Lazy W Marie

Carpeing all the diems in semi-rural Oklahoma...xoxo

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giveaway winners & happy Monday to you!

August 4, 2014

 

RMJ book cover

Hopefully as the weeks pass everyone has time to post a photo of their finished projects to the Lazy W Facebook page. I am plotting a cool dresser makeover using her tips, and I pledge to post photos too.

The winners are…

Bruce Barone (gardener, chef, and fellow taker of the Joy Dare)
Stephanie Clinton who blogs at Hugs Kisses and Snot
Jennie Brooks (a beautiful soul)
Lynn Fern who blogs at On Fern Avenue
Heather Benton who blogs at New House New Home New Life

Big thank you to everyone who shared the book release information, and another big thank you to Allison for her generous gift. We wish her the best with this project AND with the final weeks of her pregnancy!

Marathon Mondays starting again. It is time for fall marathon training to start. While I have yet to decide on a race before the end of the year, I am kicking up my miles and revamping Marathon Monday posts to include all kinds of fitness and health related topics. I hope this is interesting to you! And I hope you join the conversations as often as you can. We all have bodies, and we all need to find sustainable ways to care for them.

ZB me after slide with sticker

The Lazy W Honeymakers are doing great. Maribeth helped me conduct a thorough bee yard inspection Sunday afternoon, and I want to share all of the sweet, sticky details with you. For now, just say a quiet little prayer of thanks that we have two thriving colonies at the farm! I am so happy.

bees aug 2014

Actively Giving Thanks. I stumbled across a scripture that has my memory in overdrive. The 136th Psalm is line after line of praise for incredible miracles God performed in the Old Testament, followed each time by this: His mercy endureth forever. It struck me so hard, and it inspired me to compile a long list of the incredible miracles He has performed in my life, focusing on His mercy. So I will be working on that throughout the week, and I invite you to do the same. Maybe meet me back here next Sunday and share some of your miracles remembered?

july 16 2014 purple morning glory

********************

Okay folks, I am signing off for a bit and heading outside for some running and fresh air. Then maybe some horse brushing and morning-glory thinning. Our nephew Koston is here for a day or two, so before he wakes up I need to carefully stack the Uno deck so he doesn’t beat me today.

I hope you have a full, happy, productive, loving day ahead of you! I hope you find the energy you need to tackle your lists and the reward you need to feel like it’s all worth it. Think positively. Protect your heart. Give of yourself generously. Never give up hope for your most urgent prayers.

Carpe the Heck out of This Diem!
XOXOXOXO

12 Comments
Filed Under: daily life

friday 5 at the farm: rainy day photos

August 1, 2014

What a long, luscious drink we’ve enjoyed in Oklahoma this week. Several inches of soft rain day after day, a drought buster they’re telling us. Cool temps, too, which is such a welcome relief even if you love summer like I do. I have spent lots of hours just walking around the farm, letting my bare feet squish in the mud (watching for copperheads and frogs of course), smelling the ozone freshness, letting the dripping wet crepe myrtles baptize me as I walk through them. Every little aspect of beauty is turned up a notch, and I love it so much I could cry. So for Friday 5 at the Farm this week, how ’bout just some quiet rainy photos.

 

farm rain sweet potato vine

The sweet potato vine here is threatening to choke out Instagtah,
but his jazz music will eventually set him free.
It always does.

farm rain ladder

I am thrilled with how the Great Vine-Relocation Experiment of 2014 is turning out.
About half of them died, as expected, but what remains is so robust.
Isn’t that how life goes?
And I love how the pumpkins and watermelons look on this old ladder,
all drapey and rustic.
Also, it encourages limbo games in the garden.
I just don’t have enough limbo in my life. How about you?

farm rain hives

Oh the bees. The bees. The bees. I love them so much.
Wednesday night my Dad and I built some cool boxes and frames
for the ever-expanding colonies,
and today I am painting those boxes with beloved song lyrics.
In a week or so I’ll have a more complete update for you,
once Maribeth and I do a good inspection.
But overall they are doing great. I am so happy and thankful.
Honey harvest soon, friends.
On warm days you can smell it almost from the garden gate.

farm rain pond view

This is probably where I spent the most time these past few days.
The pond is rising steadily, and my eyes cannot get enough of the beautiful sight.
So often this area of the farm is low and muddy, desolate feeling.
But it also holds so many happy memories. For example…
When Jocelyn, my firstborn, was about twelve,
we had a fantastic rainstorm that caused the pond to rise past the banks.
Fish of every variety were actually being pressed through the sandy berm there
and emerging in the west field on the other side of the pond. Onto the flat ground.
She found them while playing and carried them in buckets back to the pond, for hours.
Eventually we all helped her, and she was so happy. We all were.
She laughed and laughed, catching those slippery fish and returning them to the water.
Over and over and over,  smiling and laughing.
She was so little herself, not yet a fish out of water.
That was an unbelievable seven years ago.

farm rain llama print

Last but not least, a llama hoof print in the mud, filled to the brim with cold rain water.
It is decidedly heart shaped, which is the obvious choice for such a loving creature.

The sun is scheduled to return today, but probably not much heat. So I expect everything to yawn and stretch and be on its best behavior for a few days, plants and animals both. These days are so charmed. Life is so beautiful, so mysterious and surprising even with the rain.

Happy Friday, friends! Thank you so much for stopping in here again.

The best thing one can do when it’s raining is to let it rain.
~Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
xoxoxo

1 Comment
Filed Under: 1000gifts, animals, daily life, Farm Life, gardening

senses inventory: july pause

July 31, 2014

Handsome is gone all week for business, so the farm has been unusually solitary.
Add to that our deep, hypnotic rainstorms and cool temperatures,
plus my penchant to meditate on things,

and we have a perfect opportunity for a Senses Inventory.
This is from Wednesday night, very late.

See: Sheer curtains swelling into this spacious bedroom, one wide pool of lamplight, cold black television screen in the corner. On my favorite chair, today’s work jeans and tshirt stripped off and ready to wear again tomorrow.  Cell phone charging, mug of steaming chamomile tea, empty chocolate bar wrapper, bottle of orange nail polish. His feather pillows stacked on his side of the bed. Blankets rumpled everywhere and covered with books, a spiral notebook, and one Southern Living magazine.

Hear: Tree frogs and crickets so loud and enthusiastic you wonder if the Amazon would be impressed. Pool pump running outside the south windows, each of these noises stronger than normal because the air conditioner is off and the windows are open. Ceiling fan humming gently. Scratch of my pen on paper.

Taste: Hershey’s chocolate miniature with almonds. And chamomile tea.

Touch: My hair let down after being washed and pinned up tight all day, so loose and comfortable now, soft on my shoulders. Ticklish breeze from the ceiling fan. Cotton pajamas with swiss dot texure. Slightly humid air, but not uncomfortable. A little beeswax wedged under my fingernails.

Smell: Minty-sweet steam from the chamomile tea, like childhood and parenthood all at once. Sawdust still in my nose from some carpentry I did with my Dad tonight. Laundry soap and perfume on the sheets and pillows around me.

Think: What are my bees doing tonight, after so much rain? Do they like heir new boxes? Do they recognize my face yet? What flavor will this first honey have? How many kittens were born today in the Pine Forest? I am not ready for summer to wind down yet. But I am ready to start marathon training again.

Feel: Happy to have spent an evening with my sweet Dad, doing something he grew up doing and can teach me (building boxes for honeybees). Satisfied by our unusual work week both here at the farm and away, where Handsome is conferencing. So proud of him, too. Profoundly sad to be away from my children, confused and worried from time to time, but deep down still strongly hopeful. Assured that their most urgent prayers are being answered. Thrilled and amazed by some happy surprises in our extended family. Thankful for these blessings. Humbled by brand new challenges at our feet.

sunflower july 2014

Your turn. Listen to your senses and share something detailed in the comments. Or write our own full inventory! It’s a great way to start journaling.

And have yourself a truly wonder-filled, strong, productive, happy, intuitive, Loving Thursday!

There are so many sorts of hunger.
Memory is hunger.

~Ernest Hemingway
XOXOXOXO

4 Comments
Filed Under: daily life, five senses tour, memories

The Secret Life of bees (a very long & personal book review)

July 30, 2014

I finally read The Secret Life of Bees.

The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd

Maribeth loaned it to me a few years ago, around the time I first tried beekeeping in fact, but one of my friends in book club said it was about a motherless young girl, overall a bit sad, and yes my friend cried when she read it. At that time in life I was not ready for such material. My youngest had just left home under really painful circumstances, and I was about as lost as I had ever been. The flip side to motherless daughters, what people don’t talk about, is daughterless mothers. But that’s for another time. I wonder if this quote Maribeth often shared with me was layered with meaning? Did she know?

She liked to tell everybody that women made the best beekeepers ’cause they have a special ability built into them to love creatures that sting. It comes from years of loving children and husbands.

So I slipped this pretty little paperback on my shelf for a while, tucked among beekeeping manuals and eventually my Papa Joe’s apiary journal. Every so often I picked it up and tried nibbling at it, but a gentle warning light would pulse in my head and that still, small voice would whisper, Not yet. You’re not ready yet. So I reshelved it over and over.

july 16 2014 heavy bees frames

Something has settled in my heart now, and it is good and strong. Not only am I ready for this material; I am primed for it. Emotionally, spiritually, and poetically, I am set to receive every syllable of a book just exactly like this. Don’t you love it when that happens? It’s thrilling. The synchronicity of reader and writer, across years and miles, sharing a wide ribbon of words.

Author Sue Monk Kidd uses all the lilting, mysterious beauty of an apiary to convey her ideas and messages. And I am thirsty for this right now. I am also knee deep in bee yard activities of my own, so it’s fun to read about them in between doing them.

She reminded me that the world was really one big bee yard, and the same rules worked fine in both places: Don’t be afraid, as no life-loving bee wants to sting you. Still, don’t be an idiot; wear long sleeves and long pants. Don’t swat. Don’t even think about swatting. If you feel angry, whistle. Anger agitates, while whistling melts a bee’s temper. Act like you know what you’re doing, even if you don’t. Above all, send the bees love. Every little thing wants to be loved.

Okay, enough about me. Let’s talk about this gorgeous novel. Another debut novel, but the way. How fun! I am always curious to read the first book a writer publishes. And when it is this extraordinary, I am floored.

bees on frame corner

 

The Secret Life of Bees reads like a smooth old cotton tablecloth, the kind printed with simple aqua and salmon flowers and spread on your great-grandmother’s kitchen table. It is set in the 1960’s, another wonderful if bittersweet ground-level view of the civil rights movement in the southern United States. I had assumed it was written closer to that decade, too, it is so unpretentious and calming. So removed from the present day. I was surprised to see that The Secret Life of Bees was actually published in 2002. So if it is not a vintage tablecloth, then it is a modern one from somewhere like Anthropologie, destined to become an heirloom for us all.

Kidd has crafted believable, touchable, lovely characters who braid themselves together and become something far more than the sum of their parts. They experience loss and cope with it both individually and as a family. They fall into roles and nurture each other. They explore unique, highly personalized spirituality and are keenly attentive to social bonds and struggles. But they don’t spend their days in turmoil; they seem to have learned how to dam the river, so to speak, and protect their hard won peace. They navigate Love in common, every day ways that broke my heart to read, like painting their house pink.

You know, some things don’t matter that much, Lily. Like the color of a house. How big is that in the overall scheme of life? But lifting another person’s heart- now, that matters.

Not all the characters are so lovely, of course, but Kidd writes those just as well. She boils the pain up in your belly when you read the unsavory parts, and with very few sentences she twists your heart and rattles your thoughts. You can scarcely appreciate the light without some dark, after all. And Lily, the main character, has quite an ocean of darkness against which to kick.

As I read this slim little treasure (302 smoothly written pages) I kept thinking of people in my heart who should read it. I thought of my husband’s sister, who is so immersed in grief over the loss of their mother last autumn and all the precipitating loss our family has experienced since then. Queenlessness is what we’re enduring, really:

The queen, for her part, is the unifying force of the community; if she is removed from the hive, the workers very quickly sense her absence. After a few hours, or even less, they show unmistakable signs of queenlessness.

The inner dialogue we enjoy with Lily is so truthful and recognizable, I think anyone drowning in grief or just coming of age with some difficulty would at least take comfort in hearing it expressed in another person’s life. More importantly, though, the reader is taken on a simple, sensual journey that has very real healing powers. Kidd writes us into the moment, allowing us to feel the sweat of hard work, the pleasure of a meal prepared by someone who loves us, the relief of sleep and quiet. Since we’re in the south in the 1960’s there are no electronics to numb us. There is little driving around away from home to keep us from enjoying nature. There is the mostly the pink house, the honey house, the lawn, the forest, the river, the people, and the bees. Heaven.

The family's pink house kept reminding me of my beloved folk art by Handsome, especially this adorable pink raccoon. And for the record I feel like we live in heaven too. These nine acres have grown into quite a peaceful retreat. xoxo
The family’s pink house kept reminding me of my beloved folk art by Handsome, especially this adorable pink raccoon. And for the record I feel like we live in heaven too. These nine acres have grown into quite a peaceful retreat. xoxo

Oh, the wall. Something else has captivated me and you’ll probably hear more from me about it soon. One of the characters has a special coping mechanism for her difficult emotions. She has built a crude rock wall and visits it at times of overwhelming pain. She writes her pains (prayers) on little slips of paper and inserts them into the crevices of the wall. I just love this. It touches on what I know to be true about journaling, and it is so simple. Several people close to my heart are in crippling pain right now, and I thought of them over and over, imagining them writing their pain into a rock wall and feeling better.

Unbelievably, the book also touches on lunar cycles, a topic near and dear to me. I will be expounding on this soon, too!

As long as people have been on this earth, the moon has been a mystery to us. Think about it. She is strong enough to pull the oceans, and when she dies away, she always come back again. My mama used to tell me Our Lady lived on the moon and that I should dance when her face was bright and hibernate when it was dark.

Isn’t that beautiful? And consistent with what we know about energy flow and the moon?

Well friends, I could basically retell the entire book to you. There’s so much more to it, and obviously it’s made a deep impression on me, and I want you to read it, so long as that still small voice in your own heart is not warning you away at the moment. When you are primed for some life instruction, a smooth serving of poetry, and a powerful boost in your belief in Love and all the miracles it can perform, read The Secret Life of Bees. Then consider diving into the world of beekeeping yourself. I dare you to not be tempted after reading Kidd’s seductive descriptions of the art.

This little beauty is about to turn 17. Will you please help me send her Love every chance you get?
This little beauty is about to turn 17. Will you please help me send her Love every chance you get?

When a bee flies, a soul will rise.
~Sue Monk Kidd
XOXOXOXO

5 Comments
Filed Under: beekeeping, bees, book reviews, faith, family, Farm Life, memories, thinky stuff

fence repair & a naughty bison

July 28, 2014

Our little buffalo has nearly destroyed the outermost fence of the front field, which is a problem for so many reasons. Mostly, it makes the neighbors nervous. And this is definitely gun country, and nobody needs nervous neighbors.

I’m usually not a fan of alliteration, but this time it seemed unavoidable. Sorry.

So yesterday afternoon Handsome and I went out in the pickup with his bag of fence repair tools, a sledgehammer, and a heavy spool of barbed wire. We started working while Chunk-hi and Chanta were up in the shade shoveling back a big pile of soft hay.

Eventually the bachelors finished their hay and sidled their way over to us one at a time, just to see what Mom and Dad were up to. Chunk-hi was especially affectionate to me. He snuggled and snorted and let me scratch his fuzzy ears and steer his massive, carved-wood horns, all from the safety of the truck’s open tailgate. I swear, as long as my feet are not touching the ground, he never tries to get silly with me. If I am on a fence rail or sitting on the tailgate or whatever, he is gentle as a kitten. Plus, yesterday he was in a mellow frame of bison mind, clearly not the frame of mind he had been in when he did whatever he did to the fence. What the zoos might not tell you is that these creatures are extremely moody.

As I snuggled Chunk and accepted big, snotty kisses from his square leathery nose, Handsome continued pulling and hammering the swayed fence panels. He straightened and rewired and shored up yard after yard of double-thick perimeter fencing, incurring bloody gashes and bruised knuckles all the while. Besides playing with the animals, my jobs were tool delivery and moral support.

The noise of fence repair must have triggered Chunk’s guilty conscience, because soon he left my lullabies and face snuggles to wander away from the pickup and sneak up on Dad.

“You’ve got company,” I said to Handsome, although he is less in need of buffalo sneak-attack warnings than his wife.

Handsome glanced over his left shoulder, looked straight at Chunk, and said, “Yeah you did this didn’t you?”

I swear to you, gentle reader, this simple admonition stopped that buffalo in his guilty little tracks. It’s a tone of voice thing, just like with human kids. These animals read us so well, and they do want to please us. They also like to destroy fences, though, so you see the problem.

For the next half hour or so I played with Chanta, the big golden paint horse, and watched my husband and our five-year-old whirling dervish as the front field fence (ack! more alliteration!) was righted. Handsome was mostly crouched over, muscles hard and gleaming in the sun, back turned to Chunk-Hi who just stood there looking terribly guilty and awkward. The funniest part of the scene was listening to my husband muttering a long, even stream of reprimands at the 2,000 pound creature not six feet behind him.

“I can’t believe you did this again. Why? Why can’t you just play with the four-wheeler we gave you? Why do you have to do the one thing I tell you not to do? Do you know what will happen if you get out in the road? You want us to believe this was Chanta, but it has your name written aaaaallllllll over it.”

That last one was my favorite.

Also, have you ever tried not laughing while someone is really angry?

Well, Chunk just stood there and took it. He endured one scolding after another, occasionally swinging his fluffy head to look at me. He’d blink open those beautiful eyes until the whites shone in clean circles beneath his thick black lashes, like he was pleading with me, “But Mooooo-oooom…”

So I raised my voice with mock sternness, “I don’t know what to tell you, Chunk. You know better. Stop destroying the fence and you won’t be in trouble with your Dad.” What else could I say? Sometimes, no matter how cute the kids are, you have to act like a united parental front. That’s what the books say.

Chanta, meanwhile, stepped closer to me and reminded me I was supposed to be rubbing his horse neck and quietly singing him Beatles songs. He assured me of his innocence in this fence mangling episode, and I chose to believe him. Isn’t it also common for the “good kid” to swoop in for extra attention when a sibling is in trouble? Yes. Yes I believe so.

crazy eyes chunk april 2014

 

So the front field fence is now finished (dang it!) and the bachelors are back to their happy selves, eating hay and accepting cuddles. The neighbors can relax for a while at least. And my gorgeous husband will have a few days to let his knuckles and muscles recover.

Audience Participation:
Have you ever been caught speaking to your animals like they are naughty children? Have you ever had a pet who seemed hell-bent on senseless destruction? Can you think of a non-alliterative way to say “nobody needs nervous neighbors?” Or “front field fence is now finished?” Help me help myself.

Hug Your Buff. He’s Sorry.
XOXOXO

7 Comments
Filed Under: animals, daily life

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Hi! I'm Marie. Welcome to the Lazy W. xoxo

Hi! I’m Marie. This is the Lazy W.

A hobby farming, book reading, coffee drinking, romance having, miles running girl in Oklahoma. Soaking up the particular beauty of every day. Blogging on the side. Welcome to the Lazy W!

I Believe Strongly in the Power of Gratitude & Joy Seeking

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"Edit your life freely and ruthlessly. It's your masterpiece after all." ~Nathan W. Morris

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