New Category

I also added a new category to my blog today. It is called “Mysteries.” In this category I will post pictures of strange and/or interesting things that I see while out and about. If I’m able to find the answer to the mystery, I’ll share it in the comments. If not, I’m hoping that someone will eventually come along who knows the answer and wants to share it with us.

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Mystery Thing #1

Thing

These weird spiky things are growing on one of the trees near our building. The tree is probably a cedar, possibly a juniper. We were pretty sure that the things weren’t actually part of the tree, so we wondered if they were insects, fungi, or body-snatching aliens. After a lot of research, Faithful Reader finally found the answer to the mystery. Do you want to know what it is? If so, the answer is in the comments.

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Recipe Madness

Over the years I’ve noticed that we almost never follow recipes exactly. For example, one of our Mexican recipes calls for black beans cooked until done, the cooking liquid, and green bell pepper. I always substitute those ingredients with canned beans (ease), chicken stock (necessity), and red bell pepper (preference). And the cornbread that I make to go with it may contain low-fat milk, whole milk, soy milk, or buttermilk, depending on what’s handy. I hear that yogurt can also be used in place of milk, so you can bet that I’ll try that someday.

My favorite food substitution of all time is black cardamom pods in place of ham flavored concentrate in a recipe for Rice With Chick Peas and Chorizo. The cardamom is much better, though not exactly a typical ingredient for that dish.

What’s your favorite food substitution?

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Good Advice

Samuel Johnson’s mantra for keeping melancholy away: “If you are idle, be not solitary; if you are solitary, be not idle.”

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New Page

I just added a new page to my blog. It’s a page devoted to the characters of the children’s books that I’ve read. It’s also a huge maintenance job, so I don’t know how well I’ll be able to keep up with it, but I wanted to at least give it a try.

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Hanging With the Wolves

Julie of the Wolves by Jean Craighead George
Grade: B+

Julie of the Wolves is the story of a 13-year-old Eskimo girl from Alaska who runs away from home because of her abusive husband. She is heading for San Francisco, where her pen pal lives, but gets lost on the North Slope of Alaska. Using the skills taught to her by her father, she befriends a pack of wolves, who help feed and protect her along the way.

I decided to read this book because I’ve had it since I was a child but I don’t remember ever reading it. It was probably bought for me because it won the Newbery in 1973. Browsing among the reviews at an online bookstore, I was surprised to see how many reviewers questioned how this could have won the award. I think the answer should be obvious. It’s about a young person showing strength and ability in the face of tremendous challenges and it also highlights a dying culture. Doesn’t that sound exactly like the kind of book that would win an award?

The book’s weaknesses are its beginning and its end. At the start of the book, before you really know the main character, Miyax, you are expected to believe that she can communicate with wolves. Later, as you get to know her, the story is more plausible, but you don’t really learn much about her history until the second part. As I recall, you have to read a long way before finding out why the story title contains the name “Julie” rather than “Miyax” (“Julie” is her English name and “Miyax” is her Eskimo name).

Throughout the book, Miyax’s Eskimo traditions and survival skills are fascinating. This is my favorite passage:

She plucked the birds, laid them on the ground, and skillfully cut them open with her ulo. Lifting out the warm viscera, she tipped back her head and popped them into her mouth. They were delicious—the nuts and candy of the Arctic.

Revolting, yes, but a great way to impress readers with the differences between Miyax’s culture and ours!

The ending of the story is difficult because it’s so sad. I know that the author was trying to make an important point, and I understand that many of the things that happen are necessary symbolically. Still, I think the author took it a tad too far, which is why I give Julie a B+ rather than an A-. I would recommend this book for school-age children who are learning about native cultures, but personally, I find it hard to love a book that ends on such a tragic note.

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Signs of Thought

While I was learning sign language in college, I practiced fingerspelling by spelling out my thoughts, letter by letter, any time my mind was drifting. The habit became so ingrained that I still do it now, like when I’m shopping or driving. I noticed that I was fingerspelling during the drive to Sturbridge on Saturday, but I’m not actually sure what I was spelling. I tried to retrace my “finger steps.” I think there might have been a T, an R, and an A. TRAFFIC? Anyway, it’s a harmless habit, at least as long as no one can see what I’m spelling, but it is scary to think that I’m spelling things of which I’m not fully conscious. I’m spilling my guts through my fingers! Isn’t that weird?

TAHA!

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Philosophy of Blogging

It is too easy to live one’s life as a series of big things (births, weddings, vacations, promotions, etc.) and bad things (illnesses, deaths, accidents, taxes, etc.) and overlook the wealth of small, wonderful things that happen all the time. I remember the bad things well enough without a written reminder, and I certainly don’t want to envision my life as a string of those events. That’s why I try to stay positive on this blog and focus on the everyday victories, beauties, and pleasures of life, like double rainbows and “nine squirrel days.”

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Seeing Double

On Saturday, I went to Sturbridge to meet up with K—. We found a nice place to have lunch and browsed through a couple of stores. We would have spent the rest of our visit at one of the local coffee shops, but it was so hot inside that we decided to check out the East Brimfield Dam instead. While we were there, some dark clouds came by and started raining on us.

Dark Clouds at the East Brimfield Dam

The rain became heavy enough that we took shelter in the car and we were going to leave, but then I looked out the driver’s side window and noticed that there was a rainbow.

It was a double rainbow, both semicircles bright and solid-looking, and I was surprised to see that the space between them was darker than the rest of the sky (a phenomenon called Alexander’s band). I’ve risked car accidents many times while gawking at rainbows on the highway, but this beat anything I’ve ever seen and I had the good fortune to be outside with nothing to distract me from its beauty. We stayed and admired the rainbow until the last small arc of color faded away.

What a wonderful day!

P.S. There’s no picture of the rainbow because the camera on my phone wasn’t quite up to the task.

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Tax Relief?

Whew! My taxes are done! But after all the numbers were crunched, punched, and slightly drooled upon, things did not turn out in my favor. Uncle Sam took a mighty chunk. Do you think there’s any chance he might learn to spend it wisely?

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