It's Word of the Year time, people!!
Apparently, this is also one of the few times a year I can muster the discipline to sit down and write anything for this erratic, ever-diminishing blog. But the New Year is not the time to quibble over details or fixate on failures! Let's be hopeful, and optimistic, and believe that this is the year I will write at least five blog posts!
Or, at least one more than last year...which was one.
So, let's go for TWO!!!!
You can tell I am filled with all of the hopes and dreams that a new year and a NEW DECADE inevitably bring. I am positively Pollyanna!
This year my Word of the Year (henceforth to be known as WOTY), came to me well before the close of 2019. I wasn't even trying to think of one, and my train of thought was really somewhere entirely different, but I've found my WOTY can be tricky that way. It likes to sneak into my subconscious when I least suspect it.
It's like a ninja WOTY.
But let's back up for a minute...
My WOTY came to me on a day when I was feeling a bit melancholy (it happens) and was fixating a bit too much on unknowns, things that are a-changing, and just generally stuff I can't really control. That's always a good recipe for melancholy.
There are good things happening all around me. I'm watching my children, especially my older two, step into new opportunities and live their lives more and more independently. That's always been the goal, right? That whole "Preparing to Launch" thing means...one day they launch. And one of my main goals as a mom has always been to allow my kids to grow up free from feeling that they owe me a certain amount of time, attention, or gratitude. I want very much to have relationships with them for as long as I am on this earth, but I don't want relationships that are coerced or borne of out of guilt. I want them to be free and to know that I am always right here...their #1 fan.
I love all the ways they are forging their own paths and making their way in the world.
But I do miss them.
2020 also brings a milestone birthday for me.
Yep, all of us 1970 babies are turning 50 this year!
For the most part, I'm fine with every new age that comes along. I tend to not get too focused on birthdays, even the biggies. But this one carries some extra...stuff.
I rarely do parties or even much else in the way of celebrating my birthdays. (Although I do refuse to ever cook dinner on my birthday. That's my bare minimum.) I'm just not that into them. But the two big-ish parties I did have, for my 30th and my 40th, were both orchestrated, directed, and insisted upon by Tracy. Now SHE was a party girl, in the very best way.
There is no doubt in my mind she would not have allowed my 50th to pass quietly.
It is also always on my heart that our favorite party girl never had the chance to celebrate her 50th.
So, on this melancholy day, I was thinking about all these good things, hard things, things that have been, things that never will be, and all of the things I'm hoping for and wishing for... and it came to me...
It was so obvious.
My 2020 Word of the Year is....
CELEBRATE.
(And if you just heard Kool and the Gang start singing in your head, well, you are my people.)
Celebrate the little things.
Celebrate the big things.
Celebrate the everyday.
Celebrate the extraordinary.
Celebrate all we have been given.
Celebrate all that lies ahead.
Find something to celebrate every. single. day.
In many ways celebrating is both natural and foreign to me. I'm looking forward to celebrating in ways that come easily to me, and also stretching myself to celebrate those things that might challenge me.
I want to celebrate for myself and for others. I really want to celebrate for others.
2020 is the year I find my inner cheerleader (a cheerleader who can't even touch her toes and never in her life could do the splits). An inflexible but enthusiastic cheerleader!!
I'm still not going to have a big party for my 50th, but I do promise not to let the day pass without some sort of celebration, however small. It may not be entirely Tracy-approved, but she knows me and I believe she will understand.
Mostly, I intend to focus on the everyday and celebrating all the small, good things that make up a life.
An unexpected text message from a friend.
A meme that makes me laugh.
Sleeping in.
Good news shared by my adult children.
Couch and TV time with Annie.
Dog snuggles.
A husband who snowblows in winter, gathers leaves in the fall, and cuts the grass in the summer. And a million other ways he takes such good care of us.
Chips and salsa.
After school visits from my niece and nephew.
Sister time.
A good book.
Watching the cousins swimming at the lake.
Snowy winters and hot summers. (Although the snow gets harder and harder to celebrate the older I get...)
French fries.
Fresh baked cookies.
Champagne. (!!!) (TONIGHT!)
The list goes on and on.
So, off I go into this year of Celebration. If you have any good news to share in 2020, large or small, be sure to let me know and I will be the first to give you a big, "WOOHOO!!!!" (I can and will do the 'Woohoo", but do not expect splits or cartwheels. I am 50, after all. Almost.)
And, because no WOTY is complete without a VOTY:
Happy New Year, friends!
I celebrate each and every one of you!
XO
Three baby birds. One almost ready to fly. The countdown to launch starts now...
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Thursday, January 10, 2019
Soup and Bread
Last night I made a soup that I haven't made in over 3 years.
The last time I made this particular soup recipe was on Friday, December 4, 2015.
I know this not because I have some incredibly organized system for recording every meal I have ever made, but because I made that soup for a special lunch, with some special friends, that turned out to be even more special than we knew in the moment we were living it.
We had planned the lunch because for the first time in over 10+ years our little Dinner Group, which we had organized when our kids were still in preschool and some were not yet even born, was not going to have its annual Santa Party.
It was a tradition we all enjoyed and loved but that particular year life was getting in the way. The kids had gotten older and had wildly varied college Christmas break schedules. There were private health issues creating concern and complication. The kids still at home had winter sports tournaments and performances. For the first time in well over a decade we all reluctantly agreed to forego the party.
This doesn't mean it's the end. We can do it next year! We will figure it out!
And a million other assurances flew back and forth on that email thread.
But I really do think, looking back, we all did kind of know it was the end.
As the Brad Paisley song says, "There's a last time for everything."
(Because there is a country music song for every occasion.)
Not wanting to let the Christmas season pass without any opportunity for connection, we decided to meet for lunch, just as gals, early in December- before everything got TOO crazy.
Again, life got in the way. In the end it turned out that only 4 of the 6 of us could meet. Tracy, myself, and two of our old, dear friends.
It always kind of surprises me when I realize I have "old friends" in Seattle. Since I didn't grow up there, there were so many years I felt like everything and everyone was new. But I think it's fair to say that when you have been friends for 20 years, you now qualify as "old friends."
And, of course, Tracy and I were the very oldest and dearest of friends.
As we sat around the table someone suddenly noticed and remarked, "Well, this is kind of perfect. Here we are, the original four who decided to start the Dinner Group."
We started reminiscing about that day, many years before, when we were all together watching our kids play and Tracy floated this idea (of course it was Tracy's idea) of gathering together with our spouses, every couple of months, just to eat a meal and talk. That simple idea launched both many fun, lively dinner gatherings, and an annual Christmas party that our grown kids still talk about. From preschoolers to college graduates, we watched each other's kid's grow and talked about everything under the sun.
I don't remember anyone saying it this way, but I think the four of us sitting there felt like that lunch together validated something.
It was a marker of some sort in which we said silently to one another, Thank you.
Thank you for giving me connection and community and support during those busy, sleepless, uncertain years of raising little ones.
Thank you for making me laugh more times than I can count.
Thank you for bringing me food when I was sad.
Thank you for babysitting my kids.
Thank you for commiserating about sleep schedules, school choices, picky eaters, diet and exercise, discipline, homework battles, health concerns, family dynamics, fashion trends, and a million other life issues both mundane and significant.
(And, on a personal level, I hope my heart remembered to offer a special thank you to Tracy, because I'm pretty sure she came up with this idea in large part for my benefit. She was always working her magic to help me put down roots in a city that was not my own.)
The four of us ate a cozy meal of soup and bread on a cold, December day, celebrating what had been and perhaps quietly acknowledging the future would not look quite the same, even if we didn't yet know how or why or in what way.
One week later Tracy passed away.
That was the last meal she and I shared together. That was the last meal we as four old friends shared together. I guess you could say it was the last meal of our little Dinner Group.
And for over three years I have not been able to bring myself to make that soup again.
But last night I did.
It was just for my little family of three. It was cozy and warm and Annie declared it to be, "Sooooo good."
I made it giving thanks for good memories and good friends. I made it feeling grateful that even as life sometimes brings unexpected change and loss, I have known what it is to be held and lifted up by community and friends. I made it as a promise to myself to seek, nurture, and celebrate the important relationships in my life. I made it with hope that this year is going to bring a deeper sense of community and home. I made it to remember.
It made me happy to make that soup.
I think I will officially rename that soup in my own mind: Friendship Soup.
The last time I made this particular soup recipe was on Friday, December 4, 2015.
I know this not because I have some incredibly organized system for recording every meal I have ever made, but because I made that soup for a special lunch, with some special friends, that turned out to be even more special than we knew in the moment we were living it.
We had planned the lunch because for the first time in over 10+ years our little Dinner Group, which we had organized when our kids were still in preschool and some were not yet even born, was not going to have its annual Santa Party.
It was a tradition we all enjoyed and loved but that particular year life was getting in the way. The kids had gotten older and had wildly varied college Christmas break schedules. There were private health issues creating concern and complication. The kids still at home had winter sports tournaments and performances. For the first time in well over a decade we all reluctantly agreed to forego the party.
This doesn't mean it's the end. We can do it next year! We will figure it out!
And a million other assurances flew back and forth on that email thread.
But I really do think, looking back, we all did kind of know it was the end.
As the Brad Paisley song says, "There's a last time for everything."
(Because there is a country music song for every occasion.)
Not wanting to let the Christmas season pass without any opportunity for connection, we decided to meet for lunch, just as gals, early in December- before everything got TOO crazy.
Again, life got in the way. In the end it turned out that only 4 of the 6 of us could meet. Tracy, myself, and two of our old, dear friends.
It always kind of surprises me when I realize I have "old friends" in Seattle. Since I didn't grow up there, there were so many years I felt like everything and everyone was new. But I think it's fair to say that when you have been friends for 20 years, you now qualify as "old friends."
And, of course, Tracy and I were the very oldest and dearest of friends.
As we sat around the table someone suddenly noticed and remarked, "Well, this is kind of perfect. Here we are, the original four who decided to start the Dinner Group."
We started reminiscing about that day, many years before, when we were all together watching our kids play and Tracy floated this idea (of course it was Tracy's idea) of gathering together with our spouses, every couple of months, just to eat a meal and talk. That simple idea launched both many fun, lively dinner gatherings, and an annual Christmas party that our grown kids still talk about. From preschoolers to college graduates, we watched each other's kid's grow and talked about everything under the sun.
I don't remember anyone saying it this way, but I think the four of us sitting there felt like that lunch together validated something.
It was a marker of some sort in which we said silently to one another, Thank you.
Thank you for giving me connection and community and support during those busy, sleepless, uncertain years of raising little ones.
Thank you for making me laugh more times than I can count.
Thank you for bringing me food when I was sad.
Thank you for babysitting my kids.
Thank you for commiserating about sleep schedules, school choices, picky eaters, diet and exercise, discipline, homework battles, health concerns, family dynamics, fashion trends, and a million other life issues both mundane and significant.
(And, on a personal level, I hope my heart remembered to offer a special thank you to Tracy, because I'm pretty sure she came up with this idea in large part for my benefit. She was always working her magic to help me put down roots in a city that was not my own.)
The four of us ate a cozy meal of soup and bread on a cold, December day, celebrating what had been and perhaps quietly acknowledging the future would not look quite the same, even if we didn't yet know how or why or in what way.
One week later Tracy passed away.
That was the last meal she and I shared together. That was the last meal we as four old friends shared together. I guess you could say it was the last meal of our little Dinner Group.
And for over three years I have not been able to bring myself to make that soup again.
But last night I did.
It was just for my little family of three. It was cozy and warm and Annie declared it to be, "Sooooo good."
I made it giving thanks for good memories and good friends. I made it feeling grateful that even as life sometimes brings unexpected change and loss, I have known what it is to be held and lifted up by community and friends. I made it as a promise to myself to seek, nurture, and celebrate the important relationships in my life. I made it with hope that this year is going to bring a deeper sense of community and home. I made it to remember.
It made me happy to make that soup.
I think I will officially rename that soup in my own mind: Friendship Soup.
Easy.
Not at all fussy.
Simple ingredients.
Consistent.
Comfort with a capital C.
All it takes is a little time to get the flavors just right.
Just like old friends.
Thanks to all of mine. 😘
P.S.
Okay, here's the recipe. It's a total 1970's dump in the crockpot type recipe with the modern addition of quinoa. 😄 I have found it works better to prepare the quinoa separately and then add it to the soup. When it cooks with the soup it just keeps soaking up all the liquid and it gets really, really thick. If it is prepared on its own, even if you still then add it at the beginning and let it cook for 4 hours, it doesn't seem to do that. For SUPER convenience, I used the frozen Trader Joes quinoa packets. I cooked two in the microwave and then added them to the crockpot. Everything else, I did as written. Couldn't be easier.
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