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Author Archives: Julia Monroe

Today and One Year Ago Today

02 Wednesday Oct 2013

Posted by Julia Monroe in home decor, Inspirational, lighting, Scoliosis, sunlight, time, Uncategorized

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

arch windows, inspirational, one year ago, one year ago today, painting, renovation, Scoliosis, scoliosis surgery, sunlight, surgery

One year ago today I had scoliosis surgery. I had an 18″ incision and two titanium rods inserted the entire length of my spine.
Today I put masking tape around the trim of the new windows.
Painting trim-2
One year ago, my back was fused from T1 to pelvis. I could barely move.
Today I stretched high as I worked.
Painting trim-1
One year ago the bolts in almost every vertebrae and four in my pelvis made me unable to move without assistance.
Today I gathered supplies and worked on the major renovation.
Painting trim-3
One year ago, my hands shook as I pressed the morphine button.
Today I firmly held the paintbrush and stroked the smooth white paint over the trim.
Painting trim-4
One year ago, the nurse kept telling me to open my eyes. I had trouble staying awake and the pain seemed less severe when my eyes were shut.
Today the afternoon sun streamed through the wall that had never had a window before.
Painting trim-5
One year ago, I could barely handle the next minute. Recovery seemed impossible. I couldn’t sit up. I felt shattered but glad the surgery was over.
Today I sat at my computer editing photos. Today I mopped the floor. Today I washed dishes and dusted and painted.
Painting trim-6
If things seem dark today, don’t despair. Amazing things can happen in a year.

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The photographs I don’t have and one I do

30 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by Julia Monroe in flowers, gardening, God, Inspirational, Scripture, Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Alzheimer's, bloom, flowers, God, inspirational, miracle, orchid, rainbow

In 1998 I saw an upside down rainbow. It was almost straight overhead, high in the sky and didn’t end on the earth. Some of my sons saw it with me and we wondered how it was caused. It looked like it could have been a complete circle but we only saw the bottom side of it, an amazing arc of color under rain clouds, an ethereal smile. Wow. I’m so glad I wasn’t the only one who saw it. I wish I had taken a photograph of that rainbow.

In 1999 I saw a whirlwind of late fall leaves. I was in the backyard and heard a huge whooshing sound, a sudden loud crackling, like a thousand newspapers being rustled. I ran around the house from the backyard and saw an entire column of leaves swirling up from the ground. The column of rushing leaves completely filled the tree from the ground to the top of a tree. The sound I heard was those dry leaves crashing and breaking against the bare branches of the tree, like a giant blender filled with ice cubes. Wow. It was so fast and sudden, I didn’t have time to grab a camera.

When I saw those leaves I asked “What, God?”
If God was trying to tell me something, I didn’t want to miss.
But there were no words so I just watched and marveled as the whirlwind dispersed and all the leaves fell down to the ground again.

Have you ever seen something that has no explanation? Moses saw a burning bush and he stopped what he was doing in order to get closer to figure out what this strange sight was and God called to Moses from the burning bush.
. . .

4 When the Lord saw that he had gone over to look, God called to him from within the bush, “Moses! Moses!”
And Moses said, “Here I am.”
5 “Do not come any closer,” God said. “Take off your sandals, for the place where you are standing is holy ground.” 6 Then he said, “I am the God of your father,[a] the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob.” At this, Moses hid his face, because he was afraid to look at God.
7 The Lord said, “I have indeed seen the misery of my people in Egypt. I have heard them crying out because of their slave drivers, and I am concerned about their suffering. 8 So I have come down to rescue them from the hand of the Egyptians and to bring them up out of that land into a good and spacious land, a land flowing with milk and honey—the home of the Canaanites, Hittites, Amorites, Perizzites, Hivites and Jebusites. 9 And now the cry of the Israelites has reached me, and I have seen the way the Egyptians are oppressing them. 10 So now, go. I am sending you to Pharaoh to bring my people the Israelites out of Egypt.”
Exodus 3:4-10

Have you seen something you can’t explain? Do you feel a tug to do something for which you don’t feel qualified?

In 2008 I saw an orchid bloom. I had been very discouraged and was crying at the kitchen window. It was so very hard being caregiver of my father-in-law in our home while his Alzheimer’s Disease progressed. The disease was ravaging his mind and I felt like my own life was being fractured and broken. I didn’t have the time, energy or attention my children needed and feared I was neglecting them while taking care of a man who barely knew I was even there.

Through tears I asked God “Is everything going to be ok?” I just needed to know that everything was going to work out alright, that my kids would not be harmed from the complicated situation we were in. After I asked God that question, I was still uneasy. So I wanted a sign from God. But then I thought that would be silly to ask for a sign. People who know God believe in him, right? Wouldn’t asking for a sign be a lack of my faith? But the tears kept falling and I looked at a plant on my window sill and asked God for a sign. I asked him to make the orchid bloom.

The orchid was over ten years old and had never bloomed. It was a sterile orchid. But I asked God to let it bloom to show me that everything would be all right. And then I forgot my prayer. Asking God for a sign was like telling him “The ball is in your court. I will wait for you to make the next move.” Peace descended on my spirit and I was ok.

Four days later though, I was washing dishes when I just happened to see the orchid. My jaw dropped. A shiver ran down my spine. There, sticking out from the orchid, was a bloom stalk several inches long. For it to be that long, it would have had to start growing as soon as I had prayed “God, make the orchid bloom.” At that moment, probably before I finished asking, God said “Yes” and he made that sterile orchid to bloom. I took a photo. Big, beautiful, white flowers lined the stalk. That was five years ago. I still have the orchid but it never bloomed again.

The miracle orchid. Everything is going to be ok.

The miracle orchid. Everything is going to be ok.

Ever since then, I’ve never needed another sign. If God can make a sterile orchid bloom, I don’t need any other sign. If God says “Everything is going to be ok” I don’t need to hear it again. I believe him. I remember. He was right, everything did work out ok.

Things might not be going the way you want. And things might get worse before they get better. But in the end, everything is going to work out ok. Trust God.

9“Then you will call, and the LORD will answer;
You will cry, and He will say, ‘Here I am.’
If you remove the yoke from your midst,
The pointing of the finger and speaking wickedness,

10 And if you give yourself to the hungry
And satisfy the desire of the afflicted,
Then your light will rise in darkness
And your gloom will become like midday.

11 “And the LORD will continually guide you,
And satisfy your desire in scorched places,
And give strength to your bones;
And you will be like a watered garden,
And like a spring of water whose waters do not fail.

12 “Those from among you will rebuild the ancient ruins;
You will raise up the age-old foundations;
And you will be called the repairer of the breach,
The restorer of the streets in which to dwell.

Isaiah 58:9-12

Put your trust in God and stay strong. He will be with you in the work.
Everything is going to be ok.

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A Confident Heart

29 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by Julia Monroe in Inspirational, Scripture

≈ 3 Comments

A couple months ago I attended a Bible Study of A Confident Heart, by Renee Swope. Gathering and sharing with friends was heart-warming and deeply comforting. Here is a small excerpt from the book.

from A Confident Heart, chapter 8 - "When Doubt Whispers 'I don't have anything special to offer'

from A Confident Heart, chapter 8 – “When Doubt Whispers ‘I don’t have anything special to offer’


  Excerpts taken from Chapter 8:

—When we don’t know what our heart’s desires are, we tend to spend our lives fulfilling the desires of others. It’s time to ask ourselves the questions: “Am I doing what God may be calling others to do, while leaving undone what He is calling me to do?”—
—What about you? Do you listen to the desires of your heart and live from your God-given passions, or do you serve from a sense of duty and obligation?—
—If you want to know your purpose, pursue the heart of God and you’ll have a head-on collision with your calling.—

Trust in the LORD with all your heart
And do not lean on your own understanding.
In all your ways acknowledge Him,
And He will make your paths straight.
Proverbs 3:5-6
So true!

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Chloe and the toy boat

29 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by Julia Monroe in grandkids, Little Plastic Bears, sparkling

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Tags

beach, granddaughter, grandkids, Little Plastic Bears, toy boat

The little bears go a-sailing in the toy boat.

My granddaughter plays with the little bears and the toy boat.

My granddaughter plays with the little bears and the toy boat.

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Image

Chloe and the ship

29 Sunday Sep 2013

Tags

beach, grandchildren, toy ship

Chloe and the ship

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Posted by Julia Monroe | Filed under grandkids

≈ 1 Comment

Marble window sills

18 Wednesday Sep 2013

Posted by Julia Monroe in home decor, lighting, projects

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

construction, DIY, home, marble, marble window sill, marble window sills, windows

I’m so glad I insisted on marble window sills for the new dining room windows! They look amazing. I had my heart set on marble but we had to go cheap. So we bought two door sills for $10 each. And then came the sawing. We didn’t have the necessary equipment or blades to saw marble. But I don’t give up easy. So I walked into the workshop and eyed up the straightest blade I could find.
He didn’t believe it could be done but I picked up that old rusty saw and asked God to bless that blade. And then I sat down and began.
window sill 1 cutting 7814
Here I am later. Wow, great progress, huh?

Still sawing...

Still sawing…


How about even later?
Window sill 3 cutting 7819
It took three full hours of constant sawing to make that single vertical cut! I used my right hand. Then my left hand. Then my left hand held my right hand… Just short of involving my feet, I completed the cut.
Dedicated? Determined. Obsessed? Maybe a little insane?
After 3 entire hours of non-stop cutting I had to rest a day. But my husband said I inspired him so he turned on the tv and made the other 7 cuts. Where there is a will, there is always a way!
Our beautiful, hand-cut, marble window sills.

Our beautiful, hand-cut, marble window sills.


To install, we used a strong construction adhesive, Loctite Power Grab.
Squeezing out the heavy-duty construction adhesive to place the sills.

Squeezing out the heavy-duty construction adhesive to place the sills.


and then pressed the sill in place.
Window sill 6 install 7844
Window sill 7 install 7848
Isn’t this beautiful?
The marble sill pressed in place.

The marble sill pressed in place.


A completely unexpected effect – seeing reflection of the sky above in the sills! Wow, I would have chosen marble if I had known that would happen. But this was completely serendipitous. When the sun hits the sill, it casts light on the ceiling too, just one more way we have introduced light to the formerly dark room. I love how the trees can be seen in the marble too.
Window sill 9 finished  8610

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Galaxies in the Sand

16 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by Julia Monroe in All Sparkled Up, grandkids, nature, sparkling, sunlight, Uncategorized

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Tags

galaxies, nature, nebula, sand, sun, suns

If you look close, you'll see nebula, milky way, stars and suns in the sand.

If you look close, you’ll see nebula, milky way, stars and suns in the sand.

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Crust-Lover’s Apple Pie

02 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by Julia Monroe in baking, food, recipe

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

apple pie, baking, dessert, food, king arthur flour, pie crust, recipe, williams sonomas

Sometimes a gal just needs more crust.

Crust-Lover's Apple Pie

Crust-Lover’s Apple Pie

I very loosely follow the recipe in this 2003 cookbook. Here is a similar recipe Williams Sonomas’ Apple Pie, but I use more apples, more brown sugar and less or no white sugar, triple the cinnamon, a little ginger and nutmeg. I don’t measure the filling ingredients. For the past 35 years, I’ve always used an assortment of apples in pies for better flavor, usually a couple Granny Smith for tartness, a couple Macintosh for extra apple-i-ness, and Rome or Gala for structure.

I discovered King Arthur Flour’s thickener – Pie Filling Enhancer, so now my pies aren’t soup-in-a-crust. The Emile Henry ruffled pie dishes are gorgeous and make any pie look extra delicious. The dishes also bake a better crispy crust than normal glass dishes.

But the crust… oh the crust! The recipe is probably in some cookbook somewhere because there are only so many ways to make a pie crust with few ingredients. It started out as a Good Housekeeping recipe and slowly morphed into a WS recipe with a couple tweaks.

Pie Crust

Whisk together:
2 2/3 cups all purpose flour (I always use King Arthur flour – it has the best flavor and is always consistent)
About 1/4 tsp salt
About 1 tsp sugar
Using a pastry blender, cut in:
2/3 shortening (NOT butter flavor stuff, just the regular white shortening)
1/3 cup unsalted butter
Cut in the shortening and butter at the same time till dough is craggy. If you cut the fats in too little, there will be too much flour when you stir in the water, making a glutenous, stretchy tough mess. If you cut the fats in too much, the fats will coat all the flour, basically greasing it, so you can’t add the water. At that point, your pastry will fall apart when you bake it. So the right amount of cutting-in has some small baby pea-size pieces of butter at the most but mostly looks like a lumpy powder.
Stir in with a fork:
About 6 tablespoons cold water. Sometimes you’ll need more if your house is extra dry, which drys out the flour too. But usually 6 or 7 tablespoons is enough. As you stir with the fork, the dough will almost lump together in one big mass. Press it together the rest of the way. There will still be little bits of yellow butter. That’s good because those bits mean a flaky pastry! Never knead the dough or it will get tough.
At this point, you can chill the dough to use later. I’m usually in a hurry and just roll the dough out between two pieces of floured plastic wrap for pie crust as usual.

Today my back was hurting wicked fierce and I had completely run out of decorative-edging patience. I didn’t do my usual pretty scalloped edging. I didn’t neatly trim the excess pastry from around the pie. I didn’t make cute cutouts for the top. With zero finesse I flopped the excess pastry on top of the vanilla-sugar-sprinkled pie and had one of the boys heft them into the oven.

This suits me fine. I’ve been known to make a pie crust, roll it out flat on a cookie sheet, sprinkle with cinnamon sugar and bake. Eaten as is. So this pie, with it’s splendid mass of buttery pastry, meets my crust lovin’ appetite today. And the scrumptious apple filling is a bonus!

Cheers!

Just look at all that yummy pastry! Truly a crust-lover's pie.

Just look at all that yummy pastry! Truly a crust-lover’s pie.

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My Granddaughter’s little bouquet

01 Sunday Sep 2013

Posted by Julia Monroe in family, flowers, gardening, grandkids

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

bouquet, bouquet of flowers, flowers, Scepter'd Isle roses

A couple days ago, my five year old granddaughter and I made a little bouquet. I have very few flowers this year so we used every bloom we could find around the yard – basil, mint, honeysuckle, tall phlox, and the lovely, purple ornamental grass spikes. She forgot to take the bouquet home so she wrote me this note.

The note my granddaughter wrote to me when she forgot her bouquet.

The note my granddaughter wrote to me when she forgot her bouquet.


It says:
“My heart was broken last night. I forgot my bouquet of flowers. I really hope I get them tomorrow.” And she signed her name.

Oh my heart had such a tug! The night she left the bouquet, I saw it still sitting on the table and considered driving it to her house!
Well, she was back today so we made a new bouquet. Flowering basil and mint, English ivy, ornamental grass flowers, a little butterfly bush and the very last Scepter’d Isle roses.

Her little bouquet.

Her little bouquet.


The rosebush is bare but this little bouquet went home with her, much to her delight. Love has a scent; it smells like mint and rose.

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Light where you are

28 Wednesday Aug 2013

Posted by Julia Monroe in home decor, Inspirational, lighting

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

chandelier, flower bouquet, inspirational, lighting, windows

The windows are in and the walls are primed. What an amazing transformation it is to put a window in a wall that had none, a wall facing the west.

The walls are primed. One of the new windows is covered with plastic but it still lets in spectacular light.

The walls are primed. One of the new windows is covered with plastic but it still lets in spectacular light.

The project isn’t even finished yet but there was a pause so I gathered a small bouquet of honeysuckle, thyme, butterfly bush and ivy and placed it in the window. It was a holy moment. I used to sit in that corner at my computer. But even next to the sliding glass door, there was never enough light. And now look at this!!!

First bouquet in the new window, even before it's done.

First bouquet in the new window, even before it’s done.

Now my computer is in an even more dark space. I’ve decided to not block the new window with my computer so I’ll probably be on my computer less. But just to make my new office space cheerier, this is how I light where I am.

Chandelier ornaments and a bracelet hang from an artificial tree to light my new office space.

Chandelier ornaments and a bracelet hang from an artificial tree to light my new office space.

Where are you? Are you in a dark place? Don’t keep saying you’ll be happy when you finally get to some other place. People who are happy inside are light on the inside, no matter where they are. It is a choice.
I remember when we were homeless I carefully gathered a little bouquet of flowers and placed it on a picnic table. My dining room then was under a canopy of trees in the day and a chandelier of stars at night. There is NO place on earth where you can’t find light.

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