My mother and a friend primping for the Prom at Cooley High in Detroit maybe 1948?

I would love to do one of those fairy gardens. I used to put tiny fairies and elves in my terrariums but of course I don’t know where those shots are when I need them. Maybe another day.
Found this at Heritage Park in Taylor Michigan of all places.
Good Morning from Mill Pond in Tecumseh, home of the Tecumseh Paddling Company.

Many find their own bedroom a place of sanctuary from the rest of the world. I especially felt this way as a kid still at home with my big family. My family still reminds me of when I used to hide away in there after school, not doing homework but eating fudgesicles and reading what they called “Beatles Magazines” like Teen Beat or 16 magazine.

At first I thought what an odd Theme for a weekly photo challenge until I remembered this picture taken at one of my friend’s wedding years ago.
As usual, I touched up the one photo for everyone else’s privacy, just something I do for certain pictures.


Things are left behind for various reasons.
Sometimes it’s part of your heart.
Some of us have had to leave our homes in the past and go on to other adventures in our lives.

Sometimes it’s people we love or used to. Sometimes it’s the life we used to live.


Sometimes we are leaving actual “things” behind. Things we paid for but of no real value. The false importance we placed on the “thing” due to some great marketing campaign and the idea of keeping our economy viable. Truth is, the more things we leave behind, the more we can actually start living again. Many born past 1980 never got to live, they have been “consuming” since birth.
Just a little fun with Microsoft PhotoDraw.
Is there really such thing as food porn? It can be extremely difficult to resist all those provocative curves!

I was born in 1951. I was blessed that my parents were not able to maintain a household on their own back then. It was also a curse but that’s a whole nother story that comes out in my book. From the time I was born until about age five, we all lived with my divorced maternal grandmother and her widowed sister, my Aunt Ruth in a tiny bungalow in Detroit Michigan.
I am only addressing the memories I had with my Aunt Ruth who was born in 1899. Obviously she was from a completely different era as well as coming from a good family was taught manners and etiquette that is not practiced by many today. I am thankful that I learned this from her in my short time with her because most of my siblings did not have this privilege and they acted as such.
We were always reminded to act as a little lady or gentleman from both my aunt and grandmother. This is how they were raised. You always said please and thank you and the table was always set every night for dinner, not like the slap dash of busy families nowadays. I remember the teas my aunt would sometimes have for my sister and myself, our grandmother and our other Aunt Lillian that lived nearby when she would visit. This was after we moved out and my sister and I would spend weekends with them to lessen the load for my mother who had two more at home and was expecting her 5th child. The three sisters loved to visit and leisurely sip their tea while eating finger sandwiches of cream cheese and watercress with the crusts cut off. They would always have little cookies or slices of coffee cake that she spread with butter before eating.

Then there were the songs accompanied by the piano or pump organ and my Aunt Ruth took my sister and I with her to Sunday School where she was the organist at Grand River Baptist Church, which was later moved from Detroit to Livonia of all places. We never prayed much at home and I seldom saw any family members pray about anything except sometimes before a meal or that lovely bedtime one that includes the part of “dying before waking” which is always fun for a child to think about before you turn out the lights. When I was old enough I would ask, “am I going to die?” To which whoever was at the light quickly replied “No” and that was it.

We played in the gardens in the yards and freely picked and ate any seasonal fruit on the trees or bushes. I still can’t figure out why more people don’t grow edible plants in their yards anymore. People liked their children to play outside in good weather. If it rained or snowed there was sewing projects or coloring. Sometimes we just sang songs.

Thank God there was not the bad influence that is the modern entertainment industry. It’s like the devil himself has taken everything over. I have a real problem with the violence and negative messages in most if not all movies and network television programming. For many years I have called it “hellywood” and “hellivision” rightly so. We are all little computers so garbage in means garbage out and then when people imitate the car chase they saw a hundred times from a Prius commercial everyone says “why did this happen” on the same network that let them air the bad influence. Yeah, not very bright.
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