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6/25/2009

crossing off #26a

[iPhone]

Today I woke up with the need to bake something. Cookies, cupcakes, chocolate cake, Nutty Bread, whatever. This is due to five reasons that I can think of:

1. I have an intense sweet tooth.
2. I'm a baker at heart.
3. My friend, Robyn, hipped me to an amazing web site: Healthy Indulgences. Take a peek and drool with me.
4. I read Andi Ashworth's piece in the June 2009 issue of Comment magazine where she listed several of her mouthwatering recipes. For example, "Breakfast favourites include the Barefoot Contessa's Granola - I make pounds of it every year for our houseguests, along with Apple Cinnamon or Lemon Ginger muffins from Marion Cunningham's Breakfast Book." Her bio. for this piece reads, "Andi Ashworth with husband, Charlie Peacock, runs Art House America - a unique hospitality ministry for cultural creatives in Nashville, Tennessee." And, Art House is a renovated old Church. They are quite the all-around inspiring couple. Oh, and if you haven't read Andi's book, Real Love for Real Life: The Art and Work of Caring, you ought to do so ASAP. It's a must-read, one that I turn to again and again.
5. I recalled my poor, neglected to-do list, namely #26a: "Learn to make granola."

So this afternoon, I did just that while listening to a Timothy Keller sermon on marriage. I didn't have every single ingredient that the recipe called for, so I used what I had on hand including raw pepitas, raw macadamia nuts, and so on. Any nut/seed combo will do; I plan to switch it up each time I make granola.

I can hardly wait for breakfast tomorrow - granola and blueberries swimming in So Delicious unsweetened coconut milk beverage. At times like these, it's hard for me to grumble and complain about a restricted diet. In fact, as I mixed up these ingredients, I smiled and thanked God for the bounty in our fridge and pantry, and for reuniting me with granola - truly, one of my very favorite foods.

Cinnamon-Peanut Butter Granola (Grain-Free)
[adapted from Lauren's Peanut Butter Granola recipe]

Makes two heaping cups.

Ingredients:

1/4 cup freshly ground peanut butter
1/4 cup coconut oil (or butter)
3 tablespoons Truvia (4 1/2 packets - I used this conversion chart)
1/4 teaspoon SweetLeaf clear liquid stevia
2-3 egg whites
A generous pinch of Celtic sea salt
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon, or to taste
1 tablespoon flax meal
2 tablespoons almond flour
1 tablespoon sunflower seeds
1/4 cup raw pepitas (pumpkin seeds)
1/4 cup raw macadamia nuts, chopped
1/4 cup cashews, chopped
1/2 cup almonds, chopped
1/2 cup walnuts, chopped
1/2 cup unsweetened coconut, shredded

Preparation:

Preheat oven to 300 degrees.

Melt coconut oil (or butter) with peanut butter in a small saucepan on the stove - low-medium heat - until liquefied. Pour into a bowl. Whisk Truvia, liquid stevia, egg whites, sea salt, and cinnamon into the peanut butter mixture. Mix the dry ingredients together and stir in the wet ingredients, using your hands to coat the nut and seed blend. Spread the mixture over a parchment paper-lined cookie sheet. Bake for 45-55 minutes, occasionally stirring the mixture. Remove from the oven and spread over a paper towel set on a baking rack. The granola will continue to dry out as the moisture evaporates. Store in an airtight container for up to a week, or freeze.

6/23/2009

five senses tuesday

See.
-We loved watching The Band's Visit last night - such a great film.
-Two super cute little French-speaking boys in the elevator at the doctor's office.
-New photographs hanging on the brick walls of Antidote Coffee. If I was smart, I'd have jotted down the local photographer's name.
-An antique highchair behind our table. I took it as a sign.
-I read three chapters of If You Want to Write (and played on my iPhone).




Hear.
-Doug Burr's CD, The Shawl, in the car . . .
- . . . as well as Over the Rhine's The Trumpet Child.
-OK, unknown music playing overhead in Antidote.
-An "interesting" jingle set to the music of "La Bamba" on a Middle Eastern TV commercial.
-One wretched song after another in Walgreen's, such as Wilson Phillips.

Taste.
-I'm still thinking about the big mugga rooibos vanilla tea I made last night - extra sweet with a splash of almond milk.
-The last of the organic strawberries with breakfast. Those went fast.
-Iced chicory coffee, a nod to my Louisiana relatives.
-Apricot rooibos tea to-go.
-A Lebanese feast at Cedar's: chicken shawarma, salad, and hummus for me.




Smell.
-Johnny's cappuccino.
-My apricot tea was also very aromatherapeutic.
-That glorious old-book smell in Kaboom Books.
-Cedar's is one very aromatic restaurant, making us very impatient as we waited for our meal.
-A little Japanese incense to complement Evening Prayer.


Feel.
-If you have to wake up early to go to the doctor, this is the way to redeem the day.
-Grateful that the appointment was for nothing serious, though necessary. I love natural remedies, but doctors are blessings, too.
-My skin flushing a bit in the Houston heat.
-A/C, sweet A/C, inside of buildings, the car, and our house.
-Harley purring in my lap here; he's happy we're home. Milo is, too - he and Johnny took a nap together.

6/16/2009

tornadoes, books, and art - oh, my

I signed up for the Trinity Arts Conference for a few reasons: I love art, I want to improve as a writer, and it's high time to overcome anxiety. During the past two years of health issues and slow healing, I not only became (more of) a homebody, but I also developed a phobia of getting out and about all by myself. I would drive around our part of the city, but otherwise, Johnny did the driving. There were times when his help was valid - like when I was too dizzy to drive - and of course married folks should spend time together, but somewhere along the way I convinced myself that I couldn't travel alone. Something catastrophic would happen. I'd be too tired. Too weak. Really, my imagination did acrobatics in the fear department. Yet the lineup for the conference was a great motivator to shake my phobic behavior: Gregory Wolfe, Jeffrey Overstreet, Mary Kenagy Mitchell, Sedrick Huckaby, and Doug Burr. The theme of the conference piqued my interest as well: "The Gift of the Unknown."

Johnny helped me load up the silver Monte Carlo, a leather Cross and tiny black djembe hanging from the rearview mirror. I placed a Pyrex dish of cookies in the passenger seat. The drive through Texan countryside was sunshiny and blue. The light slanted over farmland like something out of a movie. I listened to Fanfarlo and a Timothy Keller sermon on marriage. I stopped for tea in Ennis, TX. But as I drove into Dallas, I knew my idyll had ended. Leaves were swirling upward in the shape of small cones and the sky was a greenish-purple, vomitous hue. I tried to think positive, but as I missed an exit and meandered through skyscrapers downtown, I heard loud sirens. The sirens repeated. My stomach sank into the pit of my soul and I thought, "Uh, oh. Oh, NO. A Texas tornado."

My phone rang, my Dad calling. He said, "I don't want you to come any farther north. It looks horrible out here. Electric wires are snapping and flashing like fireworks. You need to find shelter quickly." When I asked if he could make it home safely, he said, "I hope so." Not really the answer I wanted to hear.

It should not surprise you that the shelter I conjured was a bookstore - a very large Half Price Books on NW Highway. Bookstores have always been havens to me, so if I had to wait out a tornado, a big bookstore was where I wanted to be. Of course, my nerves were so frazzled that I couldn't remember where the store was to save my life. With Johnny's help, I finally made it to the bookstore and ran inside. The wind ruined my umbrella and I got drenched, but I was inside, thank God. I promptly ordered chamomile tea (I really needed Merlot), checked on my Dad (he was OK), and browsed beloved old books.

I found the neatest little book with black & white woodcut illustrations: A Cafecito Story by Julia Alvarez. How could I pass up a book with the subtitle, "A story of love, coffee, birds, and hope"? I also found a book for me and my husband to share: The Power of Prayer in a Believer's Life by Charles Spurgeon. After the tornado finally scooted away from the Dallas area, I got back in the car, purchased a few groceries at Whole Foods, and wearily stumbled into my parents' cozy house.

All of that storm-related stress was worth it, though. I hugged my parents necks, two of my favorite people. I petted their sweet, feisty dogs: Jake and Kujeaux. And my Mom spoiled me yet again with a bag o' goodies including a tea mug, notepads decorated with birds, and so on, but best of all, she gave me two blue & white pillowcases hand-sewn by my grandmother, Nina, in the 1950's. I will use them sparingly, and every time I do, I'll think of how Nina rubbed by back - one hundred slow strokes with her long fingernails 'til I drifted off to sleep.

OK, at this point I'd planned on writing a lengthy, poetic description of each day of the conference. But I have a Curator article due this week, and there was almost too much creative goodness to absorb and process by today. Everyone who spoke uttered humor and wisdom. I took notes furiously. Slowly, but surely, I relaxed in a crowd of strangers, introduced myself to a few folks, and just took in the art and intellectual stimulation. I'm so glad I set out for the unknown because I received many gifts:

-The beauty of the University of Dallas campus. I mean, rabbits were hopping around. Seriously. Dallas was h-o-t like my native Houston, but the post-storm weather produced some jaw-dropping skies. The conference was held in the Haggarty Arts Center, a long modern building with a backdrop of deep, tall trees. This iPhone photo doesn't do the beauty justice, but the scenery was very meditative and peaceful:

[click to see larger]

-Something painter Kim Alexander said on the first night: "You can know you are here because we prayed for you. Be who you are - you fit."

-Lunch with Christine at Jason's Deli. However, we almost didn't find the restaurant - not even with my handy iPhone - because Jason placed the sign for his deli across the street. Ahem.

[click to see larger]

-I started purchasing loot from the Eighth Day Books tables the very first night, and on the last day, I tucked these into my luggage:

* If You Want to Write by Brenda Ueland. I've pored over Eighth Day Books' (free) catalogs for years wanting this book. It spoke to me from the table, "Buy me." So I did.

* A handmade Post-a-Quote card with a quote I simply could not pass up:

"Stand at the brink of the abyss of despair, and when you can see that you cannot bear it anymore, draw back a little, and have a cup of tea."
[-Elder Sophrony of Essex]

* A lovely Transfiguration icon for Johnny, and also for our wall of icons in the living room.

* Doug Burr's CD of Psalms set to folk/alt-country tunes - The Shawl. The conference staff opened up Doug's concert to our friends and family, too, so my pal Jenny joined me on Saturday night. She geeked up over the banjo and I geeked up over pedal steel. That's just how we are.

* Painter Sedrick Huckaby's program to his exhibition Big Momma's House. His slide show presentation was beautiful - image after image of his grandmother, her room, her hats, and her quilts. During the last slide of her empty bed, he played a tape recording of his grandmother singing a favorite hymn. Huckaby's work is full of the South, warmth, rich color, and intricate composition. I wish my photography could do his paintings justice, but these will have to do:

[click to see larger]

[click to see larger]

[click to see larger]

Also, Sedrick has a daughter named Halle-Lujah Huckaby. Is that a perfect name or what? They call her Halle; his grandmother's name was Halle, too.

-Gregory Wolfe's plenary and closing addresses - "The Gift of the Unknown" and "Inexhaustible Mystery." One of my favorite quotes by him was "Poetry is art in real time." He read a lot of Scott Cairns's poetry as well. Everything Gregory Wolfe said was remarkable, just like his amazing editorial essays in each issue of Image.

-Panel discussions with all of the speakers - "Mystery . . . It Might Not Be What You Think" and "Wrestling with the Angel." Please tell me these conversations were recorded and will be for sale. Please?

-Mary Kenagy Mitchell read her brilliant short story one night, and the next morning she gave a great talk entitled "You Should Expect to Fail: Humility and Humiliation." That talk was so great that it ought to be published. Oh, and somewhere between her short story and talk, I decided that yes, I do want to write fiction. I've thought this many a time, but Mary said something to the effect of, "Creating people is very exhilarating." A voice resonated inside of me in agreement. It's funny how my desire to form people on pages was birthed during this time of waiting for God to create little people in my womb.

-Jeffrey Overstreet's plenary - "A Little Willingness to See" - was out of this world. He gave a brief tour of his personal history with film based on his book Through a Screen Darkly (on my to-read list). His talk was funny, insightful, moving, and very wise. He incorporated Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Ephesians 5:11, Acts 17, the beauty of trees and sky, and two of my favorite quotes (among many other things):

"If we are to love our neighbors, before doing anything else we must see our neighbors. With our imagination as well as our eyes, that is to say like artists . . ."
[-Frederick Buechner]

"Wherever you turn your eyes the world can shine like transfiguration. You don't have to bring a thing to it except a little willingness to see. Only, who could have the courage to see it?"
[-Marilynne Robinson]

As much as I loved the entire conference, Jeffrey Overstreet's talk was my favorite. I keep mulling over things he said.

-I should say here that I drove back to my parents' house during the workshops each afternoon. I didn't realize we needed to bring work with us for the writing workshops - I thought they were lectures on writing. DUH, I know. But it worked out well. I was pret-ty weary and it helped to rest before the evening speakers. Next year, I will be healthier, and I'll bring my fiction (or creative nonfiction) for critique.

-Good food and conversation and laughter with my parents at Abeulo's (chicken fajitas, charro beans, pico de gallo, and fresh avocado) and La Madeleine (mega custom omelette with bacon, red bell pepper, and spinach, and cinnamon apple tea). My Dad, the dogs, and I took a walk to the lake around the corner from their house. And there was an afternoon where I really thought my healing body couldn't go on. Not even art enticed me. But my sweet Mom held my face in her soft hands, smiled her pretty smile, and prayed for me. She says she prays simply, but I say she prays perfectly - full of peace, love, and wisdom.

-On my way out of Dallas, I stopped at Fat Straws for a large iced vanilla berry truffle rooibos tea. They even added Truvia which I had in my purse. Yum-my.

-More Fanfarlo and Tim Keller on the way back to Houston. At one point, I was so tired that I could barely keep my eyes open. I blared Radiohead until I found a Starbucks in Huntsville. I gulped down that Americano - a very rehumanizing beverage - and played Pandora's Wilco radio. The two combined with prayer got me home safely. As I veered around the Sam Houston tollway, golden-pink evening light fused through parallel electric wires and tall, steel angels ushered me home. I had a fun, forever-inspiring week, but home is where Johnny is.

I highly recommend Trinity Arts Conference, even if you live elsewhere than Texas. Come on down in the summer of 2010 - I'll be there to say hi.

6/09/2009

love, tragedy, transcendence, and a red balloon

[image courtesy of Janus Films - click to see it larger]

My first article for Wunderkammer magazine is up today: a review of the classic short film, The Red Balloon. The film editor gave me 800 words which was a nice little challenge for my verbose self. But I'm grateful - I stumbled upon Wunderkammer in my internet adventures not too long ago, and I've been an avid reader ever since. I really like their whole vibe and what they are doing, so it's an honor to be published.

Also, if you're curious, here's a link to the unofficial Grizzly Bear video I mentioned in my review. It's a brilliant piece of art, but be warned: the video does contain a few Red Balloon spoilers.

6/08/2009

joe pug & the wrestler

I have a mountain o' laundry to do before I can pack and leave town on Wednesday for the Trinity Arts Conference in Dallas. Any household chore goes best with great music, so today, it's Joe Pug's EP, Nation of Heat (hat tip to Sandra McCracken on Facebook). I mean, look at the lyrics to "Hymn #101":

Yeah, I’ve come to know the wish list of my father
I’ve come to know the shipwrecks where he wished
I’ve come to wish aloud among the overdressed crowd
Come to witness now the sinking of the ship
Throwing pennies from the sea top next to it
And I’ve come to roam the forest past the village
With a dozen lazy horses in my cart
I’ve come here to get high,
To do more than just get by.
I’ve come to test the timber of my heart
Oh, I’ve come to test the timber of my heart
And I’ve come to be untroubled in my seeking
And I’ve come to see that nothing is for naught
I’ve come to reach out blind
to reach forward and behind
For the more I seek the more I’m sought
Yea, the more I seek the more I’m sought.

And I’ve come to meet the sheriff and his posse
To offer him the broadside of my jaw
I’ve come here to get broke
Then maybe bum a smoke
We’ll go drinking two towns over after all
Oh, we’ll go drinking two towns over after all.

And I’ve come to meet the legendary takers
I’ve only come to ask them for a lot
Oh they say I come with less
than I should rightfully posses
I say the more I buy the more I’m bought
And the more I’m bought the less I cost
And I’ve come to take their servants and their surplus
And I’ve come to take their raincoats and their speed
I’ve come to get my fill
To ransack and spill
I’ve come to take the harvest for the seed
I’ve come to take the harvest for the seed

And I’ve come to know the manger that you sleep in
I’ve come to be the stranger that you keep
I’ve come from down the road
And my footsteps never slowed
Before we met, I knew we’d meet
Before we met, I knew we’d meet

And I’ve come here to ignore your cries and heartaches
I’ve come to closely listen to you sing
I’ve come here to insist
That I leave here with a kiss
I‘ve come to say exactly what I mean
and I mean so many things.

And you’ve come to know me stubborn as a butcher
and you’ve come to know me thankless as a guest
will you recognize my face when God's awful grace
strips me of my jacket and my vest
and reveals all the treasure in my chest.


I'm also listening to The Boss's song, "The Wrestler"; we watched the movie of the same name last night. 'Twas so sad, but a good film. I love great books, records, movies, paintings . . . really, any art infused with truth, goodness, and beauty. It helps me go on.

Now onto that laundry, baking for road-snacks, and loading up my iPod nano with good tunes.

6/06/2009

happy saturday

Ahem. More photos, but I am pondering a wordier blog entry; it involves the female perception of beauty, especially this female's perception. I even have another word-centric blog brewing, but that involves the purchase of two rocking chairs. Stay tuned.

Today was a great Saturday. I finished writing an article on The Red Balloon.

[snapped with my iPhone]

I chilled out in the living room and hung the Paris Crush print on my inspiration wire. Those macaroon colors are so pretty. I also took a few photos with a real camera vs. the iPhone. Nothing spectacular, but it felt right to play with the camera and tripod again.

Harley chilled in the living room, too.

Then Johnny and I went on a long, sweaty walk around the 'hood. I spied the cutest swing in a neighbor's front yard. I smelled honeysuckle and gardenia in a different neighbor's backyard as we circled the walking trail. I am telling you, as of right now, long walks are hard work for my healing body, but I love that tired feeling after any good work. God made us for good works. And while I appreciate sweat a lot more than I used to - bye, bye toxins - I'm so thankful that God created me in an age with A/C. And that He created hibiscus flowers & mint as well as the genius who conjured up hibiscus mint iced tea.

[snapped with my iPhone]

[snapped with my iPhone]

Tonight we're gonna watch The Wrestler a recorded episode of Conan's Tonight Show and get the heck to bed because Sabbath mornings come early. I'm also trying to talk Johnny into hanging a string of small rice paper lanterns & white lights above the fireplace, and a "Mandarin Bloom" perpetual wall calendar near the couch (all were kind gifts from Robyn). He's not sold on the idea yet, so we shall see.

Oh, and out of nowhere, I decided on a baby nursery wall color. Johnny approved. The ideas that come to me while I am clearly not pregnant make me laugh.

6/05/2009

tell me our story

Good morning, y'all. I'm waking up with PG Tips here, how about you? I've got a full day of writing to do this pretty Friday, but before I get started, here's my latest Curator article: "Tell Me Our Story."

I wrote about one of my all-time favorite movies, The Fall. To tell you the truth, I'm a bit fanatical about it. Read my piece, if you will, see the film, and let me know what you think. I bet you've never seen anything like it.

6/01/2009

easy on the eyes

Only visuals today, but oh my, they're amazing:

[Paris Crush by Simply Photo]

[Cash by C.K. Sample III]

[ABC of Birds by Geninne]

. . . and a must-read article about Flannery O'Connor: "The Way of Distortion" by Christopher Benfey.

Happy June!

* Click the 1st and 3rd images to see 'em larger.