Thursday, March 26, 2015

Bound for Death Valley



Today, 26 March 2015, three months to the day after Shannon called EMS at seven in the morning to transport me to the hospital with my runaway pneumonia and incipient meningitis, we set off from home at nine in the morning for a visit to Death Valley National Park.  From knocking on Death's Door to visiting Death Valley.  It's my way of thumbing my nose, I suppose.

We passed the Four Corners National Monument on the way:



That place is funny in that the latest GPS technology allowed the spot where AZ, CO, NM and UT meet to be verified as ACTUALLY some 400 meters off to one side of the fancy mesa top monument shown here.

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Marie the Artist



My late sister Marie Moore worked in art even in my earliest memories of her, ranging from charcoal drawings to oils and acrylics, water color and pastels.  She won many awards and exhibited her works in galleries and museums around the Midwest and beyond.



Above is her masterful water color entitled Lily Pond II.  It rests above our fireplace mantle between a Chyako Hashimoto ceramic on the right and a copy of Praxiteles's Aphrodite.  Good company.


Friday, March 20, 2015

A New Year



Spring officially arrives today.  I see evidence of new life, lots of it -- crocus and daffodils are up, grass is greening, buds are on the trees.  And I have a lot of catching-up to do here.  I'm lucky to be alive.  So lucky.  More so than usual.

In October last year, as part of our Tour de Johnston, Shannon and I visited nieces, nephews, cousins and siblings around the Midwest, notably my brother Gene in his Evansville, Indiana nursing home.  Gene was 89 then, nineteen years older than me; I had not seen him for several years. 



He died a month later.

I myself damn near died in December/January, from streptococcal pneumonia and meningitis, right after my birthday, Christmas Day.  Spent a week in ICU sedated and intubated on the ventilator, stewing in a mix of high-powered antibiotics.  And I survived.  It has now taken me the better part of ten weeks to regain my strength.  But I survived.

Then, sorry to say, earlier this month, my dear sister and my veritable second mother Marie suffered a stroke.  She died a few days after.



It's almost as if the Johnston siblings (the three out of four remaining; my sister Wanda died 17 years prior) -- almost as if we had collectively reached the end of our shelf life within a few months of each other.  (Yah, I know I could have said Our Expiration Date.  Bad pun.)

I've always been the baby, born eleven years after Wanda, 15 after Marie, 19 after Gene, who was off fighting WWII in the Pacific, late 1943 when I straggled onto the scene.

Now I'm the only one left, sole surviving sibling, and it's a lonesome feeling.

My earliest auditory memory is of hearing mourning doves; I'm two years old or three, sitting on the steps of the old family home, 1112 North 19th St, Mattoon, Illinois.  After her funeral last Saturday when we returned to the house Marie had shared with Marvin Moore for many of their 68 years together, the mourning doves were again active.  Marie is buried within sight of that house on North 19th St.