Vacation

When we look ahead to vacationing, we forget how to really relax. We are in a hurry to go and see and do. When you living routine of work, home, and sleep, your routine prevents you from discovering new things. When your adventure begins, whether it is camping, touring new states, or going on a first cruise, you try to do it all. This creates a snowball of most days doing and no days to do nothing. Doing nothing feels like a crime when you are returning to the normal workday in just a week.

My first camping trip, I would remove the routine. I gave myself permission to not plan ahead other than taking food and clothing for a week away from home. My husband golfed and fished. I took no computer, and had poor cell service. Books, paper, and my dogs were my entertainment. I had to focus on one task at a time. I reconnected with life through silence and some time with family living nearby.

Grandma’s advice is to keep your hands and your eyes open to life around you so you don’t live to plan, but treasure living.

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Beta Readers Wanted for Upcoming Novel

“You’re not coming back this time are you?” Vernie whispered. 

Looking through dirty car windows out over the cut fields around the bar left her no real idea where they were. She thought about how many hours they spent waiting on their mother. Waiting for her to come. Waiting on her to find food. Waiting on her to find a place to stay. Waiting for her to figure out how to be a mother.  Vernie doodled circles around the word –WAITING– on the notebook over and over.

Vernelle’s anger grew as she rolled the corner pages on the notebook in her right hand and started clicking her ink pen. The nervous energy coiling in her gut needed an escape, but there was nowhere for it to go. The cotton fields were empty on one side and rocky ground and dead grass sparkled with a light frost.  They had been here all night, tucked into the shadows behind the bar, parked just far enough back to go unnoticed. Esther had said it would only be one shift, just long enough to earn some tips and get them a room in the next town. Just a few hours. Just until morning.

That had been before the rain started. Before the temperature dropped. Before the sky began to lighten into the dull gray of a morning that came without answers. The rusted old car had become a cocoon of not knowing, of stretching time thin until it almost disappeared behind the permanent musty smell of rust and greasy take out bags.

Vernelle tightened her thin hoodie around her shoulders, pulling the frayed sleeves over her fists. Her sisters were huddled under a scratchy, dirty wool blanket on the vinyl green seat, their small bodies curled into each other for warmth. Roz, still lost in the kind of make-believe world that hunger and exhaustion hadn’t yet stolen from her, murmured something under her breath. Little Kit didn’t move as she slept. Not unusual. She never did,  always hiding, playing “statue” and blending into her surroundings to stay unnoticed. 

“Shit.” Vernie said.

She hadn’t meant to say it loud. Her voice, sharper than she intended, cut through the quiet. But neither of her sisters stirred, thank God. Like God cared she thought.

This is an excerpt from a new youth novel called “Rules of the Road”. Beta readers should send a message to be included on a mailing list for beta readers for Summer 2025. The first 20 requests will get a link to the ebook before release.

Thanks for your support!

Sherry

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I am not my mother

My mom has been gone now for a few years and I know I had the best of her.

She was an experienced mom by the time I came along as child number four. I was born January 1965 to Dorothy Marie Stallman Traylor, a strong woman of German heritage. Her grandparents were immigrants, and the Dutch-American slang with a few German curse words still slipped from my grandma. Although mom did not speak German, she understood some. She understood more than that.

Born in 1925, mom never described her childhood as lacking although by most financial standards today, she would be considered poor. She had rickets from not drinking milk and ate a lot of homemade peanut butter. She still portrayed her life as an adventure.

My mom was a knock-out in the looks department and was adored by men and women in her town. She had black brown thick hair, dark brown eyes, and petite features of 36, 26, 38 (according to her). She was described by her friends around her as she was always smiling and accepting of everyone.

Post WWII, my mother and father married in a quick ceremony at a Catholic rectory in 1948. No she was not pregnant, but were in love. They had dated for 3 years on and off. Dad decided he could not bear to see her wed to anyone else. He realized he must be hopelessly in love with her. He did not like that feeling but gave in to it (his words not mine). She was a dependable hard-working wife. She cooked in a restaurant, pumped gas, sewed her own clothing, made meals in a pressure cooker and on a hot-plate, and lived in small rooms as a new wife. Her description to me was that she was happy because she was with him and it didn’t matter where they lived. She walked to work, she had two dresses, and made leftovers last several days. Wow. I am not my mother.

I only know the stories of all of the moves before I was born. Dad was back in the service, going from base to base, and still had money making ventures of building houses and selling cars on the side. At one point, he parked in Southern Indiana with our family for several years, built his own house, and we enjoyed friends and being closer to family. His dreams never let him feel fulfilled even though mom seemed at home where ever he took us. Dad loved to make profits and keep track of his gains and losses in journals. His plan was to retire a million dollars richer, and he spoke of these plans with mom while she cooked, cleaned, or read books. She smiled and nodded a lot and learned to pack a house up to move in a day if the Army required it. A flexible and talented soldier’s wife. I am not my mom.

The role of mom seemed to come natural to her, and she excelled at being a great homemaker. One homemaker skill of the fifties she proved time and time again was to make clothing and other things needed in the house. Sewing our pajamas, shirts, pants, and even a few suits, while bringing in some extra money sewing logo patches on hats for a local company. She spent 4 hours a day sewing typically during the fall before Christmas. She sometimes made her own patterns from store bought, adding paper, adding marks, and tailoring them for our short family. She fashioned car seats, ottoman covers, protective covers for dad’s recliners, drapes for the house, and repaired a lot of things dad asked for. Her patience for ripping out seams and doing over to make it perfect surpassed my abilities in every way. I most definitely am not my mom.

I never met such an accomplished listener as Dorothy Traylor. Her ability to listen and make a face or just ‘uh-huh’ noise was sometimes all her kids or grandkids needed to understand her. Endlessly empathetic but firm when you were screwing up, she never failed at making us want to please her by trying to make her proud. Her face was easy to read for most people who knew her. Although I rarely saw her mad or really angry, if she was, that face showed it. The lips tightly pressed and eyes narrowed with head slightly tilted down, and if she was really mad, her eyes looked out above her glasses rim and her closed fists propped on each hip. Then the index finger. If one fist left its tidy perch upon the hip and formed into a pointed warning to your nose, you knew a spanking was near if you didn’t “straighten the hell up”. She rarely cursed except behind dad’s back when she was real mad and stuck her tongue out at him and whispered “ass” as she walked into the other room. My mouth was not as civil as a young wife and mother. I am not my mom.

She imparted a role of the hostess and keeper of the house by never turning away anyone who showed up by invitation or not to sit at our table for a meal. She had supper on the table at 5 pm every day, for all 53 years of their marriage unless she was in the hospital. Friends of her kids, grandkids, her husband, neighbors, all could count on a plate of food if they showed up at regular meal time. My friends called her mom Traylor as did many people who came in the door. She never demanded good manners, or denied anyone if they smelled, or if they had no appreciation.

Now as my daughter becomes a mother and I slip into the role of grandmother, I think a lot about my mom. She would know how to do this better. I hear her voice telling me these things over the years but as a speech. “You are not me. Don’t try to be me because I was not perfect. Remember what I taught you – treat others how you want to be treated. Stop trying to be something else and just be who you are. You can’t teach them everything but how you respond to their mistakes you can control.” I see her looking out over her glasses with head tilted down.

I can’t be my mom. She was a mom in the 50s.

She lived through the depression, WW II and more challenges than I will ever face as a woman. She had no conveniences as a kid and started making her own clothing at 15 so she could express some of her individuality and have nice things. She worked physically very hard by working, studying, and then she played hard with friends. My mom was taught that she should strive to be a good wife and mother over anything else. Though she achieved that goal and more, she also raised me to know I can be whatever I want to be. She taught me how to take care of myself and others.

When I said I wanted to be a firefighter when I was seven, she smiled and just said, “that sounds like something you could do but why do you want to do that job?” She let me look at myself as more than a girl. That was forward-thinking in her time. Because she didn’t raise me just like her mother had raised her, I became my own woman.

After I gave birth to my daughter, I was crying over the phone to mom on my first day at home alone with my newborn. I said, “I don’t know how to do this!” She said, “There is no instruction manual for parenting. You will figure it out as you go like everyone else. When you make a mistake, say you are sorry and you love them and move on. Love her and take it a day at a time. You will be fine. You can do this, I know you.” I believed her.

Sara cannot be me because I was a parent in the 90s. I am not my mom, and my daughter is not me. There is no instruction manual.

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Waking up…

Physically waking up is a major triumph when you know 3 of the 6 names in the obituaries every day. Just getting from breathing to dressed in the morning is a wide gap faced with reapplying makeup after sweating it off during a dozen hot flashes in the first hour.

Waking up when you are 20, 30, 40, and 50 are so very different. I really don’t remember 20 so I can’t say I miss it. I do remember at 30 jumping out of bed because my day was full with a kid, a job, a husband, a life.

Forty, the wake up was more of a slide into the needed activities of the day, followed by grumbling and self-loathing after a long day.

Fifty waking up having hurt myself during the short sleep has been usual. I feel like I have done this before I tell myself. Repeated gestures lead me to forget where I am in the process of waking up. Did I turn off the light in the bathroom? Did I remember to turn off the coffee pot? Where’s my work badge? Waking up now takes half the day and starts over at 1 pm when the energy drops and a nap is needed. Work is a state of being that holds some pride but obviously I would not do it if I was financially able to stay home in pajamas.

Waking up to aging happened when I looked in the mirror and decided make up was not needed because it wasn’t going to get better. Who was I trying to impress and did I really give a shit? No, so no more make-up or hairspray. No acrylic fingernails or long hours at the hairdressers paying for hair color. Embrace the grey. No more trips to the store for menstrual pads or cramps medicine. Menopause has a few perks.

Waking up in relationships happened before I married for the third and last time. When I basically decided I didn’t really want a man again, I found a good one. He accepted me and I him just as we were. Some days we are great, kind, thoughtful, and others we are just assholes. But that is okay.

Waking up to your sense of self is the best part of aging over 55. I know who I am and have no big career goals to meet. I am looking forward to grandkids and retirement as I get closer to my 60s. I accept myself with flaws and wrinkles. I have no illusions that I will beat death or become well known in my lifetime by anyone other than family and friends. I don’t expect to be perfectly happy everyday and that is okay. My biggest plan for tomorrow is to…wake up.

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Getting Older and passing through my story.

The older I get, the more I find myself contemplating things. Life, people, the whys and whats of living and finding purpose. As years drip away, it seems easier to leave material things behind because I know I don’t need it where I am going in the future. I have been reading a few books lately about Near Death Experiences (NDE) because I find them a wunder. A miracle that such traumatically hurt people awaken and recovery quickly and bring with them such common stories from young to old NDErs.

I have always had lots of doubts because I want to understand things, how things could possibly work. The human body is a wunder as well, and we still don’t know all of the ways the brain and neurological system heals itself. Just because I don’t think there is a way to know it all and that is how it is suppose to be, does not mean I don’t want to seek those answers. God makes us seekers of truth and knowledge, his inquisitive children. We are never really satisfied in our life on earth and always looking for satisfaction in some way. Probably because we are wired to seek something in Heaven and we are looking for it on Earth. What has kept me up nights is a fear of losing myself and all I know, my family, my friends, my memories, who I was when I leave this world. Reading this book has given me a sense of peace with that annoying worry and driven it away.

I feel assured and more confident that my life force will pass into a different dimension of Heaven some day where there is no fear, no pain, no time, and all the people I love will be there enjoying the same spiritual dimension. I will not be the same in body, but my thoughts, my true self will evolve into a full meaning and full complete self when my spirit is set free from the limitations of my body.

I find solace in the fact that NDEers have come back to say that they immediately knew answers to anything they wanted in Heaven and felt fully aware of a full communication with a loving God and reunion with all loved ones who were happy and present. They were told all answers would come to them after their second return since they were being sent back. Most did not want to go from that wonderful place of peace and happiness. However, they knew they had to return to share what they found and who they met.

In this Easter Season, even as a doubter, let’s agree that it is a year of birth and death.

The cold and rot of winter is breaking to allow a rich fertile harvest to begin. Allow some seeds to be sown of new beginnings. If you are not a Christian, know you are loved and welcome to share in the grace of God at any time you accept.

For me, I am just a story waiting to be told.

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Aging Without Grace

Much like a used care, the older I get, the more parts that need fixed. Since turning 50, my hinges creak and muscles tire more quickly. I feel like I should get a prize because I have three new diagnoses that “come with aging” over the last year. Arthritis does suck mom, as you told me it would. She never complained like I do when I get up. As a matter of fact, noises escape my mouth whether I sit down or get up from a chair. It is as though either require an enormous amount of expended energy now. Sad and pitiful.

I used to shake my head at people like me and think, “Good Lord, why must they make so much noise just to get up?” As the knife twists in my rheumatoid joints and the swelling prevents my rings from going on or coming off, I want to smack that little twerp I was in my twenties. I had no idea the pain you could get just by getting up wrong from a chair.

I don’t have to like what is happening to my aging body, but that won’t change the happening. I know every life challenge is a part of a bigger plan. I hate surprises, and nothing has surprised me more about life than getting older. It seems like yesterday that I was climbing trees in my yard and dad was yelling at me to get down before I break my neck. Now, I walk across the yard and fall in non-existent holes ten feet from my front door and sprain something. Even with no trips or falls, things don’t work well, the body starts moving slower, and you have to slow down even if you don’t want to. You have to plan outings strategically because you know you will run out of steam after a few hours.

Recently, I realized I was getting old when I went to Goodwill and actually bought a cane because it was only $2.00 and with my Wednesday senior discount and the tag color, it cost me only 99 cents. Wow! For that, I can store it for a few years or use it to beat off a burglar. I have found humor in it all as it is as easy to laugh as to cry and takes less energy.

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Write a Book in 90 Days?

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You can write a book in 90 days if you have the dedication and endurance to do so. I did it. You have to follow some simples steps in order to get it done:

  • Set up a schedule based on how much time per week you will dedicate to writing.
  • Organize first! Knowing where you are going with a story helps keep you moving.
  • Get beta readers. (Have at least 3 people read and give you suggestions/edits)
  • Be open to criticism.
  • Do your homework. (Enter your storyline into internet search)
  • Read other authors in your genre.
  • Practice writing daily. (Short stories, journaling, workshops, exercises)

Investigate your storyline before you begin writing. If your story is too close to someone else’s, you could be accused of plagiarism. It is okay to emulate the style of authors you love, but be careful not to reproduce their whole story or plot with new character names!  This is still considered plagiarism.

Outlining a story may save you a lot of wasted work. Sometimes plots or storylines just don’t go anywhere. We all do it but some never stop to consider that the story just isn’t interesting and feel the need to finish it without tweaking the plot along the way.

I had beta readers following the developing story and making suggestions. Some would say, “hey, this doesn’t make sense…” and I would add backstory, a literary device, or cut something altogether. In one instance a cut sent my story in a new and better direction completely than my original intent. Outlines don’t prevent this, but it gives a simple map to prevent you from getting lost if you are one to wander.

Everyone has their own way to write. Some sit down and do it quickly, some struggle with beginnings or endings. I know an author who loves to sit in a loud coffee shop and type at a table. Your space and process is whatever works. Go do it!

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Grandma Rose

Grandma looked like a spider crab moving as she grasped chairs, knobs and doorways to pull her weight in the wheelchair.  I was seven and visiting her for a week during the summer months off of school.  I sat across from her at the kitchen table; her head drooped over a plate of dry cake soaked in warmed coffee.  Her hands were unsteady and as they shook, the crumbling cake fell onto the old china plate.  After her snack, we went into the living room and she pulled out an old photo album.  It was a normal routine for us to go through her life in pictures while I visited. I always had new questions for her since she enjoyed sharing.  Her dry leathered hands, scarred and crooked cupped each black page with tucked black and white pictures. 

She showed me a picture of her sisters Louise and Mary.  Mary had become a nun and her name was changed to Sister Benigna. She had to shed all things from her life when she became a nun in 1923.  She wore a black and white long dress and a similar hat covering her entire head accept her face.  Her face was round and pleasant but my grandmothers nose crinkled when she talked about her.

“She was favorite because she was called by God,” she would say in her Dutch German accent.  “But my sister Louise was favored because she married rich and got a pew in the front of the church.” She would drop her eyebrows as she looked at the picture of her sister and turn the page.  “I sat in the back with the others who have nothing.” Grandma would look sad until she looked up. 

I climbed into her lap from my stool and her soft lap comforted me as I hugged her tight. “But Grandma, I’ll sit with you!”  She closed the book and put it aside and said, “Yes, and that’s special.” She smelled of menthol, and lye soap but she always made me feel loved.

Sometimes our lives are full of tragedy, sorrow, struggle, and countless other small challenges that seem to overwhelm our thoughts.  When we recount our lives, it is easier to recall those things that really test our faith. 

In those times that you feel unimportant or overwhelmed, remember that God has already given you the greatest gift; the gift of unconditional love through the sacrifice of his son on the cross. 

Matthew 18:3 “ I tell you the truth, unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.  Therefore, whoever humbles himself like this child is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven.”

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When was the Last Day?

Recently, my 94 year old mother entered Hospice care. She suffered from Kidney Failure and then COVID came calling. She was weakened so that she stopped feeding herself, became incontinent, and became confused and had COVID pneumonia. It is apparently difficult to treat as antibiotics don’t do much to resolve the severity of it.

Mom was on lockdown like a prisoner in the Assisted living facility because they had residents with active cases of Covid 19 for over 4 weeks. It spread quickly because of poor PPE practices, not quarantining early, and workers continued to come to work sick. When we saw her last in early July, she was still able to take her own shower, transfer to and from her wheelchair, and feed, groom, and dress herself. Within a month she was totally dependent and unable to do anything but lie in bed.

Being locked away from her family took it’s toll because she was used to talking to family every day on her phone. Because she had to be moved into a COVID isolation area of the building, and it had little to no phone reception, we were unable to speak to my mother and she was so weak she could not have tolerated a window visit requiring her to sit up.

After she fell and we demanded she be sent to the ER to check her for a broken hip or pelvis, she was direct admitted into Hospice care at an incredible $300 per day just for the room board fee. This did not include nursing care, foods, meds, and equipment.

While other families would be unable to afford this advanced end of life care, our father had assured money would keep coming in form of military pension split and retirement investments, long after his death.

We were able (with special permission) to start visiting to say goodbye after the first week in their care.

Mom, Dot, Dorothy, sister, grandma, great-grandma, sweetheart, friend, aunt, best friend, matriarch; she had those names and so many more.

It was in those final days with her, holding her hand that no longer squeezed back, that I prayed she heard all the words she already knew. We were very close. We had talked for so many years about all the important things in life and even not so important things. I cried every tear for all those in the family who could not bare to be there to see the shell of her sickly body. I helped nurses bath her, change her clothes and talked to her as she had done for me so many times in my life.

Even though the conversations were one sided, I knew she heard. I knew she was ready to see my dad again, dance again, and see many old friends gone for a long time. I lost my best friend, the voice in my head, and the heart that loved me without measure. We never know when our last day will be with those we love. So, if you are reading this, take time now to contact that person. When was the last day I told that person that I care?

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When An Old Poet Dies…

“When an Old Poet Dies Her Words Remain”: Tribute to Mina Scott 1985

No fame, no fortune.

Words scattered, recycled.

Last days in a nursing home

Racked with pain, immobile

Letters curled and lifted

Written when viable

Published and shared

Jotted down by a teen at the library

One line repeated later by a twenty-something

During coffee with a friend

No fame, no fortune

Words in a journal

On a shelf at Goodwill

Bought by a thirty-something

Read under a tree in a park

Connected by life over ink

Unseen contractured old poet 

A blot of ink on a white sheet

Her cursive filled hope folding back on itself

Words on a scrap of paper

Inside a Bible by Her bed as she exhaled

“When an old poet dies, their words remain”

Because 

I had fame

Because

I had fortune

anytime

any-somethings 

picked me up

And read me

in their voice 

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