A friend posted "How do you like to spend your Sundays?" First thing that came to mind was building a maze so I can hide the toast with cinnamon sugar from Charlie. All I want to do is eat it without tearing a section off for him. And by section, I mean a half of a piece of toast. We share because he is insistent we do so! You see, Charlie is a 95 pound Golden Retriever/Lab mix who has a major talent for not finding a bird to retrieve but can hear you opening the bread bag (he hears the twist), then you dropping the bread into the toaster and then you pushing down the lever. His excitement grows when he hears the toast pop! When you are buttering the toast, the water works begin. He needs a drool bucket at this point. He's in the kitchen during this process because its lonely waiting for food to be ready. He knows, he's a dog and has to wait all the time for someone to notice that he's down an ounce and needs sustenance immediately. Charlie's talents abound, he is world champion at love, hugs, drool, kisses, stepping on feet, lying on feet. He can jump into bed with a five minute pep talk from the occupant(s) and once in bed nudges the female occupant out so he can be with his beloved daddy. I'm used to that. He depends on me while the males in the household are at work/school. Charlie is my beloved and I am his, until 2:45 p.m. strikes. We walk and talk, I talk and he sleeps actually. Typical male. But we roam the our village greeting shopkeepers and then Charlie begins insisting they give him a treat. Reminds me of stories of days gone by when the cops or local hoods would shake down the shopkeepers to keep their stores safe. Although in this instance, Charlie is given a treat and the shopkeeper is more than happy to do so. Win-win all around. Except the idea of taking him out for a walk and getting him exercise is quickly replaced with the need for his next "fix". He's less expensive than taking out the boys that's for sure. Charlie is a people magnet, the boys aren't. People scratch his ears, toddlers want to ride him (I don't recommend they climb on him) and Charlie wants to eat whatever treat is in their hand, especially ice cream. He loves ice cream for sure.
But Charlie's greatest, most impressive talent by far, and one he did not keep secret for too long, is his devotion to all that is FOOD. If we trained him better, (flunked out of obedience school with a German teacher, I might add) we would have avoided about 30 pounds. We should change our name to "Frankenstein" since we created this monster. He was sickly when we first got him. Charlie is a rescue and almost died three times before he was 3 months old. He had Parvovirus and $1,600 and a week and a half in the hospital later, came home to us, his adoring family. This is where the bonding began between doggie and daddy. So its been that way for almost 10 years. He hears food, he comes running; he sees food he won't lunge but he will be patient until you have a tiny morsel that he almost wills into his mouth. He likes my cooking but doesn't chew it, just swallows it and goes to a different family member for his next piece. My husband and I are the biggest offenders and our sons are his least favorite targets. He is so patient at dinner. I've thought on many occasions giving him an I.V. drip because the drooling resembles a leaky faucet and as such must be suffering a bit of dehydration. Charlie can work it, there is no doubt. Hell, at 3 months he was climbing into the dishwasher to get any scraps I missed in the sink. I remember shutting the door on him thinking it would scare him. Nope, he just kept on licking. Good thing I had that load on sanitize.
As I'm writing all those words I just now thought my husband is an enabler because he thinks of Charlie as his fourth son. I must remember to begin torture to stop hubby from giving in to Charlie all the time. I'm guilty as well and will undergo psychoanalysis to change my behavior.
So there it is, how I have to spend my Sundays. Off to the pool now, where Charlie is not a member. He will be recharging his batteries no doubt for dinner tonight. I, in turn, will begin badgering my husband quietly enough so no one at the swim club will hear me chastise him for his bad behavior these past 10 years. Which, by the way, he learned from his dad (hehehe).
Who doesn't want to enjoy the musings of a mom who can't seem to stay away from the Camp. Lots of letters to be written from a fantastic Camp atmosphere.
Sunday, June 8, 2014
Friday, June 6, 2014
D Day 70 Years Later
I grew up listening to my history-crazy father discuss
different points in the timeline of the history of the world.
He loved American history and a particular devotion to the Civil War. He gave me my love of history and I am forever grateful for the things he brought to my attention and taught me. But World War II mesmerized me. Since I was a little girl, I was either
reading books or watching movies targeted for that part of our history. D Day or “Operation Overlord” has always garnered
my particular attention. All those years
of training and conditioning, knowing when the call came they were ready to go
where needed. What an impressive
fighting force!
There is no greater intimidation than parachuting
from a plane hoping the German soldiers and their supply of guns miss their
targets so they can make it safely to Terra Firma. In watching “Band of Brothers”, “The Longest
Day” and other movies, they gave me just a glimpse of what their hell was like.
As soldiers approached Omaha Beach or Utah Beach they were weighed down by 60 pounds or more
of equipment meant to sustain you for two weeks or longer, you were lucky. These guys came out of the water even losing
their guns or worse, drowning because they so heavy and couldn’t swim away from
the landing boats. How horrible. But
then some get out of the water and make it onto the beach where they are a
target, their helmets caught in the crossfires of someone hidden on the cliffs
above. To survive you hide behind the body of a fallen comrade. This is a case of survival of the
fittest. They must survive and move on
to the cliffs looming in front of you.
The German guns are saturating the beach, and they begin to see Army Rangers
climbing up their ladders hoping to get the upper hand finally. When the beach is finally in American hands
you take that look around and suck in a breath and see blood in the ocean
waves, bodies strewn on the beach, body parts no longer assembled as
bodies. These men end an ugly journey only
to pave the way for the road of the continuing journey for more soldiers needed to secure freedom for the French and
all that lies in their way to Berlin.
I know my respect for these valiant men who answered
the call from a nation in crisis to come to their country’s aid knowing there
would be the possibility of a bleak future.
At the tender age of 18 and sometimes younger, they take an Oath stating
“I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States, etc….” These men had at the time a modern military
with equipment that they hoped would win the war. Great minds gathered together to give the
United States the edge they needed.
Americans at home sacrificed to give whatever they
had to support their military men and women and did it without tears,
grumblings or cries of it all being unfair.
They all came together and together they defeated an evil that wanted
what they wanted and wanted the ultimate submission with maiming, killing and
destroying everything in their way. War
raged on for a total of six years. Americans battled on for 4 years on two
continents. How amazing their strength
and fortitude! God bless the men and
women of the Greatest Generation. These
men undertook a task that seemed daunting and unrelenting.
Now we are 70 years since D Day. 70 years since the
beginning of the end. I didn’t have
anyone involved in D Day but my uncle died at Anzio in July of 1944. My husband’s
uncle died at Monte Cassino around the same time. Many families have stories to tell of their
loved ones and in my personal estimation, they should continue on with those
stories. New stories will be told in
time of loved ones in Afghanistan and Iraq.
God Bless them all and maybe there will be a time when there is not one
battle being waged in our lifetime.
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