Month: March 2020

Aunt Anna

Sunday blog. Well, I wrote it on Sunday–late. So I’m posting today. Life’s crazy these days.

In 1918, Hazel was pregnant. The family had just moved to Webster County; and she got Spanish flu. Then George got sick—and their children, Cecil, two-years-and-a-few-months, and Nina, just one. Both sets of grandparents had it too. The only person who could breathe clearly was George’s sister, my Aunt Anna. She nursed the sick with cold compresses on foreheads, teas and broths to drink, and maybe some chicken soup as they recovered, gathering cobs from the hog lots, then heating and cooking on a cob-burning cookstove. She took care of the babies—changed diapers, rocked them to sleep, and comforted them when they cried—and washed the laundry on a washboard in the washhouse out by the well. And managed the livestock—gathering eggs, milking, and separating cream, not to mention feeding and watering, the pigs and chickens by hand in buckets. Fortunately, the cows had a tank fed directly from the well by a windmill. Anna was just 16 that year.

As our hospitals become overwhelmed, we will probably need more Annas, because there simply aren’t enough beds or enough medical professionals. We’ll have to “shelter in place.” And with global warming continuing to worsen, this isn’t the only crisis we’re likely to face.

So do any of you have stories from the last global pandemic. Please share. We might need them now.

Safety In A Time of Worldwide Pandemic

And here’s my GirlieOnTheEdge six sentences on the blog prompt “Safety.”

  1. We’re conditioned to trust the U.S. government to keep us safe with ships and drones and bombs.
  2. We have soldiers and bases in nearly every country in the world (and they’re still bombing.)
  3. Our sanctions deny medical supplies and devices to Iran, Venezuela, and whatever other countries our administration doesn’t like.
  4. Now we have a threat we can’t resist with bombs and sanctions.
  5. While the government dithers, the U.S. has sustained 785 COVID19 deaths (as of five hours ago); worldwide 19.656 have died.
  6. Do you feel safe yet?

The Rabbit on the Roof

I haven’t worked for a while. A little depressed maybe; bored with my own company due to self isolation. Writing time, you know. I hope I’m back with new energy. time will tell. Anyway, here’s my contribution to this week’s Carrot Ranch 99-word challenge.

Sod house roofs were just more prairie

When my grandparents put in the septic tank back in 1951 when we got REA, they found the hewed rafters of Billy Arnold’s original soddy, wood that lay rotting in a jumble beneath generations of dirt and prairie on the level north of the house. When Grandma told me, I closed my eyes and pictured the blocks of root-frozen dirt and the roof, a growing prairie of grass and wildflowers. If I were the rabbit on the roof, would I vary my diet with some tough purple coneflower, or daisy fleabane? Perhaps I’d just stick to the succulent grasses.

“In Novels You Can Show the Best Side of People

“In the real world, villains too often succeed and heroes, too often die,” says writer James McBride — and that’s one of the great things about being novelist. “In novels you can move matters around … you get to show the best side of people. You get to show redemption, and forgiveness, and you get to show the parts of people that most of us never get to see.” I loved this quote from Scott Simon’s interview this morning on NPR. It articulates so well what I’m trying to do.