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Jennifer Murch

Art is the only way to run away without leaving home. -Twyla Tharp

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  • 2024 (and 2023) book list

    December 12, 2024

    Have you read any good books this year?

    My book list has gotten increasingly pathetic (meaning, I haven’t been reading much), so I’ve lumped the last two years together.

    • My Dyslexia, by Philip Schultz. Memoir of a dyslexic writer — has some interesting concepts. 
    • The Upgrade: How the Female Brain Gets Stronger and Better in Midlife and Beyond, by Louanne Brizendine. Some valuable ideas but I got the impression that the author was not comfortable in her own skin. She made it seem that all women were upgrading from a place of weakness, and I don’t think that’s true. Perhaps too much power is being given to the concept of upgrading. Couldn’t it just be “growth”?
    • The Power of Now: A Guide To Spiritual Enlightenment (the abbreviated version), by Eckhart Tolle. It didn’t make my skirt fly up but maybe that was because I read the short version.
    • Remedies for Sorrow: An Extraordinary Child, A Secret Kept from Pregnant Women, and a Mother’s Pursuit of the Truth, by Megan Nix. I cruised through this one. If you’re pregnant, or thinking of getting pregnant, or a medical provider, read this. Five stars.
    • Take This Bread: A Radical Conversion, by Sara Miles. Surprisingly good, and the jacket photo made me ridiculously happy. Some main themes included Nicaragua, food, restaurants, and faith.
    • Plain: A Memoir of Mennonite Girlhood, by Mary Alice Hostetter. I didn’t think I’d like it, but it was actually well-written and interesting. Bonus: it included some cheesemaking!
    • Finding Me: A Memoir, by Viola Davis. Choppy.
    • Feast: True Love In and Out of the Kitchen, by Hannah Howard. Devoured it. (Don’t read this one if you’re struggling with an eating disorder.) 
    • Expecting Adam: A True Story of Birth, Rebirth, and Everyday Magic, by Martha Beck. Well-written, but theatrical. Nugget: the purpose of life is what happens between people. 
    • Friends, Lovers, and The Big Terrible Thing, by Matthew Perry. Perry did not take pains to paint himself as a likeable character. Also: addiction is boring and tedious; I ended up skimming a bunch of the book. 
    • The Rosie Project, by Graeme Simsion. Fantastic! Comedic, and well-written. Reminiscent of A Man Called Ove. I read it out loud to my husband in just a few days.
    • The Bang-Bang Club, by Greg Marinovich. Intense, dark, gory, interesting.
    • The Charisma Myth: How Anyone Can Master the Art and Science of Personal Magnetism, by Olivia Fox Cabane. Weirdly enough, this is one of the most humanizing books on forgiveness, compassion, and relationships that I have read in a long time.
    • The New Menopause: Navigating Your Path Through Hormonal Change With Purpose, Power, and Facts, by Mary Claire Haver. Invaluable. Every woman needs to read this. (I wrote more about it here.)
    • I Write What I Like: Selected Writings, by Steve Biko. A dense book about a difficult situation and a unique person.
    • Kitchen Confidential: Adventures in the Culinary Underbelly, by Anthony Bourdain. Good writing, okay book.
    • Be Ready When the Luck Happens: A Memoir, by Ina Garten. Too many exclamation marks! Some good ideas, but the over all story felt shallow.
    • My Traitor’s Heart: A South African Exile Returns to Face His Country, His Tribe, and His Conscience, by Rian Malan. Well-written, thoughtful, complex, dense, excellent.

    This same time, years previous: the quotidian (12.11.23), the quotidian (12.12.22), the fourth child, just what we needed, turkey broth jello, in praise of the local arts, Italian wedding soup.

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  • the quotidian (12.9.24)

    December 9, 2024

    Quotidian: daily, usual or customary;
    everyday; ordinary; commonplace

    Vanilla braids: a Magpie bestseller.

    Chili’s secret ingredient: PB Cups.

    Sourdoughs: olive, multigrain, country white.

    The flour that revolutionized my pizza game.

    Organs: anyone have a good recipe for beef pancreas?

    Stocked: Sunday night popcorn, here we come!

    My Thanksgiving contribution: blackberry, millionaire’s, pumpkin, apple crumb, sour cherry.

    Table hang.

    Upstate New York T-day Family 5K(ish).

    Everyone’s going somewhere.

    “Can I pet that dawg?“

    Milkslinger’s hit 10K subscribers!
    photo credit: my younger son

    This same time, years previous: butterfingers, a cheesy survival story, currently, 2021 garden stats and notes, 2020 garden stats and notes, the quotidian 12.9.19), yeasted streusel cake with lemon glaze, managing my list habit, okonomiyaki.

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  • just three

    December 7, 2024

    The week before I left for South Africa, my younger daughter moved out of our house and into an apartment with her older sister. Both girls had been wanting to find an apartment together for months, but they had two tricky requirements: the place needed to be dog friendly, and it needed to be affordable.

    It used to be that “young adult kids living with their parents” had a lazy-moocher vibe, but not so much anymore. Often it seems that young adults are living longer with their parents — not because they don’t want to move out (at least not in the case of my younger daughter), but because housing costs are so prohibitive. As much as I wanted my daughter to move out, it seemed foolish to get locked into a work-to-live spiral if it wasn’t absolutely necessary. But my younger daughter was aching to move out, and my older daughter’s wonderful little basement rental, while super cheap, didn’t allow dogs.

    So the girls puttered along, looking, asking, and dreaming.

    And then some folks from our church posted that they had a basement apartment coming available, and the girls jumped. 

    While I was thrilled about the apartment — it’s spacious and airy, only ten minutes from our house, and reasonably prices — it was still expensive. But then I decided to look at it from another angle.

    This might be the only time these girls would ever have the chance to live together. Sibling relationships are worth an investment, and living together (especially when they couldn’t stand each other for the first 18 years of their lives, ha!) is an experience in its own right, perhaps even more valuable than international travel or college courses, or any of the other countless number of things they might spend their money on.

    And the worst case scenario? They’d come to realize it was more than they wanted to pay and would move out after their contract was up.

    In the weeks leading up to their move-in date, the girls were abuzz. They made plans and scavenged for furniture. My younger daughter packed up her room, and my older daughter began dog searching in earnest. 

    I didn’t have much time to process the transition as it was happening — I was in the middle of my own upheavals — but coming home to a household of just three made my post-travel befuddlement all the more disorienting. Every time I walked by my daughter’s echoey bedroom, I felt the emptiness. 

    It’s a weird feeling, having kids move out. I definitely don’t miss when they were younger, but each time a child leaves home, it’s another thunderclap of finality. Those-clap-years-clap-are-clap-GONE. That part of my life is over, and even though it’s time for it to be over, and it’s what I want, there’s still a mourning. I’ll never get those years back.

    My husband is patching the walls in my daughter’s vacated room in preparation for painting and then its transformation to guest room. My younger son wants to move into the newly vacated room, but I said no. He already has a whole room to himself, plus the clubhouse. I don’t want him feeling too comfortable here. If he wants to spread out, he’s gonna need to find a bigger nest.

    Recently, on the Cup of Jo website, someone wrote, “I saw something so sweet the other day — reframing the ‘Empty Nest’ phase as the ‘Open Door’ phase, and orienting your parenting for that to be the end goal. Your home has an open door for your grown kids to come and go, through texts, calls, and in-person visits.” I love that.

    Just the other evening, my daughter-in-law stopped by to pick up cheesecloth and milk, and while I dished up our supper, she stood in the doorway and entertained us with stories about her day, her classes, winter skiing, and house projects. My younger daughter stops by to drop off her dog while she’s at work, and to deliver buckets of diner slop for the pigs (and sometimes goodies for us). Tuesday this week, my older son and his friend came by for a late lunch. My older daughter calls, texts, and pops in to pick up her mail, tools for the jobsite, sourdough starter, etc —

    And just as I was finishing that sentence, my daughter-in-law popped in the door to return a kettle and pick up her mail, and we ended up chattering about organ meat, butchering, and pig fat, as one does.

    So are we in the Open Door phase? Why, yes. Yes, we are, and I love it.

    P.S. Just a few days after switching apartments, my older daughter got a 12-week-old Border Collie named Luna who positively bubbles with wiggles and cuddles. 

    This same time, years previous: name me, Lil Peach: the bus life, the coronavirus diaries: week 92, the quotidian (12.7.20), “take out the trash”, when the dress-up ballgown finally fits, welcoming the stranger, the quotidian (12.7.15), holding.

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