What To Do For An Encore

My ongoing conversation with the world, to find new ways to challenge myself to do better by working towards racial justice, food justice, human kindness, and equality for all.

Saturday, April 2, 2022

On Rest and Resistance

 A confession: there is a moment, pretty much every day, when I am in bed, the snooze button has been hit a few times, and I look at the clock and wonder: can I do it today? Can I actually get up?

But that’s not the confession. The confession is that many times , possibly half the time, even though it’s already “later than it should be”, I sink back down and literally pull the sheets over my head. Perhaps you know what I’m saying? There used to be posters and mugs with sayings like: Not a Morning Person Doesn’t Begin To Cover It. And we laugh because it’s so funny. Except it’s not. And on the days when I’m going into my physical office, there is also always a moment of surprise for me when I’m riding the train, realizing: okay, I’ve done it again. I got up. It’s kind of a surprise though it also comes with wondering what I forgot in order to get out of the house. My lunch? Check. Makeup on? Check. My phone? Check. I’ve forgotten each of these over the last few weeks, so I check off the basics and let that be enough. There are connected ideas here. Anyone who knows me knows that I’m a Night Person . In my perfect world, I’m up until 1 or 2 am and sleeping til noon. Pre-pandemic, I was working 9-5, in the office, 5 days a week. I sucked it up, imagining that someday things might change. The complete surprise, of course, was that things changed. Everything changed.

I have no way of knowing the stats on this but it seems like we night people are in the minority. Early birds are great for jobs with 9-5 schedules. And that was how it was in the Before Times. Lots of us Night People working hours that were unnatural for us, five days a week. When we arrived at work late, even with kind coworkers, the underlying assumption was that we were outliers, which also meant those of us who aren’t are perceived as lazy or weird.

But then, it was Covid and we were all home, all the time-- a complete upheaval.

Last summer, I offered up a sermon at my church: What Covid Showed Me. It was a numbered list of items and number 1 on this list was titled: I Don't Have to Be Chronically Exhausted. It offered this observation:   

 I discovered had extra time in my day and didn’t dread every morning. It took several weeks for me to realize what was happening but one day last June, I told a friend: I’m not chronically exhausted anymore.  It was a revelation – and I hadn’t realized it was possible.

For me this was -- and still is -- a miracle. But here's the thing. I am a person who knows how privileged a world I live in. I am grateful to be able to now be more able to give my body what it needs, when it needs it. For so many in the world, this is not a possibility.

There is a woman in Atlanta -- Tricia Hersey -- whose Facebook page: The Nap Ministry caught my eye a couple of years ago. I assumed it was a call for those of us who were tired to take naps, which it does -- but more importantly, it is a call for us to resist the Grind Culture, for people of color especially.

She has been working on a book which will be published in October called Rest is Resistance. I have already preordered my copy. I cannot do justice to the power of her words, though I try to live up to her mission every day. In the description of her book, she is described this way:

    Rest Is Resistance is rooted in spiritual energy and centered in Black liberation, womanism,     somatics, and Afrofuturism. With captivating storytelling and practical advice, all delivered in     Hersey’s lyrical voice and informed by her deep experience in theology, activism, and            performance art, Rest Is Resistance is a call to action, a battle cry, a field guide, and a     manifesto for all of us who are sleep deprived, searching for justice, and longing to be     liberated from the oppressive grip of Grind Culture.

I listen to her words because she is dead-on right. The Grind Culture can only kill us. Certainly it means we don't live our own lives. We are addicted to a system that profits off of us. That is not life. 

This is powerful stuff. If I truly care for collective liberation, how can I not answer this call?

If you are interested in reading more of Tricia's work, here are the links to her book preorder.

Rest Is Resistance by Tricia Hersey | Little, Brown Spark (littlebrownspark.com)

Listen to your bodies, friends. Take a nap. It's good for the soul.

Peace


Posted by Leslie at 10:32 AM No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

Sunday, January 30, 2022

On Gender

I have a non-binary child.

I've been thinking about writing about it for awhile, and the time is now. One important note: I am not a expert; I am a mom.

First of all, in spite of what one might think, people didn't  start talking about gender identification last year.  It may *feel* trendy and it may be something that you never thought about until last year or the year before but that doesn't change reality.

It’s not a trend. It’s not new. What’s IS new is that it has entered a current moment of conversation. 

So my non-binary child legally changed their name this year. Yes they use they.  Now I use they. I used to teach writing and grammar, so I understand about plural and singular pronouns. Is it "hard"?  One may perceive it as hard, but honestly, there are lots of things in life that are only as difficult as you make them, and this is one. If adjusting your language to respect what someone is asking for in the name of mental health is the most difficult thing you're doing, then you have a really easy life. In other words, get over it

Here's my position. This is MY KID. I love my kid. My kid says; "I identify using they, which isn't exactly right but I'm figuring it, so bear with me." So I say; "Okay, I’ll use they."  Which I do.

I have friends who say to me: "You NEVER slip, using they" which I wish was true.  I do slip sometimes and the kid and I have had to talk about this.  At first, they took it as dismissive and disappointing when I slipped. But we've progressed. We've had to work it through.

The last few years have been hard.  Getting appointments during a pandemic has added a layer of stress on top of the usual, but I am unbelievably grateful to be living in Massachusetts where we have access to amazing medical care and resources. So many people don't.

As I've entered this journey with my child and gotten myself educated, it's been heartbreaking reading the stories of what trans and nonbinary people have endured to be themselves. Going broke just to get medications and surgeries. Living double lives to be safe. 

I am so proud of my beautiful, creative kid. This kid has bloomed in the past year. Finally able to express themselves with their clothing, make-up and hair, their joy is simply contagious. And as for the hair! I have told them that I need help with my hair! Their ability to cut and color is amazing --and they certainly didn't get that gene from me. 

If you're wondering about how much I worry about them, the answer is: more than I'd like to.  Parents worry; that's our job -- but this is different. Any parent watching their child go out the door  who worries that their child may be a target just because of how they look gets it. And there is plenty of that going around. It's partly why I wanted to write. 

As we know, representation matters. It won't fix everything but getting an understanding that the world is more than we know -- or certainly, more than we've seen in media and perhaps even been directly told -- can begin to open minds. We need open minds. 

If you haven't thought much about folks who are non-binary, I would ask you to keep your heart open. 

Life is too short not to get a chance to be yourself. That's true for all of us.

Peace.

Posted by Leslie at 5:07 PM 1 comment:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

Sunday, October 31, 2021

On Photographs

 I took pictures today as the sun was setting.  Almost every day I take pictures, whatever catches me: rocks, plants, water, light. Tonight, walking the dog, the setting sun took away my breath. No picture I take ever does justice to what I see, but it doesn't discourage me. Even dim reflections bring me back to the moment. 

This is an ordinary thing. Phones with cameras have made photography easier and also, more equitable. Certainly, the opportunity to be unconstrained by the fear of screwing up the shots and wasting film liberated me. As a kid, I saw photography like all visual mediums: only talented people can do it. The rest of us are embarrassing ourselves. 

My parents took pictures. They documented our childhood, up to a point. There was a period with very few pictures, and then later, when my siblings and I were older and leaving home, they began taking pictures of seasonal changes. Pictures of flaming sugar maples in fall, deep snow piles in winter, shining branches that looked like they were coated in glass, after an ice storm. And their cats, so many pictures of the cats. These weren't very good photos, but that didn't seem to matter. My mother put them in albums. 

When my brother and I sold the house in 2004, it was a gut-wrenching project to clean out that house which three generations had lived in. The photographs were everywhere.  At the time, I remember thinking: Why the hell do I have boxes of pictures of the old tree? And all this snow? And these cats? WHY did they take these pictures??? 

Recently, I was having a discussion in a group where we were asked if we had a spiritual practice. Many shared that writing was theirs, and though that's true for me, what I said was that one of mine is taking photographs, usually every day, and looking through them to return to the immediacy of presence.  

When I look through the pictures on my phone, or in albums, or in one of the digital vaults where everything goes -- like heaven after death, it's all in the cloud -- it feels like sacred ritual. Each piece connects to the next. Bead next to bead on a string, like a rosary or Buddhist mala, image after image. Each unique, each part of a whole. 

The visual mantra of life.

This week, for the first time, I imagined my parents looking through all those pictures. Not just taking them and stuffing them away, but taking them out, looking at the storms, the snow, the trees, the cats. Remembering. Reliving. Imagining this, I thought: I understand. As a child, you don't often feel like you can ever get your parents. I was 39 when my mother died. By my age, my mother was already fighting cancer.  Because I've been a parent without either of them alive, I've wondered a lot: how would it have been?  But I won't ever know the answer to that question, so when I make a connection like this, it feels like finding buried treasure.

As I write this, it's 10/31, Halloween. Samhain. Tomorrow is Dia de los Muertos. Is the veil thin? I'd like to believe so. Sometimes when I write, I imagine my parents are with me, over my shoulder. Certainly, they are in my heart. 

So friends: take all the pictures. If it moves you, if you want to remember it, do it. Go back; relive that instant. Life is only instants. You get to choose what to keep and what to savor. 

Peace

                                                                          


 






Posted by Leslie at 8:20 PM No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

Saturday, October 2, 2021

On Not Being Taken Seriously

I had an experience this week that I am still processing. There are parts of it I can't share but the parts that I can, I realized, connect to a bigger truth: lots of us are not taken seriously.

On Tuesday, a car on the train I use for commuting derailed. I wasn't on it, and in fact, no one was injured, thankfully. It was just another the-MBTA-is-a-broken-down-system event. 

But. But the immediate affect was that trains stopped running and shuttle buses were brought in. It was a rainy day, too. Bonus. I left work early, hoping to avoid some of the worst of what was sure to be commute hell. When I got to the station where the busses began -- Park Street, the hub of all commuting in Boston -- it was worse than I imagined. A sea of people and no buses. Waited, waited , waited. People were stressed and wet, since it was drizzling. 

A tall guy in front me started to yell: Where are the buses?!! where are the goddamn busses? 

To which I -- already pissed off from an earlier conversation in the day, a conversation where I felt passed over for something I knew I could do -- added: Yeah, haven’t you been doing this all day?!

At which point, the tall man turned and yelled at me: Hey lady, calm down! 

Let me repeat that: he then yelled at ME to “calm down “

Think about this for minute. He did it because of course, sexism. I am a short, dumpy middle aged woman so very tall guys can do that. They get to decide who says what. 

Now, you may be saying: Leslie, stop being so sensitive. 

I hope to God you aren't saying that because if you are, then you are part of the problem.

Let me restate the problem: some of us are not taken seriously.  I can only speak to my experience, but as someone who recently discovered she doesn't even reach 5 feet tall anymore (4 ft 11 3/4 inches!), I am often, literally, not seen. Ask me how many times I've gone up to a counter, only to have the cashier speak to the person behind me. (HERE, here. HELLO!!!)  

I could give more examples but here is the thing: I am aware that my needing to already assumes that I am not believed, that I need to justify this truth with enough "evidence". 

There is much eyerolling in the world about the phrase: microaggressions. Even among those who care about it, there are doubts. Why worry about those, they say, when we haven't even eradicated the macro ones?  

I also know that after the last administration, there is deep exhaustion and PTSD. That's real. But here is the thing: being able to step away from compassion is a sign of privilege. If you are saying: This doesn't affect me, then you are using your privilege. 

I woke up this morning thinking about the end goal. I thought about all the times I've not been taken seriously, when I had to defend and argue, how something felt. Now let me be clear here. What I am talking about are the moments when I have stated how I felt. 

When I think about the cry for social justice, how the marginalized --refugees, indigenous people, people of color, trans people, gay people -- have often said how they feel, only to be disbelieved, it breaks my heart. 

In my world, the Unitarian Universalist world, we have 7 Principles, the first of which is: the inherent worth and dignity of all people. ALL people. 

I might be challenged: why do you only care about the feelings of minorities? 

My reply: I don't. I want ALL people to be believed, cherished and certainly: taken seriously. The historic truth is that those in power have used that power to control speech. In this time, I am working to give voice to those who have not always had a voice, and certainly, not felt safe and believed.  This feels important to me and yes, because part of me understands how this feels. I have written about this before. Though I may have my story and my life, if I hear your story, then I can get a glimpse into who you are and what you have known. 

So here was my first thought this morning: How about we assume that when people, especially from marginalized groups, say how something feels, how about we believe them? Rather than doubt their perspective, rather than overanalyze it because it's different from what we thought we knew, how about we just trust that they know themselves well enough to just say how it is??

I know this isn't a novel idea, but when I think about all the contortions I see some good-hearted, like-minded folks I know get into about microagressions, all I can think is: Why can't we just say yes? Why can't we just listen to that truth and let it sit within us? 

And on a personal note, I will add that after my awful commute, I emailed the person who'd I'd felt had not taken me seriously. The person replied to me, apologized, and said that they understood that I had a lot to offer. To me, this is how change in the world happens. To hold the truth, to speak the truth, to listen to the truth, and not deny its existence. 

In Zoom conversation this week with a wonderful friend who lives across the country, a woman who is well over six feet tall, we commented on how virtual conversations leveled the playing field. So many of the assumptions we had experienced when people met us in real life disappeared on Zoom. What clothes we wore, how tall we were, all of it -- meaningless -- and how freeing this was. 

My prayer for all is that we can reach this place, where our hearts lead the way and our stories are heard. 

peace






Posted by Leslie at 8:51 AM No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

Monday, July 26, 2021

On My Empty Nest

My friends and my coworkers know I hate change. This is incredibly inconvenient since life is basically nothing BUT. Even so , there are moments and there are moments. This is the latter.

In November of 2019, my oldest child who had started that fall at college recognized that the decision wasn't healthy and came home. It wasn't a huge surprise to me but I told him: Just come home. We'll figure it out. The decision turned out to be timely. March 2020: Covid lockdown. We were home, all day every day.
September 2020, the other child entered high school senior year virtually. We happen to be in that small demographic who benefitted from remote schooling, so we stayed virtual all year. (Graduated with honors, straight As. Yes, I’m proud.) Again, home all day, every day. 2021 arrived along with the numbing sense of Blursday. The sameness, the strangeness, the where-do-we-go-from-here-ness. What day is it? When did I wear pants? In that fog, it would be a gap year for both, they said. But then, a thing happened. From the depths of the slumbering state, ideas arrived. Inspiration. A direction, plans. One set sites on LA; the other, college in Boston. Money was saved, applications were sent, acceptances were received. Spring raced forward, then summer. Details became clear for both coasts. The paperwork, the documentation, the arrangements all listed and checked. It happened so fast. And now, I draw a sharp, pained breath. My children are leaving. I remember— very well, in fact— when I was where they are now. My freshman year of college, my first apartment. I was so freaking excited. To not know what the hell you’re doing , but to get out there and figure it out with friends. Becoming yourself. It’s magic, when you can do that- because it’s transformative and because not everyone gets to. My first two apartments gave me some of my best friends, whom I adore, forty years later. People who I pick up conversations with as though we were just living together last year, not 1982 or 1985. I want that for my children. They’re headed out. Sunday at 6 am, a plane leaves for LA. My first-born -- Mr. Bright Eyes, the midwife called him at birth-- will be on that plane with four friends. They'll share a living space and begin calling it Home.
Next month with the second child, we load up the car and run the freshman gauntlet that is arrival on campus, the first day in the dorm and college life. So many of my friends have already been here, at the Empty Nest precipice. Here I am. I'm not worried about boredom; I have more projects lined up than I can likely accomplish in my lifetime. I love time to myself, too. When I remember my own stumbling, serendipitous path in my 20s , I am both ridiculously excited for and proud of them for setting off on their own. And yet. Yet it won’t be the same. I remember that "going home" was never the same after that, after I was ready to leave. I understand this; it’s part of the parenting bargain. I throw open my arms ushering them out, understanding that this is the change we are making. Knowing that they are both really leaving. I applaud them, and I weep. Both are true. So we’re off for a new adventure, all of us. Off we go. Peace
Posted by Leslie at 4:03 PM No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

Saturday, May 22, 2021

On What Sweeping Means to Me

 I ended my day today the way I often do in the summer: I swept the debris off my front porch and the sidewalk in front of house. I'd been transplanting seedlings today so there was a fair amount of dirt to sweep, but even on evenings when I'm not actively creating the mess, this is something I do. 

I realized at some point last summer -- the summer during COVID lock-down -- that it had become a ritual. My house is literally on the line of the sidewalk. There is no front yard, just sidewalk, and my open porch is lined with slate stones that do a fantastic job of catching dirt. I had swept periodically during the 20 years that I've lived here but when the house became mine a couple of years ago, I realized my sense of being here, of ownership, had shifted within me. 

I was born in 1960. My mother's father, who I never knew, owned a small office supply store in the Upper Valley of New Hampshire where I grew up. I remember the store and they way the downtown area was in that decade. Small businesses were owned by local families, and in the mornings in the summer, the ones who had awnings in front would unroll them and sweep the sidewalk. It was how they got ready for the business of the day.  It seems like such a small thing now, and sometimes I wonder if I am even remembering it accurately.  I know my grandfather did this, and my recollection is that lots of them did.  Does anyone do this, still?

The cynic in me imagines that when sweeping happens, it may be a task given to an employee, someone who may or may not care about how it looks when it's done. I say that not because employees don't care -- or even that they should -- but because the piece that resonates with me when I am sweeping is that I am thinking about my grandfather and what I imagine it meant to him. It was his store, his caretaking for customers.

It's different when it's yours. It's about pride, of course, but to me, it's also about being welcoming and hospitable. It's the same reason I spend time every spring putting hanging flower baskets on my porch, planting sunflowers in the incredibly tiny spot of dirt next to my house. I want it to look nice, of course, but I want it to look cheerful, open-hearted.  

Everyone has their own level of filth tolerance. I know that. If you are thinking: She sweeps her sidewalk, dear God how neat must her house be??? Rest easy. We all pick our organizational battles. A meticulous housekeeper, I am not.

 The thing about the sidewalk is that for me, it's a ritual. There is a meditative quality to it. Back and forth, back and forth. It's a lovely rhythm. The next thing I know, I'm done and I can stand back, take a look and smile. For this one minute, it looks neat, and I feel satisfaction.

I think about the reliable, low-tech pleasure of brooms, too. In an age of loud leaf-blowers -- which to me only seem to move piles somewhere else -- the quiet broom seems like an antique. 

The sidewalk isn't literally mine, but I feel a responsibility towards it.  I battle the weeds in the cracks but because I won't add poison to the earth, well, the crabgrass tends to win many of those skirmishes.

As I am writing this, I am reminded of a poem I love called Red Brocade. I often share it when I am asked to read a poem for an occasion. The spirit of it calls to me about being welcoming to all. To me, these ideas connect. To be in a place of open-heartedness, ready to offer kindness. 

So I will sweep my sidewalk and hope it says to all: welcome. 

My prayer is for all to center their lives with brooms and poems, to create receptivity everywhere.

Peace.


Red Brocade ~Naomi Shihab Nye - 1952-

The Arabs used to say,
When a stranger appears at your door,
feed him for three days
before asking who he is,
where he’s come from,
where he’s headed.
That way, he’ll have strength
enough to answer.
Or, by then you’ll be
such good friends
you don’t care.
 
Let’s go back to that.
Rice? Pine nuts?
Here, take the red brocade pillow.
My child will serve water
to your horse.
 
No, I was not busy when you came!
I was not preparing to be busy.
That’s the armor everyone put on
to pretend they had a purpose
in the world.
 
I refuse to be claimed.
Your plate is waiting.
We will snip fresh mint
into your tea.





Posted by Leslie at 7:59 PM 1 comment:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

On Being Stuck

 A confession: I've been stuck. 

I've had random blog-y ideas but in the last weeks, haven't had the ability to put them together. We've reached that place in this now, this whatever, that should feel better and for brief, shining moments, does feel like life, but in the bigger ongoing way, I am really, really stuck. Fried. Worn out. 

April is the cruelest month, says T.S. Elliot. Certainly, for those of us who work in academia, it's one of the most exhausting. I know that. And yet, I expect myself to transform the experience, transcend the exhaustion and GET IT OUT THERE. But I haven't. Because I'm stuck.

But today, I caught the lyrics to a song. My kids think my taste in music is hysterical which probably all kids do, but it's my affection for what they don't expect me to like that catches them off-guard. I like the group AJR. I really do. I love their exuberance and use of brass instruments. I love it that they are siblings, but mostly, I like how they approach life. 

Today I caught the lyrics to a song that's on their third album: Neotheater. The song: Can't Wait to See What You'll Do Next just stopped me in my tracks. It is, friends, the *essence* of this blog's inspiration. The song is bouncy and it just filled me with joy and seemed so GOOD for this moment. It made me...well, you can SEE what it did. I am putting it down.

So...without further ado, lyrics and song. 

And yes, I am still here, processing it and wondering about all of you...and myself...I wonder what we will do next... 

peace

-Leslie


AJR - Finale (Can’t Wait To See What You Do Next) [Official Audio] - YouTube


Finale (Can't Wait To See What You Do Next)
Song by AJR

Main Results

Lyrics
Don't you go, we need you here
You brighten up, a shitty year
Well, congratulations on your bit of success
We can't wait to see what you do next
Come outside, come outside
You fell low, but now you're high
You been outside, been outside
So go ahead and do it one more time
Come outside, come outside
You went hard, and you did fine
You been outside, been outside
So go ahead and do it one more time
They wanted, they wanted
They wanted, they wanted
They wanted heaven from me, I gave 'em hell
Now they want something bigger, I'm overwhelmed
And if you're just as hopeless, I wish you well
We can't wait to see what you do next
Come outside, come outside
You fell low, but now you're high
You've been outside, been outside
So go ahead and do it one more time
Come outside, come outside
You went hard, and you did fine
You've been outside, been outside
So go ahead and do it one more time
Don't you go, we need you here
You brighten up, a shitty year
Well, congratulations on your bit of success
We can't wait to see what you do next
They wanted, they wanted
They wanted, they wanted
They wanted heaven from me, I gave 'em hell
Now they want something bigger, I'm overwhelmed
And if you're just as hopeless, I wish you well
We can't wait to see what you do next
We can't wait to see
We can't wait to see
We can't wait to see
Can you wait a sec? Let me catch my breath, let me catch my
Let me catch my, I can't remember how I got here
Can you wait a sec? Let me catch my breath, let me catch my
I can't remember how I got here, got here
They wanted heaven from me, I gave 'em hell
Now they want something bigger, I'm overwhelmed
I think it's time to go now, I think my curtain's falling
Just don't forget about me when you get out of college
If it's my final album and if I am forgotten
I hope I made you smile, that's all I ever wanted
Well, congratulations on your bit of success
Welcome to the Neotheater
We can't wait to see what you do next
Eh, okay
Posted by Leslie at 8:38 AM No comments:
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Links to Stuff I Care About

  • Faith Kitchen
  • Harvard Divinity School
  • Harvard Divinity School Garden
  • Seed Savers Exchange
  • Unitarian Universalist Association

What will YOU do for an encore??

What will YOU do for an encore??

About Me

My photo
Leslie
View my complete profile

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2023 (4)
    • ▼  September (1)
      • On Focus
    • ►  June (1)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2022 (3)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  April (1)
    • ►  January (1)
  • ►  2021 (6)
    • ►  October (2)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (1)
    • ►  February (1)
  • ►  2020 (6)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  March (1)
    • ►  February (1)
  • ►  2019 (7)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  August (1)
    • ►  June (1)
    • ►  May (1)
    • ►  April (1)
    • ►  February (1)
  • ►  2018 (11)
    • ►  December (2)
    • ►  October (1)
    • ►  August (1)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  June (1)
    • ►  March (2)
    • ►  February (1)
    • ►  January (2)
  • ►  2017 (15)
    • ►  December (1)
    • ►  November (1)
    • ►  October (2)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  July (1)
    • ►  June (1)
    • ►  May (3)
    • ►  April (4)
    • ►  March (1)
Picture Window theme. Powered by Blogger.