The best season: your responses

Last week, I asked you readers to tell me about your favorite season. Thank you for your responses! Here's what you said:

*****

We spent years living on the edge of the tropics as missionaries. We missed crunching autumn leaves underfoot and the smell of bonfires. Now that we are retired in NW Wisconsin, it is sunshine on snow that sends my heart soaring; the long blue shadows of naked tree trunks in the woods; mornings when every twig is etched in white against the bluest of blue skies; the sound of falling water behind the fairy castle formations of a frozen waterfall. I love propelling my body on two strips of wood along a groomed trail or tromping across a frozen lake with snowshoes and breathing in cold, crisp air. Deer bed down near where our geo-thermal system spills a stream of warm water all winter. And don’t get me started on hot soup, candlelight dinners, and Christmas lights.

LeAnne, NW Wisconsin

*****

Summer is the best season because of the sunbathing after half a year of snow and going outside without being in pain from the cold. I love that the sun stays out till 9pm, road trips with the windows down, swimming all the time, late night ice cream trips, bonfires, sleeping outside, etc. The hot days are like heaven but for just the perfect amount of time. If summer were too long I don’t think I’d appreciate it as much as I do.

Tanya, Minneapolis, Minnesota

*****

I like summer because I adore being drenched in everything I wear and almost passing out every time I move.

Gail, Palm Springs, California

*****

Fall. Because it’s crispy; it’s not humid. You can wear a sweater, jacket, shorts, and flip-flops. It’s beautiful sitting outside by the fire at night.

Seamus, Angle Inlet, Minnesota

*****

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)


The best season

Today, I want to hear from you. What’s your favorite season? Why?

I’ll get us started.

Whirring fans. Oiled-up skin on a beach towel. Boomboxes on the beach. Orange push-up ice cream. Galilee Bible Camp. Sleepovers in a tent in the backyard. Bike rides to Young’s General Store. Strawberry Shasta and video rentals. Road trips in the station wagon. A fresh-cut lawn.

I loved summer then; I love it now. And it hurts my heart when it leaves me.

Now it’s your turn.

If you’d like to share your favorite season with us (and why you like it), click HERE to send me a message, and I’ll publish your writing in next week’s blog (along with your first name, city, and state.) Subscribers, simply hit reply to this email.

I can’t wait to hear from you!

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)


Broken

I spy broken glass on the floor in the furnace room. The pane I slid behind some boxes and planned to repurpose for a future artistic endeavor is now lost to me. I also recall the outdoor clock by the pool I hung a handful of weeks ago. I positioned it on its nail and jumped into the water. The CRASH! onto the cement seconds later showed me a person really can kill time.

I follow a social media page about weird and wonderful secondhand finds, and recently, someone posted a photo of a broken bit of pottery they found while combing a beach on South Korea's East Sea. A transfer-printed cobalt blue tree marked the white fragment. The finder hoped to turn the piece into jewelry and asked the followers for suggestions on how to preserve it well.

I think of glass; I think of humanity.

“Why are there so many prickly people, so many sharp edges on them?” I ask myself one day.

Because they’re broken.

The answer, landing in my spirit, was a reminder. Navigating my own shards of life and everybody else’s too, I get it. I think of human brokenness now, and examples prick me.

One training requirement of my day job as an employment consultant is to listen to a mental health podcast monthly, and an episode I heard last week was on small t traumas. The word trauma is used on social media—spent on things like messed-up coffee orders, texting mistakes, wardrobe malfunctions (and more)—its true weight brushed away. But here we are with traumas of all sizes. Why? Because life has many edges for us to bump against as we walk through it. And some edges hit us.

Now an ancient story springs to mind, retold by so many cultures no one knows its true author.

An old man had two large pots, one hung on each end of the pole he carried across his neck. One pot was perfect, holding the full amount of water each day. The other was cracked, only able to carry half the water on the long walk home. The perfect pot was proud of itself; the broken pot was sad.

After years of failure, the cracked one spoke to the man. “I'm ashamed because I leak water each day on the way back home.”

“Did you notice the flowers only on your side of the path?” the man said. “I planted seeds, and every day you watered them.”

I've never seen a pane of glass, a clock, a piece of pottery, or a pot heal itself. And I know this much is true: the same goes for me.

But we have this treasure in jars of clay, to show that the surpassing power belongs to God and not to us.

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)

*Names in this blog have been changed to protect my family, neighbors, and friends in the neighborhood, and in a nod of appreciation to the beloved Swedish author Maj Lindman, I’ve renamed my three blondies Flicka, Ricka, and Dicka.

The family holiday

This past week, a faithful reader of my blog (whom I’ve never met) emailed me. She said she loved the story of our family’s 2012 holiday visit to northern Minnesota, and would I send it so she could read it again? I was happy to oblige, but in the process, I reread it. My stomach did a little flip. Maybe it’s still too soon.

Dear reader who just contacted me this past week: this one’s dedicated to you. (Thank you for reading all these years!)

*****

“And we’re off.”

I sipped coffee from my travel mug and glanced over at Husband in the driver’s seat. The car’s back seats brimmed with luggage and kids. Ricka and Dicka flanked the car seat, and I plucked at ten-month-old Dontae’s pudgy foot to make him laugh. Safe Families for Children and Dontae’s mother had given us permission to take our little house guest with us on the six-hour road trip to Mom’s place in northern Minnesota. There we would visit my siblings and their families and bask in the magical time between Christmas and New Year’s when the agenda presented nothing more arduous than munching on cookies and frolicking in the snow.

When we arrived at Mom’s, my brother Fred, my youngest sister Flo, and their families wrapped us in hugs. My older sister Coco and her husband Ace pulled up in their fifteen-passenger van, and their eleven kids and one son-in-law streamed out. Even without my sister Olive and her family, the headcount was thirty-one. Each of our girls had a cousin her own age, and the kids scampered off together, shuffling Dontae amongst them. We adults discussed the menu for the upcoming days and each family’s meal responsibilities, and before bed, I prepped the next day’s breakfast.

“Do you have room in the fridge for this, Mom?” I pointed at the three pans of egg bake I had mixed up. “It’s supposed to refrigerate overnight. I’ll bake it in the morning.”

“Just stick it out on a shelf in the garage. It’s cold out there.”

I pulled tin foil over the pans. “But you have a heated garage, right, Mom?”

Mom waved away my concerns. “It’ll be fine.”

We awoke the next day to news about my sister Flo’s husband. He had vomited in the night, but not to worry; he was already feeling better. A couple of days earlier, a stomach bug had ripped through their household, Flo said, and he was the last to succumb.

The egg bake was a success, and we settled into our day. Dontae had been a champion sleeper; the new environment hadn’t thrown him off one bit. The kids smothered him with attention, and he beamed and pumped his chubby legs while they toted him around. The day flashed by with baby time, snowmobile rides, Bananagrams, and Hüsker Dü.

As we cleared away the dinner dishes that evening, one of Coco’s little ones curled up on the couch in the living room.

“My tummy hurts,” he said, his color ebbing away. Coco hustled him out of the room. Ten minutes later, she returned to the kitchen.

“Well, he threw up.”

“Poor thing,” said Mom.

Twenty minutes passed. Someone hollered, and Coco darted from the room again.

“Oh, boy.” She was back, her arms heaped with dirty laundry. “Another one just threw up. Do you have some old towels, Mom? And buckets?”

Mom rushed to the laundry room. Coco, Fred, Flo, and I followed.

“Help yourself to anything you need.” Mom pointed out the place where she stored pails and old towels. Then she stuffed soiled laundry into the washing machine.

Another one of Coco’s kids poked her head into the laundry room. “Mom, I think somebody else is throwing up right now.”

“Oh no.” Coco bolted from the room.

I flung looks at Mom, Fred, and Flo. “I don’t think this’ll end well.”

“Flo’s gonna hold back my hair when it’s my turn,” Fred said with a snigger.

“Yeah.” I smirked, eyeing his nearly bald head. “All your luscious, flowing hair.”

Dicka scrambled into the laundry room—her eyes wild—and tugged me aside. “Mama, I’m scared.” Her face twisted, and she burst into tears. “I don’t wanna throw up.”

“Oh, honey.” I bent down and gave her a squeeze. “You might not.”

Coco stuck her head into the room. “Another one’s down.”

Sobbing, Dicka ran off.

“I’m going to make a list.” I headed to the kitchen, and Flo joined me. I grabbed a notepad and pen off the counter and jotted a title—Vomit Fest 2012—and then the names of the four fallen ones with their approximate times of demise. “This could be fun.”

I ran upstairs and located Husband who was reading a book in our bedroom. I briefed him on the stomach flu situation.

“Yeah, I heard.” He raised his eyebrows and sighed. “I mean literally. I heard.”

I wrinkled my nose and gathered my hair into a ponytail. I pulled on a pair of tennis shoes. Husband watched me. “Getting ready to do the night shift with the sisters. I can run around faster this way.”

“Nice.” He shot me a half-smile. “Good luck with that.”

I jogged downstairs. Flicka and one of Coco’s girls lay facing each other—and chatting—on two parallel couches in the living room, a bucket stationed by each of them.

I put my hands on my hips. “Are you guys okay?”

“We’re ready,” Flicka said, and her cousin laughed.

I headed back into the kitchen for an update.

“Two more down.” Flo scrawled the names on my list. “Do you have enough buckets for this, Mom?”

Mom scrubbed her hands at the sink. “Each bedroom has a garbage can, and I have more pails and old ice cream buckets out in the garage. We should be fine. And we’ll keep the washing machine running all night if we have to.”

A thought punched me in the stomach. “Do you think it was the egg bake? The garage didn’t seem cold enough.” I frowned, nibbling my lower lip. “I bet it was the egg bake.”

Mom vigorously shook her head. “It wasn’t your egg bake. Not everyone ate it.” Then she picked up her cell phone, a twinkle in her eye. “Hey, let’s text Olive.” She read aloud as she keyed in a message to my sister—far away and safe in Minneapolis. “‘Wish you were here.’”

“We know she doesn’t.” I snorted.

As the evening hours passed, the body count rose, and the growing list of names threatened to trail off the page. We sisters scurried around the house and tended to the puking and listless ones. Flo, a nurse in real life too, wore rubber gloves and disinfected toilets and buckets between heaving patients. On my midnight rounds, I found her assisting Fred’s daughter who had stumbled into the upstairs bathroom.

“Fred’s whole family is sick now too.” Flo lifted the toilet seat, and the little girl emptied her stomach into the bowl. “Hand me that towel, would you?”

I pulled a towel off the rack and approached Flo at the toilet. But when I saw my niece’s hair matted with vomit, I gagged.

Flo wrinkled her brow. “Really?”

“I’m sorry. Weird.” I waved away my weakness. “I’ve been looking at vomit all night.”

I backed out of the bathroom and ventured into our family’s room—one of five bedrooms on the second floor of Mom’s house. Ricka had made a bed for herself on the floor, and she snuggled next to a bucket. She was on the verge, she said. Husband slept with a garbage can parked on the end table near his head. The baby snored in his Pack-n-Play. Curled up in her sleeping bag, Dicka wept quietly in a corner of the room, an old ice cream pail poised next to her.

“Have you gotten sick yet?” I whispered, stroking her hair.

She clutched her pillow, her chin quivering. “No. But I’m afraid.”

“You might be okay.”

She grabbed onto my sleeve. “Would you pray that I don’t throw up?”

“Sure, honey.” I bowed my head. But my stomach roiled, churning dread along with my dinner. “Uh oh.”


The room swirled around me, and I was vaguely aware of the passing hours. Clutch my stomach. Writhe in pain. Dangle my head over a bucket. Repeat. What time was it? Did I have a fever too? I imagined I heard the baby fuss, but someone plucked him from his bed and tiptoed out of our room with him. Someone else handed me a cold can of ginger ale and a bottle of water before I slipped from consciousness. Hours passed. Or maybe days…

I needed to visit the bathroom, so I slithered out of bed and dragged myself out of the room. The mission was grueling but once accomplished, I headed on all fours—in the dark—back to bed. On the way, I bumped into Ricka, creeping along the floor in a low crawl on her way to the bathroom.

Back in bed, I listened to the sounds of the night. In contrast to Ricka’s nearly soundless style, my brother-in-law Ace’s retching pierced the darkness, trumpeting his agony throughout the cavernous upstairs with its high ceiling and wood floors. As if put to a challenge, Husband rivaled Ace’s volume with his own technique. I heard others sputtering out their last remains too. How many of us were left standing? Would we all die? Did it matter? What was the baby’s name again?

The next morning, nineteen of us were strewn about the house like used dishrags. Wan and stripped of joie de vivre, we sipped water through straws and kept the noise level down. What had happened? Had we traveled hundreds of miles simply to throw up together? Now having blown our allotted vacation days, it was time to plod home.

We gathered our things and carried our weak selves out to the car. We blew bland kisses to all and drove off. I loved the big group of people we had left behind, but I wasn’t sure I ever wanted to see them all again at the holidays. Under one roof. Sharing the same egg bake—or Norovirus germs. It all left a bad taste in my mouth.

As we regained strength, though, I noted a few positives. All of Dicka’s crying had helped; she had somehow escaped the scourge. The girls learned to do a decent impression of Uncle Ace’s vomiting. And we all learned “in sickness and in health” should be reserved for marriages and not family holidays.

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)

*Names in this blog have been changed to protect my family, neighbors, and friends in the neighborhood, and in a nod of appreciation to the beloved Swedish author Maj Lindman, I’ve renamed my three blondies Flicka, Ricka, and Dicka.

Stress

With Husband’s help, I lugged my snake plant outside in late May when the weather assured me it would be safe from winter’s death grip. My plant sits next to the front door, and its presence brightens my entry every time. How did it feel going from an indoor climate of a constant seventy degrees, though, to outside temperatures ranging from the high sixties to low nineties? I marvel at its robust health despite the fluctuations.

Soon, I notice a green shoot springing from my plant’s base. Then another. And a few more. Buds form on the new stalks.

“In the years we’ve had this thing,” I say to Husband, “I’ve never seen anything like it. Maybe it’s about to bloom.”

And so it does.

Vanilla and jasmine scents issue from the blossoms, and pride swells my chest. I must’ve done something right, I think, which is a fresh idea for me when contemplating plants.

I run some online searches to learn more about what my snake plant is doing. The flowering is extremely rare, I read. People try hard to coax the elusive flowers to come, but it’s often impossible. One must create the right environment for this to happen. As I read, I smile—until I go deeper.

If you want to get a snake plant to flower and bloom, one article says, it’s going to take some calculated neglect. The challenge is to create the right amount of stress without going overboard.

Stress? I feel a little sick now. I take no pleasure from hurting either flora or fauna. My poor plant, standing so faithfully (but under duress) at my front door while I selfishly go about my day content! How dare I? I learn more online. It could be root-bound, too warm or cold, or under-watered.

Now the flowers look like silent cries to me, and I don’t know what to do.

I think about stress, though. The internet brims with quotes about coal under pressure too. Flowers (at least my snake plant's) and diamonds—both painfully obtained.

Maybe there's a lesson in it for us all. No, of course there is.

We are hard pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not in despair; persecuted, but not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed.

If you have any good snake plant tips for me, I'm listening. But for now, I'll try to enjoy the flowers.

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)


The depths: Part 3

“‘There’s no pit so deep God’s love is not deeper still,’” I read, my voice coming out jagged.

“Mama, are you okay?” Flicka said. My girl was probably nine years old at the time.

I felt like saying, “Not really,” but instead I nodded as I remembered scenes from The Hiding Place, a 1975 movie I saw as a kid about the Holocaust. The words I read to my girls were Betsie Ten Boom’s, and the truth she uttered couldn’t be destroyed by the hatred that put her in Ravensbrück for loving the Jewish people.

I think about depths these days, and everything I read nudges me closer to their edges to peer into them. Some depths crave children, and they make me nauseous; there aren’t enough millstones in the world for all the necks that deserve them. Some depths sweep my breath away; there’s no getting to the bottom of the riches and wisdom and knowledge of God. Some depths put me on my face; his compassion is too much for me as he hurls our sin into the depths of the sea.

Now a kids’ song plays in my head, and if you grew up in the Sunday School culture, oh, let’s say forever ago, you’ll hear it too (and probably do the actions that go with it):

Deep and wide, Deep and wide,

There’s a fountain flowing deep and wide.

Deep and wide, Deep and wide,

There’s a fountain flowing deep and wide.

In one of the next verses of the song, the reverse happens, and the speed ratchets up with its actions–Wide and deep, Wide and deep, and so on–and all hilarity ensues because kids love a chance to wiggle and act crazy in church.

On our epic family road trip in 2019, I stood alongside the family at the Grand Canyon’s South Rim and said, “That’s a big hole.” I needed better words to convey the vastness of that over-a-mile-deep river valley, but in its presence, I lost them.

And so it is today. I glimpse the wild depths of God, but I still don’t fully understand. I need the strength to comprehend what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ that surpasses knowledge.

I know this much, though: it’s worth peering over the edge to look.

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)



The depths: Part 2

The fish in my house distract me from the fish in my blog.

No, we don’t own any of the real creatures anymore; my best efforts around those watery pets years ago were dismal. I intend to write about the more recent discovery, though, of entire biologic communities thriving in extreme darkness under the crushing pressures of the deep sea. It’s an interesting romp, reading about the newly identified fluffy sponge crab, the bioluminescent sea worms that emit bluish-violet light, and the rose-veiled fairy wrasse–a reef fish that comes in a stunning pink–but soon, I stall out.

I pad into the kitchen to see what Husband is cooking up for the family reunion this weekend. He shoves a savory snack mix around on hot baking sheets with a silicone turner. Oyster and Ritz varieties turn golden, and because I’m thinking of sea life today, of course there are goldfish crackers in the recipe too.

I gaze around the house. Our girls each wear three permanent fish drawings on their skin–matching sister markings. The trout represents Flicka, the tuna is Ricka, and the anchovy’s for Dicka, which makes me recall the day a few months ago when somebody I gave birth to asked what my sign was. In our house, we’re clueless about such things.

“I’m a Pisces,” I said because I only know that much–and that it’s a fish.

Ricka’s eyes widened. “Oh, I thought it was pronounced Piskiss.”

Somehow it leads me to think of the French word, pécheur, and how it means both sinner and fisherman. And I think of Jesus calling his followers to him–how they were both those things at the very beginning.

I have the calling on me too, and I’m not so different from my ancient brothers and sisters, minus the fishing part. And there’s that familiar undercurrent, pulling me now.

I open the Book. My bookmark, made from a photo of koi Flicka snapped at Como Zoo, holds my spot. “You’re the shiniest fish in the ocean!” she wrote on the back for me, but I care more about the crashing waves opening to me in the pages on my lap. No more disjointed thoughts about aquatic creatures; no more distractions over crackers or tattoos or the world’s signs.

Deep calls to deep in the roar of your waterfalls; all your waves and breakers have swept over me.

And I swim down as far as I possibly can.

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)


The depths: Part 1

In this world, Husband fears one thing: swimming in the middle of the ocean at night.

“You never know what could be out there.”

And I shudder when I imagine it too.

Like most of the country, the catastrophic implosion of the Titan submersible on June 18, 2023, on its way down to view the wreckage of the Titanic snapped me to attention. In the following days, I viewed chilling 3D animation videos demonstrating the depth of the ocean through a virtual underwater seascape by using global landmarks like the Statue of Liberty, the Eiffel Tower, and many of the world’s seas for perspective. Even the Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building, located in the United Arab Emirates, would descend only 2,717 feet–far short of reaching the Titanic's remains which rest 12,500 feet below the surface of the Atlantic Ocean.

The ocean liner’s grave is shallow, though, compared with the Mariana Trench, living in the Pacific Ocean 35,000 feet below the sea’s surface. I shiver thinking of what’s down there in the darkness. And the knowledge of it all is too much for me.

Where can I go from your Spirit? Where can I flee from your presence? If I go to the heavens, you are there; if I make my bed in the depths, you are there. If I rise on the wings of the dawn, if I settle on the far side of the sea, even there your hand will guide me, your right hand will hold me fast. If I say, “Surely the darkness will hide me and the light become night around me,” even the darkness will not be dark to you; the night will shine like the day, for darkness is as light to you.

Deeper than our waters, higher than our universe, broader than our everything. A formidable presence, fervid grace, fearsome love.

Yes, He is.

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)


Time

I sit in the 5:30 a.m. silence, the passing seconds needling me. It’s Thursday, and I’m set to do what I always do, but I come up empty.

What do I write today, Lord? I’m out of ideas, and I don’t have time.

You always have time.

And that’s my answer. That’s how it comes, all the inspiration over the years. If it’s good, it drops into my spirit in the stillness–when I’m patient enough to listen.

I’m obsessed with time–like my dad was–and if my insides had a leg to bounce, they’d be doing just that as I note the movement of the minute hand on the analog clock above the kitchen sink.

I put the brakes on my nature, forcing my thrumming to stop. NO. I will breathe and write, write and breathe. And for the first time in all these years, I think this is God’s mercy over my life to slow me with the written word–His and my own.

For everything there is a season, and a time for every matter under heaven:

a time to be born, and a time to die;

a time to plant, and a time to pluck up what is planted;

a time to kill, and a time to heal;

a time to break down, and a time to build up;

a time to weep, and a time to laugh;

a time to mourn, and a time to dance;

a time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together;

a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing;

a time to seek, and a time to lose;

a time to keep, and a time to cast away;

a time to tear, and a time to sew;

a time to keep silence, and a time to speak;

a time to love, and a time to hate;

a time for war, and a time for peace.

If The Byrds’ hit song from 1965, “Turn! Turn! Turn!”, is playing in your mind right now, I offer either an “I’m sorry” or a “you’re welcome,” depending on your outlook.

Inspired by Ecclesiastes, I’m opting for balance over productivity on the only July 13, 2023 I’ll ever have.

What are you choosing for your time today?

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)



The mail

“If, somewhere, any possible world can exist, then somewhere there is any letter that could possibly be written. Somewhere, all those checks really were in the mail.” Terry Pratchett

I spy that little white truck rolling by. It halts in front of every house in our cul-de-sac each day, and as soon as it’s gone, I scurry out there. There’s a mini sense of suspense built into my daily life by what could be left behind. Mail delights me.

My family thinks it’s weird. Unlike me, they don’t believe there could be anything in that box and likely, money. But I have that kind of faith.

“Is there a check in the mail today?” I ask Husband who signed up for the preview through Informed Delivery notifications. I could sign up for it too, but it’s more fun to ask him every twenty-four hours, minus Sundays.

“No, but you’ve been selected to represent concerned citizens of Minneapolis in front of the U.S. Senate,” he said one day.

I’d rather have his usual “Probably.”

Last week, our mortgage company sent an escrow overage refund, AND a rebate arrived from Menards (for store credit), keeping my expectations of funds in the mailbox ripping around the yard like a puppy just released from his kennel. A letter also came from the National Cremation Society.

Husband read it aloud. “‘How long do you plan on living?’”

“It does not say that.” But I stole a peek at the paper anyway.

He laughed. “Actually, ‘How long have you lived at your current residence?’”

I suppose there’s nothing like the thought of death to ground us, though, while we’re going through the mail.

One day a few weeks ago, I clicked off half my brain to sift through the USPS’s offerings. From the looks of it, there was no cause for elation. I slid my finger under the edge of one piece, opening it. The U.S. Census Bureau. It contained a questionnaire of several pages. Who fills this out? Surely there’s a way for the U.S. government to count its citizens without relying on them to get out a pen and tell the truth on paper about who lives in their house. But wait. A five-dollar bill was also tucked inside. Since when? Did they send every American household five bucks as an incentive to complete the form?

The papers went straight into the recycling, and Abe Lincoln made a beeline for Husband’s wallet. I texted a friend. She had gotten the same letter but no money, and no, she had never heard of such a thing.

Oh, dear mail! You sure offer a burst of anticipation every day anywhere from noon to three o’clock. (Or sometimes it’s later, like that one day when I didn’t see you until the next morning because you had been delivered so late the previous day, but no matter.) Thank you for the daily fun.

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)


Freedom

I post this blog installment every couple of years because the reminder of freedom is always timely. Life has changed for us since I wrote this in 2018—Lala is no longer with us, and we live in a new neighborhood—but the truths still hold.

Happy 4th of July!

*****

With each explosion of fireworks, Lala, our dog, presses harder against me, and I feel her trembling. She doesn’t understand there’s a celebration going on and no one’s really bombing us.

Our dog isn’t the only one who struggles; I’m told the neighborhood’s many canines quake in their coats around this time each year, sometimes even refusing to step paw outside to answer nature’s call. They’re free to go out, of course, but to them, the pyrotechnics in the night sky signal sure terror, and the endless pops imprison them in fear inside their houses.

Unlike Lala, I know I’m free. And I’m free in more ways than I live.

Freedom frames my thoughts as I drive east on Dowling Avenue, pointed toward the grocery store where I’m free to spend my money how I like before it closes early for the July holiday. On my way, I pass a house where two large tents festoon the side yard. Ribbons of smoke curl skyward from two grills. A tall slim man approaches one of them and maybe he’s holding a spatula, but who cares, because he’s dressed in exactly two clothing items: a red Speedo and an American flag worn as a cape. Husband’s at work, but I have to phone him this minute anyway, because the brand of freedom I just witnessed should be shared with others.

As I drive on, I count my freedoms on Independence Day, and like the sighting of the guy in the Speedo, they surprise me:

I’m free to live a life that doesn’t look like the next person’s.

I’m free to do the right thing, even when it’s hard.

I’m free to serve others more than I do.

I’m free to keep the words that are in my head out of my mouth.

I’m free to not worry today. Or tomorrow.

I’m free to tell people I love them, even if they may not return the sentiment.

How are you free?

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)


Like a tree

Among the white tents with their canvas sides still lowered, vendors meander, their voices low. It’s a quiet, steady set-up on this Sunday morning. I’m early to church, so I use this time to watch the Stone Arch Bridge Festival preparation from a bench close to the river. A bus hisses to a stop on Hennepin and First. A train clatters by on a nearby bridge. I sip my latté.

Paella Depot, MeeMa’s Coffee, Firehouse Foods, Amish Annie Donuts, and Top Dog are the food truck names I spy from my post. I eye the things man has made and something he hasn’t. That tree, stronger than the cityscape, has seen a few festivals and runners and strollers and bikers in its years. And it doesn’t care what humans set up or take down around it. Its branches are skyward, pointing back to everything.

He is like a tree planted by the waters that sends out its roots toward the stream.

I set down my coffee and rub my arms. It’s chilly out here for me at seventy degrees. Wasn’t it supposed to hit almost ninety today? I consider the tree. What variation of temperatures does it know, standing like a sentinel by the Mississippi?

It does not fear when the heat comes, and its leaves are always green.

The people by the river scurry with their plans. They have lists to accomplish, a deadline to meet. But the festival scene drops away from my notice, and it’s back to the tree.

It does not worry in a year of drought, nor does it cease to produce fruit.

I think of my own worries, my fruit, my roots. Maybe I’m not immovable like the tree, but I can point my branches back to everything.

He is like a tree…

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)


This, that, and a tortoise

The week passed in a haze and not just because of the Canadian wildfires (yikes to the air quality around these parts!) My work called for heavy screen time (Rise, Inc. rolled out a new case management system), which meant not enough personal screen time to write a decent blog for you.

While my face was buried in work, I learned it was time to put our Honda to rest. We seem to enjoy keeping vehicles on life support, but the mechanic called our beloved Pilot’s time of death yesterday, June 14, at 3:33 p.m. We’re mourning the loss of the old girl who faithfully carted us around–and not only us but also the many relatives, friends, and thirty-two kids we hosted through Safe Families for Children. She was trustworthy (mostly) and showed us a grand time all the way to California and back on our Epic Family Road Trip of 2019 (and spent only two times in the shop for brake issues on that trip, if memory serves me right.)

But enough eulogizing our SUV. You didn’t come here today for the breezy recap of our week’s minutia; you came for something creative, which you won’t get (refer to the first paragraph, please.)

I did, however, land on a delightful story from a Twin Cities’ news station, and I think you might enjoy it too.

KSTP’s newscaster, Paul Folger, tracked down Toby, the Galapagos tortoise, who lived at Saint Paul’s Como Zoo from 1958 to 1974. Back in the day, the children at the zoo loved Toby. He gave them rides, and as the legend goes, Dad plopped me on top of the big guy at some point in 1972. When the massive turtle moved a centimeter underneath me, I startled and cried. I guess my two-year-old brain thought he was a rock instead of a reptile.

Toby’s tortoise friend, Lady Godiva, passed away in 1974, and Toby was moved from Minnesota into a breeding program in Hawaii that same year. I imagine him suffering the trauma of his friend’s death as well as the stress of relocation, and I feel for the slow-moving guy. But that’s just me projecting, so who knows.

Just recently, the Mayor’s Office in Honolulu called Paul at KSTP to let him know Toby was living his best life in Hawaii, no longer giving rides but instead relaxing and eating his favorite snack, cactus. He lives in a habitat with other tortoises, and he’s 91 years old, which is young, since Galapagos tortoises can live beyond 150 years.

Oh, and Toby knows his name. When someone calls him, he stretches out his neck in response, and he poses for photo shoots too. Isn’t that cute?

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)




The pool

“It looks like a shipwreck out there,” I said a month ago to our houseguests. Might as well speak the truth out loud, I figured. When a disaster lives in your backyard, there’s no hiding it. 

But let’s go back to the beginning, so I can tell you the whole story.

During the summer of 2022, we limped through the process of making our pool swimmable. New to the house, we heard stories from the neighbors, and they told us no one had used our backyard water feature in a number of years. We waved away the situation. We would fix it up, we said, and I think the words no problem punctuated our replies. 

Husband toiled away, de-mucking the slough like a champ. He scooped out rotten leaves for days. Next, he turned on the pump, but when it wouldn’t fire up for more than a few seconds, he came this close to buying a new one on the recommendation of two pool companies.

We phoned Dolf, our electrician, and he sleuthed out the situation, pinpointing the actual root of our troubles. He rewired the shed to power the pump to filter the pool to bring us the swimming experience we enjoyed last summer. The man didn’t look like a superhero, but he scaled the heights of our expectations all the same, and at the end of the story, he stood at the very top of our dreams, his cape flapping in the summer breezes.

A valuable truth I’ve learned from writers’ conferences over the years is this: good stories brim with seemingly insurmountable obstacles. Conflicts keep the plot rolling, the pages turning, see. And unfortunately, our swimming pool became a good story. 

We opened our pool on July 6, 2022. Delights abounded; romantic notions of the pool were realized and all that. 

Then we spied The Tear. 

It started out as a little gash on either side of one of the jets. Husband patched the problem. But as our glorious summer ripped on, so did our pool liner. Our already short swim season screeched to a halt in early September because our swimming hole was losing water at an alarming pace–so alarming the people at Sparkle Pools said it would run us about $700/month to keep replacing the gallons that drained away. (I got the water bill for the summer months in November, though, and happily, they were wrong.) 

We covered the sad pool with its shredded liner for the winter, but the leaks were so bad the water level sank lower than it should have. Husband slid boards under the tarp to support it, but the arctic winds of Minnesota during The Dark Months yanked it back and flung the supporting rocks and sandbags into the abyss.

In the spring of 2023, we ordered a new liner. The week before Memorial weekend, a new-to-us pool company came in, pulled away the old liner, and inspected the situation underneath it. Uh-oh. But no problem; it would only run us a couple thousand dollars to repair the walls and flooring and patch it with new concrete before installing the fresh liner. What choice did we have? The repair job done, the crew stretched the new vinyl inside the gaping maw. 

Husband and I wondered aloud why we couldn’t just call the fire department to come with their big ol’ hose to take on the next step and fill the thing. Apparently, they don’t do that, so we did what the others do: we filled the new beaut with our garden hose over three days.

All final touches in place, we officially opened our pool yesterday, June 7, 2023–one month earlier than last year. And really, so far, so good.

Enjoy the below pictures to either brighten your day or serve as a cautionary tale to take into your hopefully-wiser-than-us future. 

Photo 1: My Favorite Pool Boy (a.k.a. Husband) from the summer of 2022, vacuuming the thing. See what I circled, though? Yeah, yikes. 

Photo 2: The post-winter shipwreck. *sigh*

Photo 3: The concrete repair work and Dicka, not too thrilled with it (but at least she had her iced coffee.)

Photo 4: The installation of the new liner.

Photo 5: The pool today, June 8, 2023.

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)





Ziklag

“David at Ziklag.”

I unpeeled the covers, swung my legs over the side of the bed, and stood. David at Ziklag.

What was that?

I shuffled into the bathroom and trudged through my groggy first motions of the day. I moved from there to the closet, out to the coffee pot, and over to the couch. Still two hours until my workday, and enough time to listen. It came again.

David at Ziklag.

The man’s name and location puzzled me. It wasn’t a reminder of the previous day’s reading, a memory of a recent study, or a recollection of a conversation with a friend. No, it was a fresh nudge to search for more.

Since I already knew who and where, I dove in for the what. The story was vague to me—and only one of many I’d put my eyes on at some point at some time.

David and his men came back from battle to their town of Ziklag to find it burned to the ground. The enemy had taken all the women and children captive. David and his six-hundred men bawled their eyes out until they were exhausted. Some of the men threatened to stone David because he was their leader, and this was a mess. He called a priest, prayed, and strengthened himself. An inspired idea came to him, and he rallied his army.

On the way to take back what was stolen from them, the warriors came upon an Egyptian—unresponsive but alive. They tended to the young man for three days, giving him water and food until he revived. He told them he was a servant of the same enemy who had devoured their lives, stealing everything, and because he was sick, his master had left him behind. Could he join them on their way, though? David said yes, and the man promised to take them to the people they sought, if they agreed not to give him back to his master.

David and his men—four hundred of them now because two hundred were too tired to go into battle and stayed back with the baggage—fought their enemy and recovered what was theirs—their wives, children, and property. AND NOTHING WAS MISSING. They even took a great spoil.

When it came time to divide the winnings, the four-hundred men complained about the two hundred who had stayed behind. Why should they get anything? But David said no, they should have their portion too. And from that day on, it became law: share and share alike.

I sat with the stories, four lessons emerging in front of my eyes, and I imagined them as titles: Plundered, Caring for Another on the Way, Recovery, The Great Sharing.

So, which one did I need? Which counted most for my life and the lives around me? Or a better question: if this progression mattered for today, where was I in the story?

Two days later, a friend who knew nothing about my wake-up words sent me a sermon from YouTube. It had to do with victory over this or that in life, and sure enough, “David at Ziklag” came out of the speaker's mouth. The day after, a podcaster talked about standing strong in adversity. Somewhere in the middle, she dropped the words, “like David at Ziklag.” Why was this obscure story of an ancient warrior (and later king) showing up again and again?

As I write this today, I can't say I know the application. What does it mean for my life? I might be in the Caring for Another on the Way stage, but who knows?

Or maybe I'm meant to tell you right now because this story is for you.

What do you think?

*Has My Blonde Life inspired or entertained you? If you wish to toss a tip into my writerly coffers, here's how you can do it: @Tamara-Schierkolk (Venmo) or $TamaraSchierkolk (Cash App)