Monday, January 19, 2026

Monday Mood: Reminders


The key to your future is on the table, grab it up. 

Don't let fear of something new stand in your way, at one time crawling across the floor was something frighteningly new, you survived that, you will survive this. 

When I left behind my first career, and moved forward into uncertainty, Sweet Bear gave me a card that simply said, "Jump and the Net Will Appear." It was on the wall over my desk at home for years, it reminded me to go boldly into the future. 

Be bold. You are Brave. You are Strong. You can Do This. 

The wrinkles, grey hairs, and scars are the proof a life lived. Be proud of them, be glad that you lived long enough to see them. 

Breathe deeply, inhale the essence of life. 

Thank the world that you have this day.

A great link from Angus in Scotland this week:   https://kevinkelly.substack.com/p/how-will-the-miracle-happen-today 


Sunday, January 18, 2026

The Sunday Five: Daily Routine


1: What is your morning routine like? 

2: When do you read and comment on Blogs? 

3: Is there anything you do almost everyday?

4: Do you shop with or without a shopping list? 

5: What should you do, that you don't do? 

My answers:

1: What is your morning routine like? I get up, when I wake up and I am sure I am not going back to sleep, after the toilet, I wash my hands and take my daily pills, pull some clothes on, go to the kitchen and start the coffee and make toast. 

2: When do you read and comment on Blogs? As soon as the toast is ready, I eat breakfast at the desk in my bedroom, and read blogs. 

3: Is there anything you do almost everyday? I walk an hour or more almost every day. 

4: Do you shop with or without a shopping list? Without, there is a running list on the refrigerator door, if it is long I will snap a photo of it with my phone, but most of my shopping is sans list. 

5: What should you do, that you don't do? Vacuum parts of my bedroom floor. 

Please share your answers in the comments. 


Saturday, January 17, 2026

The Saturday Morning Post: Feed the Beast of Creativity

Back in my running days, my early 30's, I remember the practice of "carb-loading." Eating meals heavy in carbohydrates the day before a big race with the goal of the body storing up extra accessible fuel for the task ahead. This was especially important before long distance runs, and triathlons, races that always exceeded the longest training sessions.  For a half marathon, 13.1 miles, the rule of thumb was that the longest training run should be about 10 miles, and with carb-loading you would finish the race. This was also a period in my life of living on a austere diet, I forced my body into a thin shape that I had outgrown as a child, an unnatural shape for me - so the carb fest of pasta and bread was a real feast, that my body used to create endurance needed to extraordinary (for me) feats. 

Likewise as creatives we can, we need to, feed our creative powers.  We do this by viewing art, hearing music, reading - reading - reading, tasting, smelling, watching movies, going to the theater; taking it all in.  Spend time in museums, galleries, streets and alleys covered in murals and graffiti, listen to familiar music, and new music, read things you love, read things that you hate, cook your favorites, and try new things.  We feed our creative powers by travel, seeing different and new places and things.  As creatives we need to fill our brains, and our bodies with fuel, with creative fodder. Take every opportunity you can to feed the beast of creativity.  

Friday, January 16, 2026

Foodie Friday: Drinkers edition

Those little blue berries are what makes gin taste like gin. Beyond that other herbs are added, taking the flavor in different directions. I sampled one made here in Virginia, out near the Blue Ridge, that tasted like pine trees. I didn't like it. Hendrix in Scotland has a nice balance.  Bluecoat from Pennsylvania is mild and mixable. But all of them start with Juniper as a base.  Without those little blue berries, it is just flavored vodka. Oh, and no tonic for me. Why water down good gin with bitter water? 

The flavor differences in Bourbon come from three things, the mashbill, the barrel, and how it is aged. The mashbill is the mixture of grain used, always at least 51% corn, beyond that wheat, rye, and barley.  My preference is a wheated bourbon - they are milder and sweeter. There are subtle differences, rye gives bourbon the bite. All of the color, and much of the flavor comes from the new charred white oak barrel, with differences in the selection of the wood, and how it is charred. The rest is how it is aged. How long and in what temperature ranges make the biggest differences. Too long, or too hot and the finished product can taste woody. Long and in moderate temperature is where the magic happens. 


 

Thursday, January 15, 2026

The Thursday Ramble: Home


Last week Doc Spo posted a 99 Questions to Ask Your Grandparents, about a favorite or memorable home. This got me to thinking about the places I have lived since moving out of my parents home. 

In 1980 I was hired by a home building company in Orlando, I shared an apartment for a couple of years with my brother, and later with the person who would be my first spouse. Those were utilitarian places of no merit other than being closer to work and the tourist zone. 

I built my first home in 1982, a 2 bedroom, 1 bath home,  with a one car garage, it was about 1,000 sq. ft. of living area. For anyone thinking mortgage rates are high today, I was a first time buyer who qualified for a special discount rate of 13.5% (fixed for 15 years.) 

A year or so after I moved into that one, I built another home. A smaller 2 bedroom, 1 bath, a two unit building. I sold half of the building to my middle brother, and I bought the other half. I never lived there. I rented it for a few years, and parted with it when I parted with the first spouse. My brother still lives there. 

After the duplex was finished, interest rates came down a bit, we sold the first house and I built the third house (second one I would live in.) It was larger about 1250 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, a nice kitchen, and a two car garage. It was a modest home, but I customized it heavily, with nicer doors and trim, redesign on the kitchen, larger enclosed patio. I also built in 71 days from the day the building permit was issued, until the power was turned on and we moved in. I lived in that one until I moved out of Florida and sold it. 

When we moved to Kentucky we had a long weekend to go house shopping, by the end of the second day we had a contract on a nearly finished new home. It was about 1750 sq. ft, two large bedrooms, a large office area that could have been enclosed as a 3rd bedroom, 2 full baths, a two car garage. It is the only home I have lived in that had stairs and a fireplace. The living, dining room, entryway and kitchen had 16 foot ceilings. It was very stylish, very pretty. The largest and in many ways the nicest home I have ever lived in. Lexington was an easy place to live, but it lacked museums, gardens, restaurant variety, culture and shopping we both craved. Traffic is terrible because of a poorly designed road network, my 4 mile commute often took 30 minutes or more.    

A couple of years while I was in law school, I rented a tiny efficiency apartment near the University in Louisville. It had been the living room of grand old brick house, plus a bathroom built in under the stairs. The owner lived upstairs. I would drive in on Monday, study, sleep and study until my classes were done for the week, then go back to Lexington.  Eliminating the commute, allowed me to take Saturdays off. 

When I took the job in Washington DC, I rented an apartment in Crystal City (if you have flown into National Airport, this is the area between the airport and the Pentagon. It was a 2 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath apartment probably about 1,000 sq. ft. The kitchen was tiny and dated. The parking garage was a nightmare and I was driving the largest car I ever owned. It was a five minute walk to the Crystal City Metro Station. I knew when I rented it, it was temporary. If the job worked out, I would be looking to buy. It did, and I did, about a year later. If that apartment had been available to buy - I would have bought it. Amazon now has a massive office building across the street from it. 

I moved from there to a 2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, condo that is about 1,120 sq. ft., plus a glass enclosed conservatory. For those not familiar, a condo is an apartment or flat that you own, along the right to use common areas such as the pools and gym.  There are a little over 1,000 apartments in four high rise towers in the community. We are a ten minute walk from the Huntington Metro Station. Over the years we have made it our own.  When I moved in I painted and updated all of the electrical fittings and light fixtures. A few years later we put hardwood floors in all but Sweet Bear's bedroom, the kitchen and baths. We had both bathroom replaced with very custom work. I debated long and hard about tearing out the tub and putting in a shower, the experts all tell you not having a tub will hurt on resale, ultimately we decided we were doing this for us, not for resale, and I wanted an age friendly shower.  The last item was the kitchen remodel.  COVID delayed that work for a couple of years, and supply chain delays made it more complicated, but we waited and custom designed what we wanted, the way we wanted it. I enjoy it everyday. 

If I had to pick a favorite of all of these, it would be the condo that we live in. We have remodeled it to our taste and to fit our needs. The location is easy to live in (it would be nice to be in Crystal city, but it would have cost another half-a-million-dollars to be there.) It is Home. 

 

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

My World of Wonders January 14, 2026


What have I been up to this week? Friday morning we reset the Showcase, and then I had lunch with a friend I had not seen in a couple of years. Saturday was water aerobics and then the opening for the Landscape art show. 

Who have I talked with this week? Beth, Amy, Ruth, Warren, Giuseppe, Larry, Mary, Anna, Susan, Linda, Kevin, Marcel, 

Where have I been this week? Close to home,  a nice walk and lunch at Mason Social in old town north, the treadmill, the pool, lunch at an Indian restaurant in old town, The National Gallery of Art for a long walk, the library, 

What have I been up to in the kitchen this week? Thursday and Friday nothing. Saturday I slow braised (275f for three hours) round steak with onions, mushrooms, and celery in red wine, with carrots and parsnips, and made a nice sauce from the braising liquid. I made a beef pie - featured in a foodie friday in a couple of weeks. 

Who did I reach out to this week? Stephen - the guy who started me blogging - I was thinking of him when I read about the sheep movie coming out in May, he gifted us the book Three Bags Full that the movie is based on. 

What have I been reading? Pappyland, someone recommended it in a comment on Doc Spo's blog, it is well written and having lived in Lexington and gone to law school in Louisville, the places in the book connect in my brain.  And then started "Spice."  

Tuesday, January 13, 2026