Home Cooking

My son, daughter-in-law and grandson are all are in Thailand this month, visiting my daughter-in-law’s family. This is her first visit home in seven years, and her family’s first time meeting Connor, so I’m sure it has been a fun-filled and exciting time for all of them. We’re keeping tabs on the visit via Facebook and smiling because most of the pictures involve eating. As my daughter-in-law reported this morning, “Eating is the national pastime in Thailand!"

She posted photos yesterday of some of her mother’s home-cooked specialities. “My favorite foods my mom makes!” she captioned the photos. “I've missed them so much!” 

It’s true, we miss those favorite home made foods, especially the ones we most associate with our childhoods. Growing up with two southern cooks in my house (my grandmother and my mother), as well as two more across the street (my great-aunt and my great-grandmother), there was certainly no shortage of home-cooked southern style goodness on our table. 

I grew up in an atmosphere where food equaled love. Great care was taken with every meal, every loaf of bread baked, every pie crust rolled and crimped at the edge, every cookie slipped hot and buttery off the sheet. My mother and grandmother’s day was devoted to domestic duties, so nothing was ever rushed or hurried. From fried chicken to grilled steaks, everything was prepared and served with love, a way of nurturing the body, but also the soul. 

It was also a time when we didn’t worry about what we ate. There weren’t daily news bulletins warning us away from all our favorite foods, no internet posts about the evils effects of fat or sugar or carbs or gluten. We ate what tasted good, we enjoyed it, and maybe most importantly, we didn’t feel guilty about it. When I was a child, I ate hot buttered toast (often made from thick slices of my grandma’s homemade bread), crispy fried bacon, and a steaming cup of milky coffee every morning of my life. Dinners were often more fried goodness: platters of chicken, golden brown and crispy on the outside, meaty and juicy on the inside; tiny, melt-in-your mouth lake perch, heaped on a platter, drizzled with lemon wedges, and gobbled up one after the other. Side dishes were potato salad, classic macaroni salad, baked or pinto beans, black eyed peas, wilted spinach with garlic, eggplant or okra (fried!).

My mouth waters at the memory. 

So, yes I miss all those home cooked favorites. They’re nothing like the dishes my daughter-in-law craves, and I’m quite sure her favorite foods are healthier than the ones I grew up on. But home cooking, as we all know, is about more than the sum of its parts. Because while I miss the aroma and taste of those meals, I miss even more the sight and sound of my grandmother bustling around in the basement kitchen of our house, wiping her hands on her ever-present apron. I miss seeing my mother working alongside her, preparing salad or vegetables, setting steaks out to marinade and eventually put on the grill. I miss us all sitting around the white formica table, my grandfather at the head of the table, my grandmother sitting nearest the stove, jumping up and down like a jack-in-the box to refill someone’s plate, add another batch of fish to the fry pan, or remove a fresh pan of biscuits from the oven. I miss being the center of attention while I told stories of my day at school, especially enjoying the reactions when the stories involved those classmates whose behavior was less stellar than mine. 

I know I’ll never taste anything like those foods again. My cooking skills (such as they are) were learned on my own. You’d think with two fine “home-cookers” in the house, someone would have taught me something. But there seemed to be a silent consensus between my mother and grandmother that I wouldn’t need to cook, that I was destined for “more” than a life in the kitchen. If I was hanging around aimlessly in the kitchen, instead of encouraging me to help with the meal, my grandmother might say, “Go up and play the piano for us while we’re cooking.” My mother might shoo me out of her way. “Go read your book, honey,” she’d say, giving me a gentle shove. “We’ll call you when it’s supper time."

Consequently, while I don’t mind cooking, it’s not an activity I’m passionate about. Most of the time, I do prefer eating at home to eating out. Most of the time I’m happier with the small portions of things I make for myself. I enjoy experimenting with new recipes, but since I’m feeding a staunch meat-and-potatoes Irishman, there’s not much room for exotic variations to the menu.  I imagine most of my son’s home cooking memories relate to things his grandmother (my mother) made for him: Shepherd’s pie, spaghetti and meatballs, turkey and stuffing, pot roast. Chocolate cake with caramel frosting, pumpkin pie with whipped cream. 

Comfort food of the highest order.

My grandmother would probably chuckle at the current obsession with cooking - all the food-related TV shows, and even a whole network dedicated to Food. To her, cooking was part of her job as a farmers wife, one of the vital chores she did every day. The fact that she was extraordinarily good at it was a point of pride, but not something she saw as an unusual accomplishment. Like everything else she did, it was done out of love for her family, out of necessity for their wellbeing, to make them FULL - of love, comfort, and tenderness, all sensed with a generous amount of butter, fat, and salt. 

In her book, Home Cooking, writer Laurie Colwin says that “when life is hard and the day has been long, the ideal dinner is not four perfect courses, each in a lovely pool of sauce whose lovely ambrosial flavors are like nothing ever before tasted, but rather something comforting and savory, easy on the digestion - something that makes one feel, even if only for a minute, that one is safe."

That sense of safety and comfort is the one I most yearn for when i think back to mealtimes growing up. I think that’s the key to successful Home Cooking, no matter where your home lies on the globe. 

Write On Wednesday: Sensing Synchronicity

It’s an age old question: Is life nothing more than a series of random events? Or is there a delicate underlying order that connects us with events, people, and ideas? Are the things we often consider mere coincidence really earmarks of this subterranean framework, pointing us in the direction we need to go?

Psychologist Carl Jung believed that life was a reflection of a deeper order, something he called synchronicity. At one point or another, we’ve all experienced it, and probably more often than we realize. You find yourself thinking about changing careers, and you sit next to someone on an airplane who has done just that and offers you all sorts of advice. You’re feeling badly about an argument with your partner and you open a magazine to an article about ways to repair relationships. You’ve been cooped up in the house with whiny toddlers and are longing for an escape when a friend calls you unexpectedly and offers to babysit so you can go out.

Synchronicity.

I’m most often aware of synchronicity in hindsight, looking back on things that have happened in my life and realizing they were “meant to be.” Back in 1992, finding myself relieved of some family obligations that had been holding me down for years, I had been wishing for more opportunities to work in music. One afternoon I’m preparing to fry chicken in my electric skillet, so I spread some newspaper on the kitchen counter to absorb the spatters (a trick I learned from my grandmother who fried a lot of chicken when I was growing up). The section of the paper I “happened” to open was the classifieds, and my gaze “happened" to land on an ad for a piano accompanist. 

That job changed my life - because of it, I met people who would impact me and my life in more ways that I can count. Literally, nearly everything I do now, every friend I have, even my dogs, have come as a result of that job and those people. 

A lucky coincidence? 

I really don’t think so. 

Since then, I’ve tried to become more aware of those meaningful coincidences in life. They can be easy to miss, even though in retrospect it seems as if they’ve struck you like a thunderbolt. A few years after I started my accompanying job, I was still estranged from my father, still consumed by anger, but beginning to feel the first stirrings toward forgiveness. A chance conversation with a co-worker whose mother had died suddenly was the spark that moved me to contact my father after several years of non-communication.

The principle of synchronicity applies to creative work as well, particularly writing. In her new book (A Writer’s Guide to Persistence) Jordan Rosenfeld writes: “Synchronicity is the way the muse speaks to you - it’s one part your subconscious mind making connections that your conscious mind misses, thus urging you toward opportunities, and another part the language of patterns, the quantum physics of creativity. Synchronicity requires you to be open and present. You must look for it. You must not write things off as accidental."

The ability to take notice of those kinds of synchronous events requires the ability to sense when something is more than just a happenstance occurrence. It requires focus and attention to the details of life, to looking up and around and not just down at the screen in front of you. It requires really listening to the voices of friends and mentors in whose words and advice you may find the inspiration you don’t always even realize you’re seeking. It requires time and patience to take hold in your heart and spirit.

This is difficult for me. I’ve spent my life among practical, logical people, who dwell in the land of making and doing rather than the land of sensing and being. Taking up residence in that sensory realm means I have to separation from my normal world and spend quality time with just myself - and not the me who is busy ticking off her “to-do” list, but the me who writes in her journal, loses herself in a good book, or plays the piano. The me who sits quietly watching the birds at the feeder.  The me who really hears the music playing on the stereo. The me who really hears voices in conversation around me. 

So as spring finally begins to take hold here in Michigan, I find myself pondering ways to do this, to  invigorate my senses and awareness and bring the fruits of that to my writing.  

“We live in a world of beautiful patterns and unexplainable beauty,” Rosenfeld writes.  "Our lives are like novels - we have such a short time to explore, discover, overcome obstacles, fight antagonists, make allies, and transform or discover our stories. What you do in your life can be empty and robotic, or it can be transformative, pushing you to new heights.” 

Jung himself believed that synchronistic events were more likely to occur when a person was in a heightened state of mental and creative awareness. Learning to engage in life on a deeper level, learning to sense the synchronicity that makes itself available to me, is one way to transform experience, to achieve new levels of insight and meaning.

It’s also a way to add depth and direction to writing. I’ve spent the winter floundering with new projects, wondering where to direct my writing energies. Recently I’ve connected with some new readers of Life In General who reinforce comments made by so many of you already -  how the stories I share in the book have helped them feel more understood, less alone in the world, and comforted by our connection through words. Comments like these seem to come at exactly the right moment - when I’m feeling as if I have nothing left to say. Clearly I do have a mandate for my writing, and it fits perfectly with my personality. I am, as an elementary teacher once described me, the “perfect little quiet helper.” When I focus my energy there, that’s where I perform the best.

So here then is my call to the universe: How can my next writing project help others? What can I share about my life or my experience that will create new and valuable connections? May I be open and observant to those synchronistic moments which lead me in the right direction.

 

Getting Out of the Way

We don’t make a big fuss about holidays around here anymore. With just the three of us (Jim, myself, and my mom) in town, our celebrations are really low key. My mom doesn’t like to eat in restaurants, and really doesn’t like to leave home much at all anymore. It’s a struggle to get her to come to our house, and I can tell she’s not really comfortable here. So for Mother’s Day this year, she will do what she does so often - make a meal for us. I know that’s what gives her pleasure.

When Jim and I set our wedding date lo those many years ago, we weren’t thinking about the fact that it was the Saturday before Mother’s Day. This caused a few difficulties, not the least of which was that we had a tough time finding a florist willing to do a wedding on their busiest weekend of the year. Then it occurred to us that we would be on our honeymoon on Mother’s Day. So, like the dutiful (and perpetually guilt-ridden) only children that we were, we called our mother’s first thing from the hotel in Niagara Falls  on the morning after our wedding to wish them a Happy Mother’s Day. 

I had hardly ever spent a night away from home before, and to initiate my permanent move out of the family home on Mother’s Day was like rubbing salt into her wound. But I was young and in love and eager to set off into my own life. She was gracious about it, as she always is, and never revealed any sadness she might have felt. 

I didn’t realize it at the time, but now I know what a cruel blow it must have been for my mother to be separated from me for the first time on that day of all days. Something like the way I would feel about 20 years later, when my son moved to Florida at the age of 18, shortly thereafter married a young woman from another country, and settled out of state permanently. As for Mother’s Day, in the almost two decades since, I’ve actually only spent only one of those holidays with my son.

It’s a little bit sad, but as I said, we don’t make a big fuss about holidays in our family. 

One of the most important lessons I learned about motherhood is that you have to get out of your children’s way. You can’t be the security guard who stands at the crossroads of their lives, pointing them in the direction you want them to take or the one you think is best. You can’t put your arms out and block them from stepping into the future they want. The ability to do this  takes a lot of skill. And you will get plenty of practice as they grow from the completely dependent blobs of neediness that erupt from your womb into full grown people with very strange and rebellious ideas of their own. 

But as I wrote in Life In General, “there is nothing easy about this process. There’s no magic pill you can take to stop missing your children, to keep your heart from aching when you’re apart on birthdays and holidays, to prevent you from wondering what they’re doing or how their day is going, if they’re in a bad mood or on top of the world."

My mother, as much as I dearly love her, was not terribly good at getting out of my way. I had to learn that motherhood lesson on my own. And my son was a very good teacher. He had definite ideas about what he wanted for his life, was responsible enough to take charge of getting those things done, and simply refused to be held back.

So, I stepped aside and got out of his way.

Sometimes, though, I wonder if I stepped back too far. If I should have held on a little tighter, should have protested a little harder. I was so eager to prove that I wouldn’t be like my own parents who wanted to keep me so close, maybe I let go of him a little too easily. In contrast to my experience, where sometimes I felt loved too much - where the warm blanket of parental care and concern occasionally threatened to smother me and suck the life right out of me - I hope he felt loved enough

Now he’s 35 years old, with a growing family, a busy career, a home to maintain, plans for the future. He works incredibly hard, is a faithful husband and loving father. Nothing stands in his way, certainly not his mother. And I’m incredibly proud of him for all of that. 

And most of the time I’m proud of myself for having the courage to get out of his way and let it happen.

But there’s still that shadow of a crossing guard mother in me, the one that wants to go back in time and stand on the corner with her arms outstretched. “Stop! Wait! Look every which way you can before you cross that street! It’s dangerous out there where I can’t protect you."

And then enfold him in a tight embrace where I can keep him close and safe forever.

 

Coming Up the Stairs

There is a narrow and twisty cement stairway leading to the basement of the Martha Mary Chapel, the small historic church where my husband and I were married thirty nine years ago today. When the wedding consultant directed me down the dark passageway to the Bride’s Room on that bright spring morning, my stomach did a back flip. I was scared of stairs, scared of the dark, and mostly scared that I would trip over the filmy train on my wedding dress.  I carefully wended my way downward, my father ahead of me and my Maid of Honor trailing behind holding the train out of harm’s way, only to realize about half-way down that I’d have to make this torturous journey back UP in about 30 minutes.  I could feel my heart beating faster and faster, my knees getting weak. “Hey, you can’t give up now,” my friend said to me. “You can do this."

Yes, I told myself. It’s my wedding day, I’ve been waiting for this day, I CAN do this. And so I did, navigating slowly and gingerly, but successfully down the stairs, and then, back up again for the ceremony that set me on a new course for my life.

Today, almost four decades later, I realize how much of married life resembles that stairway. We enter into a relationship filled with excitement and hope, ready to commit ourselves heart and soul to this other person. We set ourselves on a path hoping for sunshine and flowers, seeking a yellow brick road, never knowing how many times we’ll be forced to detour down a dark, narrow passageway.

In her book, Magical Journey, author Katrina Kenison writes, “What I didn’t know...on the day I donned an ivory wedding dress and became a wife, was that every marriage is a gamble and the stakes are always high. Love, after all, is not synonymous with permanence; we offer our hearts into each other’s safekeeping on faith alone. Our relationship has survived, adapted, deepened, but it is hardly immaculate. In fact, the landscape of our lives together is a muddy criss-cross of mishaps and memories, exultation and grief, hallowed landmarks and forgotten detours made along the way as each learned, one day at a time, what it means to love another person for the long haul.” 

Getting down that dark twisted stairway was only the first of many challenges married life would present me.  In our many years together we’ve experienced long separations imposed by work, job losses and changes, my parents divorce, illness and death, moving house, giving up on dearly held dreams. So often it is these “muddy criss-cross of mishaps,” the “hallowed landmarks and forgotten detours” along the way that give us opportunities to strengthen our resolve, to look back and say, “we survived that and became stronger, more loving people because of it.”

I was really proud of myself for navigating to the bottom of that staircase, but I was even more proud to make my way back up again, to stand in the tiny vestibule of the church on that bright May morning in 1976, fix my gaze on the young man standing at the altar waiting for me, and take my first steps down the aisle into our future. Today, on yet another glorious spring day, I do the same thing, knowing so much more about what it entails.

“I stepped into my marriage convinced that passion would sustain us,” Kenison  writes. “Now, I know better. We will endure by the grace of acquiescence, cooperation, patience, and the small daily rituals that keep us close even as change transforms the landscape of our lives.”  Kenison is so right: If I’ve learned anything in all these years gone by, it is that those are surely the keys to getting back up from every dark stairway life puts in your way. 

So here’s to anniversaries, because they compel us to look back as well as forward, to see the long history of stairways successfully navigated, bridges painstakingly crossed, hurdles courageously cleared. And to know that with “the grace of acquiescence, cooperation and patience” we can continue on the journey together. 

Write On Wednesday: Window on the World

For a couple of mornings last week, this was the view from my bed. I spent a few days at the French Lick Resort and Spa, a huge mid 19th century resort in southern Indiana. It was so beautiful there -  lush, green, hilly country, with trees in full leaf and flower.  Everyone we encountered was warm and welcoming with a decidedly rosy outlook on life in general.

It was a restful few days for me. I was there for a musical event (a handbell festival) but neither the repertoire nor rehearsal schedule were taxing. There was plenty of time to sit on the long front porch, enjoying the company of good friends and the beautiful weather. 

Because I tend to hole up in my safe little cave, I often forget that it’s important to venture out into the wider world once in a while. This trip was like a spring tonic, restorative and energizing at the same time. And even though a few days in southern Indiana seems small compared to the world travels many of my friends embark upon, it opened a new window on the world for me, this quiet little homebody who rarely strays from her cozy nest.

Writers sometimes have this romanticized view of themselves, secreted away in a tiny attic space, fueled with coffee and spirits, connecting with their muse and pouring their creative heart and soul onto the page. My normal life is nothing like that, of course. I have coffee and breakfast to make every morning, a finicky old dog to feed and pamper, a husband with chronic pain and a frail elderly mother who needs daily attention. Somewhere in between all that, I may retreat upstairs to my desk under the window, stare out at the flickering branches of the dogwood tree and listen to the the finches and wrens who settle there after enjoying a meal at my feeder. I scribble some words onto the screen or in my journal. I take my small pleasures where I find them - lunch at an outdoor cafe, the arrival of a book in the mail, the listening ear of a dear friend, an unexpected kiss or kindness from my husband. This is my world, and I’m grateful for it.

But no matter how much we love our usual view, occasionally it’s powerful to open a window onto a new vista and gaze in wonder at what’s before us there. It’s like taking a deep, cleansing breath - it opens the heart to new possibilities, reminds you of all the reasons you have to smile, and make you eager to return to the world you’ve left at home.

So wherever you are today, open the window wide and savor the world around you.