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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

fall colors

A magical month of ordinary days: October round-up

November 1, 2022

October has felt like a magical month. The weather has been as close to fall perfect as I can remember in recent years, the colors of the trees eye-catching and gorgeous.

It’s been a busy month with a lot of ordinary days but not without its moments. Here are some of those moments in the form of What We Did, What We Ate, What We Watched and What We Read.

What We Did

I had the amazing opportunity to go away for a weekend with some friends from book club at the beginning of the month. We traveled about 3 hours away to the west and north into the mountains to a cabin on the creek. It was dark when we arrived, so it was morning before I set eyes on the beauty of the place. 

Coffee at the creek

I was in love at first sight. I kayaked (you can read more about that here), and we went to an overlook in the PA Grand Canyon.

Gorge.

Now I want to go back and hike some of the park. It was fun just to get away. It’s been a long time since I’ve gone somewhere without my family, and I didn’t realize how much I needed it.

Also that weekend, my friends encouraged me to bring some of my writing for them to read. I went overboard and printed three of my current works-in-progress.

The following weekend, my parents came to visit. We enjoyed the fall weather and the fall sports/activities the kids are in. They helped me with some yard work, too.

We consolidated the porch plants for the indoor season.

Band competitions, football games, and soccer games have been our lives this fall and October was no exception. During one of those soccer games, the boy got a mild concussion, which took him out of the physical activity world for a bit. He’s better now.

Soccer was on hold for almost two weeks but we’re finishing up the season.

One of the marching band activities was a Halloween parade in a small community in the school district. I haven’t been to a parade in a long time, and I don’t think I’ve ever been to a night parade. It was fun to watch kids running for candy in costume.

And we spent a quiet night in for Halloween watching shows and eating our own candy.

Lastly, there were costumes on Halloween for the school day.

“Bruh. This is so dumb.” (I’m a middle-schooler)
Elastigirl to the rescue!

What We Ate

Chellas. Peruvian food cooked basically on our block. We took my parents here for lunch during their visit because I like food I don’t have to make.

No pics of the food because it disappeared too quickly!

We also ate at the Nifty Fifties diner in the Philadelphia suburbs before attending a band competition.

It was well worth the experience and the food was delicious.

Crab fries
Holy milkshake, Batman!

To celebrate our girl and her band performance, we picked up some Crumbl cookies. We are newly obsessed with these cookies, so it’s good that we can’t get them super locally.

On the one Friday night we opted out of football, the three of us ordered from The Big Five African Cuisine … a smorgasbord of  beef stew, chicken stew, rice, cabbage, chapati, beef samosas, and ugali.

Maybe it’s not the flashiest looking food but it is tasty

And of course, we had some soups. Pot pie soup was a hit from the Cravings cookbook by Chrissy Teigen.

You can trust a supermodel with food recommendations

And winter vegetable stew was easy and yummy.

One night, we had Dino nuggets because if you’re going to have chicken nuggets, they might as well be dino-shaped, right?

While the kids were at a Halloween party at church, Phil and I went to brunch. I had shrimp and eggs.

He had biscuits and gravy and a virgin bloody Mary.

We’ve had so much time as a family lately but not enough couple time. It was nice to be reminded that we can still be a couple.

On Halloween night, I made this ultimate 7-layer dip from the Cook’s Country cookbook. It’s the second time we’ve had it this fall. It lives up to its name.

I can taste it just by looking at it

What We Watched

Shows that fill the time:

Richard Osman’s House of Games. Quiz show. British. Low-key. Fun.

Press Your Luck. The new one. I watch for nostalgia and because I’m personally risk-averse but like watching other people take risks.

Saturday Night Live clips. It’s the most wonderful time of the year when SNL returns.

Movies:

The Mighty Ducks. Hits different when you’re a parent/teacher of middle schoolers and our middle-schooler loved it.

Home Team, the story of Sean Payton’s one-year suspension from the NFL and his stint as a coach on his son’s football team. I had mixed feelings throughout but I think it turned out okay.

Shows in progress:

She-Hulk Attorney at Law. Six of nine episodes. Love it.

I Am Groot. We actually watched all of these shorts at once.

The Great British Baking Show. I read a book (fiction) about a baking show like this and since I’ve never seen one episode of it, I decided to start. It’s good company.

What We Read

Books I finished: 

All That We Carried by Erin Bartels. I bought this book on our anniversary trip to Michigan this summer. I liked the memories it brought up of our time in nature.

The Miraculous Journey of Edward Tulane by Kate DiCamillo. Out. Standing. I couldn’t put it down except when I had to. 

The Traitor’s Wife by Alison Pataki. Historical fiction about Benedict Arnold’s wife. Pataki is a new favorite historical fiction author.

Last of Her Name by Jessica Khoury. This is YA sci-fi that reminded me of Veronica Roth, and since I love Veronica Roth, I loved this as well.

The Reason I Jump by Naoki Higashida. A memoir written by a 13-year-old Japanese boy with autism about what it’s like inside his brain. Fascinating.

Rosaline Palmer Takes the Cake by Alexis Hall. This is the book that led to me watching The Great British Baking Show. Features a bisexual single mom on a baking competition and the love she finds along the way. So much fun.

Books in progress:

Here For It by R. Eric Thomas. Book club read. Has led to some interesting discussion.

Spy School At Sea by Stuart Gibbs. Reading with my son.

A Great Reckoning by Louise Penny. I started this then had to return it to the library, so Inspector Gamace is in limbo.

Portrait of a Thief by Grace Li. I’m only about a third of the way through. It’s like Ocean’s 11 meets Sneakers. I’m loving it.

Filed Under: monthly roundup Tagged With: fall colors, fall sports, football games, Halloween, marching band, pa grand canyon, soccer, soup season, weekend getaway

How I'm learning to love the dying season

November 18, 2013

A few weeks ago, the trees around here were breathtaking in their fall colors. I’m learning that Lancaster County is a beautiful place to live in autumn. No matter which direction I drive, I see color and mountains and streams and rivers.

Beauty.

Some days, I’ve felt like I live in a painting, but no picture can quite capture it. Even if I was an award-winning photographer with professional equipment, the result would be inadequate.

fall color

Now, the leaves are falling. And the weather is turning colder. (Sort of.) And the days are shorter, the sunshine lacking.

I always get a little sad when the seasons change because, well, change is hard. When you get used to one thing–leaving the house without jackets, mittens and hats–and you have to switch suddenly, it’s jarring. I’ve sent my daughter to school without a winter coat on a cold day because I just didn’t think about her being outside for recess. And I forgot my coat when we went to the park on Saturday because it had been warm during the day. News flash: when the sun drops in the sky, the temperature goes with it. Live and learn.

And my eye is drawn to color. I notice the reds and pinks and yellows and differing shades of green. Sometimes I can’t believe there are so many different colors in nature, that trees that all look green in the summer display the whole palette of colors come fall.

So, winter, with its whites and grays and browns seems dreary.

But this year, I’m noticing beauty in the barren.

wpid-20131116_154248.jpg

Because what looks dead isn’t really dead. It’s dormant. Resting. Waiting.

If the trees were dead, there would be no hope. But they aren’t dead. They’re alive, and this is just a season. A part of the natural rhythm of life. Necessary, even, for the new life to come.

I have felt it in my days, those spring and summer seasons of life and fun and fullness, when everything seemed new and bright. And I have felt the dying seasons of change and loss and bleakness.

In the life seasons I rejoice, and I think things could stay this way all the time. In the dying seasons, I  wonder if spring will ever come again. If it will always be this way.

And, of course, it never is. Life, death, life again. The seasons change, in nature and in life, and we do well to find the joy where we can.

I can’t yet say that winter is my favorite season. Maybe none of them are my favorites anymore. Maybe they all hold their own special charm. And maybe I wouldn’t appreciate them at all if not for the others.

Without winter, would I anticipate spring? Without fall, could I endure the heat of summer?

“There is a time for everything,” the wise man writes. Living, dying, laughing, crying.

This winter, instead of moaning and whining about the cold, I want to find the beauty. Seek the joy.

Will you join me?

Filed Under: faith & spirituality Tagged With: autumn, barren, dormant, fall colors, seasons, winter

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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