Pumpkins and Halloween

Pumpkins

Pumpkins remind of the holidays. Halloween is rapidly approaching!

Saturday afternoon, I attended a local meeting of SCBWI. I enjoyed making new friends and the published authors’ presentations. The only problem I had was trying to ignore a nagging fibromyalgia pain of 5-6 on the pain scale. This pain made me forget to bring my camera and a few items, so I apologize for not posting pictures of the attendees. Instead my readers get treated to a picture of delightful pumpkins; they serve as decorations for the upcoming holidays and as baking ingredients. Oh! I can already taste a pumpkin muffin and pie.

A Full Moon

Full Moon Peering Through Branches

I’ve always enjoyed looking at the moon in all its various forms. Why? The moon reminds me of childhood days when my mother and her children (two brothers and two sisters) visited her family in Saucillo, Chihuahua, Mexico. Uncles, aunts, and cousins always gathered at Grandma’s when we visited. Always surrounded by people, I never felt lonely. Grandma greeted relatives with breakfast made from fresh flour tortillas, freshly hatched eggs, beans, coffee, and milk for the children. (We were also treated to a homemade lunch.) Although Grandma didn’t want help because we were guests; we always helped with chores.

By late afternoon, relatives discussed at whose place we (my mother and her children) were going to spend the night. We ended up separating and staying at different houses, but we always gathered at Grandma’s for supper; she loved to entertain. And although she didn’t want any help, her guests always helped clean up in the kitchen. When we finished, we went outside to enjoy the cool evenings. We sang Mexican songs and chatted. We usually sat in folding chairs on Grandma’s dirt sidewalk flanked by a two-foot wide canal that conducted water to the river. The streets in most of Saucillo, including the one in front of my grandmother’s house, were unpaved and rutted. After a torrential downpour, which didn’t happen very often, we walked on muddied streets, but that didn’t bother us, especially me. I seldom wore shoes. I loved to feel the ground, pebbles, and wade in the river which was not far away. This behavior prompted one of my cousins to tease me. He called me a Tarahumara because these Indians never wore shoes.

Animated conversation and laughter filled our nights. My relatives had a lot of interesting stories to share; some were quite comical. Eventually, Grandma would declare that it was getting late so the group disbanded. Mom stayed with her mother. But her children separated and ended up at beloved aunt’s houses. We didn’t need anything to light our way to their homes. The moon graciously took care of that. The following day, we met at Grandma’s for a late brunch. Even though we’d already had breakfast, she insisted on feeding us. The day advanced. Eventually nighttime arrived, and so did the full moon. Now, every time I look at the moon and its various shapes, I remember those pleasant unforgettable times that I spent with my family when I was growing up.

St. Francis of Assisi Feast Day

I love this statue of St. Francis, and enjoy seeing it every day. I hope you like it, too. I pray to him every day, and ask Him to take care of my pets.

St. Francis of Assisi

Today, October 4, 2019, is St Francis of Assisi’s feast day. I am so fortunate to be alive to celebrate his feast day. St. Francis is the patron saint of animals and the environment. Many churches and religious communities celebrate his life, and priests also bless people’s pets. (If you can’t take your pet to be blessed, it is okay to take a photograph of your beloved pet or pets to the priest. He will bless the photo and pray for your pets. My husband and I don’t take our foxhound, Twister, for the “blessing of the animals” ceremony because he would get too excited and might scare people and their pets. Twister’s a very nice dog, though. We’re just being cautious. Our rescue kitty, Mr. Martin, would be traumatized by the crowds. So we don’t take him, either)

I’ve had the following prayer for a long time, and say it every day. It helps me during difficult times.

Prayer of St. Francis of Assisi

Lord, make me an instrument of your peace; where there is hatred, let me sow love; where there is injury, pardon; where there is doubt, faith; where there is despair, hope; where there is darkness, light; where there is sadness, joy.

O Divine Master, grant that I may not so much seek to be consoled as to console; to be understood as to understand; to be loved as to love. For it is in giving that we receive. It is in pardoning that we are pardoned. It is in dying that we are born to eternal life.