My mother is 87 years old today. I’m making her a birthday pie because she likes the yoghurt/jello refrigerator pies that I concoct. I usually make Key Lime, but today it will be with Peaches and Creme yoghurt and peach jello — with some peach slices lining the bottom. Shrimp Alfredo for dinner. Food is love, right?
I trimmed her hair this morning. I have to figure out how to have a life while she’s waiting for hers to end. I wonder if she’s going to still be around at 97, and I wonder where I’ll be when I’m her age.
Such are my thoughts on a gloomy snow-bound Tuesday with stuffy sinuses and a hunger for something that I keep satisfying with food.
Meanwhile, Molly Ivins adds to my gloom. She says
The news is not good. Osama bin Laden wants us to invade Iraq. We’re at orange on the alert code. The economy is tanking. We’re spending $1.08 billion a day on the military.
The president wants a $674 billion tax cut. In the first year, 50 percent of that tax cut would go the richest 1 percent of Americans and three-quarters of it would go to the richest 5 percent. In the years beyond that, the concentration at the top actually gets worse, according to Citizens for Tax Justice. To pay for that, he wants to raise the rent on subsidized housing for the poorest people in the country and break up Head Start, sending it down to the states, where governments are frantically cutting everything they can. Money to pay for everything from cleaning up Superfund sites to leaving no child behind is being slashed to pay for this obscene tax cut.
We’re about to got to war with a country that hasn’t fired a shot at us or anyone else. Our war plan calls for us to “shock and awe” Iraq by smashing 800 cruise missiles into Baghdad in the first 48 hours of the war. That’s one every four minutes night and day. According to Harlan Ullman, the “defense intellectual” who advocates the “shock and awe” tactic, it’s supposed to work like the atomic bomb on Hiroshima. That worked, all right.
During the last Gulf War, we killed 13,000 civilians directly and another 70,000 died in the aftermath from no water, no food, no electricity, no medical care, etc. I’d like to get rid of Saddam Hussein myself, but how many lives is it worth? And do they get to vote on it?
I wonder if any of us will we be around to celebrate my mother’s 88th.
Birthday wishes to your mother, her strength is quite admirable. Your strength and patience is just as well.
Difficult as it is to be happy about anything these days, I’m wishing your mother a happy birthday.
Best wishes to your Mom. I hope she appreciates having a daughter like you. If she does, it’s the best gift she could have.
A Happy Birthday to your mother, despite all the mess beyond the front door. 🙂