• As Life Would Have It

Jean's Blog of Life, Farms and Everything

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Jean's Blog of Life, Farms and Everything

Author Archives: Jean

Not a Traditional Memorial Service

28 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by Jean in Grief

≈ 1 Comment

When I had to plan the memorial service for William it was really the last thing in the world I wanted or needed. I hope I’m not the only wife who has felt that way, and I suspect I’m not. I felt empty, lost, confused, terrified and certainly not ready for public. I wanted to transport myself back in time at least ten years. I didn’t want anyone around me who was liable to say something comforting like “He’s better off” or “God needed him more” or any of a hundred other trite and truthless statements by people who feel the need to say something when they have no idea what to say to make you or themselves feel better. Everyone told me I needed this memorial. I didn’t. Everyone told me it would be good for me. It wasn’t. A memorial did not solve a damned thing for me. It was simply one more thing I needed to get to the end of to appease others. Kind of like sitting for two hours at the local city offices to get all the death and marriage certificates everyone was demanding, or sitting for hours at the dining table filling out forms and categorizing bills for medical expenses that started arriving the day after he died. What I did know, was that William would have absolutely hated a traditional, wear your best clothes, lots of flower arrangements, solemn service with his physical remnants on display.

Several years ago, my best friend was telling me about a memorial gathering she was helping to put together for a friend of hers. Their plan was a sort of This is My Life for the deceased and was so much more meaningful than a formal service that has less to do with remembering and honoring the life that was, and more to do with just a clean and shiny ceremony. I don’t want anyone standing up to talk about me that hasn’t at least taken me out to eat or gotten tipsy in the pool with me and I knew William wouldn’t either. So, the first thing I did on Billiam’s To-Do List, was to invite everyone over for a party catered by his favorite BBQ restaurant.

I asked his family and friends to bring pictures and to write down their best memories and funniest stories about their experiences with William. Here at the house, my best friend and I washed several hundred of the models he’d built and placed them around the house on display, printed out funny Williamesque quotes from his Facebook page, had pictures printed, and delegated things like drinks, napkins, seating and tables to family and friends who were desperate to have something to do other than wring their hands in helpless sorrow. Because the gathering would be in our backyard that William had planted so beautifully, there was no need for flowers so we asked people to please make a donation to one of his favorite organizations. We plastered the front door, the walls, cabinet doors, refrigerator, interior doors and his desk with the photos, and all of the printed quotes and stories. When we were done, everywhere we looked there was William. We had a computer running a slideshow of photos of his happy faced antics on the table. His ashes were where he spent much of his quality alone time, in his chair at his model building and painting table in his office. His lovable spirit was everywhere.

We had guests enter at the front door where we had posted his favorite Star Trek meme, a note explaining that they were here to get to know the multi-faceted man he was, to laugh, and to share their own fun experiences. There was also a very important note regarding what not to say and what it was safe to say to the widow. This gave people a safe guideline to help them find the right things to say and to help me through a terrible day without feeling the need to bite anyone on the ankles. Guests aren’t going to know what to say, so give them a list. When people come up to you and fumble around with “I’m so sorry”, “He’s out of pain” and other platitudes, you’re going to tune them out and only  remember about 10% of what they say at the memorial service for the love of your life. On the other hand, if all you hear is “The food is great!”, “The yard looks Great!” “No wonder he liked it out here so much!” and “His tractor really IS as ‘groovy’ as he said” then you’ll remember the experience more fondly.

When people leave and tell you that when they pass on, they want this exact type of memorial, you know it was right. People breathed easier being able to laugh, without the pressure of what to say, they truly got to know, appreciate and honor William and I was just able to stay out of everyone’s way and allow them the closure they hoped to find.

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As Life Would Have It

28 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by Jean in General Farm Stuff, Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

The month William and I set up this blog, looking forward to telling you all of our stories in our own styles, he became ill. A month after the onset of symptoms he was diagnosed with terminal liver cancer. 8 weeks later he passed away, holding my hand, a look of surprise on his sweet face.

His life and energy are still here, on the farm, as is his unfinished, and rather lengthy, To-Do List. We had so many things we planned to accomplish around here like concrete work, laying pavers, adding a drip irrigation system, tiling the bedroom, adding plants, building furniture, painting, and various household repairs but we were attacking them slowly. Even on just a three acre farm, there are a lot of daily and weekly tasks and chores that leave little time for the improvements we simply want to do. Turns out, there was much less time than we thought.

As I sorted through a lifetime of disorganized paper work, grieved, made his final arrangements at the funeral home, filled out never ending forms, planned his memorial, cried, cleaned and boxed up his models, paced the house in stunned silence picking things up and laying them down in a different spot, and trying to remember to eat, the one thing that kept appearing on the top of the heap was his To-Do List with all of his plans for a future on the farm. I knew that after eighteen years of doing for him, all I could do for him now was to tackle his list of things he wanted done.

After the memorial gave his family and friends some closure (more on that event in a later post), I picked up Billiam’s List. Between the never ending paperwork, necessary phone calls and runs to town to fax important documents, rather than doing so much pointless pacing I started keeping my brain and hands busy on the things that were his true final requests.

Writing was what we did. We wrote together, we wrote separately. Writing, and reading writing, was what made us fall in love and kept us close. It was our most personal love both together and separately. Thus, writing has been the most difficult thing for me to get back to. The things we love most and do most often are what define our normal and normal isn’t easy to find, and is often too painful to approach, after we lose the person with whom we shared that normal.

I read an article last month about using personal rituals to help us through grief. I realized that this is what I had been doing by taking over the To-Do List, these projects had become my personal daily rituals of honoring my husband, healing and finding that new normal. So, as life would have it, this blog has changed from being our life on the farm, to a blog that is essentially my path through grief. Because my path through grief involves projects I’ve either never done alone or never done at all, there will be ample examples of How-To do the things on the To-Do List as well as how not to do them.

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Gate Safety Lesson: provided by “Weena da Queena”

28 Sunday Jul 2013

Posted by Jean in Wee Horses

≈ Leave a comment

Weena da Queena, equine product safety engineer

Weena da Queena, equine product safety engineer

This will be one of many posts regarding safety around the barnyard. More will be added as the horses figure out other ways to get themselves into trouble and as I remember past times they’ve gotten themselves into trouble. I’ll generally need to post these in the daylight hours as too close to bedtime and I’m liable to have nightmares or lay awake wondering “What was that noise?! What did they do now???”

We started with one barn, added a second barn about 20 or so feet from the first, and have now enclosed that space between them and added two covered stalls and a covered hay area. As the space between the two barns did not accommodate our 12 foot gate panels, we improvised with chain link gates. This worked very nicely until we put a horse in them. I led little Rowena into one, closed her gate, put a horse in the new stall next to her and before I got that gate closed the sounds of panic came from Rowena’s stall. I looked, my heart stopped, my stomach lurched and my body levitated the 20 feet necessary to rescue Rowena who had managed to trap the back of her neck between the gate and the post.

The bottom of the chain link gate is curved. We’d hung it about 10 inches above the ground so it swings easily. Little Weena, in her never ending search for stray bits of hay had stuck her head out the bottom of the gate to try and reach some edible tidbit or other and when she pulled her head back, the slim part of her neck, right where it joins her head, went up into the slot created by the curved bottom of the gate. She was so panic stricken that it’s a major miracle she didn’t separate her head from her body or snap her neck.

After that incident, we kept larger horses in that stall, but they too have slender necks that could fit into that slot. We ended up replacing that set up with two regular gate panels that overlap in the middle. We’d also never noticed that several of our regular gate panels have that curved bottom. We’ve tied rope, chain, no-climb, hardware cloth,  and bungee barriers across the curved neck catching gates, but every day I go out there I’m scared I’m going to find a horse that has managed to get past our flimsy precautions and killed itself. We’re going to have to weld a bar or bolt a board from the bottom of those gates and across the open space the curves create in order to truly fix the problem.

Below are photos of the safe straight gates and the unsafe curved gates.

Unsafe gate: notice the Weena snoot hovering near the place she can get in the most trouble.

Unsafe gate: notice the Weena snoot hovering near the place she can get in the most trouble.

Safe gate: notice the lack of a Weena snoot. If they can't get into trouble with it, it is uninteresting.

Safe gate: notice the lack of a Weena snoot. If they can’t get into trouble with it, it is uninteresting.

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It’s a Dry Heat

27 Saturday Jul 2013

Posted by Jean in General Farm Stuff

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Not during monsoon season dearies. It’s a wet heat and those of you who tell me wet heat is worse than dry heat need to come visit for 3 months out of the year. You’ll get a taste of both dry and wet heat.

During the summer monsoon it is common to have a 70% humidity along with 100-108 degree temperatures. Prior to monsoon season, it is common to have 110-120 degree temperatures. The difference is a comparison between sitting in a sauna or sitting in a kiln. HINT: People often pay to sit in saunas. After a week of 10% humidity and 112-120 degrees frying eggs on the pavement, baking cookies on your dashboard and risking heat stroke while walking to your mailbox, you’ll be excited for the cooler 105 with 70% humidity.  Ask the lizard my husband witnessed doing a 50 yard dash from the dry wash to the garage where it came to a stop next to his foot. The poor critter was so hot he didn’t care about that size 14 shoe that could have turned him into reptile mash.

As someone who spent most of her life in Louisiana, unless you are from Louisiana, you don’t know humidity. 95 degrees and so much humidity you can soap up and rinse off in the sun on your way to your car in the morning still feels cooler than 118 degrees. Sure you sweat more, but you’re still not as hot as you are when it’s 118.

Speaking of sweat, I realize this is supposed to be the body’s cooling system, but has anyone ever, anywhere, felt cooler when the body is producing more precipitation in an hour than the desert gets in a year? As far as I’m concerned, sweat as a body’s natural air conditioner is a massive fail. We should have kept our tails and evolved solar powered fans at the ends of them.

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A Day in the Life

26 Friday Jul 2013

Posted by Jean in General Farm Stuff

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

farm, horse, miniature horse

This is actually from an old blog from several years ago.  My father was in poor health and mentioned he wished he could have seen our little horses. We spent a day working to put a picture in stories together for him. He passed away just a couple of weeks later so I’m sure glad we got the idea to do this for him. A year later we lost my beloved “Honey”, the buckskin mare in the good grooming picture, and just this year our much loved Anniedawg passed away on Easter Sunday. My big brother lost his war with cancer, but my wonderful husband emerged victorious over Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. Things got tough and scary in the years since I wrote this blog post, but the little farm goes on with fresh hope, new furry faces and cherished memories.

Here at the miniature horse farm we rise at around 5:30-6:00 each morning, creak our way slowly out of bed and stumble toward the coffee maker. We wake up via caffeine I.V. while checking email and reading news on line, then we head for the medicine cabinet and hit the dated, categorized, carefully compartmentalized pill boxes that we’re told keep us living. Then we dress and sit dumbly on the edge of the bed, as if our boats fetched up in mud, while our engines try, re-try and try again to turn over. Mostly what we get is that “tick, tick, tick” sound of a bad battery. Eventually, however, we sputter to a start and mosey out to the barn to feed the horses around 7-ish.

goodtobeshortblog

Being short has it’s priveleges.

Then we feed horses. Horses who today are standing out there, tapping their toes, and not at all happy that breakfast is late. Rowena is determined to chase William down for her bowl because as you can see the poor baby is emaciated.

gimmemyfood2

Handsome is turning himself into a giraffe trying to inhale his feed straight out of the scoop before I can dump it in his feeder.

feedinghandsomehossblog

William and John handle the heavy chores around here, lifting those bales, toting that poop and such. (Imagine Green Acres theme playing in the background)

merikangothicblog

John also handles the WHW (Wittmann Horse Wrestling) duties whenever anyone gets out of line.

desiwrestlingblog

desigoesdownblog

While the horses eat we check the garden for ripe veggies so the rabbits and squirrels don’t make off with them first. The rabbits have finally gotten desperate enough to eat zucchini. Looks like we’ve been raided overnight AGAIN.

rabbitetzucchiniblog

Gol-durn rabbits! We’ll show ’em!

durnrabbitsblog

Then, it’s time to ride out and check the fence lines.

rideemoutblog

Good grooming practices are part of the daily routine, at least for the 4- legged residents. Folks wouldn’t recognize me without hay in my hair.

propergroomingblog

William tries to explain the concept of rabbit hunting to Elmo and Anniedawg. They just want their biscuits and bacon thanks.

baconhuntersblog

On weekends we love to watch the televised PBR events after the evening chores.

watchinpbrblog

watchinpbrtooblog

And that’s pretty much our day, minus the tractor work, house work, nap and writing!

DISCLAIMER: No herbivores were harmed during the making of this blog post.

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