I learned this morning that my cousin, Tony Torlai died yesterday afternoon. He had terminal brain cancer and was not very old, just his early 50’s, I think. My mom told me last week that the Archbishop (Tony wrote him regularly) had visited him to give him last rites. The last time I saw him was last June at my Aunt Gloria’s funeral. It had just been a couple of weeks since learning of my own cancer so I was in a bit of a fog. Tony showed definite cognitive impairment from his disease but was congenial with a most positive attitude. He was getting a great deal out of going to church each day. I was overwhelmed with admiration for his strength and faith. I was also overwhelmed with sadness for his family, especially his three children,

Tony was really close to his brother and four sisters as well as to his parents. They live very close to one another. I can only imagine the depth of their grief right now and in the time ahead. I am heartened that their great love for one another will, in time, carry them to a place of peaceful solace.

To lose someone so young is the hardest loss, especially when he was a father, still so needed by his children. This must have been an awful grief for him, knowing that he was leaving life while his children are still growing up.

I carry them all in my heart and hope that I will be able to provide a little bit of comfort in the days ahead.

My grandparents were married for 60 years before the passing of my grandfather in 1987. I know you never read characterizations like this in the newspaper announcements about 60th anniversaries, but frankly, my grandparents had a terrible marriage. My mom said that even as a devout Catholic kid in the 40’s, she had concluded that her parents should get a divorce.

But they didn’t. They were children of Italian immigrants who settled in the Renton and Black Diamond, Washington. Their fathers worked the coal mines. Both of my grandparents were highly intelligent people. My grandfather graduated from high school, which was quite an achievement. First generation immigrant girls were expected to go to work instead of high school so my grandmother did just that after completing the 8th grade. My grandma was 17 and my grandfather 21 when they married. They had their first five children in seven years and then a sixth child 14 years later. Imagine giving birth to your first child at the start of the Great Depression and your last child a few years after the end of World War II!

I grew up in a house about two miles from my grandparents. I saw them a lot. This was mostly a very good thing. However, they argued a GREAT deal. Many arguments were beyond ridiculous. By the time I was a kid, my grandparents no longer vacationed together. My grandmother regularly flew to Hawaii to see their daughter, Judy. My grandmother loved Don Ho, yes the Hawaiian lounge singer of “Tiny Bubbles” fame. She went to his shows. Apparently, he used to call the grandmothers up on the stage to take photos with him, kissing them on the cheek. My grandmother, always up for a brush with celebrity, got her picture taken. (Remember, this is the same woman who got in trouble for calmly stepping over the velvet rope barricade in order to try to shake the hand of Prince Phillip, who was visiting the Seattle area. My mom and her sisters figured out what had occurred when they read a headline in the local paper, “Woman with shopping bag accosts Prince Philip.”)

Anyway, my grandfather was insanely jealous of the corny picture my grandmother took with Don Ho! They argued about it for YEARS! See, I told you that they had ridiculous arguments. We once visited their house on one of their anniversaries. My grandmother got angry with my grandfather and in the heat of the argument she exclaimed, “57 years, married to the wrong man!”

But this post is not about my grandparents’ marriage, may they rest in peace. Yesterday, my dear parents celebrated their 58th wedding anniversary. My parents have a quite happy marriage. They met on a blind date. My dad and my mother’s brother were stationed in the Coast Guard together in Seattle. My uncle set my parents up on a date and they only stopped dating to get married on Thanksgiving Day in 1954. They married on a major holiday because my grandparents did not want to close their retail business for an extra day. My uncle (the same one who set up my parents), likewise married on Memorial Day. For their wedding, a full Thanksgiving dinner was served. The bridesmaids wore gowns, each in a different fall hue. Too bad the pictures are in black and white. My mom’s wedding gown was beautiful. She brought a picture out of a magazine to a seamstress who tailor made it for her for $50.

Truth be told, my parents sometimes argue about ridiculous things. This is actually kind of reassuring to me because my husband of nearly 23 years and I also have stupid arguments. My parents also share a lot. They love to hike and travel. They love their family. They love their beautiful home in the woods. They share strong religious beliefs and are active in their church.

They have a true love match and I am both so happy for and inspired by them.

Joe and Martha MacKenzie, Thanksgiving 2010

Yesterday, in addition to being my 47th birthday, also marked 6 months since my breast cancer diagnosis. Since I started this blog on that same day, it also marked six months of of blogging. I’ve accumulated quite a number of posts, two hundred something and counting. As part of my own recovery, I look back at them from time to time. I’ve decided to re-post one of my favorites, about once a week, starting with my oldest posts. So, this is the kick off Best of Blog!!!!!

I wrote this post on 5/27/12, three days after learning about my breast cancer. I had started back on Weight Watchers at the beginning of May and had quickly decided to keep working on weight loss. As you may know, I have since lost a considerable amount of weight and changed to a much healthier lifestyle. This post is called “My Other Project.” It’s about more than weight loss and health, as you will read.

So my other project is Weight Watchers. As some of you know, I have had trouble maintaining a healthy weight since I was a teen. Sometimes I dread going in for my annual physical because if I’m overweight, I know my internist will ask me about my weight loss plans. Even though it is totally her job to talk to me about this and she does it in the kindest way possible, I still feel dread. Just last Friday, I was weighed at the beginning of my consultation with the surgeon. I was slightly surprised as I had asked the day before whether I would be given a medical exam and the woman whom I had spoke with told me that it was just a consultation. So, the nurse escorted me from the waiting room with the first stop being the scale. I quipped, “Ugh, getting weighed is worse than having cancer.” Crickets. I am known for my gallows humor under extreme stress. After all, I was the the person that upon opening a letter at work informing me that I was one of the people being let go in a round of lay offs who stood in the hallway, waved the letter, and exclaimed, “I thought this was a bonus check!” People laughed then but not this time. And perhaps I was imagining things but I thought I even saw a bit of a pained look on the face of one of the RN’s that passed me so I lamely said for all to hear, “I really don’t think it is worse to be weighed than having cancer.”

There are periods in my life when I’ve been overweight and periods when I have been at a healthy weight. I also have a long history of a poor body image. I didn’t really believe that I could possibly be good looking until I was an older teen and even that was a tenuous realization. There were also periods when I viewed myself as downright ugly. I used to get bullied about the way I looked, too. NOT HELPFUL. I remember when I was a 5th grader, there was this 6th grader who purposely sat on the bus with me for what seemed like days on end to tell me how ugly I was. He once said, “You’re so ugly, you don’t deserve to live.” Now this was not one of the popular kids, he was, objectively speaking, a pretty homely kid with a lot of problems and not many friends. Nonetheless, I can still remember the way my face burned and my stomach turned, just listening to him. In the 7th grade, some of the 8th grade boys used to tease me by pretending they liked me by derisively flirting with me. They also gave off the impression that they thought I didn’t know they were insincere.

When I was in the 8th grade, I lost about 25 pounds and grew a number of inches. I also started wearing make-up and stylish clothes. When I wasn’t wearing my velour top, white painter’s pants, and high heel Candie’s slides, I was wearing my Brittania’s with my blue Nike swoosh running shoes. I got my hair professionally cut into a Farrah-esque mane, except with more curl and brunette hair. Anyway, you get the picture. The world changed for me. Some of my old friends were no longer friends and then some kids who wouldn’t have previously given me the time of day, acted like they wanted to make friends. I pretty much stuck with the friends in the third group, the ones who stayed my friends throughout my physical transformation.

When I got to high school, some of those former 8th grade boys did not recognize me because I had changed while they were high school freshman. One of them actually tried to ask me out a few years later and our band teacher was even trying to be his wing man. I did not explain myself. As it turned out, I actually didn’t end up dating a lot in high school. I was loud and a good student. I was considered a “brain” and in adolescent black-and-white thinking, if you fit in one category, it was hard to be in another category like “pretty” or “fun.” I remember, too thinking that I would have a better dating life if I weren’t doing as well at school. As much as I wanted a boyfriend and doubted whether I was attractive or not, I knew that if I worked hard at school I would have a lot more choices later in my life. I also remember having a strong sense of financial responsibility for supporting myself someday. (This was more than a little unusual as I was 1) thinking far ahead into the future and 2) there were still a lot of stay at home moms back then, including my own.

By the time I got to college, I got a lot of attention for my looks. I had never really experienced a lot of positive attention like this. Men I didn’t know would see me walking up the steps to U.W. buildings and open the door for me! I have to admit, it was pretty cool. I remember during one week of my sophomore year, I had two young men asking for dates. I thought, “Why shouldn’t I be able to date two men?” So I went out to lunch with one and out to dinner with the other all in the same week. SCANDALOUS! This will sound ridiculous but the idea of dating two guys felt like juggling 100 items at once and like I was doing something wrong. I liked both of them. After a week I chose one of them for a stupid reason, too (he lived closer to me.) Ironically, this boyfriend was also one that when mad at me, complained that I was too fat and not pretty enough. This is a lesson to you, young ladies out there. It is perfectly okay to casually date more than one guy especially if you are simply eating meals with them. And don’t pick boyfriends based solely on convenience.

My husband and I met when I was 20. He’s a dear and has always sincerely complimented my looks no matter my age or weight, which has fluctuated quite a bit over the past 25 years. It was with ample embarrassment and some shame that I recently admitted to him that even now during the overweight periods of my middle aged life, I think negative thoughts about my weight and appearance several times a day. I am extremely careful to avoid saying these things aloud, especially in front of my daughter. But despite the fact that I have a wonderful husband, career, and family as well as the fact that I am a pretty happy person, I have yet to eliminate the negative self-comments from my head.

It is easy to say that this is ALL the doing of the media or our culture for it’s ridiculous emphasis on beauty, sex appeal, and youth in women in defining their value to society. And although I was hardly immune to this influence, I was able to counter so many other cultural influences. I didn’t take drugs, smoke, or drink. I did well in school. I was very ambitious in my schooling and career. Further, I have experienced myself as being valued for so many substantive characteristics, for being intelligent, for being kind, for being smart and fun. I know there are other ways to be valued as a woman than for beauty. I am a happy and outgoing person. When I walk down the street, people often smile or say, “hello.” My experience with the world, even of people I don’t know is so overwhelmingly positive. Why do I still have these thoughts of being less than? Is it really so important to me that I be valued specifically for beauty? Or is this voice in my head just an old tape that plays when I am feeling the negative physical and emotional effects of not eating right or exercising? Maybe it is really closer to the latter and I am not so superficial deep down after all. I’ve never thought about it that way before. Thanks again, Mom this blog was a great idea!

Some of you may read this and be tempted to provide me with reassurance, to tell me, “Don’t be ridiculous, you are beautiful.” I’m not looking for reassurance. Whether I am beautiful or not is beside the point. Whether I am physically beautiful to others is irrelevant. All of us know women who are breathtakingly beautiful and even make money at least in part for being breathtakingly beautiful and are still horribly unhappy about their looks. (I’m looking at you Uma Thurman.) No amount of outside reassurance is going to fix those insecurities and doubts.

Finally, I may never fully rid myself of that negative body image tape. But maybe I need to stopped feeling so embarrassed and ashamed by it. I will never be perfect so I don’t need to beat myself up for beating myself up. The tape is one of the things about my life I would like to be different. I’ve already proven that I can live with it and be a happy, well-adjusted person. And yes, I know that my project is bigger than Weight Watchers. But the Weight Watchers project is helping me be physically healthier and there’s no shame in that.

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I finished all of my continuing education credits today to renew my psychology license! Crisis averted!

My cat, Ollie, is very “verbal” as some cat fanciers like to say. He has a HUGE vocabulary beyond the usual meow, purr, caterwaul, and HISS!!!! Ollie has little high pitched chirps when he wants to be fed, which are quickly followed by whiny and nagging meows if he is not immediately fed. If we wait much too long for him, the whines turn into the most pitiful cat cries you’ve ever heard.

Ollie is very territorial, which makes for a frustrated existence for him, being that he is an indoor cat except for when he sneaks out. When he gets out, he is often gone for hours, coming back home the next morning with roughed up fur and in more recent years, broken canine teeth! Ollie also loves to hunt and before we got screens on our windows, he used to hang half of his body out of the window and try to catch birds that flew near the house. Over the years, we came home twice to a pile of bird feathers in the kitchen!

This morning, I heard a new noise, a growl! He saw a cat in the front yard and was pacing back and forth on the window sill. Now it wasn’t the low moan warning noise that cats make when they are getting ready to fight. This was low and rattling, almost like a little lion!

I don’t know what’s gotten into him today. He also started the day running down the full length of the hallway and jumping half way up the walls with his claws out. He left scratch marks on the trim around the bathroom door way.

I keep asking John to email the vet and see if any of these recent changes in behavior (I’ve spared you from some of them because they are gross) are a result of side effects from his medication. (And yes, I could contact the vet myself, but I am already in charge of my own and my daughter’s medical care.)I tend to think that an almost 12 year-old cat with multiple medical issues would be a little more sedate than this wild jungle cat who is slinking about my house.

Here’s Ollie with his mouth closed for a change today. He started chattering away again as soon as I finished taking this picture.

I woke this morning to the sound of heavy rain. Actually, I woke to the sound of my alarm and then the rain. I reset my alarm and tried to go back to sleep, fully preparing myself to cancel my walk today. A half hour later, I felt a little burst of energy and decided to get out and walk. The deciding factor was the lack of wind, which meant that I could bring an umbrella with me.

The first part of the walk was pretty easy. It wasn’t really raining that hard, as it turned out. Some of the storm drains were clogged so I had to jump from dry spot to dry spot to cross the streets. But that was even a little fun, like jumping from stone to stone to cross a creek. It reminded me of being a kid again.

Then the rain got heavier, a LOT heavier. But I stayed mostly warm and mostly dry and had a good walk. I took off my shoes at the door and walked into the house, leaving wet footprints with my wool socks.

I had a comforting thought during my walk. Through thick and thin, there are things I can do to take care of myself.

I also had the thought that as we head into winter, I might be wise to buy some water proof gloves and reassess my supposedly waterproof breathable Gortex light hiking shoes!

One of the things I like most about my daily walks is the reminder of how surprisingly busy the world of the outdoors is. Today, there were gulls flying overhead and little birds flying into all of the berry-laden bushes. I also recognized the sounds of a starling. Their calls are so varied and mechanical sounding as if they are wound up by hand each morning.

John had recently commented that he doesn’t know how we can have hummingbirds all year with the lack of flower nectar. I told him, “They must find something to eat or they wouldn’t stay around.” Today I found two hummingbirds flying into a couple of bushes. When I looked closely I noticed that each bush had tiny little flowers in it, thousands of them.

So much life. And I’m part of it, too.

I took a few smartphone quality pictures on my journey.

Yes, that is a chicken coop in the left back corner. Our neighbors are taking advantage of Seattle’s City Chickens program.

 

Now that most of the leaves are gone it’s much easier to see the grapes on these vines.

 

Carpet left from the wind storm last night.

 

 

Lithodora diffusa ‘Grace Ward’. This is such a handy little shrub. Although it’s not the solid blue mass of flowers it is for a couple of weeks of the summer, it keeps at least a few blooms on it all year.

Arbutus unedo. Another handy shrub that blooms and fruits constantly throughout the year. The fruits are edible though bland.

 

 

 

 

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Lindbergh High School Reunion '82, '83, '84, '85

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