I’m currently catching up via Sky Plus with the latest episodes of the
new Dallas (heck, it’s like it’s never been away! I adore S’wellin’.), waiting for Downton Abbey to return to my telly-box, and running a Spyware
check on my laptop.
My schlepptop seems to lurch from one virus to another
these days. And for someone who doesn’t
download great balls of *&)T from the vast bowels of t’Internet, I don’t
know what else to do.
Currently I’m also delivering cupfuls of hot lemon,
ginger and Manuka honey to the bedroom, as hubby languishes there, coughing,
spluttering, and just generally making the house a more unhealthy place to be.
The lemon and honey sore throat recipe comes courtesy of darling
Rosaria Williams. I made it up, she says it can be left
in the fridge for up to two months, and it’s amazing. I’m already making up a second batch. I wonder if it’ll work on the laptop?!
It’s been a long summer.
Not hot. It’s been frightfully
wet. A bit grey. Some very wearing heat. The midges have thrived. I've been nibbled and scarred over my arms. Wonderful.
I came back from Paris some weeks ago and I’ve got on top
of the laundry again. When I say ‘on
top’, what I mean is that there’s nothing left to wash and, since I no longer
iron, smoothed but still wrinkled clothes lie strewn decorously (or not!) in baskets about the house.
I used to watch Dallas back then. When I ironed like a good ‘un in the
Eighties. When shoulder pads reigned (come on, we all wore them - Even the men!), and it seemed like the world was at my feet.
Now, I feel like I’m at the feet of the world, as I
strain to find a job in this difficult economic climate. And, to top it all, I’ve had some anxieties
about stuff going on elsewhere in the family.
We just never stop worrying about our children, do we?
I was talking to a fabulous octogenarian lady, Ella, the
night of our pub’s Annual Leek Club. I
came 18th, and very proud of it, I was too.
(NB: There are 25 members in the Leek Club. 1 lady has got so old she couldn’t remember
to submit any leeks this year for the show.
‘No-one told me to grow leeks’, she cried... That'll be me one day.)
I know, I’m rambling. That's what I do - Unhitch yer wagon if you don't like the odd (and I mean odd!) ramble or two!
Ella and her husband, Don, are very dignified people. Always beautifully turned out. Caring and loving. She was telling me about her children, who
are older than me, and her grand-children, who are almost twenty years younger
than me. We sat and whiled away the
evening. The Leek Club Champion, who’d
just got married that same week, passed around the silver cup, filled to the
brim with the whiskey that he’d won in that evening’s raffle. (He won three raffle prizes, his luck seems
to be in! He told me he'd also had a very modest win with the Lottery, yikes!) Like the true Pagans we are descended from, we each took a sip from the burnished cup, drinking to his health and his good
luck. And hoping a little bit of his luck will rub off on each of us for next year's show.
Ella told me how she’s never stopped caring about how her
children are doing. Not for one
minute. She was describing how she
moved from their childhood home just a few years’ back. She is pleased she was able to give her
children and the grandbairns the memories of growing up in a safe, rural
location, where there were lots of freedoms and, above all, fun...
I’ve tried to do that for my young ‘un. And this year, I’ve noticed him getting more
and more anxious about his studies.
I’ve seen his fingernails bitten down to the quick. Wherever did he pick up that habit? Not from me... Perhaps the angst is passed down in the
genetic makeup? That’s not so good a
feeling to have as a parent. I hope
I’ve given him lots of fun too. I know I have always known, and shown to him, just what love I hold for him. Just how much he means to me.
So now I’m giving him the free rein he needs. To make the decisions he wants to make about this part of his future. I’ve never pushed him into anything, as
such. Pushy parent, not moi? Helicopter parenting? I try not to.
But I’m worried about this next year, or so, in his life
(and mine), and what it will bring.
There. Enough
said. If I keep on phasing in and out
at the blog, that’s generally why.
I’m
an anxious person.
I’m strong, but I’m
also vulnerable sometimes.
That’s
me. Pleased to meet you!
But, can anyone tell me, how come the dead woman from Desperate Housewives has managed to get to Dallas and marry Bobby?!
9 comments:
You must know it's the magic padded shoulders can make anything happen in Dallas.
They even had a UFO changes one of the characters in the 80's... I saw the episode and laughed until I cried and was never able to watch it again
hah...l did wonder that about bobby;s new Mrs...wish Pammy would reappear...
Helicopter parenting...did you make that up...its a fab relevant wordage..
xxx keep strong...
You never stop worrying about your kids and most of 'em are just fine anyway. (in spite of us and our hovering)
You're wise to let him make his own decisions tho', and I'm sure he will make the right ones because you've given him what he needs.
:D
I'm sure I had that pattern and mad that dress in a few colours!
And yes, we continue to worry about them...seemingly ad infinitum/nauseam.
Jump online and download and run these programs and see if they help:
Windows Defender (if you are using a windows product, obviously)
CCleaner
Malware Bytes
That, in addition to Norton or McAfee should help with your computer woes....I think. But then, I'm not an expert. But these have helped me.
As for children.....sadly, there's nothing you can download to keep from worrying about them. That's something we are stuck with forever. I have to keep reminding myself (over and over and OVER) that I've done the best I could and taught him the best that I can. Now, it's up to him to follow through with the love and knowledge I've given him.
Gah! It's hard to let go, isn't it?
"I know, I’m rambling." It's when you no longer know you're rambling that you need to start worrying, Fhina.
Me, shoulder pads, never. They were the real thing in those days - it's just that I slouch now. That's my story and I'm sticking to it....
As for worrying about children... Mum was in her nineties when she died and she was still worrying about me. If Dad ever worried he never let on! Of my three only two are giving me cause to worry at the moment. The middle one (in her thirties) seems to be OK. That's a 33% success rate!
My "baby" is in her 40's now and I think I worry more about her now than when she was a child.
So many things to comment upon, but I'm most taken by the leeks. They really are beautiful plants, aren't they? I think I'll try to grow some next year in my little backyard. If nothing else, it will make a good blog post :-)
Love the bit about having no leeks !
I bite my nails down & don't think it's anything to do with the way I was brought up !
It wouldn't be normal not to worry
xx
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