Saturday, January 24, 2026

Sunday Stealing

Here are 10 things that make me happy:

1. My flannel sheets on a frigid night

2. That "pop" when I open a Coke can

3. Photos of Violet, my great-niece                            

4. Scratching an activity off my "to-do" list

5. Losing myself in a good biography

6. A good steak*

7. My morning shower

8. Watching my cats enjoy their breakfast

9. Meeting up with friends

10. Unexpectedly hearing Sir Paul on the radio

 


*I think about steak a lot because I'm in the midst of dental work and can't enjoy one right now

  

Friday, January 23, 2026

Saturday 9

Saturday 9: Up the Ladder to the Roof (1970)

Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.

1) Many people are uncomfortable with ladders. Some feel unsteady on the steps, others have a fear of heights. Then there's the superstition that warns against walking under ladders. Are you afraid of ladders? I love my ladder at home. It's shiny and sturdy and makes it possible for me to change those overhead light bulbs and my smoke detector batteries. Not crazy about the step ladders at work, though. Nothing to hold onto on the way down. 
 
2) In this song, the Supremes advise us to go up the ladder to the roof to be closer to Heaven. While poetic, that's not really why most homeowners climb onto the roof. They're more likely replacing shingles or cleaning the gutters. Have you ever been on the roof of your building? I've been up there twice, both times to discuss the condition of the roof with contractors and fellow condo board members. Both times I nodded sagely and pretended I understood what was being said.
 
3) The record was the Supremes first and biggest hit without Diana Ross. When Jean Terrell replaced Diana as lead singer, the two ladies appeared together at a press event to launch this new iteration of the Supremes. Have you ever met your replacement at a job, or perhaps the person you replaced? Yes. Advertising in Chicago can be a surprisingly small world.
 
4) Mary Wilson was a member of the group when it was formed in 1959 and stayed through 1977, when the Supremes officially disbanded. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average American stays at a job 3.9 years. Looking over your job history, how long did you typically stick with an employer? I worked full-time for 48 years. Answering this question accurately would require entirely too much math. My best guess is around 5 years.
 
5) The third Supreme performing on this record was Cindy Birdsong. After the group broke up for good, Cindy finished nursing school and practiced at UCLA Medical Center. When did you last interact with a nurse or nurse practitioner? This week! My nurse practitioner sent me the good news about my annual mammogram and refilled a prescription for me. I love how available she is.
 
6) In 1970, when this song was popular, TV shows about doctors like Marcus Welby, MD and Medical Center ranked high in the Nielsen ratings. Medical shows are still popular today, with Grey's Anatomy entering its 22nd season and The Pitt earning critical accolades. Do you have a favorite TV doctor? Dr. Michael Rossi of Peyton Place. He was the best person in the sin-soaked town. He truly cared about every horny teenager, frustrated housewife, wife-beater, nymphomaniac and alcoholic who entered his office. Yet for some reason he couldn't get laid. His first lady friend was frigid, his second dumped him for a man from her past, his third got hauled away to prison for perjury, his fourth tragically ended up at the bottom of a cliff ... and all before he could "kick it through the goal posts," if you will. 
 
Won't someone please sleep with this man?

7) Also in 1970, when this song was popular, audiences were lining up to see the movie Love Story. Without looking it up, complete the film's most famous line:  "Love means _______________." I don't have to look it up. I had this poster on my bedroom wall. I don't know why, but in the summer between 7th and 8th grade, my friends and I just loved movies that made us cry.
 

 
PS Ryan O'Neal, aka Oliver Barrett III in Love Story, got his big break on Peyton Place. It's like a Peyton Place reunion around here.
 
8) Slumberchums™ were all the rage among pre-teens in 1970. These sleeping bags had attached pillow "heads" that made it look like you slipping into sleep inside a plush bear. When did you most recently sleep in a sleeping bag? Approx. 25 years ago. My niece's Brownie troop needed another "mother" for an overnight camping trip and I was pressed into service. My niece is now a mother herself.
 
9) Random question: Did you take a multivitamin this morning? If yes, did you swallow it or chew it? Swallowed it. I have two temp crowns and under the circumstances, chewables would do more harm than good.
 

 

 

Wednesday, January 21, 2026

Thursday Thirteen #447

13 of the most common dental procedures. I'm in the midst of another dental adventure. I had a dual crown lengthening in December and if it heals according to plan,  I'll have a pair of new, permanent crowns before the end of February. 
 
This inspired me to find out what happens to most patients when they settle into the dentist's chair. These are the procedures mentioned most (beyond routine exams, x-rays and cleaning):

1. Filling

2. Root canal

3. Crowns

4. Implants

5. Extractions

6. Bridges

7. Scale and polish 

8. Fitting dentures

9. Whitening

10. Veneers

11. Sealants

12. Bonding

13. Night guards

Did you spend much time in the dentist's chair in 2025?



Please join us for THURSDAY THIRTEEN. Click here to play along, and to see other interesting compilations of 13 things.

Monday, January 19, 2026

My George Bailey moment

Remember that scene in It's a Wonderful Life where Clarence shows George Bailey how the world would have been less without him? Over the weekend, I got a glimpse into how my life has touched others. 

I spent the weekend with my nephew at the Cubs Convention. I realize how lucky I am – not many 25-year-old men would look forward to hanging with their post-menopausal aunts. Even better, he casually slipped in an invitation: next time we get together for lunch, would I like to meet his girlfriend?

Who? What? He has not mentioned a girlfriend since his days at WIU. 

She's a 31-year-old ophthalmology tech* who recently relocated to the Chicago area and happens to be living behind one of my nephew's favorite local pizza places (and he takes his pizza seriously). She has two cats, both rescues. And she knows all about me. My nephew told her how I got him interested in his passions: baseball and politics.

I appeared casual about this, but I nearly cried.  

Sometimes as a barren spinster, I wonder if my life has mattered. Then something like this happens.


 

*Not sure what that is, but I'll find out. 

The boys were back in town!

 

I spent two glorious days among the faithful. I wore my Grandma's vintage Ryne Sandberg jersey over my 2016 BRYZZO (Bryant/Rizzo) shirt and carried my Cubs purse. There are places where that would be too much. The official Cubs Convention at the Sheraton Grand was not one of them. 

•  Stood close enough to touch the newest Cub, superstar third baseman Alex Bregman. He's smaller than I expected. (His baseball card says he's 5'11, but I don't believe it.) But positive and friendly and nerdy-smart about hitting. I loved listening to him.

•  Checked out our middle infielders, Nico Hoerner and Dansby Swanson. Our Butch and Sundance. They are so cute, so funny, and so good. They're both Gold Glovers!

 

 • Excited by how excited Cubs fans are by PCA, the electric Pete Crow-Armstrong. That charming kid is our superstar, clearly the successor to Anthony Rizzo in the hearts of the faithful. He's clever, too. Though born and raised in Southern California, he wore his Bears cap all weekend.


•  Made peace with Clark, the Cubs mascot. Frankly, he's always annoyed me, but seeing him interact with very young fans changed my mind. 


•  Best of all, there was the 2016 Reunion! We celebrated our World Series Champs. I got to see former manager Joe Maddon, who I adore, in his first official Cubs appearance since he was let go in 2019. I was impressed – but not surprised – by how gracious he was. And of course, there was my all-time favorite-most player, Anthony Rizzo! I went to all four of his events, including his grand entrance holding the World Series trophy over his head. Like old Joe, he's retired now but happy and living his best life. My baseball heroes never stop teaching me by example.


 

 

It's not that I don't like the Chicago Bears

... I just don't care about football. I have appreciated the Bears' magic season, though. Not only was everyone in a better mood once they started winning, but I knew I could do my laundry uninterrupted when they were playing.

Last night, during their long over-time playoff game against the Rams, I managed to do four loads. I even washed my mattress cover and pillow protectors! If only they'd made it to the Super Bowl. Then the living room curtains would have been washed, too. 

  

 Photo by Anton Savinov on Unsplash

Saturday, January 17, 2026

Sunday Stealing

3 x 5

Three things I love (Remember, these are things, not people):

1. Coca Cola

2. Chocolate milk

3. Cinnamon (both taste and scent)

Three things on my desk:

1. A pile of papers I probably don't need

2. A cube notepad

3. A pencil cup made by gluing crayons to a styrofoam cup (a gift from my nephew when he was in Kindergarten)

Three things I can't do:

1. Sing

2. Dance

3. Drive

Three things I'm good at:

1. Writing

2. Pet care

3. Earning airline miles (really, I'm quite the rewards whore)

Three things I want to accomplish:

Here are my 2026 goals –

1. Make a drop off/month at either Goodwill or my local resale shop

2. Find a new pair of really comfortable athletic shoes (my beloved Nikes aren't gonna last forever)

3. Drink more water every day

 


 

Friday, January 16, 2026

Saturday 9

Saturday 9: Man I Need (2025)

Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.
 
1) In this song, Olivia Dean is looking for a man who wants to really communicate and doesn't make her "read between the lines." Tell us about a time when you felt you had to work hard to figure out what someone was trying to tell you. In my old life, when I worked in advertising, it took me a while to understand my client. They are a Fortune 50 company, but their internal culture is so nice, so considerate, that I didn't always understand at first what they really wanted. Example: It was kind of exciting when we went to their offices to present new creative concepts, and so lots of people not directly involved with the project at hand would be in attendance as I did my reveal. Afterward, the VP would go around the room and invite everyone to share their opinion. 
 
"I liked the picture in the first concept but the headline of the second concept." OR "I think it would be better if we made the type bigger." OR "Instead of a young woman on her phone, could we show a dad with his kids?" 

I'd be taking notes furiously. I'd get my team started on the requested revisions. Then the VP would call and say, "We're going with the first concept as is, no changes."
 
WHAT?!? I finally realized the VP just wanted to make all her coworkers feel heard. Which is not the same as actually paying attention to what they said.
 
I eventually learned to not make any revisions until I got that call from the VP. 
 
2) She's eager to meet his best friend and join their friend group. Have you made any new friends recently? Kinda/sorta. Christine has been in my movie Meetup for well over a year, but last month she invited me to hang with her away from the rest of the group. She shares my Cub love and has been texting me all week, asking me which of this weekend's festivities I'm attending. So yeah, I guess we're becoming friends.
 
I'm so excited!

 
3) "Man I Need" was a hit in the fall of 2025. It was so popular that, in addition to CDs, a special vinyl release was scheduled in time for Christmas (2025) gift giving. How do you listen to music most often? Do you play CDs, download, stream, or play vinyl records? Mostly I just say, "Alexa, play [insert artist here]." I'm too lazy to actually cross the room and put a CD into the player or even download an album.
 
4) Olivia Dean recalls that her first public performance was singing at a school talent show. If we had a Sat 9 talent show, what would you do to entertain us? I would stay seated. You do not want to see me dance or hear me sing.
 
5) She says she loved listening to her parents' music collection. How about you? Did you and your parents share musical tastes? How about you and your kids? My dad hated every artist I loved. He's been dead more than 30 years now. I often wonder how he'd feel about being so wrong about the Beatles being a flash in the pan. Come to think of it, he loathed Elvis, too. Always called him "Presley." Streisand bugged the shit out of him, too, but I think it was more her unconventional personality than her artistry.
 
6) Olivia likes to be dressed up when she gets onstage, favoring gowns and heels. She says of her audiences, "If you guys paid good money that you worked hard for, let me give you a show." How do you feel when you're invited to an event that calls for you to dress up? Are you enthusiastic about choosing your outfit, or would you rather keep it casual? I like to see other people dress up. I enjoy checking out their outfits. One of the reasons I look forward to going to the bank is that all the advisors look so handsome in their jackets and ties. All that said, I will be happy to remain in jeans and t-shirts for the rest of my life.
 
7) She enjoys classic film and lists Singin' in the Rain as her favorite. What's the last movie you watched? Do you recommend it to other Sat 9ers? I just watched Something of Value, a 1957 film starring Sidney Poitier and Rock Hudson available on Amazon Prime. It's really hopelessly dated and I don't recommend it, except for the fact that 
Sidney Poitier and Rock Hudson were ridiculously gorgeous.
 
 
8) In 2025, when this song was popular, the average price tag for a new vehicle was $47,690 and $25,100 for a used one. Are you planning to make a big purchase in 2026? Not $50,000 worth of big, but yes. This summer I want to get a new refrigerator. Hopefully by year-end, I'll have purchased a new bed, too. It's funny, but the bed I've kinda fallen in love with online sits totally on the floor and is being marketed for pre-teen boys. I'm going to go into the showroom and check it out in person. It's a full-size bed (not a twin) and has all those book cases and USB ports and I think it would make me happy.

But I don't have a skateboard or school trophies!

9) Random question: Are you better with love or money? Ha! This is kind of a race to the bottom for me. But I'll say money. It looks like I'm going to be OK in retirement. No trips to Versailles or the Incas or London – like some of my Facebook friends took over Christmas – but I am going to Hollywood for the TCM Film Festival and I don't break out in a cold sweat when I get a bill from my dentist and I never skimp on my cats' care or food. So that's something.

 

Thursday, January 15, 2026

These people vote, drive & buy guns

While researching the veracity of a factoid for Saturday 9, I came upon this little "joke," which was posted last week.

 

Really? Shouldn't your ass be named DJT? After all, it was President Trump who turned the White House lawn into a Tesla showroom and said he wanted to buy one of Elon's sedan EVs.

Of course, that was back in March. 10 months ago. I guess that's a long time for MAGA supporters with short memories. Though the woman who posted it does seem to remember to blame Joe Biden for whatever she doesn't like, and he's been out of office a year.

I suppose I'll just never understand the mind of a cultist.  


 

Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Thursday Thirteen #446

Movies are my passion. I just checked out my Letterboxd stats for 2025, which gave me a deep dive into my film watching.

1. I saw 176 movies this past year, an average of 3.4/week.

2. My watch vs. rewatch ratio: 55% of the movies were new to me, 45% were rewatches.

3. The average running time of the movies I watched this year: 1 hour/48 minutes. 

4. My biggest movie-watching day is Sunday. I think that's because my movie group meets on Monday and I'm catching up. 

5. My biggest week of movie going was April 21-27. 13 films in all. No surprise there, since that was the week of the TCM Classic Film Festival.'

6. There was one week in May and another in October when I watched no movies at all. The reason is simple: BASEBALL!

7. The oldest movie I saw this year was from 1930. The Divorcee, starring Norma Shearer. It was considered scandalous at the time and it's still rather frank about extramarital sex. I love pre-code movies (movies made before the Production Code of 1934).

8. Four were released in 2025Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere, Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale, One Battle After Another and Sorry, Baby. You may not have heard of Sorry, Baby. I liked this little indie film about a woman recovering from trauma. The writer-director-star, Eva Victor, was the darling of Sundance and has been nominated for a Golden Globe. (PS Nothing bad happens to the kitten. You need to know this.)

9. The 50th of the 174 movies I saw this year was Misery. It was a special 35th anniversary screening at the TCM Classic Film Festival with Kathy Bates and Rob Reiner. I attended two Festival events with him and he seemed like a sweet, joyous man. His murder makes me so sad.

10. The 100th was Mrs. Miniver (1942). It was a movie group selection. I liked it well enough (I gave it 3.5 stars) but others in the group loved it. Mostly, though, our conversation about the movie was memorable because of what Betty revealed. She asked why Mrs. Miniver didn't just grab the Nazi's gun. I said, "She's a suburban housewife. How would she know how to use a gun?" Betty shrugged and said she had a FOID (Firearms Owner's ID) card and usually carried her gun. I do not find this news comforting. If you knew Betty, you wouldn't, either.

11. The 150th was The Locket (1946). Oh, this psychological thriller is trippy! It has a flashback ... within a flashback ... within a flashback. It made me question everything I was watching. What if one of these narrators is that famous unreliable narrator? 

12. This year I gave 16 movies a full five stars. Of those 16, my fellow Letterboxers nearly agreed on two, giving both Psycho (1960) and It's a Wonderful Life (1946) 4.5 stars. The online community disagrees with me most vehemently on Jailhouse Rock (1957). Letterboxers give it an average of 3.2 stars. They are simply wrong. Elvis getting everybody on the whole cell block to dance to the "Jailhouse Rock" is one of the most iconic musical numbers of all time – right up there with Julie Andrews twirling around on that mountaintop and Gene Kelly stomping in puddles. I will die on this hill.

13. The star I spent the most time with this year was Robert Redford. I watched 8 movies that he starred in and one (Ordinary People) that he directed. Many of his movies were suddenly available to stream after he died in September. 

 

Please join us for THURSDAY THIRTEEN. Click here to play along, and to see other interesting compilations of 13 things.

 

Tuesday, January 13, 2026

WWW.WEDNESDAY



WWW. WEDNESDAY asks three questions to prompt you to speak bookishly. To participate, and to see how other book lovers responded, click here

PS I no longer participate in WWW.WEDNESDAY via that link because her blog won't accept Blogger comments. I mention this only to save you the frustration I experienced trying to link up

1. What are you currently reading? G-Man: J. Edgar Hoover and the Making of the American Century by Beverly Gage. This book is a deep dive into the life and career of the first FBI director, a man who served under eight Presidents and was at the center of American law and culture for decades. I've encountered him often while reading about JFK and Nixon. Now I'm going to get to know him as the subject of this Pulitzer Prize winning biography (la-de-da).

 

This was a Christmas present from my nephew. He knows that I'm attracted to big biographies of men with big personalities (last year it was Richard Nixon and Leo Durocher) and he figured I would like this one. I appreciate the thought he put into my gift and I not only want to like it, I want to have made a significant dent in the book by the time we spend the weekend together at the Cubs Fan Convention (January 16-18). Wish me luck!

  

2. What did you recently finish reading? Just the Nicest Couple by Mary KubicaNina and Lily both teach at a high school in the Chicago suburbs. The women become friends, and socialize away from school with their husbands, Jake and Christian. Their worlds are completely upended when Nina's husband Jake suddenly goes missing, and Lily tells her husband Christian that she believes she was the last one to see him before he disappeared.

 

This is a psychological thriller told by two characters: Nina and Christian. Page by page, Nina goes from angry to panicked. At first she thinks Jake went off without a word to punish her after a fight, then she begins to worry something darker happened. As Christian narrates, we can see him go from protective to paranoid. At first he believes Lily is exaggerating her role in Jake's disappearance. After all, she's newly pregnant and very emotional. Then he starts to worry that running into Jake at the forest preserve that day put her in grave danger.

 

I love how Kubica uses the forest preserve. Here in Chicagoland, they bump right up against residential neighborhoods and are part of our lives. In this book, the local forest preserve goes from being a restful and friendly meeting place where folks cycle and walk their dogs to a dense, dark thicket that keeps its own secrets.

 

Which is not to say I loved this book. I liked it. I appreciated it. But Christian bugged the living shit out of me, and he narrated half the book. He wasn't an unreliable narrator, he was an annoying one. As curious as I was about what happened to Jake and why, I almost bailed on the book because Christian was such a ninny.

3. What will you read next?  Edgar and I are spending almost 900 pages together, so who knows what I'll be up for when we're done?

 

  

Sunday, January 11, 2026

Sunday Stealing

When I Was Young

1. Tell us about a time when your family got a newfangled invention (your first air conditioner, color TV, VCR, microwave, computer, etc.). We were first on our block to have a color TV. My dad was sooooo proud of this, and became a tyrant about what we watched. There weren't many color shows yet, but if it was in color we watched it, no matter what it was about. (After all, he paid for the color so he wanted the color!) Bonanza became a sticking point between my parents. My mom felt it was too intense for me – I responded strongly to the action sequences – and then figured out I really only got upset when it was Little Joe or his pinto horse who were hurt. Though I don't remember this, she maintained he was my first real crush, even before Sir Paul.

2. Is there a particular song that sparks a childhood memory? I was obsessed with this song when I was 9. "I loved the flower girl ..." It seemed so romantic! (Hey, I was 9.)


3. What is something an older family member taught you to do? It was just after Easter at my Nice Grandparents' house. We were doing the dishes in the kitchen while the menfolk were watching TV in the living room. The sink was stopped up. I started to go get my Grandpa, but Grandma shook her head. She'd handle it. She was tiny and so ladylike, yet even in her Sunday best she could handle a plunger like a pro. I watched in amazement and think of her whenever I use a plunger or snake a drain.

4. Back in the day, what name brands would we have found in your family's kitchen? My mom was very loyal to Comet cleanser. I have a can in my bathroom now. I only use it occasionally, but it works well on calcium stains in the toilet.

5. As a child, did you collect anything (rocks, shells, stickers, etc.)? Somewhere around here I still have a box of Beatle trading cards.


 

Saturday, January 10, 2026

A plot twist I didn't see coming

Helena was the store manager at the card shop during Caroline's brief but painful reign of terror. While Helena herself was almost always a pleasure to work with – my shifts went fast when she and I were alone in the store with customers – she also hired Caroline around Labor Day and began dismissing complaints by other employees back in October. Caroline was her favorite shift manager, the one she trusted most, and Helena refused to acknowledge any problems. Four of the girls I work with – and they are girls, all on the green side of 30 – filed a formal complaint with corporate on Tuesday, December 16. After a review which took about two weeks (Christmas fell during this period), Caroline was let go on December 31.

The karma train also flattened Helena. Thursday, January 8, was Helena's last day. She sent me a text telling me of her resignation, and I believe she resigned. But the timing tells me she resigned during corporate's investigation of Caroline. If she wasn't officially placed on probation during that period, it must have been crystal clear that corporate had no faith in her.

Yesterday, January 9, was the first time I worked in three weeks. The first day without either Helena or Caroline. It was weird. It all looks completely different – Christmas has been completely packed away and Valentine's Day is spreading across the store – and someone I'd never seen before was acting as store manager. Corporate has called upon a pair of managers from nearby shops to pinch hit until they can hire a replacement.   

My self-esteem has taken a mighty hit. I needed help at the register when a customer wanted to exchange a product, which is more complicated than a return, and I forgot how to do it. Logically, sanely, I realize that it's been months since I was called upon to do this and so it's understandable that I needed an assist. But now I'm wondering: does the new, temp manager think I'm an old, incompetent woman, as Caroline referred to me?

And while I appreciate that Helena completely mishandled the Caroline situation, I also feel bad for her. She began working at the shop years ago, as a college student, and accepted the promotion to store manager last fall because she had just turned 26 and needed to get her own health insurance. I know her heart is in teaching dance to children – which pays little but brings her joy – and I hope she can find a way to support herself doing that.

It's been hard for me to watch Helena and Caroline learn that actions have consequences, even as I understand that what has happened to them is just and fair.

And I'm tired of how much emotional space this $16/hour job is taking. I may still quit soon. At this stage in my life, I want to do something that makes me happy.

 

Photo by ダモ リ on Unsplash

Friday, January 09, 2026

Saturday 9

Saturday 9: Volare (1960)

 
Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.

1) The word "volare" is Italian for "to fly." Say something else in Italian. "Cantare" means "sing." It's in the next line of the song. Duh. (Since I'm the one who does the questions, I can make a smartass response with complete impunity.)

2) This week, Bobby Rydell invites us to take off with him up in the clouds and promises we'll find a rainbow. Countless lyricists have included rainbows in their songs. Can you name another song that mentions rainbows? I have loved this song since I first saw Ski Party on the after school movie when I was a little girl. I have spent much of my adult life on public transportation. I can attest that the movie misled me and this never, ever happens on buses in real life.
 
 
 
3) His happy heart is singing. What is making you happy this morning? I just learned that my beloved Joe Maddon is returning to Chicago for next weekend's Cubs Convention. He was manager of the magic 2016 World Series team but has not appeared at anything Cubs related since management fired his ass declined to renew his contract. I get such a kick out of old Joe and am looking forward to seeing him as part of the convention. (Rizzo will be there, too! My heart is not only singing. It's spinning around like Julie Andrews on a mountaintop.)
 
4) Bobby Rydell, like Frankie Avalon and Fabian, was a 1950s teen idol who hailed from Philadelphia. Home to the Liberty Bell and Independence Hall, Philly is Pennsylvania's most populous city. Have you ever been there? Many times. I was once in a long-distance relationship and came dangerously close to moving to Bala Cynwyd, a suburb less than half an hour outside Philly.
 
5) Bobby was such a perfect example of a clean-cut American boy that when Jim Jacobs and Warren Casey sat down to write the play Grease, they named their fictional high school Rydell High after him. Do you have a favorite song from Grease? Wella wella wella uh! Summer Lovin'.
 
6) In addition to singing, Bobby also acted. His most famous film role was opposite Ann-Margret in Bye, Bye, Birdie (1963). Have you seen it? Yes, but I don't think of it a an Ann-Margret/Bobby Rydell movie. I remember it for this Dick Van Dyke musical number. (We sang it for our fathers at the annual Girl Scout Daddy/Daughter Dinner.)
 
 
 
7) In 1960, when this record was popular, so were hand-loomed, 100% virgin wool sweaters from Italy. You could order one from the Sears catalog for $12.60 (approx. $135 in today's dollars). That sweater was labeled "dry clean only." Do you have any garments waiting to be picked up from the cleaners? Nope. Since I retired from advertising, I seldom wear those grown up/suitable for big presentations/dry clean only jackets. I really should donate them to Goodwill before they go too far out of style.
 
8) Also in 1960, Princess Margaret married photographer Antony Armstrong-Jones. They met when he was commissioned to take her official portrait. Who took the most recent photo of you? My niece took a freaking adorable photo of me with her baby on Christmas morning. I told her that from now on, she does all my portraits.
 
9) Random question: Is your oldest friend also your best friend? Not anymore. This makes me sad because we met in kindergarten and, for more than 40 years, we were best friends. But she has changed and while my heart goes out to her and I work to understand the financial, physical and emotional challenges she has faced since moving to Los Angeles in 2011, I can't honestly even refer to us as friends anymore. That implies an equal partnership she is simply incapable of. I legitimately cannot recall the last time we talked about anything but her: her anxieties, her money troubles, her (completely one-sided) "love affair" with her landlord ... It's depressing and exhausting. Every time she reaches out, I respond because I love her and honor our history. But I'd by lying if I didn't admit I emit a heavy sigh and wonder, "Now, what?" when I see a message from her.
 

 

I'm sorry he's upset, or maybe I'm not

I've long known Will's politics are different from mine. There were clues on his social media – like when he was effusive on LinkedIn over his former employer's publishing a children's book devoted to Amy Coney Barrett, or his X post about Governor Pritzker. I've never engaged him. It's his social media, these are his opinions, and this is where he should express them. 

Will is the founder/moderator of our movie group and members of the group have been very outspoken in their criticism of Trump. As long as it somehow ties to the film we're discussing, Will doesn't weigh in. I've always respected him for that. 

From cnn.com
He knows where I stand on things, as I'm very outspoken on Facebook and we are friends on one another's pages. When Trump changed the name of the Kennedy Center,* I posted: Dear Leader is at it again. Who thinks this is a good thing? How soon before he begins naming airports, schools and roads after himself? I bet the first act of the privatized postal service will be a Trump postage stamp. When will be the penny be reintroduced with his face on it?

 For some reason, Will decided to respond: Plenty to get upset about. This isn't it, in my opinion.

First of all, I wasn't crazy about the tone. I don't need Will's permission to "get upset." Especially not on my own Facebook page.

Secondly, you don't have to know me long to understand that there are three topics I have down: The Chicago Cubs, the Beatles, and the Kennedy family. 

Lastly, Will used to work for a scholastic publisher. He worked with historians. If he doesn't understand the propaganda implications of Trump naming shit after himself, he should.

My response, while civil, reflected the second and third points. I let the first, more personal one, go.

Ever since, I've heard from Will over and over and over again. More than ever before. Now he thinks my Facebook posts are brilliant. In our text chain, he ❤'s that I'll be joining him and Elaine at a Barbara Stanwyck screening later in the month. He made me aware of another classic film on the big screen and offered to go along with me. Just now he sent me a link to a revival of a play he knows I like.

I feel like telling him it's fine. We're fine. He doesn't have to work so hard to repair damage because no damage has been done.

Except he shouldn't have done it. Condescending to me like that on my own Facebook page is rude. Same with this blog. If you disagree with me, fine. That's what your blog is for. Do not come into my (cyber) living room just to be provocative.


 

*Technically, he allowed it to be renamed, though if you believe he wasn't behind it, well, bless your heart.