Mockingbird Hill Cottage

Mockingbird Hill Cottage

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Day Three Hundred Sixty-Two

March 10, 2021 at 10:07 am by Claudia

First things first: I keep forgetting to reveal the winner of the book giveaway. It’s Melanie! Melanie, I’ll send you an email. Let me know your mailing address and I’ll pass it along to TLC Book Tours.

We’re headed to 55 degrees today. I think we’ll take a little drive this afternoon. Yesterday, I walked up and down the driveway several times and, though it was breezy, the warmer air felt so good!

I want to share a wonderful book that both Don and I are enjoying. I first heard about these books from Miranda Mills last year and I meant to order a copy at the time but somehow didn’t get to it until recently. It’s a book by William Sieghart called The Poetry Pharmacy; Tried-And-True Prescriptions for the Heart, Mind and Soul.

I’m going to add the description from Penguin Books:

Sometimes only a poem will do. These poetic prescriptions and wise words of advice offer comfort, delight and inspiration for all; a space for reflection, and that precious realization – I’m not the only one who feels like this.

In the years since he first had the idea of prescribing short, powerful poems for all manner of spiritual ailments, William Sieghart has taken his Poetry Pharmacy around the length and breadth of Britain, into the pages of the Guardian, onto BBC Radio 4 and onto the television, honing his prescriptions all the time. This pocket-sized book presents the most essential poems in his dispensary: those which, again and again, have really shown themselves to work. Whether you are suffering from loneliness, lack of courage, heartbreak, hopelessness, or even from an excess of ego, there is something here to ease your pain.

The book is truly wonderful. Most mornings, during our second cup of coffee, we will try to track our mood of late and look for something in the book that might reference that. In this first volume there are sections for Mental and Emotional Wellbeing, Motivations, Self-Image and Self-Acceptance, The World and Other People, and Love and Loss. Within each section are subsections like News Overload, or Fear of the Other, or Regret.

Sieghart writes a brief little essay on the subject and the poem he’s chosen and the poem is on the facing page.

We love this because we are exposed to poets we might not encounter otherwise and Sieghart’s writing is lovely. There is a comfort in knowing others have felt that same emotion and not only have they felt it, but they’ve written about it in a poem.

This has become one of our treasured morning rituals. In addition to the volume pictured, there’s another volume, The Poetry Pharmacy Returns, and we’re going to order that as well.

I know many people who routinely read poetry. Aside from Shakespeare and Mary Oliver, I don’t. It’s not that I’m averse to it, I just tend to stick with fiction and nonfiction. This book broadens my poetry horizons and that’s a good thing.

Still reading A Chelsea Concerto, about London during the Blitz. It’s beautifully written.

Stay safe.

Happy Wednesday.

 

Filed Under: books, poetry 27 Comments

Day Three Hundred Sixty-One

March 9, 2021 at 10:36 am by Claudia

It’s sunny and the high is going to be 57 degrees.

I’ll take it.

Today is grocery pick-up day, so I’m posting a bit late as we had to get our list together. We managed to grab a slot on the same day which is fortunate as our cupboards are bare.

I’m not one to post all that many pictures of myself – I’m not a selfie person. But this one was taken by Don yesterday after our successful haircut. I did the initial cut and then Don came in and evened it out. I took about 2 inches off. I could have done more, but the end result was so good I didn’t want to mess with it.

No makeup except for a dash of lipstick.

With baby fine hair, anything too long starts looking scraggly and uneven, so getting a nice blunt cut looks so much healthier.

I actually got an enormous amount of stuff done yesterday, including this haircut. It was one of those days where I was checking off part of my To Do list and it felt good. Still much more to be done – the list is one that includes all those tasks that aren’t imperative at any given moment but must be dealt with eventually.

Don sent me this. He took it from the stairway and I had no idea he was taking it.

I’m wearing my cross-back apron that I picked up for a song at World Market. I’m not one for aprons as a rule, but I thought having one for working with paints and glue, etc., would be a smart idea. Unlike the cross-back aprons made with linen being sold by various Instagrammers that cost $80 to $100, this was $20. I’m not spending that much on an apron!

Don, being the sweetheart that he is, told me it’s his favorite picture.

My sister texted me to tell me she was getting her first vaccination yesterday. I was so relieved to hear that as Meredith has been working with patients and families, some of whom have contracted COVID, since the beginning of this pandemic. She’s never stopped. Knowing she’s on the path to being fully vaccinated makes me very, very happy.

I plan to get outside for a bit today! I have to take advantage of this weather while I can.

Stay safe.

Happy Tuesday.

Filed Under: life 34 Comments

Day Three Hundred Sixty

March 8, 2021 at 10:26 am by Claudia

Five more days until I mark a year of lockdown. Perhaps we started it here a few days earlier, but I can’t remember. I think that the moment we officially hunkered down coincided with my decision to change the titles on my posts. Does it seem unreal that it’s been a year? Not one bit. It seems every bit as long as a year.

Today starts a warming trend here in the Hudson Valley. Baby steps today, but by tomorrow it will be in the mid-fifties and on one day this week – actually two – we will be in the mid-sixties! It won’t stay that way, of course, temperatures will drop down to the forties next week, but even that is welcome!

I’m going to cut my hair today. I cannot stand it any longer! Since it’s baby fine, it looks straggly when it gets too long and believe me, it’s too long. Don has promised to assist with evening out the initial cut. Fingers crossed!

I put the little wooden house from Helga on top of the desk. It probably won’t stay there, but maybe it will!

Thanks for all your thoughts on bathroom/no bathroom in the English Cottage. A reminder that though this is a period house, it has an eclectic mix of more modern and period pieces of furniture and it will be occupied by someone living in 2021. I don’t do period houses inhabited in times of yore. Many miniaturists do, but I don’t. So, any house of mine is living and breathing in the present day, just as Hummingbird Cottage, a Victorian house, is. So…no outhouses. In eliminating the bathroom, we will just imagine it just out of range of our eyes. I may put a little whimsical sign up, pointing to the loo, or I may just ignore it. Also, this is a very small house and all wall space is taken so I won’t be putting in false doors on the walls – besides, the bathroom would be somewhere just beyond the open back of the house, not in the side walls that are already established as exterior walls made of stone.

This is the kind of thinking and rethinking that goes into any dollhouse construction or renovation. The Beacon Hill, with 8 or 9 rooms, will definitely have a bathroom, as does Hummingbird Cottage. But I’m learning that bathrooms are expendable, if necessary, in my particular imaginary world.

In the meantime, the room won’t be a library. I’ve already purposely added a large shelf system in the living room and it’s filled with books. I do see a stack of books by the chair, however. A nice place to retreat and read in private, if necessary. I do think it will be more of a studio, an artist’s studio. I see an easel and art supplies. The rest of it will evolve as I work on it.

It’s sure more exciting than a bathroom!

Yesterday, Don mentioned that he’d like to work on a small house that functions as a guitar shop. Whoa! Needless to say, I was immediately on board. It would be his baby. Why not two floors, I suggested, and he can live above the shop? Yes. He’s already thought up a story for the owner who is gradually acquiring inventory for his shop. His 70th birthday is coming up, so a kit for the shop might be in order, don’t you think?

Okay. I have to pay a couple of bills, cut my hair, clean, etc.

Stay safe.

Happy Monday.

Filed Under: dollhouse, miniatures 23 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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