OnceUponForever

Once upon forever, In a land not far away, An old grandma newbie, Created a blog to say . . . Norvona: 1996

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Location: Oklahoma, United States

Thursday, August 31, 2006

SOME OLD PHOTOS

Here are some photos that I didn't get posted when I took them. None are more than a month old


I have never been able to get a butterfly picture that I was happy with . . . until now!


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A delicate looking toadstool went from this to . . . this in less than five hours. How sad.




You can never have too many cloud photos.





My rain/dew drops are getting better, but I need something more interesting than weeds to be reflected in them.




Another collage using Picasa's multi-exposure setting. This is really fun to work with.




The rain was pouring from the sky and the roof, but I caught this one in mid fall.

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

HAPPY BIRTHDAY!

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME! Yep, that day has come around again and I'm still here! I suppose that statement will become more congratulatory as each year goes by, although 63 isn't "old" by today's standards. There was a time I fully expected to live into my 100's, but with my health problems, I am forced to be a little more realistic. Still, I intend to enjoy every minute of every day to the fullest.

Here is how Nature wished me a happy birthday. My favorite things to photograph, fog and sunrises.

Monday, August 28, 2006

OKLAHOMA RAIN

Oklahoma received some much needed rain this past weekend and I took lots of pictures.

Regardless of how hard I tried or how patient I was, lightening just didn’t seem to strike twice for my camera.
I did get this horizon lightening glow shot, but even during a spectacular show after dark of almost constant lightening, I could not capture another strike. Ah, no matter.

In Oklahoma there is always another thunderstorm.




LIGHTENING GLOW ON THE HORIZON.

THIS HAWK (I BELIEVE) COULDN'T DECIDE WHETHER TO SEEK SHELTER OR STAY FOR THE RAIN.

THIS FLOCK OF BIRDS HEADED STRAIGHT INTO THIS STORM CLOUD...NOT WAITING FOR THE RAIN TO COME TO THEM, HUH?

The yard light added an ominouse look to these storm clouds as it grew draker.



THE SUN FOUGHT VALIANTLY... BUT LOST....FOR NOW...

Thursday, August 24, 2006

BORED ON A SUMMER DAY

I really need to get a life! LOL

This is my dog Kodiak. He is Chow/Shepherd mix and nine years-old. For a poem about how I bought him, check out my website in a few days. He will have his own page.

We were sitting on the front porch watching a summer thunderstorm yesterday, and I had run out of pictures to take of clouds and rain drops . . . even the empty bird nest way up in the eve of the A-framed porch.

The only thing left was Kodiak. He is pretty patient with me for a while, and I know when I should stop...but I didn't. He decided that lying in the rain was better than staying to be photographed.

To paraphrase a credit card commercial:

One Canon Power Shot camera........................$150
Doctor visit for 'playing in the rain'..................$235
Knowledge that dogs can't read........................Priceless!



YOU WANT TO TAKE A PHOTO OF ME?


SURE, I GUESS SO, BUT MY HAIR IS A
MESS FROM THE RAIN.



IS THIS MY BEST SIDE?
OMG! WHY DIDN'T YOU TELL ME I HAD
EYE BOOGERS? YUCK!
DON'T USE THIS ONE, PLEASE!




I AM SO HUMILIATED!!
















HEY, AREN'T YOU KINDA' CLOSE?


WHOA! TOO CLOSE!






























I WONDER IF THIS IS HOW LASSIE GOT
'HIS' START?


I'M PRETENDING YOU AREN'T HERE.


PHOTOGRAPHY THIS, OLD WOMAN!

Monday, August 21, 2006

ESSAY: IF I HAD A DAD

Darienne Spradling – 3rd Grade

If I had a dad he would be important to me. We would do a lot of things
together. He would help me and my family. I would love him a lot!
My dad would spend time with me. We would go to the store together. He
would buy stuff for me and my family. He would take my family and me to
dinner. We would go on camping trips together and he would set up the tent.
On my birthday he would take me to a fancy restaurant.
My dad would help me and my family. He would make money for us. He
would help me with my homework. He would help me with my chores.
I would love him a lot. He would love me for who I am. He would look after
me. This is the kind of dad I want.
Now you see why he would be important to me because we would do a lot of
things together, he would help me and my family and, I would love him a lot!



This essay was written by my ten and half-year-old granddaughter. It won first place in her grade level for the Tulsa area schools. The dad she is writing about is my son.

However, you see, she isn’t my biological granddaughter and as everyone is so quick to point out, she is not my son’s biological child.

Still, from the time she was eight months-old until about a year ago, he was ‘that’ dad she described in her essay, and those are the things they did together. He was there when she cut her first tooth, said her first word, took her first step. He went with her mother to take her to school for the first time. He was that proud ‘father’ with the video camera. That was him and his camera again at her Christmas programs, plays, parties and Kindergarten graduation.

For eight years her mother and my son dated, lived together, broke up, and went back together. The one constant thing during this time was my son’s devotion to Darienne. Even when the ‘final’ break came and Darienne’s mother moved out, she allowed Darienne to stay temporarily with my son, because she worked nights, and did not want to interrupt Darienne’s school routine.

My son continued getting Darienne up each morning, fixing her breakfast and taking her to school. He was there when she got off the bus in the afternoon and helped her with her homework and fixed her dinner. Afterwards he would take her to spend a few hours with her mother before her bedtime and before her mother went to work. Then it was back home to tuck her into bed and get ready for the next day.

The ugliness that brought all of this to an end is private and between my son and his ex-girlfriend. And besides if I start to write about it I would in all fairness have to present both sides and that would take much too much space. Suffice to say, there was never any violence or threats of violence from either party until much later when Darienne’s mother new boyfriend threatened my son’s life. That is definitely too much to go into here and not really relevant to anyone but me (a worried mother.)

I would like to point out here that I could present both sides fairly. Although my son means the world to me and I love him with all my heart, I also love Darienne's mother. I will always be grateful to her for the years that she allowed me to be Darienne's grandmother. Somehow, I wish she could understand that this was not just a 'role' I took on and can just put aside. In my heart, I became Darienne's grandmother the first time I kept her overnight and rocked her to sleep. It doesn't take shared DNA for love to grow, and separation nor time can kill it. In that way, I guess you can say, "Like mother, like son." Neither of us can just stop loving Darienne because the courts say we have no 'rights.'

For six months we were not allowed to see Darienne, but my son’s persistence with letters and phone calls paid off and we were finally allowed to see her for a few hours every other Saturday. Then another disagreement and the visits and all contact stopped. That was fifteen months ago. This time my son’s persistence with letters and phone calls resulted in a Protective Order being filed against him for harassment! (It was dismissed.)

One of the truly sad things about this is that Darienne’s biological father quit making any attempt to see her when she was around three years-old. At about age four or five, she asked my son to promise that he would not ‘ditch’ her like her father did. Little did he know that he would not be allowed to keep that promise.

We live in a world over flowing with deadbeat dads and too many fathers who seem to care little for the children they spawn. On the other hand, here is a man who wants nothing more than to continue to be the ‘father’ he has always been to a little girl who obviously needs and wants one desperately. However, because he was not the ‘sperm-donor’ he does not exist in the eyes of the courts. This is so very sad for everyone.

Friday, August 18, 2006

A LETTER TO MY GRANDCHILDREN

In a three-day time frame, I built my first web site, decided to delete it, reconsidered, and compromised by redoing it. It is now what I wanted from the beginning, a place to store my writings and photos. That isn’t entirely true. If that were the case, I would have a password and it would not be a public website. I do want to share what I have created with other people, I suspect most writers and photographers do. Still, there is more. In my heart of hearts I hope that wherever they are, Carl and LeAndra (two of my grandchildren) might happen onto the site and know that regardless of what they have been told, I am still alive and love them as much as ever. Also that theirUncle Dusty has offered many times to buy their plane tickets to come for a visit, but we've had no reply.

Not one day has passed since they were taken out of my life (three years ago this month) that I do not think about them and miss them. I hope they are happy and safe and loved...that they have remembered to ‘make lemon-aid’ whenever life has tossed them a lemon. (Kids, do you remember how we laughed about that to keep from crying when the court gave your dad custody?) I really don’t like lemon-aid anymore, how about you?

Carl, I know that you are driving now and I hope that you are careful and courteous on the road as well as in life. May your dreams of college come true and some day we will visit the beautiful buildings you design and laugh about the flower box and ‘chair’ you built from scrap lumber that last summer we were a family. Always treat people fairly and expect only from them, what you are willing to give in return.

LeAndra, how is it possible that you are fifteen? Wasn’t it only yesterday that you were a skinny long-legged little girl gathering up the stray cats and dogs in the neighborhood? I believe it was questionable sometimes as to just how ‘stray’ they were. Please follow through with your plans to be a veterinarian. You have the intelligence and the heart and you have so much more to give the world than children. Not that I am apposed to having great-grandchildren ___ someday.

We had ten wonderful years together . . . well, some good and some bad. Never forget that I love you and always will, regardless of time or the distance between us. Nothing, and no one, can ever change that. Remember the Christmas I gave each of you keys to the house on dream catcher key chains? The card that came with it said:

Home is where the heart is,
A saying, oh so true.
You are always in my heart,
And my heart is always with you.

This is still true today. Keep it close to your hearts with the memories we share, until we can be together again. No matter where I am . . . no matter how much times goes by . . . my home will always be your home.
Love you both forever,
Grandma

The link to my website is: http://home.earthlink.net/~norvonaj

Sunday, August 13, 2006

HOW DID I GET HERE?













FROM THIRTY-FIVE TO SIXTY IN LESS THAN THE BLINK OF AN EYE






HOW DID I GET HERE?
How did I get from there to here?
Where did that youthful woman go?
I only looked away for a moment,
When Life said, "Come go with me."
How did I get here?

When did the curves and firmness melt,
Into bulges and winkles and flab?
When was the moment my energy required,
At least one mid-day nap?
How did I get here?

What turned my young dimpled smile,
Into an old-woman’s perpetual frown?
Who replaced the twinkle in my eye,
With cataracts and a nearsighted squint?
How did I get here?

In my mind’s eye and in my soul,
Things have remained the same.
I still love fluffy white clouds,
And the smell of a Summer rain.
How did I get here?

The ‘me’ I see when I look inside,
Has not changed, aged or died.
She still loves and dreams and hopes
And often wonders out loud,
"How did I get here?"

I’m going on a quest today.
Looking in all the places I know.
To find this woman of thirty-five,
And bring her back here with me.
Except...just where could "here" be?


Written by Norvona Jackson
8/13/06

Friday, August 11, 2006

POETRY

Today I am unhappy with my poetry.

Last night I read Billy Collins' The Night House. THAT is poetry!

Sometimes when I read great poetry---sometimes---I am inspired to write, and sometimes I am ashamed to pretend that I can.

So I went back and read some of my old poetry. This one, I wrote four and a half years ago, this one, I still like. It is not great---but I like it. I am not ashamed to say that it is my creation.

LOVE CAN’T

Love can’t taste of singing hearts,
Or smell like painted dreams,
When paper flowers are vased in shame,
And die from silent screams.

Love can’t write a laughing voice,
Or hear a sunrise bold,
When paper dolls are folded twice,
And left out in the cold.

Love can’t feel the moon’s pale glow,
Or catch the stars that fall,
When valentines are made of glass,
And thrown against the wall.

I can’t know the love you feel,
Or hope to understand,
If you don’t speak what’s in your heart,
And reach out for my hand.

Norvona Jackson 1/29/02

Sunday, August 06, 2006

SOMETHING UNEXPECTED


Often things surprise us or turn out to be not exactly what we had expected.

A thunderstorm rumbled around us yesterday with much thunder, lightening, and wind, but left us without so much as a drop of much needed rain. I hurried out to get some cloud pictures and it was only when I downloaded them that I saw I had captured this lightening bolt. Many times I have tried to photograph lightening without success, and this time without trying, I did it!

Sometimes life is like that.

When one of my clients spit in my face during a counseling session, it was just another day in the life of a mental health worker, until a few months later he died unexpectedly from TB. That’s when my life changed ever so drastically.

Thankfully, I have never developed TB, but as my body's immune system struggled to contain it, I was plunged with a full menu of other illnesses. For example, asthma. Having never had an asthma attack in my fifty-year life, I was suddenly in and out of the hospital and ER weekly. The heavy douses of steroids used to control the asthma, brought on diabetes and hypertension and aggravated the rheumatoid arthritis I have had since having rheumatic fever as a two-year-old child.

It wasn’t much of a surprise when I had to retire at fifty-five. If it were not for the two grandchildren my mother and I were raising at the time, I would have retired from life as well.
However, fate was not through with me yet. The long absent father of my grandchildren won custody and took them away from me. Still there was an upside...I threw myself into writing again. It became my salvation.

When Mother became very ill and was in the hospital a great deal, I simply moved into her room with her. I could not have done this if I had been working or if the grandchildren were still with us. The unexpected became something good...sort of. We weathered a very bad year or two, and now we enjoy each day as it comes...the good, the bad, and the unexpected