Today’s blog

Lynn Murphy Mark

Can it be so?

As evidenced by the date at the top of the page, we are starting our journey into October. Halloween stuff has been on display since before school started back up, reminding us to buy loads of candy – even if we never get trick or treaters. Not this year. Jan and I both are off of pure sugar and fat as much as possible, so no mini Snickers or Baby Ruth’s. We’ll find out if it is possible to get through October without sampling the childrens’ candy. Besides, we live in a condo building with lots of us old people, so we have not seen a child in a costume for a number of years.

I do remember years and years ago when my kids were of age to dress up and go from door to door in our quiet Webster Groves neighborhood. Ted was easy. He wanted to be whatever superhero he was admiring at the time. Batman was a big one. One time I made him wear a coat over his costume because it was so cold outside. Despite frequent emphatic statements that Batman could not get cold, I won that little battle and he took his grumpy self around Drayton Avenue and beyond. He’s probably forgiven me by now, some 38 years later.

That might have been the same year that Jackie wanted to dress up as a nurse. At first I was touched that she wanted to emulate me until I found out that she wanted to be a death nurse. She put on white face with dark circles under her eyes, wore a “blood stained” uniform, and carried a sharp object. Presumably that was to assist her in offing her victims. I didn’t know what to make of this, so I made sure she wore a coat too and off they went with Katie, while I stayed home and doled out candy.

October is also Jackie’s birth month. Because my mother had died that year before Jackie was born, I prayed that she would be born on October 2, my mom’s birthday. Nope. That day came and went without any sign of an appearance. That year it was unusually warm, and the Sugar Creek outdoor swimming pool miraculously stayed open. Those were the days when I swam a mile a day, even when I was huge with child. I remember one check up with my OB/GYN doc when I bragged about my swimming prowess. I was in the stirrups when Dr. J. Leslie Walker said, “The whale shape was made to glide naturally through the water…” We both laughed. Then I reminded him that I was in the perfect position to kick him in the nose for making such a statement. A few years later, Ted defended my honor by his first official act after his birth: he peed all over Dr. Walker and even got him in the face.

Ted turned 38, Jackie will be 42 this year, and I am left wondering where all those years went. Today I’m wondering what happened to most of 2023 as well. This reminds me of a line from a Kathleen Madigan stand-up comedy routine. She agreed to play golf with her 80-something mother in Florida. Their tee time was 0730 AM and Kathleen noticed the odd behavior of one of her mother’s friends. She asked her mother, who said, “Oh, she’s trashed”. Kathleen was astounded at the early hour and said so. Her mother replied something to the effect that at their age, time has no relevance. “We don’t live in the same time as regular people do”, she explained. I get that.

These days I have a lot more time behind me than ahead of me. My death is not a frequent thought, but I do remember one evening that went something like this: we went to the Santa Fe Opera building to hear Lang Lang play the piano. This young man is considered by many as one of the most accomplished classical musicians of modern times. He was playing a Chopin piece, I could see the New Mexico sky since the opera building is mostly open air, the sky was a gorgeous blue. As I listened to the music I thought, “I could die right now and die happy.” I’m kind of glad that didn’t happen.

Related Posts

07/11/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark Bewley’s coffee This morning I am slowly savoring coffee that traveled from Ireland to my hands. It was a gift

Read More »

07/09/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark On another continent While I was at my church’s convention in June I met a person who quickly became a

Read More »

07/07/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark A precious coin Richard Rohr writes this today: “To fight transformative and evolutionary thinking is, for me, to fight the

Read More »

07/05/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark Will there be another one? July 4, 1776, marked the day that the colonies announced their separation from Great Britain.

Read More »

06/28/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark The Factory I don’t know how long it has been around – not too long by the looks of it

Read More »

06/25/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark There’s no such thing… Inside my cool house I can see through my window that another day of sunshine is

Read More »

06/22/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark Both/And It’s a day to write a blog, but honestly, nothing came to mind until my phone rang. The Universe

Read More »

06/15/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark Ireland I have a little network of friends/family who are all about recommending things to watch on TV. Lately I’ve

Read More »

06/13/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark Labyrinth If you had young children during the late 1980’s there’s a good chance that you watched Jim Henson’s movie,

Read More »

06/12/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark Customer service We’ve all had experiences where the term “service” was an oxymoron. The other morning I was frantically trying

Read More »

06/08/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark Not for the faint of heart Two Social Workers and a Paralegal walk into a room….no, this isn’t the beginning

Read More »

06/02/2024

Today’s blog Lynn Murphy Mark June what? Last December I attended the best holiday concert I’ve ever been to. It’s called “Holiday Brass” and it’s

Read More »