Archive for February 2025
Love Letters in the Sand: Pat Boone
February 1, 2025Love Letter: Bonnie Raitt
February 1, 2025”The only thing most people do better than anyone else is read their own handwriting.”
February 1, 2025Today is a perfect day to see the world through windows. It is only 32°, the high for the day. A bit ago we had a snow shower which left a light coating of snow on the tops of branches and along the sides of the road. The snow showers will be around all day.
Though my jigsaw puzzle, on the table here in the den, isn’t finished, I can see they’ll be a couple of missing pieces. I know we’ll all accuse Nala, my felonious dog, but we’d be wrong. I caught Henry with a piece of the puzzle sticking out of his mouth as he was trying to sneak out of the room with his booty, his loot. I yelled. He dropped it. Now I’m confused.
When I was a kid, I went to the parish grammar school, grades one through eight, where I had nuns every other year because there were too many of us and too few of them. Every grade had two classes. Some years there were as many as 40 of us in one class. It was never chaotic. Most of us were a bit afraid of the nuns with their black habits and their white wimples. One of the schoolyard topics of conversation was those wimples. We wondered what their hair looked like underneath. How short was it? What color was it? Once in a while we’d see a tiny line of hair along the wimple’s edges.
I remember the nuns used to keep their handkerchiefs under their habits on their wrists. They wore huge rosaries, our early warning systems. You could hear the click of the beads as the nuns got closer. We learned over time to be covert.
I remember learning to write. It seems just about every classroom had the alphabet in white letters on black cardboard across the tops of the blackboards. Each card had the cursive upper and lower case of one letter. We’d practice writing the letters during penmanship, a now and then class. We learned Palmer Method. We had writing drills. I was great with the up and down lines but not so great on the circles. Mine were messy. We’d practice one letter over and over. I remember a page filled with upper case A’s. The nun would wander the aisles checking on our work and commenting on our attempts. I never did great, no penmanship awards. My writing now is a combination of cursive and block lettering.
I still have an empty dance card.



