Showing posts with label #Austin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #Austin. Show all posts

Sunday, August 27, 2017

A day of waiting and watching




Whatever else I’ve been doing today—and I’ve been busy—I have kept one eye on the TV and on my cell phone for text messages. My Tomball daughter-in-law is good about texting and posting notices, so I’ve seen videos of the creeping lake level at their house, notices of school closing for the coming week (Jacob will be so jealous), reports of assorted family in Houston.

Everyone seems safe, if not particularly comfortable. Lisa reports the rain just doesn’t quit. Her parents, in Sugar Land, have been fortunate so far. Her brother lives in a block where there have been helicopter evacuations, though his house, as of this morning, remained dry. A sort-of in-law called rescue with six inches of water in the house and was told to stay put. Rescue teams were focused on life-threatening emergencies.

The pictures of the whole area are devastating. Saddest one I saw showed nursing home residents in the badly hit town of Dickinson, sitting in waist-deep water as they waited for rescue, which apparently came shortly after the picture. FEMA authorities say they will be in the area for years. And it’s not over yet—rain at least through Wednesday. Think how dirty that flood water is. When I see pictures of people wading in it, I shudder, thinking of snakes and who knows what else. You could trip on a loose brick and plunge face-first into that nastiness.

Austin is also getting pounded. My son-in-law reported last night that after a day of normal rain the storm really hit last night, and Megan said this morning that the worst was yet to come. I haven’t heard from them all day and am waiting for a report. My nephew and his family were in El Paso to visit his grandfather, and their flight back was cancelled. They are apparently driving from El Paso to Austin. Not sure what kind of weather they’ll hit as they near Austin, but who would want to make that drive with four kids? I’m waiting to hear about them too.

Meanwhile in Fort Worth, we have drizzle, sprinkles, and sometimes a slow steady rain. The ground in our back yard is so saturated that water accumulates and moves on to the patio quickly. A good thing: it’s been a good weekend for reading and napping—I slept so hard this afternoon that it was hard for me to come back to reality.

We had a super special dinner tonight. Christian grilled really good steaks, and he knows how to grill it just the way I like it. Very pink in the middle. I saved half mine for lunch tomorrow—cold steak is one of life’s great treats to me. Tonight, we had potatoes and salad with the meat. A true luxury, and I’m full and sleepy again.

I have taken a two-day vacation from my novel in progress, so tomorrow I get back to it, plus I have guest blogs to send off. They’re written but need that final proofing and tweaking. So it’s back to work as usual. I’ve enjoyed the lazy weekend, but I’ll be glad to get back to my routine.

Hope everyone is dry and safe. Prayers for those who were caught by this monster storm.

Monday, October 19, 2015

Austin

Back from two-and-a-half days with my Austin family and feeling like a semi-new person. I did put work aside (okay, I did a little bit but only because I felt like it), read a lot, slept a lot, and really really ate a lot. Also spent a little time consciously reassessing and probably a lot more subconsciously, but I could feel my sense of joy in life returning.

My Austin family is a delight—Megan, Brandon, and I stayed up after the boys were in bed, drinking wine and talking about this, that, and politics. For the first time in forever, B. and I are not too far apart in our political assessments. Watching Megan is like watching a whirlwind in action—on a weekend when she said they had nothing going on, she attended three soccer games, went to the grocery twice, and served dinner to a total of nine adults and fifteen youngsters—no small feat but my oldest daughter pulled it off with grace.

Friday night we went to a bistro called Vino Vino in the Hyde Park area. Fun, interesting menu though I wimped out and ordered a slider—wish now I’d had the smoked trout salad. Brandon, the boys and I split an order of steak tartare—I think it’s pretty cool that a nine- and an eleven-year-old like steak tartare that well (Meg abstained). For dessert, chocolate mousse with carmelized bananas (only three slices—now that was a problem!), and four spoons.

Saturday and Sunday I didn’t leave the house—read, napped, ate at my own leisure until evening when Megan fixed spectacular meals: Saturday was roasted salmon filets, slow-roasted tomatoes, and cous cous. It’s all one recipe, and my rough idea of it is you roast the tomatoes in olive oil and herbs, drain out the herbs, add fresh, and stir some of that oil into the cous cous, pour the rest over the salmon. Good heavens, it was good. The tomatoes are so soft and flavorful, I swear you could skin them, whirl them in the blender, and have spaghetti sauce.

My nephew’s wife and two-year-old joined us Saturday night because he had taken the three older children on a Scout family outing to stay on the USS Lexington in Corpus Christi. But Sunday he called to say they were all well rested and could we get together that night. So Russ and Beth came with four children, ages nine to two. Brined, grilled pork chops, a great potato salad Russ brought, and roasted Brussel sprouts. I don’t see that branch of the family often enough and it was a real joy to visit with the adults and listen to the screaming children, who mostly stayed outside.

There’s something rejuvenating about large, affectionate families, and I am certainly blessed in that regard. The whole weekend cheered me, and I came back with a few resolves—to take care of the books I have in print and need to repost before I worry about a new manuscript, maybe to find a publisher for my historical novel which languishes unappreciated, and not to beat myself up about not getting everything done every day. We’ll see how long such resolve lasts.

Two of the things that I decided were stressing me were the ongoing remodeling (looking really good) and my bum hip which limits my activity. The first I will just have to live through; for the second, I’m having a test Wed., and then I hope we can stop diagnosing and start fixing. So I’m optimistic. Now about that trip to the grocery that has me intimidated….

It will work out. The Lord moves in mysterious ways his wonders to accomplish.