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Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Buying Dirt


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Dear folks,
 I got into trouble last night.

It was with my blog carrier for “sensitive material.” 

 Hey, I’m a good Jo, and I still believe in free speech, but I overstepped their specifications, and they placed a warning on my blog.

I wasn’t sure which statement set off their bot.  I repeated information that wasn’t true, but I specified that it wasn’t, and it had tickled me before it went away. 

It wasn't the carrier who took it offline. It was me.

For those who read yesterday's post, April 29, I would appreciate any comments. Were you shocked, offended, disagreed, or agreed?

I know readers are reticent to comment on this blog; either it’s hard to do, or they are afraid I will snatch their email. I don’t know, I am just happy all you guys show up💖💗 and whether people put in likes or not doesn’t matter as long as they read my material. I appreciate your time in reading this.💗 I know you have many choices, so that you choose to look at these words warms my cockles. Thank you.💗💗💗💗💗

I am sure the powers that be didn’t object when I got off topic at the end of my post and talked about buying topsoil for the area in our backyard where the grass isn’t growing.

It struck me as my daughter was throwing the bags of dirt over the temporary fence I bought to keep the dogs off my intended new lawn, that our great-grandparents would exclaim, “Buying dirt in bags?! What in the world is the world coming to?”

What if they heard that in the 2000s, we would be buying water, and what about $5.00 cups of coffee?

See how we ease into such things, and soon they become commonplace? We adjust.

The area I am talking about is under the Maple tree where the roots are growing up through the ground. After the leaves covered the ground last fall, the rains came and added to the the lawn's demise.

Now we have a large patch of bare ground.  

I love that Maple tree. It is beautiful in the summer and provides delightfully calming shade—do you bask in shade? (When it is hot enough, we do.)

But can I convince the birds to leave some seeds to germinate, the seeds to sprout, and grass to grow where we once had a lawn?

We’ll see.

This is our life, folks: conditions change, we have at-home challenges, we have world challenges, and here we are trying to find joy in a chaotic world.

It’s probably not all that much different from earlier times.

At least we have indoor plumbing.

 


 


Tuesday, April 21, 2026

It Changed Me

 


 The Camino de Santiago,captured from a video. *

 

This morning, I sat on my bed with my head feeling as I used to tease my curly-haired daughter, “We had to let all those curls screw themselves through your scalp, if not the inside of your head would be filled with—imagine this, a curled-up wad of hair.”

That’s how my head felt—full, but not of hair, of inspiration, of thoughts, of memories. I was in a ratified zone. I wanted to stay there, all warm and toasty, after I read that a friend pulled a needle and thread through a hiker’s feet blisters, tied off the thread, left it as a wick, and plastered Band-Aids over the blisters. The hiker put on her shoes and continued hobbling on down the trail.

I thought of the author—I was jealous of her abilities, although I know we shouldn’t compare ourselves to others, but when my head is ringing from their words, it’s hard not to wish I could sing like she does.

Laguna Beach, an old stomping ground. The author I’m speaking of, lives there, is an architect, has two restaurants, and writes best sellers, AUGH! And that’s where we used to go on Sunday afternoons driving from San Diego, to take in the art galleries, and where they had the best pottery shack, and a beach where my daughter took her first step, standing in the sand with a little body 100 times larger than the tiny feet she balanced on, weaving, swaying back and forth, concentrating with wrinkled brow, until finally she did it—took a step. And we caught it on film, with a movie camera—that’s what we had in those days.

But it wasn’t Laguna Beach that changed me, well maybe a little, during those years, they had a greeter, an old man, who had greeted motorists for so many years, they made him the official greeter, and at the beach there was an alcove eroded from the sea into the cliff abutting the beach that had so many shells my mother-in-law spent an afternoon sitting among those shells, sorting, and we could hardly pry her away.  

No, it wasn’t Laguna Beach or the memories that changed me today, it was Suzanne Redfearn’s novel, Call of the Camino.

I let others do the walking. I did the reading. After Redfearn’s two women protagonists completed the Camino, a 775 km, approximately 482-mile walk through Portugal, Spain, and France, I was left sprawled on the bed with thoughts curled inside my brain.  

Walking the Camino de Santiago began as a pilgrimage in the 9th century for medieval Christians to follow the Way of St James. It has become is a spiritual journey, a finding of oneself, of finding direction in life. For the pilgrims, it means their sins are forgiven, and any punishment related to them in this life or in the next is pardoned. For others, it’s a place to grieve, to spread ashes, and for some young guys to find girls. For all, it is an arduous walk, grueling and enlightening.  

You walk, you think, you put one foot in front of the other. You work through the pain, through the blisters, through the painful feet and aching joints. You endure the heat and the sun and the rain. You make friends, you lose some, you celebrate with coffee or a drink at a pub when a city presents itself.  You challenge yourself, face your fears, and demolish your demons. You become separated from the world, you attend to minimal daily tasks like washing your one of two outfits. You feed yourself, water yourself, and take a shower. You fall in love.

The Camino provides. There are hostels along the way and showers, dormitories, ‘The albergue,” with bunks that can house 150 stinking, smelly, snoring people. You pay if you can. it’s free if you cannot. “Buen Camino!” shouts a fellow traveler. In earlier times it was “Ultreia!!” “Onward.” And they never let a fellow pilgrim go hungry.

I wanted to run back to my office and let some thoughts leak from my brain before they evaporated. Already, the feeling is drifting away; it is not the tender Ahhhhh.

I was impacted by the fictional characters who walked the Camino. And there, snug in my bed, I thought of dreams I had had of following in the footsteps of writers who traveled and wrote folky slice-of-life stories, such as Charles Kuralt did with his books, On the Road with Charles Kuralt, and his Sunday morning TV program of the same name. He traveled the backroads of America and wrote about what he found there—a time when people were proud of America, and country fairs spouted such signs as, “See the Swimming Pig,” like he was the only one on earth, yet all pigs can swim.

And in San Diego, another writer, John Sinor, wrote a column for the local newspaper. I remember his story about the white doe, which occasionally gave a local an otherworldly experience. Sinor himself had come upon her one misty Sunday morning as the first light of the day illuminated the sky and the deer. Some society, for what reason I do not know, tried to capture her with a non-lethal tranquilizing dart, and it was too much for her.  I still grieve her, although she would be long gone by now, and her mate, a white buck, had passed before that story.

And I dream of renting a camper and taking a road trip with my dog, and seeing what I would find and who I would meet. It could be like John Steinbeck’s “Travels with Charlie,” who said a truck is more reliable than a car, and his trip was at a time when camper shells were a rare sight. When he met a fellow to whom offering vodka was appropriate, the fellow was awed by his gift of iced vodka from his camper refrigerator.

I wonder if I could pay for my trip by writing about it, but my quibbling mind tells me people don’t want to pay for writing when they can get so much for free.

Yesterday, I declared, “I no longer want to live in doom and gloom.” My grandson wanted me to read a Steven King book, I told him I had “Steven King on Writing.” That didn’t wash. He meant a novel. How many pages did I read before I said, “F* that, I’m not going to read about a demented old bastard tormenting a little boy,” and stopped reading.

Why throw in bad thoughts!

It was enough after I read a real-life Substack writer, JoJoFromJerz…” (April 17, 2026)

“Just yesterday, Donald Trump referred to Jeffrey Epstein’s victims as 'victims… or whatever.”—JoJoFromJerz

“Or whatever.”

And if I’m being honest, that triggered the shit out of me.

“There’s a man who raped me, and he’s out there living his life without consequence, like what he did to me never mattered.

“He took my virginity when I was seventeen years old—violently, painfully, in a way that carved itself in and stayed—and when I tried, in that immediate aftermath, to tell the truth about what had happened, the people I trusted most didn’t believe me.”

Now I wonder, should I change the memoir I wrote three years ago, with inclusions and exclusions over the years? For now, I am a different person. We have all changed over the years. It’s hard to find joy. It’s hard to believe in truth, goodness, those sorts of things. But then I guess a memoir, I prefer to call it a Prairie Report, is the telling of what came before.

However, our responses to what happened have changed.

I was so anxious to get to my computer and pour out something. My computer, however, decided it needed an upgrade, and it was so slow I resorted to the old, tried-and-true method—writing by hand.

Last night, after discarding King’s book, I suggested to my grandson that he read some Ray Bradbury. I read Bradbury about 50 years ago, loved him, and now wonder how I would feel about his books. Bradbury never used a computer. All his works were typed on an Olympia typewriter, and he refused to have his books published in digital form. He was a futurist who held books sacred—to hold them, to smell them, he felt something was lost reading onscreen. In 2011, he reneged and allowed Fahrenheit 451 to be published as an ebook.

I went to the computer (see, now you can read an excerpt of Bradbury’s books online) and read the introduction to  Dandelion Wine, and was moved to an ethereal realm, where he gloried in being alive; basked in it, celebrated it, tussling with his brother and getting a fat lip didn’t faze him, blood trickling told him he was alive.

The couple of times I heard Bradbury speak (when he was in his prime), once on a college campus where he sat, like Socrates, on the lawn under a tree, and taught his students. I walked away from his talks on air two feet from the ground.

There were advantages to living in San Diego.

 


 

 

*https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fbh2_XaT0Og