You’d expect daily pandemonium in a household of seven but wait! Like those infomercials on TV, we got two for the price of one! And at no extra charge, Daddy and I both walked and talked in our sleep. Most people have experience with people talking in their sleep, but sleep-walking less common. The sleep-walker doesn’t look like the ones in Continue reading
memoir
Screaming Green Slime
You’d expect daily pandemonium in a household of seven but wait! Like those infomercials on TV, we got two for the price of one! And at no extra charge, Daddy and I both walked and talked in our sleep. Most people have experience with people talking in their sleep, but sleep-walking less common. The sleep-walker doesn’t look like the ones in Continue reading
Old is When/Joke of the Day
OLD” IS WHEN… Your sweetie says, “Let’s go upstairs and make love,” and you answer, “Pick one, I can’t do both!”
“OLD” IS WHEN.. Your friends compliment you on your new alligator shoes and you’re barefoot.
“OLD” IS WHEN…. A sexy babe catches your eye and your pacemaker opens the garage door.
“OLD” IS WHEN… Going bra-less pulls all the wrinkles out of your face.
“OLD” IS WHEN. You don’t care where your spouse goes, just as long as you don’t have to go along.
“OLD” IS WHEN….. You are cautioned to slow down by the doctor instead of by the police.
“OLD” IS WHEN….. “Getting a little action” means I don’t need to take any fiber today.
“OLD” IS WHEN….. “Getting lucky” means you find your car in the parking lot.
“OLD” IS WHEN….. An “all-nighter” means not getting up to pee.
The Dead Pony, the Warped Kid, and the World’s Most Horrible Mother
The phone rang one day. Without introduction, I heard the familiar, deep voice of one of my son’s friends. “Miss Linda, is that story about the pony true?”
“Yep!” The last thing I heard was gales of laughter as I hung up.
If you are the sensitive type, skip this story.
Many years ago when my son was young, we were hauling a load of tree trimmings to the landfill. As my husband backed the truck up to unload, I spotted a dead pony, bloated with all four legs stuck up in the air. Without thinking, I said, “Hey, John. Do you want a pony?”
Of course he said, “Yes!”
“Well, there’s one right over there!”
“Wahhh!!!!!”
I swear it was not intentional. Sometimes I think there is a disconnect between my brain and my mouth!
This is for you, Lee Perkins
Bears Just Ain’t That Bad
Growing up way,way in the country the last place bordering a game reserve, the nearest neighbor a mile away, I was always aware we didn’t live in the sticks, but I hoped to someday. The woods were full of wild pigs, deer, coyote, foxes, alligators, a few black bear, snakes, birds, and a plethora of other wild creatures. It wasn’t a great idea to go stumbling around in the dark out there, especially without knee-high boots, a pistol, and a light.
It was not uncommon for hunters to come walking up to our place, any time of the day or night, reporting being stuck in the deeply rutted roads and off-road areas of the reserve, muddy, fatigued, and bedraggled, desperate for help in getting out of a mud hole. Daddy or my brother sometimes cranked the tractor, bounced them back to their disaster, and pulled them out. It could take quite a while and was a lot of work. More often than not, if they had no cash, they left personal property to be redeemed when they came back with cash.
One morning about daylight, visitors of a different type came walking up, a teenage couple who’d gone parking and gotten stuck. The girl explained, they’d spent the night in the car, afraid to walk out, thinking a bear might get them.
I was amazed. Her father must have been nothing like mine. There wasn’t a bear big or bad enough to warrant getting caught spending the night in a parked car with a boy. I’d have faced a dozen bears rather than Daddy with a story like that!
Prignant
Repost of an earlier post:
That was weird. I heard tiptoeing and a door quietly locking. I tiptoed to my parent’s room and found their door locked! Their door was never even shut except around Christmas. Mother must have gotten scared and locked it. Assuming the worst, I pounded and screeched, “Mama! Mama! Your door’s locked. Help! I can’t get in!!!” Continue reading
Twenty-Seven Biscuits
Mother made twenty-seven biscuits for breakfast most mornings. The number wasn’t intentional; that was just how it worked out. Her recipe wasn’t measured, just experience. She started out by hollowing out a hole in the flour in her big biscuit-making bowl into which she plopped out shortening scooped by hand straight from the eight pound can and poured in an indeterminate pool of fresh cow milk. Bravely plunging her right hand in, she squished the glob of shortening through her fingers, working it round till it gathered just enough flour. She worked the dough carefully, never using all the flour, thereby letting the gooey mixture adhere to the bottom of the bowl. I thought that looked horrible and never mastered the age-old biscuit making technique that had probably come to her through many generations.
Once she was satisfied with her mix, she tossed it a time or two to coat with flour, and started pinching off biscuits, which she gave a quick roll or two in her hands before placing smooth side up on her biscuit pan. Finally, she buttered the top of each so they’d brown nicely and popped them in the hot oven. About twenty minutes later, biscuits! She always ended up with twenty-seven, though she never measured. They were wonderful. The flour-filled biscuit-bowl was covered and went back into the cabinet till the next baking, which would be supper if she didn’t make cornbread.
I am a biscuit-making coward. I measure and mix my ingredients in a bowl, dust them with a handful of flour, then pinch them off and roll them out in my hands. I spray them with cooking spray rather than dipping a spoon in melted butter to butter the tops, but they are still pretty good.
Age-Old Biscuit Recipe
(Can be easily doubled or tripled)
Preheat oven to 420 degrees
2 ½ cups self-rising flour (For plain, add 1 ½ teaspoon baking powder and ¼ teaspoon salt PER cup)
½ cup vegetable shortening or softened butter
¾ cup milk (I prefer undiluted fat-free evaporated canned milk. Note: this is not the sweetened condensed kind that goes in desserts)
Cooking spray
Mix 2 ¼ cups self-rising flour with shortening or butter. Stir in up to ¾ cups milk to make gooey, not drippy dough. Should be about the consistency of mashed potatoes. Use remaining ¼ cup to dust top of dough, turn dust again. Pinch out small handful, about ½ cup and roll a time or two in your floured palms. Turn best side up on greased baking pan. Spray tops with vegetable or butter spray to enhance browning. Bake at 450 for 12-15 minutes on center rack. Done when tops are starting to brown nicely and browning can be seen around edges. Should yield 8-10 biscuits.
These can be rolled out on lightly floured surface and cut with a biscuit cutter if you prefer. Don’t waste leftover dough. Roll into strips, butter and sprinkle with cinnamon sugar and bake for five minutes. Wonderful treat. I have made entire batch into cinnamon sugar strips for a treat. Watch carefully to keep from burning.
If you can stand the health risk, put your bacon in on a rack on a cookie sheet to bake on at the same time as your biscuits. It will all come out perfect at the same time.
If you have leftovers reheat in microwave or slice in half, butter, and toast under broiler.
The previous part of the story was the easy part. We lived on a farm. There were five of us children ranging from thirteen to newborn. From my earliest memories, Mother had to be up by five-thirty to get the biscuits in. The cow would be bawling to be milked by six. Daddy never milked. He said the Bible said a man couldn’t take what he couldn’t give. He never quoted the chapter and verse, but he knew it was in there. The Bible said a lot of stuff that worked to suit him, but that’s a story for another day.
Anyway, Mother had to milk at six and get back in the house to have breakfast on the table and get things moving before the babies got up and the big kids got on the schoolbus.
That must have been so hard for Mother having to be up and out so early. I was grown, caring for my family before I understood how hard.
Grandpa’s Dead!
My cousin Barbara was an only child wise enough to be born to older parents continuously thrilled at their creation. They indulged her in everything, the way my parents should have done me, understanding she was precious and needed protection from life’s hard edges. They all lived the house with Grandma and Grandpa so it was going to be a challenge to Continue reading
The Mystery of the Monogram on a Toilet Seat
My mother often said, “If you have kids, you can’t have anything else.” Well, she was wrong. We had a new toilet seat. After installing it, Daddy looked around, stared us down, and threatened. “I’d better not see anybody’s initials on this seat!” Where did that come from? I’d never heard of anybody putting initials on a toilet seat.
I went about my business, that toilet seat and initials, foremost on my mind. I wrote LDS in my “Night Before Christmas” book, LDS in the sand under the big shade tree, scooped up some mud and wrote LDS on the dog house. Still unsatisfied, I heated the ice pick on a stove burner and burned LDS on a green Tupperware tumbler.
Feeling strangely unfulfilled and restless, I couldn’t think of a thing to do. Billy was off somewhere playing with Froggy. Mother and the baby were taking a nap, so if I stayed in the house, I had to be quiet. I slipped in the kitchen to see if there was any Kool Aid miraculously left in the pitcher. No luck. Dejected, I went to the bathroom.
There it was calling to me, pristine in its unblemished beauty. The new toilet seat!!! I sat down, my bare bottom luxuriating in its cool smoothness. I got up, locked the door, and turned the seat up. Making sure no one was looking through the window, I got Mother’s eyebrow pencil out of the medicine cabinet and wrote LDS in tiny letters where no one would ever see it. Terrified, I erased my crime. The finish was dull from pencil smears. My heart pounded! I was caught! I got tissue and buffed it off. Thank goodness the shine was back. Relieved, I sat on the side of the bathtub to catch my breath. A nail fell out of my pocket and clattered to the bottom of the tub. Never has the devil so possessed a soul. Grasping the nail, I scratched BRS, Billy’s initials, on the toilet seat. Horrified, at the enormity of my crime, I tiptoed past the room where Mother and the baby still slept. By this time, Billy and Froggy had gotten back. We were throwing mud balls at each other when I heard a shriek from the house. “BILLY RAY SWAIN!! You come here this minute!” I didn’t need to go in to know what was wrong. I heard “Spat! Spat! Spat!” and in a few minutes he was out, still snuffling.
“What happened?”
“Mother whooped me for putting my initials on the toilet seat. I told her I didn’t know how to write but she said, ‘Who else would put your initials on the toilet seat?’ “
How long could it be before she found the Tupperware?

