A Day In The Life

People, Places, Nature, LIFE!

10/01/2020
DailyMusings

12 comments

Last photo for September 2020

Brian invites us to share our last photo of September

The rules are simple:
1. Post the last photo on your SD card or last photo on your phone for the 30th September.
2. No editing – who cares if it is out of focus, not framed as you would like or the subject matter didn’t cooperate.
3. You don’t have to have any explanations, just the photo will do
4. Create a Pingback to this post or link in the comments
5. Tag “The Last Photo”

 

09/30/2020
DailyMusings

7 comments

Cee’s B & W Photo Challenge: Fountains and Sprinklers

This wonderful fountain is located on the boardwalk in Bradley Beach, New Jersey

 

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Fountains

09/27/2020
DailyMusings

20 comments

Ghosts

I was a tremendous Bruce Springsteen fan back in the 1970’s. From the time Born To Run was released in 1975, I was hooked. I attended concerts in local small venues before he became so well known, and then attended concerts (a few times a week sometimes), driving with the guy I was dating at the time, – an even bigger fan, to Connecticut and as far south as Virginia  Beach from my home in New Jersey. There was nothing like the energy at a Springsteen concert.

Two days ago Springsteen released a new single playing with his original E Street band. Sadly, Clarence Clemmons, the saxophonist with the band, and Danny Federici, the pianist, passed away in 2011 & 2008. The new song Ghosts is a tribute to those lost band mates, and Springsteen says “is about the beauty and joy of being in a band and the pain of losing one another to illness and time,” Clarence Clemmons son is with the band playing sax. It has the old E Street Band vibe, a sound that just gets you going.

Music is always a vehicle to take us back in time and remind us of people. After listening to the song a few times I thought of someone who used to go to the concerts with my boyfriend and me. I hadn’t thought of him since I had been in touch with him eight years ago when that boyfriend I had gone to the concerts with was dying of lung cancer and I wanted to let him know. So today I googled him, just curious if his name would come up on a music site that he had been active with. Maybe a comment about the new Springsteen single. Sadly what popped up was an obituary saying he had died in 2016. It made me sad to think of him gone. Death can seem so random, who is still here, who is gone.

 

09/18/2020
DailyMusings

12 comments

A Photo a Week Challenge: Something Baked

I was an avid baker back in the day. I found the act of baking to be a very satisfying one; rolling out dough, forming cookies, putting together ingredients to create something that not only looked beautiful but tasted delicious. Lace cookies, rugelach, sugar cookies in every imaginable shape. Coffee cake, apple cake, checkerboard cake, oreo cookie cake. I was always trying a new recipe and sharing with co workers or bringing to family gatherings.

I was diagnosed with gluten intolerance in my 40’s, and my joy of baking diminished. Life changes, we find other means of creative outlet. Below are mini Amaretto cakes I made for dessert for a large dinner party I hosted. One of my favorite recipes, usually made in a bundt pan, I found mini pans so everyone would get their own cake rather than a slice. I can still taste how delicious they were these many years later.

Baked

09/11/2020
DailyMusings

14 comments

9/11

This is a post I wrote a few years ago, but feel the need to post it once again today, on the anniversary of 9/11

September 11th holds unforgettable meaning for those of us living in the United States. I live 10 minutes from New York City, making the World Trade Center- the Twin Towers, not a tourist attraction, but a part of the skyline I was able to see from a local highway, the towering size of the towers looming over us as we drove down the West Side Highway, a place where people I knew went to work everyday. My memory of that morning is still vivid in my mind these many years later. I was watching the news before going to work that morning and suddenly the broadcast changed to a live bulletin of the film footage of a plane crashing into the first tower. It was surreal, as if in reality this must have been some kind of movie stunt. I left for work and upon arrival the boys in the school where I worked were all buzzing about whether this could be true or not. We turned on the TV in the office and watched in disbelief as the second tower was hit and then some 20 minutes later crumbled to the ground. It was too much for the mind to absorb. Those buildings were filled with people. How could this possibly have happened?

I can remember getting on the computer when I got home and seeing endless frantic messages on message boards set up for the many businesses that occupied the World Trade Center, people posting names, trying to find loved ones. One of the men who lives in my town had chosen that morning to take a later bus to work, saving him from the fate others met. Another young woman was not as fortunate, leaving her parents with unbearable grief that took many years for them to begin to come to terms with, but eventually leading them to start a memorial fund to help people. You can read about her life here

I read a beautiful article in the New York Times, about a man named Welles Crowther, who died in the attack at age 24. He was an equities trader whose office was on the 104th floor of the South Tower.

From the article written by Corey Kilgannon:

Welles Crowther is credited with helping at least 18 people escape the tower in several trips up and down stairwells, before perishing alongside a group of New York City firefighters. After leaving his mother  a voice mail message telling her that he was O.K., he was never heard from again. Ms. Crowther said she followed her “mother’s instinct” after the attacks, searching for information about her son and his final moments. She combed through news coverage even after her son’s remains were recovered from ground zero six months after the attacks.

Two months after that recovery, on Memorial Day 2002, she read a lengthy New York Times article on the chaos inside the towers before they collapsed, which included eyewitnesses describing an unnamed rescuer: a coolheaded office worker who appeared in the Sky Lobby on the South Tower’s 78th floor.

“A mysterious man appeared,” who managed to locate the only passable stairwell and began marshaling down groups of injured and dazed people, according to the article, which also gave a telling detail about the rescuer that floored Ms. Crowther. He wore a red bandanna over his face to keep out smoke and debris. “Oh my god, Welles,” she gasped. “I found you.” She summoned her husband, who nearly 20 years earlier had given two handkerchiefs to their son as he dressed for church one Sunday morning: a white pocket square and a utilitarian red one to blow his nose.

“One to show and one to blow,” Mr. Welles told the boy, who after that was never without a red bandana.

He wore it under his hockey and fire helmets as a teen and under his lacrosse helmet while playing for Boston College. He carried it in the pocket of his business suit every day to the World Trade Center. And apparently, as his parents were now reading, he pulled it out that morning before organizing a group rescue in the burning South Tower on floors not yet reached by firefighters.

He used it to put out some blazes and assigned a woman, Ling Young, to carry it down the stairs while he carried an injured woman on his back. He led a first group to the 61st floor, then pulled his bandana over his mouth and told them he was going back up to guide down others. He later joined firefighters who had a tool to free trapped victims. His body was eventually recovered among those of firefighters at a command center in the South Tower’s lobby — mere steps from escape.

The Crowthers contacted survivors quoted in the Times article who then reviewed family photographs of Welles Crowther and confirmed that he was their rescuer. Maintaining composure during chaotic rescues was drilled into his son at the Rockland County Fire Training Center, where he became a junior member and gained full firefighter status at 18. Where training included searching smoke-filled rooms and fiery structures and carrying out heavy dummies, he said.

“On 9/11, he put that training to its highest and best use,” said Mr. Crowther, who added that his son told him a few weeks before the 2001 attack that he had decided to leave his finance job and become a New York City firefighter.

September 11, 2001 forever changed how we think about what evil is possible in the world, changed how we think about trust and security and how what was once unthinkable can in reality happen.

The Freedom Tower now stands tall close to where the Twin Towers stood, reminding us that that from the horror of what happened we could rebuild. Though our sense of innocence is gone, and we now must live without naivety about the possibility of what can happen, we are stronger for it.

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Today I think of the families who suffered the loss of their loved ones that horrible day.  May their memory be for a blessing.

09/04/2020
DailyMusings

6 comments

Thursday’s Special: Pick A Word

Paula has returned after a long absence, and I was so glad to see her back! She has offered some words for her Thursday’s Special challenge, for us to interpret with our photographs. Join in!

ESTIVAL : belonging to or appearing in summer.

CUISINE (cause we all have to eat)

 

INSTRUCTIVE (cause we are being given tons of instructions lately)

SPAN (cause I am reaching out to you again, trying to bridge time and obstacles)

Thursday’s Special

09/01/2020
DailyMusings

10 comments

Last photo for August 2020

Last Photo for August 2020

August has flown and Brian invites us to share our last photo for the month.

The rules are simple:
1. Post the last photo on your SD card or last photo on your phone for the 30th July.
2. No editing – who cares if it is out of focus, not framed as you would like or the subject matter didn’t cooperate.
3. You don’t have to have any explanations, just the photo will do
4. Create a Pingback
5. Tag “The Last Photo”

Yesterday was the first day back to school since March 9th. I decided to document this momentous occasion, and that was my last photo for the month

08/25/2020
DailyMusings

16 comments

A Summer Unlike Others

This summer has been a different one compared to years past. I suppose everything is different this year, and I have come to accept that. With acceptance I have learned not to expect life to be as I knew it, setting myself up for disappointment, but rather to find new ways to find contentment during these times. My summers past have been filled with days at the beach, my favorite place was to sit and look at the ocean, watch the seagulls, read and relax. I drove down to the beach once at the very beginning of the summer, leaving my home at 6AM, arriving at 7, and staying until 11AM. I found myself becoming more and more uncomfortable as people began arriving and setting up far enough away from me, but still making me nervous. I never returned the rest of the summer. My feeling of discomfort outweighed my joy of seeing the ocean. Instead I found a local spot right in my home town where I visited everyday.

I had beautiful views of the river below

And flower boxes lined the bridge

At low tide the Egrets would appear, searching for fish in the mud.

And flocks of geese were there everyday

I was always surprised to find myself alone there, not unhappy about it, just surprised that others did not seek out such a beautiful place to sit. A different summer than those past,  but a summer filled with new beauty and experiences everyday.