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Archive for the ‘Family’ Category

Today, thousands of pounds of chocolates will be given, dozens upon dozens of flowers will be sent and romance will fill the air with its warm and wonderful feelings of bliss.

So, of course, I feel the need to steer things in an altogether different direction. Not that I won’t be partaking in the festivities of the day and enjoying every minute of it. But today is a national day that is very near and dear to my heart and I want to share the information with you.

Today is National Organ Donor Day. I realize for some that is a sensitive topic and altogether none of my business. However, if you have not yet made the choice to become an organ donor, I’d like to share a story why it should be important to you.

Five and a half years ago, I got a phone call that my sister had a seizure, suffered head trauma, and had been life-flighted to a hospital four hours away from me and eight hours from my parents. My Mom and Dad drove to my house and then I drove them to the hospital where we quickly discovered there was no hope for recovery. My sister was already brain dead when we arrived. A very kind doctor approached my parents with a request that they give permission for my sister to become an organ donor. After a brief consideration, they agreed.

Up until that moment in time I don’t know that any of us had given much thought to becoming an organ donor or what it could mean.

My sister, who had suffered epilepsy, a brain tumor and myriad other health problems during her life, was not a contributing member of society. She was dependent on the care of my family and others until her death. But what she couldn’t give in life, she more than made up for in death.

Although we may never know how many individuals and families were blessed by that one decision my parents made on her behalf, I’ll share with you what I do know.

There was an infant burn victim who received much needed tissue to bring healing.

A scientist, who had gone blind in the prime of his life, was able to see again and described in vivid detail the colors of the world he opened his new eyes to – including the smiling face of his first grandchild.

A young mother of three no longer had to brace her children for life without her and instead spent the holidays rejoicing over a gift beyond her ability to comprehend.

And Helen, sweet lovely Helen…. she wrote my parents a letter that to this day still makes me cry every time I read it. I don’t even know if Helen is her real name. She was born in a war-torn country during World War II. She and her husband spent 15 years surviving a civil war before finally immigrating to America where they chose to raise their family. Helen  discovered that the one kidney she had was failing. After time spent on dialysis, she knew she was fighting a losing battle. On the very day she decided to tell her husband to start making plans to go on through life without her,  she received the call that a kidney – my sister’s kidney – was a match.  Helen said she thinks of my sister often and considers her as a beloved daughter who gave her the gift of life.

I  like to think that someday I might be walking down the street and smile at a stranger  – a stranger who can see, or a mother who was able to watch her children grow up, a young person who recovered from a freak accident because of the skin grafts received, or a lovely woman named Helen who received another chance at life because of my parents making one simple choice that changed the lives of so many.

Including ours.

Especially ours.

It just takes a moment to become an organ donor. It doesn’t cost a thing. But the blessings it can bring … those, my friends, are priceless.

http://www.organdonor.gov/how.asp

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Friends are Good

This weekend my BFF (whom I’m no longer supposed to call BFF) also known as Miz Sunshine, came over for a play date.

We baked pies – a lot of them – from scratch. I think our husbands were quite pleased with the fruit of our labors.

We made quiche.

We ate chocolate mousse.

We laughed – a lot.

In general, we had a grand time. We always do. She speaks to my heart, makes me smile and likes me even though she knows the real me. If  that isn’t a friend, I don’t know what is!

She also came bearing a gift. A very wonderful, special, make-my-eyes-leak kind of gift.

It was a book entitled “Friends Are Good.” She wouldn’t let me read it while she was there, because we would have used an entire box of tissue and cried ourselves silly.

So I waited until she left to read it. And, oh, it was sweet.

The book is filled with friendship quotes. That in itself is enough to give me a bushel-load of warm fuzzies. But she wrote the most wonderful little notes throughout the book which made it something I will cherish forever and always.

If you follow me on facebook, you’ll get the opportunity to read some of the quotes this week as I’ll be posting one every day!

I can’t tell you how very blessed I am to have Miz Sunshine, my BFF, in my life!

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The other day I was browsing through my collection of cookbooks and the one that caught my eye was a cookbook I inherited from my Grandma.

My dad’s mother loved people, loved to entertain and I don’t remember ever leaving her house without a big warm hug. She was a great example of what hospitality is all about!

So, for the first time since the cookbook came into my possession many years ago, I sat down and went through it page by page. Not only did I enjoy the cookbook itself, I also found some buried treasures: a recipe for gingerbread Grandma had clipped in the mid 1960s, a grocery list that included pineapple and vanilla pudding (I wonder what she was planning to make) and a few random recipe cards. I loved seeing her handwriting again.

If I’ve done my homework correctly, the cookbook is the third edition Betty Crocker printed back in 1961.  The reason I don’t know that off the bat, is because the first four pages of the cookbook are missing. If anyone has a copy  – I’d love to know what I’m missing out on in those first four pages!

So, since the cookbook is 50 years old and I’m filled with a whole bunch of nostalgic mushiness, I’ve decided to blog about this cookbook all week. Don’t miss out on Friday when I share a cookie recipe that will throw you for a loop!

Happy Entertaining!

The Nostalgic Freak

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If you are lucky enough to live somewhere you and your family can enjoy some sledding fun, I’m so glad!

Think about inviting all the rosy-cheeked sledders home for a fun after-sledding party. It doesn’t have to be a lot of work and, if you plan ahead, you can waltz into the house with your guests and have something warm and delicious on the table in a matter of minutes.

Make ahead a tray or two of easy appetizers. It could be something as simple as a veggie tray with dip or pinwheels made by rolling up thinly sliced ham with cream cheese and chopped olives in a flour tortilla. These work especially well to make the night before. Roll up tortilla rolls in plastic wrap then when you are ready to serve, remove plastic and cut into bite-sized wheels.

Put chili in the crock pot earlier in the day and plan for it to be done when you come in from sledding. This is filling and warm and an easy way to feed the troops. Serve a loaf of french bread or tortilla chips along with the chili. You can have shredded cheese, sour cream, and onions set aside for those who’d like to garnish their bowls of steaming chili-goodness.

For beverages, have both hot and cold drinks available. You can preset a hot chocolate station before you head outdoors. When you come back in, just mix up the chocolate and serve. Other hot drinks might include spiced cider or coffee or a pot of hot tea. Cold beverages could include soda pop, juice or punch.

The recipe for this Pomegranate Punch is easy and so tasty!

 

For dessert, have a plate of left-over Christmas cookies that you’ve hidden from grubby, greedy hands in the freezer, or whip up a  batch of Cinnamon Rolls. You can make the cinnamon rolls that morning, or the day before, and quickly reheat right before serving. That is one way your guest will melt in a puddle and be at your mercy for the rest of the year.

The most important thing is to have fun!

Some of my favorite winter memories are of sledding parties we hosted at our home. We lived on a hill which meant a great sledding run waiting just outside the back door. If you survived the trip down the hill, it was a short walk to our pond where you could skate if the ice was solidly frozen. We also had snowmobiles back then that provided a never-ending source of winter entertainment and post-sledding transportation.

This photo, circa early 1980s (yes, laugh all you want), shows us gathered around enjoying a day of sledding and snowmobiling fun.

My Dad and brother would wait until the sledders zoomed to the bottom of the hill and would drag us all back up behind the snowmobiles  to do it again. Since we didn’t have to hike back up the hill, wasting precious energy, we were able to sled twice as long.

The only damper on the fun was a big ditch at the bottom of the hill. If you didn’t bail off in time, you could end up sitting in the ditch covered in icy cold mud, counting your teeth and feeling to make sure no bones were broken. That was a great incentive to never be the person on the bottom of the pile stacked on a big tractor inner tube. When bodies started falling off or bailing, there was most usually not enough time for the one stuck on the bottom to avoid careening into the ditch.

I absolutely loved the days when large groups of the family would converge and we’d sled until we could barely stand up straight. There was even a year we had so much fun, two of my cousins broke our toboggan in half. I think it had bounced across the sledding trail one too many times. Then there was the year, I stayed out so long playing in the snow I soaked through not one but two snowsuits. My mother was convinced I’d die of pneumonia, but I don’t think I really cared. Fun was waiting outside the door, calling my name!

What awesome times we had.

Pull on your boots, dig out your scarf and mittens, go sled and have some fun!

Happy Sledding!

The once avid sledder

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