MOANING this Monday (posting a day late).



MOANING this Monday (posting a day late).



This is a little late, but here’s what I’m moaning about this Monday.

SERIOUSLY?
I truly believe that the current administration has evil and dangerous elements.
Especially when it relates to African-American and minority populations in our nation.
And more especially when it comes to WHITEwashing history.
Just look at a few recent headlines …






Stop him. Stop him. Stop him. Stop him.
Lord in Your mercy, hear our prayer.

Well, I’m both moaning AND marveling this Monday morn.
I’m dealing with some frustratingly “I’m-getting-older!” arthritis issues, especially in my creaky knees.
My microwaveable heating pad is an indispensable MARVEL for temporary relief.

Benny is getting older as well—going on 16 now.

He needs the heating pad too.

I’m marveling this rainy Georgia morning at the mystery, the illusive and changing allure of clouds.











And here’s a post HR did about clouds a while back …

Marveling this morning at my grandson Daniel‘s convincing performance as a REALLY messed-up teenager in his latest play, this time at the Tybee Arts Association Black Box Theater on Tybee Island near Savannah.

The play: Marvin’s Room.
Daniel’s character: Seventeen year-old Hank. (D is also seventeen.)
Here’s what Google’s AI says about Hank:

Whew!
Hank, onstage, with his psychiatrist on the right and his emotionally distant mother on the left:

As a grandfather, it was actually (and probably foolishly) somewhat difficult to see the normally exuberantly positive and usually smiling Daniel portraying such a severely damaged young man. (Hank doesn’t smile very much in the play.)
For a moment, I forgot what actors actually do. Act.
Daniel’s now been in over thirty plays, and his specialty seems to be the romantic lead in musical theatre (Prince Topher in Cinderella, Marius in Les Mis), Raoul in Phantom of the Opera.)
Sitting in the audience for Marvin’s Room, I kept having a bit of conflict between watching that mentally challenged CHARACTER I just met and denying to myself that the young ACTOR I knew so well could have ANY of Hank’s negative qualities.
But, uh oh. Maybe we haven’t burned down a house, but haven’t we all pushed a button or two to provoke a reaction from someone else?
Haven’t we all occasionally struggled to express our emotions openly?
Haven’t we all used sarcasm?
And haven’t we all felt (or acted) a little … crazy from time to time?!

The play ends (thankfully) on a positive note with Hank seemingly on his way to a better life.
And here’s Hank — I mean Daniel (!) — smiling his usual smile with HR and me after the performance.

Chatting and joking about his crazy character, we asked Daniel what he was going to be doing after this play ran its course.
“Oh, I’ll probably burn down my high school.”

O
Marveling at the World’s Cutest Girl Scout …

… Cookie Seller …


Marveling at these luscious hydrangeas HR and I saw on a walk near us here in Historic District Savannah …


In February!


Marveling this morning, remembering our beautiful visit to the Cummer Museum of Art and Gardens in Jacksonville, FL last Friday.
It is one of our favorite art museums anywhere, but this time, because the weather was so beautiful, we decided to simply hang out in the gardens.


Robert and a BIG oak tree …


Me, pausing by a reflection pool …

HR too …



The gardens make up the “backyard” of the museum, along the mighty St. John’s River, with downtown in the distance.



MARVELOUS!

I think it’s important, perhaps now more than ever, that we finds things that cause us to pause and marvel.
Marveling at this morning’s BEAUTIFULLY DELICIOUS pastry & coffee breakfast at Flora and Fauna here in Savannah.


