I thought I’d share the Annabelle hydrangeas with you before they get pummeled by today’s storms:
A view from the side garden. Lots of fluffy hydrangeas, day lilies, and the first of what will be many, many purple coneflowers. That fabric tie on the left was something I used to train my New Dawn rose, which no longer blooms. I don’t have very good luck with roses here. Even my little rose plants in the Memorial Garden aren’t doing well. One never developed leaves (and it’s only a couple of years old) and another had tiny roses that looked unhealthy. I know that roses do well in California’s dry heat, and it’s been so, so wet here this year – I wonder if that has something to do with it?
From the front of the house, along with milkweed and spirea.
Speaking of milkweed:
So beautiful. I love those little florets! Perfection
And the meadowsweet that grows on the side of the house is starting to bloom.
It’s muggy – just turned on the A/C – and we’re supposed to get thunderstorms today, some with high winds and maybe some hail. No, thank you! If you want to give us some thunder and lightning, go ahead. But no high winds and no hail. Okay?
I’ve started to read The Salt Path. It’s extremely powerful. It brings up issues that are uncomfortable – how quickly we can lose everything, and how a devastating diagnosis can change your world in a moment. That’s what happens to this couple.
For so many years of our life in this cottage, we struggled to pay our bills. We’re still struggling, our brief honeymoon with Margaritaville is long past, but not at the level we endured for what seems like a very long time. How would we pay the mortgage? What if we couldn’t? Would our house be taken away? How would I juggle the bills? When would Don get paid for a TV episode that he had done? When I would get paid for my freelance work? Constantly thinking about money, balancing the checkbook, if I pay this first, then I can hold off on that – and on and on. I have addressed that on the blog in the past, never lingering too long on the subject because it was our choice to be freelance and that came with the life. Any actor would tell you the same thing. For the record, we always managed to pay every bill. But oh my god, was it stressful.
That situation wasn’t the same as the one the man and woman in the memoir faced, but they did lose everything in a short space of time, and isn’t that a fear we all have?
I’m only a couple of chapters in and I find myself filled with admiration for these people. And a whole lot of awe. Raynor Winn writes with such honesty, facing everything head on, sharing moments of fear and weakness. It’s gripping. I know some of you have already read it, but for those of you who haven’t, I highly recommend it.
We watched Fatal Attraction last night. Haven’t seen it in years. Oh my heavens! It’s just as frightening as it was the first time I saw it. Everyone gives a powerful performance, but Glenn Close? Extraordinary. She is fearless in this role, mapping the arc of the character brilliantly.
Don is off to try to take some pictures, though I feel he’ll be thwarted by the storms.
I have some dusting to do upstairs. I always dust downstairs, but forget to dust upstairs for long periods of time. I guess it’s because I’m not hanging out there during the day.
And I’m going to catch up on some episodes of Gardeners World.
Happy Saturday.