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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

spring sports

April showers made me cranky but we still had some fun

May 1, 2022

I’m writing this at the beginning of May and it’s finally starting to feel a little more like spring. The weather has fluctuated as much as my feelings these past weeks. As I’ve looked back on the month, I can hardly believe some of the things that were part of it (and that’s why I write these posts, so I remember the good things). You know the drill: what we did, what we ate, what we watched, what we read.

What We Did

Track meets; lacrosse matches. Sports parent life. The month started off with cold, windy weather. Not a fun sports environment but we do love watching our kids participate. The month also ended with cold, windy weather. Spring sports season has been brutal thus far.

An afternoon out with book club friends. We wandered through Building Character searching for odd/quirky gifts around $5 to exchange later, then stopped at The Lancaster Pickle Company to sample some pickles (a pickle on a stick!) before heading to Maize, a Mexican restaurant for margaritas and appetizers.

We love pickles!

Our daughter attended the high school musical with her middle school play castmates, so Phil and I had some time with our son, who opted to play video games with us: Jackbox 8 Party Pack. Admittedly, these games were mostly fun and not too thought-provoking for a Saturday night.

Game night with our small group from church. We played some new and familiar games. Bohnanza, which is a bean-planting game; Dominion, which is a deck-building game; Code Names and Apples to Apples. It was a fun night of hanging out.

Spring break! For the first time in recent memory, we had a full 5-day break for Easter weekend. It was busy with the best kinds of things: a  massage for me, a writing presentation to my online writing group, and delivering and distributing the lacrosse fundraiser stickies to those who ordered. We had a video call with our Illinois family on Easter Sunday as well.

Before we started the deliveries!

The Franklin Institute and Philadelphia. We gifted our daughter with tickets to The Harry Potter Exhibition at The Franklin Institute in Philadelphia.

I’m a Hufflepuff

It was our first outing to a city since 2019, so we were a little out of our usual travel element. After finally finding some parking, we ate our lunch near a fountain in Logan Square across from the Franklin Institute.

Then we wandered through the science museum for a couple of hours before our tickets to the exhibition took effect.

An original Wright Brothers plane

Our kids loved the immersive experience of the exhibition. It was super crowded. I loved some of the historical exhibits in the other parts of the Franklin Institute.

Standing in the coal bin of a train engine

We ended our day at H Mart in Upper Darby where we ate dinner at the food court and then perused the grocery store for the snacks and ramen we’ve been craving since my last trip to H Mart with the book club friends. Overall, it was a fun day that makes me want to get back to day trips to cities.

More video games with our son. Our daughter went out with some friends to the roller rink, so while the three of us were home, we played more video games together. 

Writers brunch. A couple of very dear writer friends open their home every once in a while to host a bunch for local-ish writers, and I got to attend for the first time this month. It. Was. Amazing. I keep forgetting how life-giving it is to be in a room with people who write, to talk with them about writing and just share our collective struggles and joys. I already can’t wait for the next one.

Indie Bookstore Day! I visited a new bookstore in Lancaster. Pocket Books is in a house with a porch and has tall shelves full of beautiful reads in a variety of genres.

So charming. I can’t wait to go back.

What We Ate

Chick-fil-a. We needed to eat out after a full day that ended with a lacrosse match.

H Mart food court food: pork fried rice, soup, sushi, Korean chicken.

Seafood in a thick noodle broth
Our son’s sushi plate

Grilled stickies. After all the ordering/delivering, I was pleased to learn that they lived up to the hype.

Easter dinner: Grilled ham steaks, cheesy potatoes made with goat milk gouda, green beans with fig vinaigrette, crescent rolls. Dessert: Cheesecake bites and mini-eclairs.

Our daughter’s cooking inspiration is back so one night a week, she’s choosing and making the meal. Her first offering was crispy rice topped with imitation crab, avocado, cucumber, green onion and jalapeño. Then she made meatloaf from a TikTok video and it was spicy and delicious. A week later, she fed us a five-cheese baked mac and cheese. She either loves us or is trying to kill us.

Thai. Phil and I went out for lunch while the kids had a youth group hangout at church. We added Thai iced tea to our meal and it was worth it! A non-alcoholic drink with an umbrella that was sweet and refreshing–what’s not to love?

What We Watched

Moon Knight. I have no idea where this is going but I’m along for the ride. And what a ride it is.

SNL Clips. Angelo clips crack me up. And Bowen is my current favorite cast member, although there are a lot of contenders to choose from. We showed our kids the Angelo clips and for a couple of days our son said, “Tonight” in a high-pitched voice repeatedly.

Outlander. Season 6 is brutal and also contains some unforgettable scenes and lines from the book. I’m itching to re-read the series now.

Bridgerton. Anthony’s story is one of my favorites. I know everyone is missing the Duke from season 1 but I love the electricity between Anthony and Kate. I enjoyed the way this played out, but I think I might need to re-read the book this one was based on.

Show Dogs. This was a ridiculous, sort of dumb movie but it was good for some laughs.

Around the World in 80 Days. We finished it. It was fabulous. I want to watch it more times.

Sanditon. Season 2 is growing on me. 

Escape From Mr. Lemoncello’s Library. I enjoyed the book. The movie was so-so. Like Willy Wonka, but in a library.

What We Read

Books I finished:

Memoirs of a Geisha by Arthur Golden. Mixed feelings about this one. It’s written by a white man who apparently researched by talking with a former geisha but it still left me feeling confused and unsettled (and not in a good way).

Where the Lost Wander by Amy Harmon. Writing a story set during westward expansion and pioneer days is no easy task. So many of these kinds of stories make the white man out to be the victim and the native people the aggressors. This book paints both cultures as complicated and culpable when it came to conflict between them. It was so well-written I had disturbing dreams one night after reading a couple of chapters because I was so immersed in the story. Amy Harmon is one of my new favorites when it comes to historical fiction.

I Am Malala by Malala Yousafzai. I took time on my lunch break to read a little bit of this book each day, and while I’ve always been inspired by Malala, reading her story and the background of where she grew up in Pakistan added to my admiration of her. She is more than just the girl who got shot by the Taliban.

The Nature of the Beast by Louise Penny. The last couple of Inspector Gamache books were a struggle, but this one is back to what I love about the series: the suspense of not knowing who committed the crime with some underlying backstory that is unsettling and may continue to play in future books.

When Stars Are Scattered by Omar Mohamed and Victoria Jamieson. This is a second read-through for me but my book club at work is reading it this month, so I’m re-reading. It was just as or more impactful the second time through.

The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels by India Holton. I was off to a slow start with this one because I didn’t understand that it was a historical fantasy (I guess?) with lady pirates and flying houses in Victorian England. But it didn’t take long for me to be thoroughly engrossed and entertained. It was a fresh twist on some of the usual genres I read.

Books in progress:

The Eternal Current by Aaron Niequist. Aaron spoke at our church this month and I was curious about his book. I’ve only just started it.

Spy School Goes South by Stuart Gibbs. Each one gets better than the last one.

Subpar Parks by Amber Share. While we were waiting for a digital version of Spy School Goes South to hit my email, we read a few selections from this funny and informative book.

These Precious Days by Ann Patchett. Our next book club read, and after one essay and the introduction, I have decided I love Patchett’s writing.

Call Us What We Carry by Amanda Gorman. This is some powerful poetry. I wasn’t prepared to process my all my pandemic feelings, but Gorman gives words to all those things I’ve sort of avoided for the past two years.

Fish In a Tree by Lynda Mullaly Hunt. My next lunch read at work about a girl with dyslexia who has fooled her teachers and parents for years about her disability.

Filed Under: monthly roundup Tagged With: april reads, book club, franklin institute, harry potter exhibit, spring break, spring sports

A month to remember: A lot of firsts for our family in May

May 31, 2021

I forgot how overwhelming and busy the month of May can be when life is closer to normal. Last May was nowhere near normal, so I was unprepared for how exhausting (mentally, emotionally, spiritually) the month would be. But here we are, at the end of it, and we made it. Summer is knocking on the door, and I’m hopeful for some rest and rejuvenation. Before we hit summer hard, though, here’s our round-up of May: What We Did, What We Ate, What We Watched and What We Read. Buckle up! It’s a ride.

What We Did

One of the first things the kids and I did was re-organized and cleaned out the pantry. Confession: we had a small ant situation that necessitated this action, but overall the pantry shelves become a catch-all, especially after a significant grocery trip. Stuff gets forgotten and pushed to the back. It was in desperate need of cleaning and re-organizing. I did not take a before picture because that would have been embarrassing. The three of us worked together, and my son’s main contribution was taking each item out one at a time and reading the label. Out loud. “This is fun,” he said. Meanwhile, I was holding in a scream.

After we reorganized.

Next up was a trip to Longwood Gardens. At the end of April, we purchased a membership for the year. It was a retroactive birthday present for me since last year I was supposed to go see Hamilton in Washington, D.C. We repurposed the Hamilton money and bought a membership, something we’ve been wanting and meaning to do for years. May 2 was the last day of the spring blooms exhibit at Longwood, so we made the day trip. We had never wandered the meadow trails and honestly, these were some of the best moments of the day because fewer people were on those trails. The main garden area was packed with people in various states of COVID compliance. Stay tuned for future visits because we can.

I love tulips.

May is a month of celebrations, and first up is MY birthday. I took cupcakes to work to share with some friends and some of those friends treated me the next day to lunch and bought balloons for my desk.

I was told I’m supposed to announce my birthday so my co-workers can help me celebrate.

Quarantine. Again! No, that’s not a holdover from last month. Our daughter had a second quarantine just two weeks after her previous quarantine. It’s wild times we’re living in.

All-day lacrosse tournament. (Twice.) I was sort of dreading it, but they turned out to be mostly enjoyable. The first one was cold but fun, even though our team lost all of its games. I enjoyed being around the other lacrosse parents and cheering on our sons. The second one we were at for 10 hours total. So much lacrosse.

One of our firsts in May is that I got tested for COVID. I woke up one morning with cold-like symptoms that had developed overnight. In normal circumstances, I would not have thought twice about the symptoms but it was the worst I’ve felt in a year (even though it wasn’t that bad). After a video call with a health care provider, I got a COVID test. It was negative so it must have been just a body-shutting-down end-of-school-year cold.

We had a FaceTime Uno date with our niece and her parents. One of my favorite things about quarantine is learning how to play games with people via video call. I want to do more of this.

Another first: our daughter got her first dose of COVID vaccine. She will be fully vaccinated by the end of next month, which will bring us great relief.

Phil stopped at a record shop after getting the car inspected and added to his cassette tape collection. Either that or he time-traveled.

I said “yes” to an invitation to drink margaritas at a friend’s house with her neighbors. I usually need a lot of encouragement to leave the house on a Friday night. I have no regrets about this decisions. I met some new people! 

Apparently trying new things with new people is another theme for the month. Since January, we’ve been attending a new church online. This church hosted the first of its summer hikes in May, so the kids and I went. Meeting strangers in the woods? What could go wrong? The answer was nothing. The next day we attended that church in person and have now been there in person twice. It’s not easy being the new people, especially during a pandemic, but this return to community has been encouraging already.

We were nervous, excited and awkward … so you know, totally normal.

We took a virtual adventure to Myanmar (Burma).

And finished the lacrosse season. As fun as it was, it is so good to be done for the year.

Another celebration: our anniversary. I took the day off, and Phil and I went hiking together at Otter Creek Nature Preserve. We hiked for an hour and a half then stopped for a picnic lunch that we had purchased at Wegman’s. Then it was another couple of hours of hiking. Four hours total on a 90-degree day and we ran out of water while hiking because we packed too little with us on the hike. (There was plenty in the car.)

At the Urey Overlook of the Susquehanna River from the York County side of the river.

Then, date night! For the first time since pre-pandemic. We sat on the porch of a local restaurant and ate and drank while it rained. But the rain only added to the experience, and I could eat outside most of the time for the rest of my life and not be sad.

Did I mention that this was my first time eating out since pre-pandemic? We’ve done a lot of take-out.

Isabelle and I ran the Race Against Racism virtual 5K. It was after the reporting window for the race, but our spring was a little bit cray-cray so we ran it on Memorial Day just to say we did.

Before we started running

Then we weeded the garden.

Maybe it won’t be a lost cause after all

And went for ice cream at Lancaster Sweet Shoppe. They were having an anniversary sale. Does BOGO ice cream taste better? Can’t be sure because the ice cream at the sweet shoppe is always good.

I thought we were done with the tongue photos, but apparently not.
I cannot begin to count the number of ice cream photos we have of him.
Her Insta photos always look better.

What We Ate

While we were visiting Longwood Gardens, we bought food there, another thing we’ve never done, mostly because pre-pandemic you could leave and come back, so we would picnic. Among the four of us, we had a wood-fired pizza, smoked cauliflower bites, parmesan truffle wings, a brisket grilled cheese, Hershey chocolate ice cream, and two ice cream sandwiches from a local place called iSwich. We will now be searching for their ice cream closer to home. It’s pricey but all the food was delicious and we needed the fuel for all of our walking.

So. Many. Cupcakes. I had three from Lancaster Cupcake in less than 24 hours: a London Fog, a Cannoli and a Vanilla Party Cake.

I also ate peanut butter pie and a southwest salad for my takeout lunch at work.

We did not light the candle because I was not about to be the reason the fire alarm went off.

And we ordered from Annie Bailey’s Irish Public House for my birthday dinner. I had the Irish nachos over waffle fries. Two of the family had bangers and mash, and our meatatarian ate a Beyond Burger. He is sold on this plant-based protein initiative and I am all for it.

What’s not to love?

Pizza and stromboli from Pasquale’s because of lacrosse tournament number one. It normally would have been a pizza night from our son’s menu but we figured none of us would want to cook after being gone all day. (We were right.)

Mother’s Day breakfast: Eggs Benedict, potatoes O’Brien, danishes, donuts, fresh strawberries, chocolate milk.

I didn’t have to cook: my favorite kind of breakfast

Frisco’s Chicken with some delicious sides: mac and cheese, chicken fried rice, plantains, yuca fries, empanadas.

Smoked turkey breast. Phil did the smoking. We pulled it and made sandwiches for one of our busy lacrosse nights.

Chicken biryani for our virtual adventure to Myanmar.

It was a Burmese take on chicken biryani and we ate this for an entire week as leftovers.

Ice cream at Freeze and Frizz with the entire lacrosse program in our school district. It was 50 degrees outside.

Meat, cheese, bread, almonds, nectarines and a ganache cheesecake for our anniversary hiking picnic.

We made our own charcuterie for hiking.

And then we went out to anniversary dinner at Quip’s Pub, a local British pub. We shared crab dip for an appetizer. Phil had fish and chips (wrapped in newspaper!) and I had Miss Lacreevy’s chicken (chicken with ham and brie and asparagus, topped with balsamic and served over mashed potatoes). And beer. Because it’s a celebration.

What We Watched

More WandaVision. If you read last month’s description of the show, it was not inclusive of everything the show is about. I mean, after four episodes, I don’t have a clear idea of what the show is about. That doesn’t mean it’s bad. The opposite in fact. Compelling. Good storytelling. Every episode leaves us with a “WHAAAAT??” feeling. We finished it, and we still have that feeling.

The Nate Bargatze episode of The Stand-ups. More laughter. Some backstory for the jokes he told in the longer special we watched last month, which I now want to go back and watch again.

And his other comedy special The Greatest Average American. Again, lots of laughs.

Footloose in Switzerland with David and Debra Rixon. Do I now want to move to a Swiss village in the mountains? Yes.

Call the Midwife. 

Kim’s Convenience. I laughed out loud within minutes of the first episode. I’m always reluctant to start a new series, even when I’ve heard good things. So far, this one doesn’t disappoint. One thing that’s hard for me is the accents because I think I’ve only ever heard Korean accents in television in a mocking sort of way. So, it’s jarring to hear them used in everyday conversation as part of the show and not be internally offended. We finished season 1 and are already several episodes into season 2. I’m stilling LOLing.

When Calls the Heart. I was so bummed when the show was pulled from Netflix. I had watched up to season 5 (heart-breaking!) so earlier this year I bought the DVD boxed set and shared it with friends. When they were finished watching, it was my turn. I picked up where I left off with the Christmas special at the start of season 6. And continued watching a few episodes in that season.

The Africam at Neledi Dam, South Africa. In keeping with our birdcam obsession, a wildlife cam in Africa came up on our suggested list and we watched for many minutes and now I’m going to be obsessed even more. I’ve since tuned in to other African wildlife cams. I can’t stop. I’ve seen birds sleeping near hippos, giraffes just eating till they can’t eat anymore and warthogs.

For our virtual adventure, a documentary about the Burma Road that is being built by hand through Myanmar to connect China and India. Fascinating.

Another episode of History of Swear Words. The “b-word” this time. My favorite part of this show is how academic and professional people talk about these words and their origins and usage. I’m also learning about all kinds of jobs I think I wish I could have had.

What We Read

The Brutal Telling by Louise Penny. It left me with questions and an immediate need to read the next book, which I requested from the library.

Evicted. Finished it for book club and am still reeling from my second read-through.

Truman. Continued. Slowly chipping away at it. Will I finish it before summer is over? Stay tuned!

When He Was Wicked by Julia Quinn. Bridgerton Book 6 and is it repetitive to say that each one is better than the last?

A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway. It was like reading Hemingway’s journal. And he made Paris come alive at a time when it was filled with American writers. Enjoyable.

Come Back to Me by Jody Hedlund. This is the first in a new series by one of my favorite authors. It has echoes of Outlander themes in it (modern woman time travels to the past, meets handsome rescuer, struggles with decision to return to her time). Not a substitute for Outlander but a strong story that tugs on your emotions in all the right places.

It’s In His Kiss by Juila Quinn. Bridgerton book 7. Not my favorite of the Bridgerton books, but I’m nearing the end and I won’t stop until I’ve read ’em all.

Bury Your Dead by Louise Penny. I’m already about a third of the way through it, and I cannot stop reading about Inspector Gamache.

Bonus book treat: I did not read all of these books yet, but on a particularly stressful day at work, I went shopping at the BOGO (buy one, get one) book fair at our school. I have no regrets.

This stack does not include the books my daughter bought. Do we have a problem? Nope!

Thanks for reading along with our May happenings. Next month brings the end of school and the start of summer and what I hope are more adventures. Till next time!

Filed Under: family, gardening, monthly roundup Tagged With: anniversary, birthday, celebrations, hiking, new experiences, pandemic life, quarantine life, spring sports, virtual adventures

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Photo by Rachel Lynn Photography

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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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