I’ve never been much of an early morning person.
“I do some of my best sleeping after the alarm goes off,” my father would say.
Me too, Pop! Me too!
In the days before retirement I’d hit that snooze and hit that snooze and hit that snooze until the absolute last minute. Then I’d jump out of bed and rush around like a madwoman so I wouldn’t be late for work.
“Why, oh why, do I do this to myself!” Me would say to Myself.
Things change.
Since my retirement I’ve gone to bed at a reasonable hour and gotten up at a reasonable hour, usually before eight. Lately, that getting-up-at-a-reasonable-hour has been creeping slowly and inexorably earlier and earlier.
My handsome mountain man, on the other hand, has always been an early riser. Sometimes as early as three or four in the morning!
These days we seem to have a role reversal.
Mike said to me last night, “Tomorrow’s Saturday, and I can sleep in because the news doesn’t come on until eight.”
This is so wrong. Mike has been
sleeping in — sometimes as late as eight‑thirty or nine.
The irony of it hit my funny bone so hard I started laughing, really laughing, the kind of laugher where you have to stop yourself because you can feel the edge of hysterics creeping in.
These days he sleeps in and I’m the one who gets up early, usually between five-thirty and six.
“Why?” you query.
I’m sixty-six years on this earth. People my age — and younger! — die every day.
Every. Single. Day.
Did they know they were going to die? I wonder when a new obituary dings into the inbox on the computer.
If you know you’ve only weeks or months to live, you would make the most of that time. You would tell the people you love that you love them. You would forgive the people who’ve hurt you. You’d say the things that you’ve been meaning to say. You’d stop saving the good dishes for later, and you’d finally wear that special dress — or that nightgown you’ve been keeping tucked away for “someday.” When you know your tomorrows are numbered, “later” stops being an option.
“We’re all going to die,” my sweet, beautiful sister said to me the other day.
“Not true. You won’t die if the rapture comes first.” I put my faith in God right out there.
I’m so sorry that I’m oftentimes blunt. I should’ve put it gentler, with more respect to her beliefs.
“If you don’t die and become a spirit, how can you talk to other spirits?” she asked.
I didn’t know how to answer that. So I took the question to one of the smartest, wisest, most God-honoring people I know — someone I respect deeply. The pastor of my church.
“How should I have answered her?” I asked Pastor Jay.
He thought about it for a moment. “1 Corinthians 15:44 tells us, ‘It is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body.’ 15:51 and 52 say, ‘We shall not all sleep (die), but we shall all be changed in a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet.’ We won’t be a spirit but we’ll have a real body, alive, like Jesus after the resurrection. So we’ll be able to talk and recognize and interact with each other.”
What about the people who have already died? You may be wondering.
They are spirits — fully alive, fully conscious, with Christ — waiting for their resurrection bodies.
I know that some of you aren’t Christian and don’t believe the Bible. But there’s so much evidence supporting its truth, both historical and scientific, that I honestly don’t know how you can dismiss it. Actually, I do know, but I won’t go down the rabbit trail.
While it’s important to have your earthly affairs in order, it’s more important to know where you’re going when this life ends. Where will you spend eternity?
For me, my time is short. I’m sliding into home base. Oh, I’m not dying. Not in the respect that there’s something medically wrong with me. I don’t know if I’m going to die today, tomorrow, next week, next year, twenty years from now, or if Christ will come again and rapture His church. But this I do know. I don’t want to spend any more of it sleeping than I have to, so I get up early.
“I’m usually up before five,” one of my peeps tells me. “I love this time of day before everyone else gets up as it's quiet and gives me alone-time with God.”
I get up early because I’ve got things to see.
Like sunrises.
I look every morning and I’ve seen some pretty sunrises.
This one started with just a streak of red and gold and from there it bloomed.
I get up early because I have critters to feed and things to do.
I want to paint! I’ve taken so many beautiful photos over the years I could paint for a hundred years and not paint them all. Right now there are two rattling around in my head for sure, just waiting for their turn. But first, I need to paint some Valentine cards for my lucrative side hustle.
I am not happy with any one of the three I’ve already painted.
“What’s wrong with them?” my beautiful West Virginia friend asked.
“I’m not telling you. If I tell you then you’ll see it and once you see it, you can’t unsee it.”
“You’re your own worst critic,” my peeps assure me.
Maybe they’re right.
Speaking of my peeps...
Many of you know that I write a morning love note.
I love morning love notes! I write about what I expect the day to bring or what happened yesterday, and I always end by reminding them how much I love them. And when they share little pieces of their own lives back with me, it makes me feel connected in a way nothing else does.
It’s been about seven years since I started the one for my family. If something happens and I miss a day, you can bet one of my siblings will be calling trying to find out if I’m okay. If I miss it’s usually because the internet is down or I thought I’d sent it and didn’t. Aye-yi-yi. That stuff happens when you get old, don’cha know.
I was recently approached by someone at my church saying she was seeking a connection with other Christian women.
If a morning love note makes me feel connected, would it work for her?
I started a second chain of morning love notes because it’s something I can commit to. There are nine of my Moxie ladies on this chain. Now, instead of thinking of my gals once a week when I see them at church, I think of all their beautiful faces when I write their love note in the morning. And I’m getting to know them better.
“We’re going swimming with the dolphins this summer,” one of the gals said. “And you can’t wear jewelry. I’ve had this ring on my finger for forty-four years and they had to cut it off. I’ll go today and pick up my newly re-sized ring.”
Forty-four years! Isn’t that a fabulous milestone? And to swim with the dolphins! How exciting would that be? I hope she comes back with photos.
One of the gals took time out of her busy day to donate blood.
Gosh! Golly! Gee-whiz! I haven’t donated blood in many years. It was easy to do where we lived before because it was right down the street. Here? I don’t know about it.
Another gal is sharing her health struggles and the insurmountable sadness over her brother’s cancer battle. It gives us a gentle reminder to pray and then pray again.
I truly believe — have always believed — that writing is cathartic. Maybe there will be some relief in just getting it down and sharing it with us.
I end these the same way as I do my family love notes. My open declarations of love sometimes take people aback. They don’t have to love me back — that’s okay. But I can still remind them that they are loved. By me!
My friend Jody came and spent a very enjoyable afternoon with me.
We made homemade tortillas. Jody and I shared two of them hot off the griddle.
“You wouldn’t do that with store bought tortillas, would you?” I asked her.
“No,” she agreed. She wouldn’t.
“I found a recipe for a tortilla that doesn’t have flour,” I said. “Should we make them, too?”
“Yeah. Let’s.”
This would be the second time I made them. The first time I made it, just a few days before, I stuffed it with some leftover baked chicken slices and a little lettuce. If you can’t have or don’t want flour, this is the way to go.
You make this tortilla by combining one half cup cottage cheese and one egg. I mashed up some of the bigger chunks of cottage cheese but it doesn’t need to be smooth. Divide into two, spread thin, and bake on parchment paper in a 400-degree oven for twenty minutes.
There are many ways to vary this. Different spices you can add like salt, garlic powder, Italian seasonings. You can blend it smooth and pour in a single sheet to make a pizza crust.
We made tacos for lunch. Jody and I each had a taco with the homemade flour tortilla and a second one with the cottage cheese, egg tortilla. For dessert we had a healthy unsweetened, cinnamon-sprinkled applesauce.
Afterward we settled in and played Quiddler for a few hours.
Tiger helped.
“What did Jody think of the healthy version tortillas?” you wanna know.
She tasted a piece of one by itself and thought it was kind of bland.
“Oh! I forgot the salt!” I told her. Personally, I never missed the salt. Being bland lends it well to adding just about anything you want to fill it with and the flavors won’t clash.
I had so much fun playing Quiddler all afternoon. Sometimes I won, sometimes I let Jody win.
“Peg! You shouldn’t ‘let’ anyone win,” you say.
Okay! Okay! Technically, I didn’t ‘let’ her win. She beat me fair and square. I just didn’t want to admit I’d lost.
We made a trip to Tunkhannock for a few groceries. Even though we’ve made this trip many times, I found a few things to take pictures of for you.
A new well being drilled beside the road.
I loved the sky here and I know it’s not going to come across in the photo but there you have it. We were going under a patch of heavy clouds but I could see the clearing on the horizon.
We got stopped at the train crossing. An ambulance sat on the other side of the tracks, emergency lights flashing.
A good many of the railcars had colorful graffiti sprawled across them but from where we were, there was too much clutter in the way for a good picture.
I saw and photographed two hawks. Only one wasn’t blurry. That’s what happens when you try to zoom in traveling at sixty miles an hour.
This old giant came down in the last windstorm.
While at the store I spot a half pound of deli sliced turkey breast.
“This’ll be good for a roll up,” I said dropping it into the grocery buggy.
Mike had a hankerin’ for Swiss cheese so he put that in there, too.
I made two more cottage cheese and egg tortillas. There was only a little cottage cheese left in the tub so I spooned it into chip size puddles, flattened them out, and sprinkled with Everything Bagel seasoning.
Mike tried one for the first time. “I think I’d rather have the flour tortillas.”
I’m not pre-diabetic but these are easy to make so maybe I’ll keep them in my meal rotation and use it for a high-protein breakfast sandwich.
I got a phone call yesterday.
I looked at the caller ID and it was Highmark, my insurance company.
“Hello,” I answered.
“I’m Darren from Highmark and I was told to talk to Margaret Lubby,” he said.
“Luby,” Mike grumbled. I didn’t bother to correct the caller’s mispronunciation of my last name.
“That’d be me,” I said.
“I’m calling on a recorded line and I have just a few questions for you,” he said.
“Fine, but I don’t know how many I’ll answer.”
He laughed. “Okay. Well, this is a recorded line. I need to verify your information. What is your date of birth?”
“No thank you,” I said and hung up.
It’s not that Highmark doesn’t know my date of birth, they do, or that they don’t use that as a way of confirming my identity, they do that, too, it’s that I didn’t initiate the call. For all I know he was phishing for personal information.
“But it said on the ID that it was Highmark,” you say.
Yeah. They can make their number show up on my caller ID however they want. It’s just one of their tricks. He kept saying it was a recorded line — twice, actually. I don’t know if it really was, or if he thought that was supposed to make him sound legitimate. That’s just another trick. And honestly, if he isn’t actually from Highmark, what good is a recorded line anyway?
I bet, looking at this picture, you’re thinking, “What the heck is that?”
Well, let me tell you.
This is Blackie’s backside, on his rump, just a little to the right of his tail and it’s a cat bite. I’ve seen them before and this is what they look like.
Blackie doesn’t trust me. Every time I pick him up it’s to shove a pill down his throat or put something wet on his neck. He will not let me handle him. He doesn’t bite or scratch me, he just wiggles a lot.
In order to get this very blurry shot of his bite, I had to tuck him under one arm and hold my camera way out with the other and hope it was in frame when I snapped it.
“Who bit him?” Mike asked.
“I’m gonna guess it was Hatch,” I answered, but now that I think about it, I’ve seen Tiger facing off with him, too. It could’ve been him, I guess. I don’t really know.
As you can imagine, trying to get anything on this will be a challenge. It doesn’t look too bad right now but if it starts to fester, I’ll take more aggressive measures.
My last picture is Raini. I caught her just standing there, staring out the window.
What is she looking at? I wondered and took a peek. It was Tiger, sitting on the feral cat house on the kitchen patio.
Let’s call this one done!
Done!
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