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You are here: Home / Archives for Meredith

The Story of Shannon & the Dentures

February 5, 2012 at 10:19 am by Claudia

Source: Wikipedia, Irish Setter from 1915, W. E. Mason, Dogs of all Nations

My friends, I’ve been very blue this weekend as I contemplate the deterioration of my mother’s already fragile health and listen to my dad cry out his heartbreak during our phone calls. I feel as if I’m on the edge of a precipice of loss. When it will happen, I cannot know, but that feeling lurks in every corner of my daily life.
So often lately, I choose to remember my parents as they were decades ago. In my head I see a photo of us together in San Diego (I’ll have to share it with you someday), that first summer I lived there, just weeks before I met Don for the first time. Big smiles, still vital – happy to be with me in my new city. Or I picture my mom and I laughing over something or other. We laughed a lot together; we’d laugh so hard that we’d clutch our stomachs, tears in our eyes. Laughter is the best medicine.
With that in mind, I thought I’d share a funny story with you. A true story. When I was a teenager, we had an Irish Setter named Shannon. Shannon was smart as a whip and constantly into something or other. Oh, he was a handful, but how he would make us laugh! He’d grab a dish cloth or a hand towel and run through the living room with it in his mouth, hoping to get our attention. If one of us purposely ignored him, he would reverse direction and run back through the room, dish cloth still in his mouth. This would go on and on until, exasperated, he would finally just drop the cloth in our lap as if to say, See? I took it. Doesn’t anyone care???
My dad wore dentures. He would sometimes leave them on the sink in the bathroom when he went to bed. One morning, my mom was in the living room (dad was still sleeping) and Shannon tore by her with something in his mouth. Then he tore by her again. She glanced up. Not a dish cloth. Something she couldn’t see was hidden in his mouth. She called out his name – Shannon! He did what he always did when he had something he didn’t want us to get from him. He went under the dining room table – just far enough to make it hard to reach him. By this time, Mom had asked for my help. We got down on our hands and knees and reached for him – he moved his head away from us. We reached again. He moved away. Finally, Mom got hold of his collar. Then we tried to pry his mouth open. When we pried his teeth apart, we saw anotherset of teeth – my dad’s.Oh no.

In a panic, all we could think was that my dad would completely lose it if Shannon chomped on his expensive dentures. And he would have. As I kept his mouth open, Mom, with the skill of a surgeon, began to remove the dentures from his mouth – praying the whole time that he wouldn’t bite down on them. Somehow we did it. Adrenalin-infused strength, I bet.
Afterwards, she took those dentures, scrubbed the life out of them, used some denture cleaner and put them back where they had been – on the side of the bathroom sink. She knew she couldn’t tell my father about it. I was sworn to secrecy and dad didn’t find out about it until many years later. For years, mom, my sisters and I would tell that story and laugh our heads off.Shannon was always up to something. We had a travel trailer parked in our driveway (right outside my parents’ bedroom window) and many was the time that mom and I would be out there on our hands and knees, one on either side of the trailer, trying to get Shannon to come out from under it. He would invariably lay there, right in the place where we couldn’t reach him, taunting us. We’d do this in whispers, trying not to disturb my dad (sleeping again) or our neighbors. After what seemed like hours of this rigamarole (confident that my dad was still sleeping) one loud bellow of Shannon! from the direction of the bedroom would bring him out from under the trailer and into the house, making Mom and me, on our hands and knees, look ridiculous.

All these years later, those stories still make me laugh. And that’s a good thing.

Filed Under: dogs, life, Meredith, mom 42 Comments

A Momma-to-be on Mother’s Day

May 7, 2011 at 6:36 pm by Claudia

It’s Mother’s Day time again. I will call my Mom today and tell her how much I love her. She’s getting frailer all the time. She very seldom gets out any more. Doing something like going into the other room to read this blog on the computer is too exhausting for her. It makes me very sad. I wish I could give her a big hug today.

As I was thinking about Mother’s Day, a mother-to-be came to mind.

Yes, it’s true. Momma Robin has taken over the nest. That glimpse of a bird I mentioned to you the other day has become a fairly constant presence. She leaves the nest for a few minutes at a time but that’s all. In the beginning, whenever I walked by the door, she flew away. I didn’t want her panicking so I draped a net curtain over the door. I came home between afternoon and evening rehearsal today, carefully moved the curtain back, crawled along the floor so she couldn’t see me, and took these photos.

So, do you think they had just built the nest when I arrived here? If so, my timing couldn’t be better. I will have a ring-side seat while Momma sits on her eggs. I’ll get to see the babies. I’m thrilled.

Happy Mother’s Day to my Mom, my sister and to my little Robin Mom.

Filed Under: bird nest, birds, Meredith, mom 24 Comments

What I Did This Weekend

March 14, 2011 at 11:46 am by Claudia

:: Clearly, Scout is telling me she needs a sleeping mask. Message received, your highness.

:: Saturday found me fluffing the studio. The vintage spools that I found at Tinsel Trading were just begging for some lace. I forgot to show you the little green velvet pincushion that I also bought at Tinsel Trading. Sweet, isn’t it?

I found that old painted trim at The Habitat for Humanity Re-Store.  I love old wooden architectural pieces. This one with its many layers of paint is beautiful.

:: I spent part of Saturday and Sunday obsessing about this crochet pattern:

I couldn’t figure out the directions for the longest time! I kept ripping it out and starting over. Never say die is my motto. My mom has always called me stubborn (that’s the pot calling the kettle black, by the way.) She’s right. I finally got it last night. I’m going to make more. Any ideas as to what I can create with these?

:: We also watched 127 Hours. For a girl with claustrophobia, this movie pushed all my buttons. Perhaps not the best thing to watch right before bedtime. And we watched classic Hitchcock: Strangers on a Train. Hitchcock was a genius. It was more frightening and edge-of-your-seat than any contemporary movie filled with expensive special effects. And oh, how I love old black and white movies!

:: By request, my sister Meredith has written a fabulous post that details how to make those Japanese Crochet Flowers. Just click on this link.

:: Tomorrow I fly to Chicago. First I take the bus to Manhattan (90 minutes) then I take the shuttle to LaGuardia (45 minutes) then I fly to Chicago (over 2 hours.) Then I take a cab to the hotel. I check in at the hotel, go to the theater to do some vocal work, watch an evening performance, write up my notes and go to bed! Wednesday, I snatch a couple of hours with my best friend, Laural, then on to afternoon rehearsal, evening performance, more notes. Thursday: up very, very early to catch a cab to O’Hare, fly to LaGuardia, take the shuttle bus and then catch the bus to my neck of the woods.  Yikes.

:: Japan is constantly in my thoughts. Such devastation is incomprehensible and heartbreaking.

I probably won’t be blogging until I get back. Have a wonderful week.

Filed Under: crochet, Meredith, vintage 25 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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