jen reminded.
"Oh, lucky for old Paw Paw the creek wasn't far or he'd a had a heart attack. That stray gray ran down to the creek bank and made mighty leap, but the opposing bank was just too far. Paw Paw said he would have splashed smack dab down in the middle accept fer..."
"Did he swat the stray gray? Did Paw Paw swat the stray gray in mid air?"
"Never got the chance. The stray gray landed square on the snout of a seventeen feet long dirty gray-green gator. City folks don't understand such is life on the ranch an every day struggle twixt the the eater and the eaten. At times even the eater gets eaten."
"That's really gross, Grammie. But chickens were saved; justice was done." Jen Jen tittered twixt the icky and profound. "Tee-hee-ed," her way back to smirk city.
Approximately one hour twenty-nine minutes, fifty nine seconds, 33.3 nano-seconds, and somewhat of a tad later, the tea sipping two rejoined kitchen.
"Time to punch some dough!" Grammie might a been a tad too enthusiastic.
"You sure got a violent streak, Grammie." Jen Jen laughed. "What did that dough ever do to you?"
"Made me to buy bloomers two sizes bigger." Grammie snickered.
Too much information!" Jen Jen arched left brow in Grammie direction. "How bout we administer some justice and punch down that dough. Although I am wondering why?"
"Remember we placed it in this greased bowl to let it rise. But kolaches at this stage require a deflated dough. So punch that dough little duh girl."
Jen Jen let out a few tennis serve grunts, aced the dough punching, more like dough squishing.
"Now we turn out our deflated dough onto lightly floured counter top," Grammie demonstrated, "then we pinch off egg sized pieces and using the palms of our hands roll them into balls, and then indent each one with thumb to make the heart of the kolache," Jen Jen copied Grammie, "and then we place each one on our butter coated baking pan."
A tad latter, "Mission accomplished!" Jen Jen, like lunar landing astronaut, said.
"Not quite, now my precious grandchild brushes dough tops with melted butter, then we cover again and let rise for about an hour."
"Sure is a whole lotta risin' goin' on," Jen Jen sang.
"That is one sad Elvis impression." Grammie chuckled like the cluckle of henhouse hen.
"So Grammie, time for more swing, sweet tea and a story?" Jen Jen wiggled like puppy dog tail.
"Hey, are we going to make kolaches or what?"
"There's more?" Jen Jen arched that left brow, raised right corner of lips, pointed her finger at own pug nose. "Bebe - Bebe!" Made excuse for break.
"No time to give up when the finish line, the poppy seed filling, is in sight." Grammie encouraged.
"I'm just a tired widdle girl." Jen Jen morphed doe eyes wide into liquid pools of soul.
"Kolaches done done in my little helper?" Grammie nearly caved, hugged her, kissed her forehead.
"Yeah, but I think I might be more hungry than tired. So what do we do with this bag of poopy seed?" Jen Jen tee-hee-ed.
"Poppy seed, not poopy seed, you little scamp!" Grammie giggled. Hugged Jen Jen gain.
"No time for hugging, Grammie. My tummy is growling. The recipe says we need 1 1/2 cup poppy seeds, 1 cup sugar, 2 cups milk, 1 tbsp flour, 2 tbsp butter. Let's do it!"
So they did: combine the poppy seeds, milk and sugar and cook till early thickening; then added the butter, then the dissolved in a bit of water flour. Grammie and Jen Jen took turns stirring as needed for near 30 minutes.
"Done?" Jen Jen sighed, hoped.
"Will be as soon as it cools a bit." Grammie sat it aside.
Jen Jen retrieved and set up Paw Paws desk fan from his study to expedite cooling.
"Smart girl." Grammie complemented.
"Starved girl." Jen Jen tummy g-r-r-r-gled.
In a tad of a while Grammie lifted cheese cloth, unveiled risen kolaches. "Ah the heart of the kolache needs filling. Just like all us little kolaches need Jesus."
"You fill my heart Grammie, but I may have to ask Jesus to feed me." Jen Jen almost was not kidding.
"You fill the hearts while Grammie prepares the posypka topping and we will get to the oven sooner." Grammie turned on the oven to preheat to 425 degrees.
While filling kolache hearts with poppy seed filling, Jen Jen kept learning eye on the Grammie-a-nator in fast forward.
"Let's see, 1 cup sugar, 1/2 cup flour, heaping tsp cinnamon, 2 tbsp butter, mix till resembling coarse meal. Viola, posypka!" Grammie eyes grew wide. "Oops, one little thingy."
"Let's bake 'em!" Jen Jen was one hungry critter.
"Just one more little thingy." Grammie smirked.
"Noooo! No more one little thingies! Bake 'em. Please bake 'em." Jen Jen wound down as if from lack of energy.
"But we must baptize the kolache poppy seed heart with posypka. Takes just a sec." Grammie sprinkled with zest, while Jen Jen clutching baking pan danced impatient polka. The sec Grammie ran out of posypka, Jen Jen almost got open oven door to pop kolaches laden pan in, when...
"Needs 20 minutes rising." Grammie apologetically explained, "The sugar in the posypka reactivates the yeast."
Jen Jen froze, eyes crossed, along with her legs.
"Are you ok?"
"Sweet tea on the swing!" Jen Jen sat down baking pan, hopped like a roo round kitchen corner to loo.
After the river rapids of time whizzed by, Jen Jen had barely re-entered kitchen, when pug nose went to twitchin' and she spied on kitchen table, "Oh yeah, freshly nuked leftover Czech goulash, praha heaven. Thank you Grammie. You are the best Grammie like ever."
"Maybe this will elevate Grammie to sainthood." Grammie glowed, as she sat down tall glass of cold milk on kitchen table; while gathering memories to savor forever.
In a tad less than a while Jen Jen had scarfed down the praha and, "Mm-mmm good," ed thru milk mustache, when...
Grammie interrupted, "Got time to pop these kolaches in the oven?"
"Does a wild grandchild pee in the loo?" Jen Jen hopped from seat.
"You scampered over here like a gerbil to cheese." Grammie smile sighed mixture of amusement and pure love.
In both hands Jen Jen grasped kolache laden baking sheet, Grammie opened oven. Jen Jen sat in baking sheet. Grammie gently closed door.
"How long?" Jen Jen still had that hungry squirrel drooling over an acorn look.
"At 425 preheated degrees, about 12 to 15 minutes till we polka down the Posypka Road to Kolache Land." Grammie teased.
Jen Jen groaned, took her arm, "Duh, your metaphors have slapped your similes silly, Grammie."
14 minutes, 53 seconds later, Jen Jen opened oven, released intoxicating fresh baked kolache aroma, Oven mitten clad Grammie reached in, pulled out, "Just a little bit of the promised land." She proclaimed. Jen Jen brushed on melted butter, then the mouth watering waiting to semi-cooling began.
One eye on kolaches, the other tending clean-up, Jen Jen and Grammie polka-ed from flour dusted mess to sparkling kitchen land, while sharing tasty tid bits of family history:
"You know it took your Mommy nine months to bake her little kolache in tummy oven."
"Duh, and she stirred in a whole lotta sugar to make me." Jen Jen was in mid tee-hee, when...
Screen door abruptly swung open, cap wearing head stuck in, "My kolache radar never fails."
"If you mean by radar that big old Paw Paw snoozola of yours." Jen Jen squealed, ran into his arms, knocked cap off his head, squeezed till Paw Paw eyes near popped out.
Jen Jen blessed his nose with kisses, hopped down, grabbed kolache in each hand, gave one to Paw Paw, one to Grammie, hopped back, grabbed two more and... took starving scarf out of each one. Poppy seed and posypka squished out mouth, ran down her chin.
Grammie praised, "Serving Paw Paw and me first; Jen Jen, you are so preciously unselfish."
"I'm no sailfish!" Jen Jen tee-hee-ed right into nother delicious kolache double bite.
"Did you see?" Paw Paw lovingly kneaded Grammie shoulder and neck.
"The kolache in each hand." Grammie felt it too.
"Think the Lord is telling us to tell her?" Paw Paw tad more than wondered.
"Tell me what?" Jen Jen took nother double bite.
Grammie and Paw Paw into each others eyes looked; took turn of tee-hee all their own.
"What?" Jen Jen mumbled thru mouthful of poppy seed posypka sweet kolache heart.
Grammie patted flour dusted apron over swollen tummy, gave blessed answer, "You may be getting a new aunt or uncle soon."
"Maybe one of each," Paw Paw eyes beamed.
As Jen Jen's kolache munching slowed, so grew her doe eyes wide... into liquid pools of soul... Jen Jen hugged her Grammie, said, "I thought you were just getting fat!" The giggling ensued.
"Lord help us all," Grammie laughed for joy, looked to heaven, "thank you Jesus."
The sweet heart of pillow soft supple dough... the kolache filled with fruit...
So should we be all... kneaded by the Creator... filled with Jesus...
Where did the inspiration for this little story come from? In the Bible, the adventures of 100 year Abraham and 90 year old wife Sarah are totally true and like totally awesome. Why would Sarah knead meal to cake? Why would she laugh within her heart? Were they at advanced age to have a son named Isaac, whose name meant laughter? And why? And why, O'My!!! Will you read and also laugh within your heart: Genesis 18:1-15; 21:1-5...
And why, O'MY!!! 2000 years later a certain descendant of Abraham and Sarah would be blessed with child. That young lady was and is Mary, whose name in Hebrew means: Wished For Child... Thank you Jesus...
...No thing is too difficult for the LORD...
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