Monthly Archives: December 2025

Greeting 2026 with a Smile

Sent to me by my good friend, Marsha

Leave a comment

Filed under Funny Signs - Humor

Wonderful Watercolors

“Joyful Day, Water Over Mountain” – Marjorie Glick – outdoorpainter.com

“Our memories, the way we tend to experience them, are sort of fuzzy around the edges, like a watercolor that has bled into the past and is not totally clear.” ~ Lisa Joy

Steve Mitchell – Strathmoreartist.com

“Part of why I like watercolor is that mistakes are visible, and you can’t really repair much. It has to look easy. When it comes out, it looks easy, but to get to that point takes a lot of doing.” ~ Chris Raschka

“Path Conservatory Garden Central Park” – Beverly Brown – fineartamerica.com

“When I was nine, my great grandfather, a landscape painter, taught me to mix colors. With his strong hand surrounding my small one, he guided the brush until a calla lily appeared as if by magic on a page of textured watercolor paper.” ~ Susan Vreeland

“Imaginary Landscape” – Esperoart.com – Watercolor with Chris

“Being creative is my idea of heaven. I’m just incredibly fortunate that I can do it in artwork. Watercolor is what I started out with. What I love about watercolor is that a lot of happy accidents occur.” ~ Jane Seymour

Artsydee – Pinterest

“Because watercolor actually moves on the paper, it is the most active of all mediums, almost a performance art.” ~ Nita Engle

Leave a comment

Filed under Watercolors I Love

2026!

pngtree

I went to sleep early last night, simply too sleepy to stay awake. Right at midnight the sound of explosions woke me up. I looked out my bedroom window to see the most glorious display of fireworks I have EVER seen. I was up high enough that even though the fireworks were being set off behind buildings, I felt like I was INSIDE the colors streaking everywhere, sparkling, one after the other for a full 5 minutes. My heart was in my throat by the end of this, SO happy to be awakened for such a great reason! 🥳 🎆

In Arkansas, we would have this mailbox decoration up to welcome the new year. Calvin & Hobbes were always one of our favorites.

Whether you’ve already celebrated, or will celebrate tonight, I wish you a very Happy New Year. I hope that this year brings you wonderful things, surrounds you with lots and lots of love, and brings a smile to your face as you do things you love.

6 Comments

Filed under holidays, Seasons/Holidays in Chiang Mai, Thailanf

Awesome Photos

Tracy Chrest – Substack – @tracychrest989204

“If man could be crossed with the cat it would improve man, but it would deteriorate the cat.” – Mark Twain

@jeffvandermeer.bsky.social

“Live bold, without fear. This is life amongst the deer.”
― Katelyn S. Bolds

Randy Wei – @randyweiphoto.bsky.social

“The hawk is aerial brother of the wave which he sails over and surveys, those his perfect air-inflated wings answering to the elemental unfledged pinions of the sea.”
– Henry David Thoreau

Mike Saunders – @hardwaterhacker.bsky.social

“In the eyes of an owl, we find the depth of wisdom.” — Unknown

2 Comments

Filed under Awe-Inspiring Photography

New Year’s Eve in Chiang Mai 2025

Bangkokair.com

We visited my husband, Harvey, in the nursing home this morning. It was Khun Yuwaret’s (Harvey’s nurse’s) last day, as she is going home to be with her family. We are really going to miss her. She has treated Harvey like he was her dad, and you can’t get better care than that. I got some pics, and the visit was a good one. When I told him I loved him, he said, “I reciprocate.” 🤣

We live on a busy street in Chiang Mai, and the celebrating may be loud and boisterous tonight. Harvey asked if there would be fireworks. I hadn’t thought of that, so I thanked him for giving me something to look forward to. Brian and I have no interest in getting out in the midst of young, drinking revelers, but I love fireworks. We will get up early tomorrow, as we do every morning, to do our walking, celebrating the beginning of a brand, spanking new year, full of possibilities.

Chiang Mai fireworks will probably originate from the river that runs through the old, original center of the city. That will make them much safer. I hope they will start as soon as it gets dark!

This was sent to me by my good friend, Nora. I think it’s beautiful.

Happy New Year, whether you’re celebrating tonight or tomorrow. Wishing you a joyous year full of love and gratitude.

2 Comments

Filed under holidays, Seasons/Holidays in Chiang Mai, Thailanf

Getting the Lard Off Report Dec. 2025

Pinterest

Today is New Year’s Eve here in Thailand – time to account for my efforts to lose the lard.

For me, this finally started about two years ago. I had developed lots of health issues, plus my husband was diagnosed with Type II diabetes (he never has admitted this – only says he ‘has a sugar problem‘.) Anyway, it was time for us to try to get serious about changing our ways.

We adopted a low carb diet plan. I got lots of help from Suzanne Ryan, who wrote “Simply Keto” a diet plan with recipes. She also has a blog called, “Keto Karma.”

Last February we got another wake up call – my husband and I both getting Type A Flu, his with pneumonia and mine with bronchitis and low blood oxygen. I went to the ER, died twice Feb. 11th, and was given a second chance at life with a temporary, then permanent pacemaker.

We were too sick to care for each other, so I wrote our son, who lives in
Thailand. He dropped everything, flew 24 hours to get to our home, nursed us back to health and convinced us to sell everything and move to Thailand to be close to him.

We moved to Thailand the last day of March, moving into an air bnb in the same building as our son. Two weeks later my husband had a stroke and is now in a nursing home. I have a condo now in the same building as our son.

I have been using my second chance at life to live it to the fullest, incorporating joy wherever possible. A visit to a doctor here showed blood pressure in the danger zone. I was told to lose weight, exercise, and was put on high blood pressure medication.

REPORT:

To date I have lost 86.6 pounds and 83 inches. I’m in the healthy range on the BMI charts for the first time I can remember. The healthy range for a 5’4″ female is 108-132. I started at 205. I’m at 118.3 this morning. My goal is 115-110, TBD.

I am eating breakfast and dinner, with a coffee or chocolate drink as a snack some afternoons, watching my portions. I’m not as strict on the low carb, being in Thailand where carbs are king, plus “Western food” being more expensive by far.

I am walking a mile on the treadmill at the gym every morning. I used to hang onto the bars for dear life, but now am able to walk without holding on at all. (My brain and body need to be retrained on balance since my experience at the hospital, and my inner ears are still causing problems when I’m walking and turn my head to either side.) I am improving, though, so I’m grateful.

I’m doing old lady yoga stretches one day – along with special exercises suggested by my son, Brian, and the doctor – and I’m trying to do a plank for as long as possible; alternating with arm exercises with water bottles the next day; plus Internet balance exercises daily and dancing like a nut to some great music. (I wear headphones so I don’t bother the neighbors.)

So that’s the report. I’m hopeful that in 2026 I’ll reach my final weight loss goal and can switch to maintenance, plus add to, or modify the exercise program I’m following now to gain stamina, strength, and flexibility.

Onward and downward!

13 Comments

Filed under getting the lard off

Memes

Memes provided via “Idiots in Public Places” on Facebook – via Nikita Manot & Dominyka Proskenaite of BoredPanda.com

Leave a comment

Filed under Funny Signs - Humor

“70”

This is a re-post of an article written by Larry Edge of Substack. I related to it so many times that I asked him for permission to share it here with you.

Larry Edge – @ldedge on Substack

70

When I turned 70, I sat in my favorite chair, looked back at my life, and whispered to myself,

“So… this is the beginning of the final stretch.”

And slowly, the truths I had avoided all my life began to surface.

Kids? They’re busy writing their own story.

Health? Slips away faster than sand through open fingers.

The government? Just headlines, promises, and numbers that never change your daily reality.

Aging doesn’t hurt your body first — it hurts your illusions.

So I sat down with myself and carved out a handful of bitter but necessary truths.

Kids don’t save you from loneliness

Children grow, life pulls them in every direction, and you become a memory they visit when time allows.

You smile… and yet something inside you remains strangely hollow.

Kids bring joy — but they are not a shield against loneliness.

Health is not forever

One day, the outings you once jumped into with enthusiasm feel like a marathon.

You realize health was never a background character —

it was the main pillar holding your life steady.

Retirement and money

Retirement is not a reward — it’s a reality check.

Depending on the system is like standing on thin ice.

Bills grow, needs grow, prices grow… but support doesn’t.

So I rebuilt my life on new rules — honest, sharp, practical rules for living with dignity.

Rule 1: Money is more reliable than anything else.

Love your kids, cherish them —

but don’t make them your retirement plan.

Save for yourself.

Even small savings create big freedom.

Financial independence is dignity.

Rule 2: Your health is your real job

Nothing else matters if your body refuses to cooperate.

Move. Walk. Stretch.

Guard your sleep like treasure.

Eat cleaner. Reduce the poison disguised as sugar and salt.

Illness doesn’t discriminate,

but it respects those who take responsibility for themselves.

Rule 3: Create your own joy

Waiting for others to make you happy is the fastest way to heartbreak.

So you learn to enjoy the small things —

a peaceful breakfast, a good book, music that warms the soul.

When you know how to make yourself happy, loneliness loses its power.

Rule 4: Aging is not an excuse to become helpless

Some people turn aging into a performance of complaints. And slowly, even those who love them start stepping away.

Strength is attractive.

Resilience is magnetic.

People respect the ones who stay capable, not the ones who surrender.

So I rebuilt my life on new rules — honest, sharp, practical rules for living with dignity.

Rule 5: Let go of the past

The good old days were beautiful — yes.

But they’re gone, and there is no return ticket.

Clinging to the past steals the present.

Life today may look different, but it still holds moments worth living.

Rule 6: Protect your peace like it’s your property

Not every argument needs your voice.

Not every insult needs your response.

Not every relative deserves access to your emotions.

Peace is expensive.

Protect it from drama, negativity, and draining people —

even if they’re your close ones.

Rule 7: Keep learning something — anything

The day you stop learning is the day you start aging.

A new recipe, a new word, a new app, a new hobby —

your brain needs movement just like your body does.

Learning keeps you young.

Stagnation makes you old.

Strength and freedom still belong to you

Aging is an exam no one can take for you.

You can adapt, rebuild, and rise stronger…

or sit back, complain, and wait for someone to rescue you.

And if ….

No one comes to rescue you ….

Stand up for yourself …

Because  you still can..

And that single truth is enough to transform the rest of your life.

Unknown author

And there are horses. You can always find a horse that needs you as much as you need them. Ruella Yates

Credit: Tammy Stedman

6 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Tuesday 12-30-2025

These are my two latest sketch paintings.

____________________

Tina Ann

I didn’t feel well this morning, so I opted out of our walking and also skipped breakfast. I finally managed to get warm enough putting a sweatshirt over my clothes, plus the throw Brian gave me, and later, when the sun came up, sitting in the sunshine beside my window. I’m feeling functional now, so all is good. I’ll just rest and take it easy today, so I’ll be in fighting form again tomorrow. 💪🏻

_____________________

I would love to be a fly on the wall when my housekeeper, Khun Nong, comes in and sees my finished dolphins puzzle Friday. She very carefully cleans around my puzzle mess each week. I hope she smiles when she sees the finished product. 🧩. Brian came and took pics to send to the glass printer, so another treasure will go on my signature shelf in my living area. Friday after Khun Nong finishes, I’ll bag up the dolphins puzzle carefully and donate it. I’ll take out my new turtle puzzle – cleaning the table thoroughly first – and will start a NEW mess!

__________________________

Xmas 2025 – Gift from Server

My favorite server at the cafe where we spend time while Khun Nong is cleaning waved me over to show me a note written in Thai – then translated to English via his phone – apologizing that his gift was so small. I showed him I was USING the cute pouch he gave me, with the stuffed handmade Christmas tree attachment, to hold my sketching supplies. I thanked him again. What a nice young man he is!

________________________

My son checked on me a while ago, wanting me to eat something. I asked for a tuna sandwich with avocado that we had recently. When he texted that the delivery was in the lobby, I went down, got my laundry, and the cleaning lady came over and hugged me! She then got the elevator for me, but I showed her I needed to go and pick up my ‘brunch,’ so she waited while I got it and then ushered me into the elevator. I’m am completely overwhelmed by how nice people are here!

2025 is almost over. We need to embrace 2026 with all the possibilities and opportunities it will offer.

6 Comments

Filed under Thoughts on a ________

Wonderful Photos

Quokka – @worldwildlife.bsky.social

“Quokkas are like sunshine with fur.” ~ Unknown

Artologica aka Michele Banks – @artologica.net

“A squirrel’s curiosity is its key to survival; always ready to explore the unknown branches of life.” ~ Unknown

Helen Bennett – @helenbennett.bsky.social

“Every tree is a playground to the spirited squirrel.” ~ Unknown

John McGowen – @jmc223.bsky.social

“Every bird, every tree, every flower reminds me what a blessing and privilege it is just to be alive.” — Marty Rubin

“Umm. Hello. The suet feeder is empty.” – Kristin Wyatt – @kristinwyatt.bsky.social

“Birds chirping around you is a beautiful realization that life is incredibly good. Let this sound be a gentle break in your routine.” ― Hiral Nagda

2 Comments

Filed under Awe-Inspiring Photography

Memories – My Brother

This is my brother, Chris, on the left, and one of his sons, Eliot, on the right.

I always wanted a large family with brothers and sisters who loved and supported each other with a bond that was never-ending. My parents were both only children and when they had my brother, and then me, 4 years later, that was plenty in their eyes.

Inadvertently, my parents created a situation where my brother and I were in competition. It was difficult because he always was better in every way than I.

  • In grade school, he brought home all A’s consistently while I brought home mostly A’s and B’s. In one 9-week grading period I brought home a ‘C’ in math, my most dreaded subject. My parents sort of ‘withdrew’ from me, saying the C was not acceptable, and were distant from me for 9 weeks until the next grade card showed a ‘B.”
  • In junior high and high school, my brother continued bringing home all A’s, plus played baseball and won some swimming contests. I played the guitar and sang for a folk music show and taught swimming every summer from when I was 14 until I finished college. I was also a life guard at the local swimming club.
  • In college, my brother got a scholarship to the University of Denver, eventually earning a Doctorate (Dr. Wheaton) while I worked at a local diner off campus at Oklahoma State University, eventually earning a Master’s Degree as a Reading Specialist.
  • My brother decided he didn’t want to teach, so he got a job as a VP in a firm who provided insurance agents to help in disasters. He was in the advertising department. I got a teaching degree and taught in the public schools in Tulsa for 8 years, then ran my own reading clinic, teaching kindergarten through adults for 3 years.

For some reason I will never know, when I was in college, my mother decided to share with me that my brother described me as, “Not worth knowing.” That summation of my worth hurt beyond description, devastating me for quite a while, but eventually giving me a great gift –

What did I learn from my brother?

  • “Do what you can, with what you have, where you are,” attributed to Theodore Roosevelt, emphasizing resourcefulness, action, and making the most of your current situation to build momentum and achieve goals, rather than waiting for ideal circumstances. 
  • I learned to simply keep my head down and be who I am and not judge my “worth” by other people’s opinions or standards. I do the best I can do at any given time and that is enough.
  • I learned that my parents are human, as are we all. They didn’t mean to create a situation where my brother and I competed and I felt failure and loss of love due to the results of the “contest.” What they wanted to create was an atmosphere where we met whatever standards were set and surpassed expectations when possible. They wanted us to succeed, feel the joy of a job well done, of achievement. They wanted us to set high goals, meet them, and then set others.
  • I learned that my brother wasn’t perfect, and that relationships either develop and thrive or they don’t. His opinion actually made me set goals for myself to try to prove him wrong. That didn’t happen, but I learned it didn’t NEED to happen.
  • I am more independent, self-directed, and loving toward the people I care about than I probably would have been otherwise.
  • I am never bored. I always have more to do than time or energy to do them.

Especially now, when my parents and my brother are gone, I can concentrate on happy memories – like when my brother and I won the men’s division and women’s division respectively in ping pong at my parent’s swimming club several years running. I thank him for making me strong enough to face whatever life throws at me, changing what I can and adapting when I need to, even thriving when life throws yet another curve ball.

10 Comments

Filed under Family

Monday, 12-29-2025

Peter Hogarth – @peterhogarthartist.bsky.social

I want to PET this doggo!

______________________

George Dagerotip – Unsplash

Our gym is closed for a week for deep cleaning and maintenance. Brian and I found a well-lit, well-paved parking lot for our walking this morning. We walked to the end and back over and over for our 30 minutes. It was cool – 61 degrees F., so I wore sweatpants instead of my gym shorts and wore my jeans jacket. It was a good walk. 🚶

________________________

My puzzle is finished! I asked Brian to come to my place this morning to take a picture that he will send to have a glass print made for my special shelf in my living area. YIPPEEEEE!

___________________________

I don’t know how much ‘weight’ the BMI Chart carries in reality, but this is what I’ve been basing my status on for a long time.

I am 5’4″ and shrinking. 😀 I began my ‘lose-the-lard’ efforts about two years ago, trying to move from morbidly obese, at 35 on the chart, to my now ‘healthy’ reading at 20. I have read that a healthy range for a female of my height is between 108-132. I am at 119 now, shooting, I think) for 115. I’ll make another decision when I get there.

This is me (on the right) in 2013.

This is me this morning.

________________________

This is the type of day I love the most now – where I can move from one activity to the next as I choose without pressure. I want to take the waist in on a pair of fleece-type snuggly pants, I’ll do my yoga practice, write my blog posts, play on the computer, paint at least one of my sketches in my art alcove, listen to music, read my book, stand in the sun at my window, and more. AHHHHHHH!

I hope that your day has moments of joy, too.

2 Comments

Filed under Thoughts on a ________

Sunday, December 28th, 2025

@dailybunnies.bsky.social

We went to see my husband, Harvey, this morning. We had a hard time getting a Grab for the trip to the nursing home because it’s ‘high season’ for tourists now. He was calm, glad to see us, and followed what we were saying. All in all, a good visit.

_____________________

This is the latest painting.

___________________________

I’m almost finished with my jigsaw puzzle of the dolphins. I’m having to go through and rearrange some areas, but I WILL prevail! 😁

_______________________

liftingitalia.com

Our gym is closing starting tomorrow for a week for deep cleaning, maintenance, etc., so Brian and I will walk in a park every morning instead.

____________________

The day got away from me today. I will try to write more tomorrow.

I hope you are doing well.

2 Comments

Filed under Thoughts on a ________

Drool and Dream – “My Chair”

I showed you a picture of the beautiful white rattan chair we saw in a window. I see it in my dreams. I discovered that this is actually in a hotel, and so is not for sale – neither the chair, nor the white cat who was sleeping on the cushions once. 😡 (assuming I could afford it)

I have been searching for “my statement rattan chair” that would live in the corner of my living area between my dining table and my sofa. I can picture myself, cozy and comfortable, with a drink on the table beside me, reading a book, listening to music, sketching, or taking a nap….

I probably can’t afford any of these unless we win the lottery, but I can drool and dream…

Here are some candidates for “my chair “-

Bed, Bath & Beyond – Blossom Accent Chair (doesn’t include the table beside it)

Luxe Designer Furniture

Throne Kingdom

http://www.reichard.de.br

2 Comments

Filed under Decorating Ideas

My World of Books

Nora Roberts – The Lost Bride Trilogy

I finished the trilogy a couple of days ago. A young woman inherits a mansion from a relative she didn’t know she had, and discovers it’s haunted. She and her friends try to rid the mansion of the malevolent ghost who wants the mansion for herself.

I recommend this highly. I liked the people Nora created. Strong, intelligent, talented young woman who don’t shy away from a fight. Caring men who become part of the group help the women in their quest. I would love to know these people in real life. The story compelled me to keep reading – just one more chapter when I should have been doing something else. I just didn’t want to put my Kindle down. I’ve provided a link above to the trilogy on Amazon.

___________________

I have told you about R.G. Ryan, one of my ‘new’ favorite authors. He’s active on X, newly active to Substack, plus has written many books, one series of which is the Jake Moriarity series, about a man ‘who finds people.’ I read six of the books in the series, and then found that R.G. had written a “Prequel,” so downloaded that and read it, and then wanted to re-read the six books again. The first in the series is “Watercolor Dreams.” I’m now re-reading book 2, “Finding Wonderland.”

I am thoroughly intrigued by the main character, Jake Moriarity. He is tough when he needs to be – even ruthless – and yet is brought to tears by situations involving his family and friends. In each book you learn more about him. His friends and relatives are people you would want to know. The group is fiercely loyal to each other. I find the series fascinating. When I finish the six books I have (not counting the “Prequel: The Last Happy Summer”) I will pester RG to provide more.

Happy reading!

2 Comments

Filed under Reading is FUNdamental

Saturday 12-27-2025

These are the last two sketches I painted.

Today is a good day. We didn’t have anything on the schedule after going to the gym, so I’ve been able to bounce from one activity to the next without worrying about what time it is.

___________________

Sew Fabulous

I did a bunch of sewing today. I only do rudimentary sewing, but I have a very small sewing kit and have been doing things like taking in the waist of my jeans until I got to the point where I wanted to buy more. Today I darned a sock; I rolled up the pants legs of my new jeans and tacked the rolls in place so I don’t fall on my head tripping over my too-long jeans. The style here seems to be long jeans, though, so my shortness isn’t a problem, as long as I don’t sprawl headlong into something. I also shortened and hemmed the sleeves of the 3rd blouse that needed that. I put a gold star (mentally) on the calendar today for all this. 🌟

_____________________

Reddit

I have 4 more pounds to lose to get to at least my interim weight loss goal. The end is in sight after over two years of trying to lose the lard. The new jeans were a celebration of getting to this point. Even if I decide to go for 9 more pounds, these jeans will be fine. I still can’t believe I’m almost there. You will be able to hear me cheering when I reach the final goal and begin maintenance!

Marao.ge

___________________________

Today I have done a piece of this, a little of that, and back again, varying my activity to try to stay productive. I’ve been working on my puzzle, closing in on finishing it now. My son will get to gripe when I show him the finished puzzle and ask him to take a pic to send to the glass print place.! 🤭

_____________________

Khun Nong, my wonderful housekeeper, left me a little surprise yesterday. I had received a really nice gift from one of the servers at the cafe where we go regularly to get out of Khun Nong’s way while she cleans. There was a zippered pouch, a bunch of stickers, a stuffed Christmas tree, a stuffed cute critter, etc. I loved it. I’m using the pouch with the Christmas tree attached as a holder for my sketching supplies. I put a couple of stickers on my sketchbook. He was really happy when he saw I was using his gift yesterday😁.

If you’ll look closely, you can see a couple of additions to the corner of my art alcove – a cute stuffed critter is hanging from my plant spritzer, and there is a small thing sitting on one of the leaves of my orchid plant.

This is another of the things the server included in my gift – at first glance it looks like a frog, but it’s a cute little kid wearing a frog outfit. I never would have thought of putting it here, but it looks like just the place.

___________________

I hope that you are enjoying your Christmas weekend, whether you’re into it, as I am, or just starting it. Have fun!

6 Comments

Filed under Thoughts on a ________

Kids at Christmas

Kenda Davis – 3 Peat – Pinterest

Kenda Davis – 3 Peat – Pinterest

Kenda Davis – 3 Peat – Pinterest

Kenda Davis – 3 Peat – Pinterest

Leave a comment

Filed under holidays

Animals at Christmas 2

lolcats

Pinterest

Roxanne Elise Engle – Pinterest

Leave a comment

Filed under holidays

Merry Christmas 2025

Giphy

I love the fact that this doggie seems to be enjoying being a Christmas tree.

Cardfool.com

_____________________

Brian and I went to a get-together yesterday afternoon and evening at the beautiful condo of a friend nearby, joined by our adoptive family and a BUNCH of other people. I knew some of them and met a whole lot of others. There were three kids there as well as the adults, so it was a fun mix.

A beautifully decorated table was groaning with all kinds of finger foods. Brian kept going and filling our plate with more – and I ate ALL of my share, loving every bite.

As we got ready to leave, I thanked our hosts and gave them a Christmas card. I then went around the room, distributing the cards I had made. My Christmas gift was seeing the surprise and pleasure the cards brought. If you could ‘see happiness,’ it was overflowing out of the top of my head…

___________________

Yesterday morning we visited Harvey at the nursing home. It was a visit I will treasure. It started with him greeting me saying, “Hi, Babe.” He was alert, not in pain, and not complaining about anything. I gave Khun Yuwaret, his nurse, the card I made for her and we cried and hugged each other. We have been so lucky to have her take care of Harvey. She will be missed and no one will ever replace her.

Harvey told me that he had ordered 40 gallons of coffee for me and a handbag. (there is no way he can actually DO this, thank goodness). When I reminded him that we had loved each other for over 64 years now (56+ married and then 9 years or so before that while we were dating), he said, “64 years is a good start.” And then he said, “You are my Miss Universe.” He also said that I was his ‘favorite’ wife. (He has announced he has married several others since his stroke and has fathered children on Mars.) I told him that as long as I was his “Number 1” wife, he could have as many women in his harem as he liked. There was just a glimmer of a smile at that. Both Brian and I saw it. It was the first since April’s stroke. To say that I will never forget this visit is an understatement.

________________________

On the way back from visiting Harvey, we stopped at Central Festival, the big mall in Chiang Mai, so that I could see the decorations and we could see if I could find a pair of jeans that fit.

The decorations were pretty, but not what I expected. There were signs here and there of the queen mother, who passed away last month, saying celebrations had been held to a minimum in deference to her passing.

I did find two pairs of jeans and two new tees. Since my weight loss, I had no clue what size I wear. Compounding this problem, Thai people are very small. That means that if there is any ‘size’ to YOU, you have to think to get several sizes larger than your normal size in order to have a chance of getting into it. We just held them up in front of me and I took a trip to the dressing room.

I still don’t know what size I wear – 26 cms – 12A – 6-B1 were on the labels, but I feel GOOD that I am close to my weight loss goal now and I’m delighted that I feel so much healthier. I’ll continue to try to get to my goal, but my focus is changing to adding more varieties of exercise to my day to increase stamina, flexibility, strength, and balance. Merry Christmas to me!

_____________________

I had my weekly massage this morning and it was terrific, as usual. This afternoon we will go the cafe to get out of Khun Nong’s way while she cleans my place. I love being a pampered “Lady of Leisure!”

Merry Christmas!

6 Comments

Filed under holidays

Make Memories

Nanea Hoffman – Sweatpants & Coffee

Enjoy this day – whether it’s Christmas Eve or Christmas Day where you are. Memories are the FEELINGS you created with people you love. They last forever. No one will remember if things you planned didn’t turn out exactly right. They remember that you were all together, laughing, hugging, eating, playing. That’s what’s important. Enjoy the moments.

2 Comments

Filed under holidays

Outdoor Christmas

Pinterest

Price Self Storage

Treehugger

Veikous

Happy Christmas Eve/Christmas!!!!

Leave a comment

Filed under holidays

A Rose Suchek Ladder

I received permission from R.G. Ryan, the author of this, to share it with you. It’s one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever read.

______________________

The first time I heard it, I was six.

I was standing on the third stair up—high enough to feel brave, low enough to run—when the house made a sound it had never made before.

Not a creak. Not a settling groan. A clatter. Bright and sudden, like something important had arrived and tried not to announce itself.

From the bedroom, my father muttered something about raccoons. My mother shifted under the covers. But I didn’t move. Because I knew what it was.

I leaned toward the living room, peering into the dark, and whispered what the poem had taught me. “A rose suchek ladder.”

Behind me, my mother’s sleepy voice floated down the hall. “What did you say, honey?”

“It’s the ladder,” I said.

“What ladder?”

“The rose suchek ladder,” I repeated patiently. “From the poem.”

She smiled in her voice. “Oh. You mean ‘there arose such a clatter.’

That version sounded wrong in my mouth. Like a coat that didn’t quite fit.

“No,” I said, softly but firmly. “I mean the ladder.”

She didn’t argue. She never did on Christmas Eve. “Well,” she whispered, “come sit with me. If it’s a ladder, let’s listen together.”

So, we listened. And there it was again. Another careful clatter, followed by a hush so complete it felt like the house itself was holding its breath.

I knew then, with the quiet certainty only children have, that something had arrived.

Years passed. I learned the correct words. I learned to say them cleanly and properly. But I never forgot the other version. Because children don’t hear language the way adults do. They hear possibility first.

And sometimes—often, I think—they hear the truth before we train it out of them.

This year, it came back because of my grandchildren’s laughter.

They were all piled on the couch, wrapped in blankets, cocoa balanced dangerously on knees, watching that old Christmas movie where Santa falls off a roof and the world tilts just enough to let magic leak in.

Then the line came up. Twisted on purpose. “A Rose Suchek Ladder.”

They laughed and repeated it immediately, tasting the words. “A ROSE SUCHEK LADDER.” Saying it like it meant something.

And something in me—old and patient—sat up and listened.

Later, after everyone was in bed and the house had settled, I found myself alone with the Christmas lights glowing softly. I don’t know why I stayed up. Practical people usually don’t.

But Christmas bends practical people toward wonder whether they approve of it or not.

I was standing near the fireplace when I heard it. A clatter. Clear. Familiar.

Then another sound—lighter this time—like a rung being set carefully against brick.

My heart did something it hadn’t done in years. “A rose suchek ladder,” I whispered.

The air shifted. Not dramatically, not enough to convince a skeptic. Just enough to feel remembered. And, for a moment, I saw it. A ladder, yes but not wood or metal. Pale and delicate, as if braided from winter itself. Its rungs looked like rose stems, stripped of thorns, smoothed by patient hands.

And down it came—slowly, carefully—the shape of a man. Not the noisy version. Not the cartoon. Someone older than hurry. Someone who still treated the moment with reverence.

He stepped onto the hearth as gently as snowfall. He noticed me. I know he did. For a second, I expected to be scolded. Adults aren’t supposed to be here for this part.

Instead, he nodded. Not as a king to a subject but as a craftsman to someone who recognized the tools.

Then he lifted one finger to his lips. Not in warning but in invitation.

I didn’t speak. I didn’t move. I just stood there with my hand on the mantle, feeling my heart thump like a kid’s again.

Santa turned slightly, and I saw it then: the ladder wasn’t just for him. It was a way in and out of the thin places. The places where belief still mattered. The places where words could still become doors.

And I realized something that made my throat tighten: Adults don’t stop believing because the world proves them wrong. Adults stop believing because the world trains them to stop listening.

He moved quietly, leaving gifts where gifts belonged, the way someone tends a garden in the dark; without fanfare, without ownership.

When he returned to the fireplace, he placed a gloved hand on the ladder, respectful, careful. Before climbing, he glanced back once more, and though he never spoke, I understood.

Don’t explain this away.

Don’t steal it by trying to prove it.

Just keep the doorway open.

Then he climbed. The ladder shimmered and vanished, rung by rung. One pale rose petal drifted down and settled on the hearth.

Morning came the way it always does—noise, paper, joy in all directions at once.

Then my granddaughter stopped and pointed. “What’s that?”

I followed her finger. The petal was still there.

I picked it up gently. “That,” I said, smiling, “is proof the ladder was here.”

She leaned closer. “What ladder?”

I knelt so we were eye to eye and whispered the words the right way—the way that opens doors. “The rose suchek ladder.”

Her eyes lit up. And somewhere deep in the house, old and patient and listening—

there arose such a clatter.

Happy Christmas to all, and to all a good night.

R.G. Ryan

Christmas 2025

______________________

R. G. Ryan –
R.G. Ryan is a novelist, musician, and essayist whose work explores the intersection of faith, culture, and human responsibility. A native of California’s Central Coast, he writes about the places—and the values—that shape us.

@rgryan on Stubstack and. @RGRyan777 on X

Author of the Jake Moriarity Series that I love and highly recommend. 

Book 1 – Watercolor Dreams

Leave a comment

Filed under Blog Repost - Wonderful Posts

Reminder

Nanea Hoffman – Sweatpants & Coffee

8 Comments

Filed under holidays

Outdoor Christmas Decorations

All Plant Training

Homebase

Home Designing

Hometalk.com

2 Comments

Filed under holidays

Animals at Christmas

Cindy S. – Pinterest

Dog Lovers – Pinterest

Dump a Day

Home-Jammie-Cat.com

2 Comments

Filed under holidays

Wednesday, 12-24-2025

It’s Christmas Eve here in Chiang Mai. I hope that your travels are safe, your family and friends are in good health, that your food is delicious, and that your heart is full of gratitude and love.

_________________

Today will be a quiet day for me – just the way I love it. I can choose between things I want to do the whole day today!

I did my chores for the morning, had my walk at the gym, had a great breakfast (breakfast burrito – 1/2 of a tortilla filled with scrambled eggs, bacon, and salad), had a shower and am ready to enjoy my day. The sun is shining, it’s 71 degrees right now. I have my laundry on the drying rack on my balcony.

_____________________

This is my latest painting of a sketch – Drawing – Lion Cub

_____________________

My puzzle is coming along nicely. I’m at the most difficult part, though, where most of the pieces look like each other, so it’s slow going.

__________________

Childhood101

I put off the hemming of the sleeves of my blouses yesterday, so I’ll really try to get one done today…

____________________

Nora Roberts – “The Lost Bride Trilogy” “The Seven Rings”

I’m reading the last book of Nora Robert’s trilogy, “The Lost Brides,” and it is definitely calling to me. It’s hard to get anything else done!

Enjoy your day!

6 Comments

Filed under holidays

Kids at Christmas

Kenda Davis – 3-Peat – Pinterest

“Gifts of time and love are surely the basic ingredients of a truly merry Christmas.” – Peg Bracken

Kenda Davis – 3-Peat – Pinterest

Kenda Davis – 3-Peat – Pinterest

“The best Christmas present is the presence of family and friends, gathered around with love and laughter.” ~ Unknown

Kenda Davis – 3-Peat – Pinterest

“Let us cherish the gift of time, for it is the most precious present.” ~ Unknown

“Christmas magic is silent. You don’t hear it. You feel it. You know it. You believe it.” ~ Unknown

4 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Cats in Trees 2

Jonas Grinevicius and Viktorija Osikaite – “Cats 1st Christmas” – BoredPanda.com

3 Comments

Filed under holidays

Tuesday, 12-23-2025

I hope that wherever you are, you are having a happy day, either doing last-minute shopping, wrapping presents, decorating a tree, hugging a loved one, listening to Christmas music, enjoying a walk outside, or relaxing with a hot drink in your favorite chair.

_____________________

I’m back from the gym, showered, breakfasted and ready to make the rest of my day a good one. I’ll write my posts for the blog first, since I love reaching out to you, and then I’ll decide whether to paint another sketch, work on my jigsaw puzzle, or read my book.

Cromarty Arts Trust

I’m also shortening and hemming the sleeves of three stretchy tops I like. (There is less of me now, and while I don’t mind the tops being long and loose, I don’t like to have to keep pulling up the sleeves. I have cut off each of the sleeves and am hemming them so I can continue to enjoy wearing them.) I did one two days ago, and will tackle the 2nd of the 3 today.

_____________________

Live Science

I have gone from being a person who almost never used my phone in Arkansas to a person who HAS to have my phone here in Thailand. Brian is teaching me a lot of things I use constantly now – like Google Maps; a chat program he likes where he, I, and my adopted family can contact each other; a weather app, Pinterest, notes, lists, alarms, and on and on. I’m still not, and will never be, a ‘techie,’ but I’m delighted in all the things I can use it for now.

_____________________

Freepik

Brian will bring dinner to my place tonight, and we’ll back up the data on my phone and my computer as we do each week. I love our visits on Tuesdays, where we discuss everything in the world and he makes me laugh until my stomach hurts…

Enjoy your day!

8 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

Christmas Decorations 3

Jennifer Fishkind – Princess Pinky Girl – Pinterest

Oops! – Pinterest

Prasad Kumar – Pinterest

Purrfect Stitchers – Pinterest

Rhonda Payne – Pinterest

4 Comments

Filed under holidays

Awesome Drawings

Kelli McNichols – Substack

@peterhogarthartist.bsky.social

Catherine Rayner – Substack

I love it that talented people can answer the call, ‘draw a dog,’ and come up with drawings that simply melt the heart. Different styles, different media, all heartwarming and jaw-dropping.

6 Comments

Filed under drawings