Unfamiliar with this week's tune? Hear it here.
3) The lyrics reference a night full of stars. When did you last take a moment to check out the night sky? I glance out the living room window every night. Does that count as "checking out?"
These are the thoughts and observations of me — a woman of a certain age. (Oh, my, God, I'm 65!) I'm single. I'm successful enough (independent, self supporting). I live just outside Chicago, the best city in the world. I'm an aunt and a friend. I feel that voices like mine are rather underrepresented online or in print. So here I am. If my musings resonate with you, please visit my blog again sometime.
What I value. President
Joe Biden said, "Don't tell me what you value. Show me your budget
and I'll tell you what you value." That quote is top of mind for me
because I recently sat down with my accountant to discuss tax deductions for my 2025 return. This list of the 13
organizations I gave the most to (listed highest to lowest) does say
something about me.
1. My church.
2. My local food pantry. Because these are my neighbors. In addition to monthly cash contributions, I also throw a non-perishable ($1.25 or less) into my cart every time I go grocery shopping. Today it was a can of corn (89¢). Anyway, by doing that, I'm able to bring a bag of food over to the pantry in person every month without even feeling a pinch.
3. Doctors without Borders. If you're like me, you see stories about Ukraine or the international impact of DOGE cuts and you wonder, "What can I do?" Through my monthly donation to DWB, I am helping provide aid.
4. Feeding America. This national organization supports food pantries and meal programs all across the country.
5. Harmony House for Cats. Chicago has many animal shelters. I've chosen to give monthly to this one. They do great work, but they don't get a lot of publicity.
6. Greenpeace. I do this for my late mother. She often worried aloud about the impact of climate change on endangered species.
7. The Night Ministry. The homeless are our neighbors. The Night Ministry supports them with food, shelter, and medical care.
8. The Carter Center. I made the first of my 2025 contributions to this organization in memory of Kathleen's mother. Kathleen has a very big family with lots of siblings, so I was afraid any floral arrangement I sent to the funeral would be lost among amid a sea of FTD deliveries. I know Kathleen found Jimmy and Rosalyn Carter's post-White House work inspiring and thought this would be a nice way to comfort her. Anyway, now I'm on their mailing list and I support their efforts to promote peace and health across the globe. The Center refers to their efforts as "Waging Peace." Contrast that with the current POTUS, who insists on referring to the Department of Defense as the Department of War. I'm happy to support The Carter Center's work.
9. Fried's Cat Shelter. I do this for my late uncle. It was his favorite charity. It was started in the 1970s by the Frieds, Jewish immigrants who escaped the Nazis by coming to America in 1939. After they retired, they bought an abandoned motel in Michigan City, IN, and turned it into a no-kill shelter for homeless cats. Their time under Hitler taught them, "To save a life is more in conformity with God's law than to kill." Every cat who enters Fried's is guaranteed a home for life, whether with an adopter on in loving care at the shelter.
10. WTTW – Channel 11. It's Chicago's PBS station. The Trump Administration has been behind the defunding of public television, and it's up to those of us who care about local news to do our part to help make up the shortfall.
11. Marine Toys for Tots. I worked in advertising for decades, and I began my career working at Sears, writing about toys for The Wish Book. I commercialized Christmas, and this is my penance. I don't want any wee one to be disappointed because they didn't get a toy from Santa.
12. Lincoln Presidential Foundation. Kathleen has Jimmy Carter, I've got Abe. People, especially children, need to learn more about him. Fortunately, since Mr. Lincoln was President before the 1950s when the formal system for Presidential libraries was established, it does not rely on Federal funding. The Trump Administration can't fuck with its staffing, like they did the JFK Presidential Library. Because it's state run, they can't fuck with the content, like they have with the Smithsonian. But that means it depends heavily on private donors.
13. World Wildlife Fund. I do this in my mother's memory, too. Polar bears, seals, elephants ... she often said she worried her great grandchildren wouldn't get to see these wonderful endangered animals. Whenever she was a little money ahead, she'd send $10 along to WWF. I like thinking how pleased she would be that I am expanding her good work, especially now that she has three great grandkids.
Before you give to any charity, make sure it's worthy of your money. Check it out at Give.org.
Please join us for THURSDAY THIRTEEN. Click here to play along, and to see other interesting compilations of 13 things.
Word Association. Share what comes to mind when you hear the word ...
1. Biscuit – Gravy. Or sauce. Sopping what's left on my plate is my favorite way to eat a biscuit or dinner roll.
2. Crayon – Back to school. Picking up my new box of Crayolas was a late summer ritual.
3. Warmth – Dry skin. The heat in here is brutal, especially on that spot on my back betwen my shoulders that I cannot reach.
4. Flip – Switch.
5. Slush – Snow.
6. Wing – and a prayer.
7. Candle – Pine. We sell this little votive candle at the card shop at Christmastime. My favorite place to stand is near the display so I can inhale the scent.
8. Cinnamon – "Let me in."
They were besties.
Back in 2005, I was swimming in besties. I had my best friend, who was my work husband, with whom I never ran out of things to discuss. I had my oldest friend, my Kindergarten classmate, who shared so much of my history and could always, always make me laugh. There was John, my opposite number in so many ways, who broadened my horizons and made every Friday night an adventure. There was Henry, who only saw the good in me and loved me so.
My best friend moved. My oldest friend is battling emotional/physical issues that make her unavailable. John and Henry both died in 2024. Each of these losses has left a hole in my heart.
I have gone from lots of besties to no besties.
I am lucky in that I am only alone when I want to be. I just got a text from Nancy saying she and her husband miss me and they want to meet for lunch. Joanna sent me a chatty email because at movie group we didn't have enough one-on-one time together to share everything she had to say to me. Elaine saw that Norman Rockwell's Chicago Cubs in the Dugout is now here at The Art Institute and wants to see it with me. Mindy invited me along to see Bruce Springsteen at the United Center in April.*
But none of them are my besties. I can't imagine calling any of them to help me drag that pesky corpse across the living room floor.
So in 2026 my life is not the life I had in 2005. It's not the life I want and miss. But it's the life I have. I have people who care about me, I'm reasonably healthy, financially comfortable, and my adorable cats are right here looking for cuddles. I have to stop feeling sorry for myself, find joy where I can and face forward.
*Can't go because of the TCM Film Festival. Yes, my life is pretty neat. I know that.
Me fall down go boom. In late January I fell down at work and landed hard on my forearm. It left me with a big lump and a multi-colored bruise, and its progression toward healing has fascinated me.
1. A bruise happens when blood vessels break but the skin isn't broken.
How about you? Do you have any visible bruises right now?
Please join us for THURSDAY THIRTEEN. Click here to play along, and to see other interesting compilations of 13 things.
1. Shrimp
2. Spaghetti
3. Springsteen music
4. Streisand movies/music
5. "Silly Love Songs"
Say it with sweetly. Here are 13 of the sayings you'll find on candy hearts.
1. I ❤ U
2. Kiss Me
3. GOAT
4. Yes Plz
5. Too Cool
6. Only You
7. Let's Hang
8. Cutie
9. Bae
10. Be Mine
11. On Fleek (I had to look this up. It means "well done" or "perfectly executed.")
12. BFF
13. True Love
Please join us for THURSDAY THIRTEEN. Click here to play along, and to see other interesting compilations of 13 things.
I started worrying Saturday. It was my Cousin Rose's birthday and via Facebook I sent her a message, a GIF of her favorite, Han Solo. I'd also sent her a gift, which the USPS confirmed had arrived in plenty of time for her big day. All I heard back was crickets.
This is not like Rosie. She would never not acknowledge a gift. Never. The woman is hardwired to mind her manners.
So I went to text her. Her phone told my phone it was "not available."
This was Rosie's 80th birthday. A big deal. I can't imagine her not checking social media or her phone to get and enjoy birthday wishes!
By Sunday I was freaking out. I was going to reach out to her cousin, Marlene.* Rosie had knee surgery in mid-January and Marlene has been staying with her. Not just because Marlene is a good cousin. She lives in Michigan and January is a good time to help Rosie recuperate in Tampa.
But then I realized something: I thought Rosie was dead and I didn't want it confirmed. As long as no one told me she was dead, it wasn't real.
What a wimpy, stupid way to feel! Yet it was how I felt.
On Monday I mailed Rosie a postcard, asking her to let me know how she is. My reasoning was if she got it, she would reach out. And well, if she didn't get it, it would remind Marlene or whoever was handling things that they should give me the news.
I checked my phone over and over. No word from Tampa. This just emphasized my ambivalence: I wanted to hear, and I didn't want to hear.
Today – Wednesday – when I went down to get the mail I discovered something glorious: Rosie's handwriting on an envelope!
She lost her phone shortly after she liked one of my Facebook posts (it was about the Cubs' Ernie Banks) on February 1. She's sure she left it in the courtesy van that took her to her physical therapy appointment, but the van company couldn't find it.
She's got a new phone, but she admits she needs her niece and grand-nephew to come over and set it up for her. Neither she nor Marlene can figure it out. (At least Marlene's phone is charged and working fine, so they're connected to the outside world.)
Rosie also thanked me for her birthday present – because of course she did – and reiterated how much she likes and uses the blanket I sent her right after she had her knee done a few weeks ago.
Rosie exasperates me. The 12 year age difference is always there in her mind, making me the junior partner in our relationship. When I was 15 and she was 27, I welcomed her input on my clothes and hair and attitudes and aspirations. Now that we're both AARP members, it just feels judgey and nitpicky.
But she loves me. The older I get, the more I value that. Because I'm blessed with the ability to make friends easily, I think I somehow always assumed people would be like Pop Tarts in a toaster – a new one will pop up. But all relationships are not created equal.
There is no one to replace John, who died after 40+ years of friendship. Or Henry, who died after loving me for more than 30 years. Or my oldest friend, who because of her physical/emotional challenges can no longer offer me comfort or companionship.
There are new people in my life – Elaine and Joanna, Nancy and Will. But it's not the same. None of them went with me to Wrigley Field three days in a row to watch the Cubs play the World Champion Cincinnati Reds. Rosie did that in 1976. None of them taught me how to braid hair, like Rosie did in the late 1960s. None of them held me as a baby.
There's no replacing Rosie.
Knowing she's out there and OK has left me feeling peaceful and oh, so grateful.
*Marlene and I are not related, and I'm not sure I've ever met her. But certainly she knows about me, just as I do her.
Photo by Aravind Balabhaskar on Unsplash
One Word Answers ONLY
1. Where is your cell phone? Kitchen
2. Tell us about your hair. Pretty
3. What's your favorite thing? Books
4. What room are you in? Bedroom
5. Where did you grow up? Hometown
6. What aren't you good at? Singing
7. Your favorite drink? Coke
8. Where do you want to be in 10 years? Here
9. Your mood. Good
10. Last time you cried. Tuesday
The National Prayer Breakfast has been held in Washington DC every year since before I was born. Billy Graham was a force in its early days, helping to convince President Eisenhower to address religious, social, and business leaders from around the world. Christians, Muslims and Jews gather to talk about faith – in one another, in community and in a higher power. Mother Teresa used the National Prayer Breakfast to condemn abortion as "a war against children." Bono spoke about how his personal spiritual journey led him to Africa to fight disease and hunger.
Want to know what President Donald Trump spoke about on Thursday?
• He mocked Joe Biden's cognitive abilities. When the response was awkward, he went on to joke that Biden "had no idea he was President so he doesn't take it personally."
• He dismissed Rep. Thomas Massie as "a moron." Massie is one of Congress' most vocal advocates for the victims of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
• He repeated lies about the 2020 election being "rigged" and admitted he had to win the 2024 election to salve his "big ego."
This was a prayer breakfast, not Don Rickles at The Sands. There was nothing humble, compassionate or reflective about his remarks. (OK, he did joke about whether he would make it to Heaven.)
He didn't take this opportunity to share firmly held beliefs because he doesn't seem to have any, except that he deserves praise and his enemies deserve derision.
That was Thursday. But no one was talking about the Prayer Breakfast any more on Friday. Do you know why?
Trump's racist post about Obamas is deleted after backlash despite White House earlier defending it.
Isn't that a knee slapper?
Just to recap: He lies at a prayer breakfast where he celebrates his own ego and uses terms like "moron" to diminish others. He is unable to keep a civil tongue in his head for 30 minutes out of respect to religiosity. Then he shares a post where the Obamas are depicted as apes but insists he's done nothing wrong. That's just two days! I'm exhausted just watching him. I guess bile gives him stamina.
But at least he is cruel to people of color and the LGBTQ community. I guess as long as he hates who they hate, that's enough for 35% to 40% of our fellow Americans.
When are his "devout Christian" supporters finally going to have enough of this charlatan?
In the meantime, the rest of us have to stay alert and active. It's so easy to feel beaten down by all this hate. But we can't afford to.
Combat Donald Trump with love. Let his supporters be motivated by fear and anger. I'm going to act out of positivity. I'm finding mid-term and special election candidates to support, giving money to organizations that protect the civil rights of those ensnared by ICE, and strengthening my ties to my own community.
My church has placed a refrigerator and a cabinet on the porch of the rectory. This is unrelated to the local food pantry. This is for those who can't/won't fill out the paperwork at the food pantry. They are either homeless or undocumented. Since ICE invaded Chicagoland, many have been afraid to go to their jobs and so food insecurity is a real issue. Now whenever I go to the grocery store, in addition to the beans or pasta I pick up for the food pantry,* I add ramen for the pantry on the porch. It feels good.
Don't let Donald Trump and MAGA beat you down. Live your faith. Find ways to respond that lift your spirits.
*Our food pantry serves people who are un- or under-employed and seniors for whom Social Security just isn't cutting it. This is important work and I'm happy to support it with cash and canned goods. But there's paperwork attached to getting the food. Clients need a photo ID with an address.
![]() |
Tips for hiring contractors. I am not very handy. OK, I admit it: I don't know how to do a damn thing around here. So I depend on plumbers, handymen, etc.
If you're like me, you might benefit from these tips, cribbed from Consumer Reports.
1. Find a repairman before you need one. You're bound to be upset when your car breaks down or you find yourself locked out of your house. You may not make your best decisions in such an emergency situation. Ask friends and neighbors who they turn to in a pinch and have those numbers on your phone.I've really been rather fortunate with my contractors. No horror stories. How about you?
Please join us for THURSDAY THIRTEEN. Click here to play along, and to see other interesting compilations of 13 things.
In January 2020, I was sure that Harry and Meghan stepping away from Royal duties would be the biggest news story of the year. Then everything shut down for Covid.
I had another Great Moment in Wrongness on January 24. Elaine had invited Will and me to meet her at the deli next to the Music Box Theater. The plan was bagels at 10:45 and Barbara Stanwyck on the big screen at 11:30. I'd have to leave my home around 10:00 AM. No biggie, right?
I was surprised when I woke up later than I'd intended. Usually the cats don't let me sleep in because they want breakfast. But on Saturday, January 24, nobody was walking on me, purring and willing me awake. I padded into the kitchen and found out why.
Roy Hobbs has somehow managed to get past the childproof lock and climbed into the kitchen cabinet. He ate through the bag and gorged himself on Connie's prescription cat food. There was kibble everywhere. For good measure, he vomited.
So I had to wrap what was left of the cat food bag in Saran Wrap and encase it in a paper bag. And vacuum out the cabinet. And clean up the puke, all before my shower. I was running short on time. I was stressed.
Elaine was in a weird mood. I thought the movie was rather trippy. On the way home, I stopped for a burger and reflected on what a crappy Saturday it had been. I got home about 3:30, sure the worst was behind me. I'd curl up on the sofa, watch Columbo reruns, and shop Amazon for containers that lock to keep Roy Hobbs out of the kibble.
Then I turned on the TV. Alex Pretti had been shot in the back by ICE agents. While he was on the ground. Just weeks after Renee Good had been shot after telling an ICE agent, "I'm not mad at you, dude."
I remember Kent State. This image is seared on my soul. Here we are again. This anguished girl is all of us right now.
What the ever loving fuck. Our government is shooting our citizens in the street. Their crime? Disagreeing with the policies of Dear Leader, Donald J. Trump.
Do not tell me that Alex Pretti spat at an ICE agent and kicked out a tail light. That happened more than a week before the shooting so it's not relevant. And even if it was, those are not death penalty offenses. The officers should have arrested Pretti, not executed him in the street.
Don't you dare mention that Pretti was carrying a gun to a protest. The GOP has been arguing for decades that we all have a Second Amendment right to bear arms. And Donald J. Trump pardoned rioters who brought bear spray, zip ties and, yes, firearms to the Capitol on January 6.
I have not been the same since January 24, and no, it wasn't the kibble incident in the kitchen. Alex Pretti happened. After ICE agents here in Chicagoland haunted school parking lots and loitered outside The Home Depot and (wait for it) the children's museum in search of "the worst of the worst." After Renee Good. After five-year-old Liam Ramos was shipped away to a detention center in another state.
OK, so what am I going to do about this?
I'm sending incremental money to the ACLU. I'm working on Democratic voter registration in red states. I'm concentrating my efforts lower ballot initiatives and special elections.
I still believe in America. I still believe in the system.
But we are broken. Approximately 35%-40% of Americans still approve of Donald Trump. They are so afraid of the LGBTQ community and people of color that they excuse his cruelty and disregard for the rule of law. And they so often do it while wrapping themselves in my Christian faith!
Whatever happened to, "whatever you did for the least of my brothers and sisters, you did for me?" I guess they found the loophole, which is, of course, that you don't have to love brothers or sisters who are trans or brown. After all, Donald Trump has made terror and cruelty OK. Patriotic, even.
So prayer is important here, too. But I won't pray to change the hearts of 35%-40% of Americans. I have to concentrate on my own heart and not let myself get too exhausted by this blanket of unremitting ugliness.
PS I truly believe that ICE began entering Blue State cities as a political calculation, to change the headlines away from Epstein. Just like Greenland and Venezuela and the Kennedy Center and the East Wing were designed to distract us from Epstein. The shenanigans in Georgia are meant to rig the mid-terms and protect Trump from Epstein. I have no idea what's in those files, but he must believe it would shake the faith of his loyal 35%-40%. I want those files released, if only to put an end to the desperate self-preservation measures of Donald J. Trump.