gratitude-a-thon day 159: the west tisbury farmer’s market

One of the best parts of the Vineyard is the West Tisbury Farmer’s Market. Not only is it filled with great stuff to eat, from local farms and bakeries, it’s got flowers. BEAUTIFUL, INCREDIBLE FLOWERS. I just love to be there and look around, because it’s like a really fattening dessert for my eyeballs.

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Stannard Farm’s display is poetic. Really, this truck looked like a painting.
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I’ve been buying flowers from this guy for like 20 years. I don’t know his name, but he’s a sweetie.
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I always buy a topiary while I’m here. This year I bought a really cool one–it’s a scented rose geranium. You rub the leaves and it gives off this fantastic smell that’s supposed to ward off mosquitoes, which is really good, CUZ IN ALL THIS RAIN, THOSE GUYS ARE HAVING A LOT OF SEX AND MAKING MORE OF THEMSELVES.
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There’s also music, which just makes everything more fun! Here’s Kevin Keady.

 

gratitude-a-thon day 158: way to celebrate

No post yesterday because we had internet issues. I’m on vacation and well, things don’t always go right on an Island. That could be applied to the weather too, as it HAS BEEN RAINING SINCE WE GOT HERE. But, that just means I have to work extra hard on the gratitude front. SO GRATEFUL THAT IT’S NOT SNOWING.

Anyway, I’m sure you’re all sick, sick, sick to death of hearing about graduation, but this is more of a design-ish, celebratory-ish thing. It’s what I did for Jake on our front stairs the week he graduated to make him feel the monumental-ness of the moment. I love branches (I think I was once a tree) and I have them tied to the stairs. At Christmas I put lights on them, and they were still up (no, I wasn’t that lazy, I just really like them), so I got these little paperclips from Paper Source and paper clipped up a a bunch of photo of Jake’s life, some award things, and programs from the pre-graduation events, and a little “congratulations” sign. During his party, it was sort of fun for people to see him as a baby and stuff.  But mostly it was fun to see his face when he saw it. That was the best part.

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gratitude-a-thon day 156: wendy davis (rock star of the political world)

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The kick-ass, taking names, but only in the most graceful of ways, Wendy Davis completes her 11 hour filibuster.

Today it’s all Wendy Davis. This woman’s story is extraordinary. At 14, she began working after school to help out her single mom and three siblings, and became a divorced single mom herself, by 19. She went to community college, transferred to a four year college, and with loans and scholarships, she graduated first in her class,  and as if that wasn’t impressive enough, she then graduated from Harvard Law School at 33. I am feeling like an absolute slacker, and you?

Anyway, it’s no wonder that a woman who could defy those kinds of odds in her past, was able to filibuster for 11 hours (and stand, arguing, for another two) in an effort to stop a Texas abortion bill from passing. And she looked totally gorgeous while doing it, I might add. Not that it should matter, but this woman is really pretty. And she knows how to rock a pair of sneakers. And don’t even get me started on her talented bladder. She couldn’t eat, or lean either. Is she human?

First of all, I have a bladder the size of a flea. I have to eat every few hours, or I will go into an out and out coma (not really, but probably). And as for standing for 11 hours? I would need more than sneakers to accomplish that feat on my feet.

But it’s not about me. It’s about Wendy. I predict this hugely intelligent woman of substance and character, and a camel-like bladder has a BIG political future ahead of her. I know I’m a fan.

gratitude-a-thon day 155: small bites friday

And it’s the second edition of Small Bites Friday. Little gratitudes in a one sentence.

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Wendy Davis, you’ve got guts, conviction and an amazing bladder. Thanks!

The Divine Miss M. Get ready to have a little sobfest.

Who knew Martha was a freak in the sheets? That’s a good thing.

Paula Deen is cooked.

The good news: we leave for the Vineyard today. The bad news: it’s raining.

Anthropologie always has a sale room.

The Dexter season finale season in three days. Killer!

Money can’t buy happiness, unless you know how to spend it.

I really love this blog. I would like to live in it.

Jeans. I loved ’em before I knew they could make me look younger.

gratitude-a-thon day 154: edie windsor

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Edie Windsor getting the news that she won, that we all won.

Oh, Edie Windsor, you did it. You helped change history for the better. I bet Thea is waving her rainbow flag in heaven. You didn’t let it go, or allow the government to bully you, you stayed with it. And baby, YOU WON. (Here’s a great re-cap of Edie’s story and her life.)

Yesterday was a very good day. A VERY GOOD DAY!  The Defense of Marriage Act has left the building. Voted on by the Supreme Court in a 5-4 vote, DOMA can no longer prevent the federal government from recognizing same-sex marriages legalized by states, as unconstitutional, meaning that same sex couples will now get the same benefits other married couples get, under federal law. This is a dancing in the streets sort of moment, a fireworks display that spans the entire country. And of course, one that should have happened long ago, but I’ll take it.

Justice Scalia, I hope you get an incurable case of poison ivy this summer in an area that is not socially acceptable to scratch in public, that you are plagued by fleas for life, that you outgrow your Justice attire and have to step down. (Can you tell I’m trying to be nice?)

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Thea Spyer and Edie Windsor. A couple who changed history.

But back to Edie, who married Thea Spyer in Ontario in ’07 after a 40 years relationship. (The longevity of this couple just emphasizes the insanity here, doesn’t it?)  They were living in New York when Thea died in ’09 and left her estate to Edie, but since the marriage was not recognized by New York, when Edie tried to claim the estate tax exemption for surviving spouses, she was unable to, because of DOMA, which states that a “spouse” only applies to the marriage of a man and a woman, which forced Edie to pay $363, 053 in estate taxes. Imagine having to grieve AND come up with an unfair nearly half a million bucks to pay to a government who doesn’t think your four decade relationship was real?

Gratitude for 83 year old Edie Windsor and her guts, courage and sense of fairness. You made the United States a “more perfect union” yesterday.

gratitude-a-thon day 152: accents (wish i had one)

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Last night I went out with friends who both have accents. One is from Brazil, and one is from Lebanon. Why is it that everything you say when you have a sexy lilt to your voice sounds more interesting, wittier? Why did I have to be born in boring old Connecticut? Why weren’t my parents people of intrigue, moving us around the globe for their very important work, and providing me with the opportunity to develop an accent? Also, I should mention that these two friends are both gorgeous, so you know, the accent is just the icing on the gosh darn cupcake.

Isn’t the fluidity and beauty of a foreign inflection lovely?  Think Hugh Grant narrating “About a Boy.” Think Keira Knightly and Emma Thompson in “Love Actually.” Think Penelope Cruz in ANYTHING. I have some good friends who are Swedish, and I could listen to them talk all night long. They could read me the phone book with a night cap of Chemistry 101 and I would get a dreamy look in my eye.

By the way, although I am a big Project Runway fan, I hate Heidi Klum’s accent. This is one that makes me feel like I’ve just eaten a big bowl of anchovies (which, accidentally, I ate mixed with some Kale last night, and still can’t kill the taste in my mouth. (There’s a flavor I could nuke from existence and wouldn’t miss.) Ah, but the beauty of a French accent, wafting down the streets of Paris, the sexiness of an Italian’s words, those, THOSE are chocolate to my ears.

So, today is the accent, oh gratitude. Not mine, mind you, which is NOT charming or pretty in any way. Good thing I can write!

gratitude-a-thon day 151: the pocket hose (seriously!)

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My little garden. See big, bad bully of a hose at left. You’re out of a job, dude.

So, I love flowers. They make me happy. They make me feel good. I’m convinced they make the world a far better place. I have only in recent years become any good at growing them, and not just buying them. I started a garden from scratch a few years ago, in my small front area, after I woke up to the smell of sewage and found that our sewage tank from the age of the Salem Witch trials, had given out, and we had to join the city’s hook up, which meant digging up the entire garden area in front of my house. Years of pre-existing perrenials went to their death, and no I wasn’t able to save them, because this shit event happened smack in the middle of a freezing cold and snowy January (the week before my birthday–a lovely gift I do not recommend). Anywho, the point–that Spring, I got to start from the beginning and really choose what I wanted in there, and with the help of a landscaper, my little plot of dirt became a little sliver of awesomosity.

But. There’s often a but, isn’t there?

The watering situation has always been dismal. The hookup to the house is in the backyard. A long stretch of hose must find its way to the front. It follows a path behind the garbage cans and under the front porch. That all sounds great, except for the hose situation springs several leaks, no matter how many times I replace it. Leaving me, soaking wet when I water, unable to get to the whole garden, and constantly worried about my flowers. And there’s more, I am always fighting with the hose. We are like wrestlers, that hose and moi. I tug and unravel, and it sits there, all stiff, or all tangled (I have a regular version in the backyard and a twisty, turny guy in the front) with the attitude of a pissed off teenager. (Do you feel me now?) And as if the leaks aren’t bad enough there are the kinks to tame, when the water just stops and I have to go find exactly where the bend in the road is. I am constantly complaining to Peter about my hose problems. He patiently ignores me.

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Enter: The Pocket Hose. I want to kiss the guy who invented this thing. Seriously, step right up, man, you are the freaking bomb!

But yesterday something rather extraordinary happened. Peter came home with something called a Pocket Hose. Now admittedly I miss a lot of good commercials because I don’t watch sports, so my reaction to this thing was not equal to the pomp and circumstance my husband made when he unveiled what he had bought for me. (By the event he made of it, I thought, how could he have bought me jewelry at Bed, Bath & Beyond?) He was surprised by my lack of enthusiasm as he unveiled this chartreuse green hose that looked to me like some sort of kid’s toy. He was shocked I was not familiar with the Pocket Hose, as it apparently is on tv all the time. I basically  thought he’d thrown away $19.99 to give me a good laugh, and kept doing my work, which I was doing in front of the air conditioner in the den BECAUSE IT WAS LIKE A BAJILLION DEGREES YESTERDAY. A few minutes later, he screamed my name from the backyard, and I ran out to see the Pocket Hose in action. Ok, even if you just want to use this as a party trick, it’s money well spent, but the thing is, this thing works! It addresses all of my hose misery. Check out this Consumer Report video on the Pocket Hose (and all the other flexible hoses out there.) I’m telling you, this little miracle might actually convince me to watch sports just for the commercials–WHY DIDN’T ANYBODY TELL ME ABOUT THIS HOSE SOONER?)

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An early version of the Pocket Hose, perhaps?

Ok, first of all, it starts out all small and wrinkly and you turn on the water, and it grows like those tablets you used to set on fire that would turn into ashy snakes (Member those–GOD I LOVED THOSE. I CAN’T IMAGINE WHY, BUT I WAS TOTALLY OBSESSED WITH THEM.) And this thing is light as a feather. No fighting, no need for a daily tug of war, it just travels with you wherever you walk. I’m not kidding, I would like to be the poster child for this product. It’s the best thing since the french fry.

So, today it’s all hail gratitude for the Pocket Hose. I’m telling you, this thing deserves a week of gratitude! And if you’ll excuse me, now I’m going to water.