Catching up after a big week






Happy Easter from somewhere
We pass by Goodwood Park every day on our morning walk. St. Alban's produced a beautiful Easter video service. We watched it this morning together in the living room. It was a lean back experience but I followed along with the prayers while I was holding our children. E is a meticulous organizer.
backyard and sleep

Our backyard and patio are seeing a lot of activity these days. So is this play pen I picked up for I.. E. enjoys playing in it, too. He especially likes to put pillows and blankets in there and tuck in himself and his sister to “go night night”. It’s kind of funny because he’s been waking us up every morning around 3 am. I wish his enthusiasm for sleeping would show itself around that time instead. Zzzzzz...

Lunch guest
E. invited a friend for lunch. I found him quite dull, but the kids seemed to enjoy his company.

Lovely rolling lawns

For a little more than 2 weeks now we've been waking up and walking out the door at 9:00 a.m. to head to a local park to play in the large soccer fields. Today we took a long walk through the neighborhoods going down the streets we haven't haunted yet admiring the thick stands of bamboo trees and other gardening projects that have all become far more beautiful in recent weeks. And instead of spending time in the park allowing E to run free we headed home to our freshly mowed yard and ran around in circles instead.
Cornbread

Today was LSU's first day of classes for the main campus after the one week pause and spring break. I'd been hoping to slide right in to a little work on my one undergraduate class but things went different differently rather quickly this morning. Oh well. Both K typing out and I are learning how to work at odd times during the day and during the evenings as well. Looks like tonight will be one of those nights.
This morning we woke up to the news that the federal guidelines for social distancing would be extended through the month of April. The Louisiana governor issued stay-at-home orders that extended through the month of April also. As K pointed out during dinner, one of the positive aspects of this forced intimacy is that our daughter, I, gets to spend much more time than her brother did at his age with her daddy. I'm actually spending more time with both my kids and with K now than I did before.
Cornbread is never a bad idea. We had a respectable black bean stew atop some white basmati rice that I bought in bulk and a simple cornbread in our cast iron skillet for dinner.
Zoom zoom, zoomy zoom zoom

K's oldest brother scheduled a zoom video conference call with K's parents, her brother and his husband, and us today at 5:00 p.m. E was shy for the camera again just as he had been on the video conference call to my parents and with K's mom a few days ago. He is not often a shy one so it comes as a bit of a surprise. But both K and I think he's processing the changes that have meant that he is no longer able to meet with his grandparents (and that K's parents had to leave so suddenly). I don't think it's a stretch to call that shyness a form of grief.
But the visit overall was great. Everyone was in high spirits and everyone enjoyed playing with the different features of the video conference application and generally just seeing each other's faces and hearing each other's voices.
Flower power

As is our custom these days, we walked to the park close to our house at around 9:00 a.m. When we go on these walks we always pack along the necessities for a 2-year-old and a 9-month-old: a few small boxes of raisins, a plastic pouch of applesauce, some nuts, water for everyone, and today a smoothie that K didn't like very much. All of these provisions fit nicely in the drink holders and pockets of our double stroller.
Unlike other days, we stopped at a closer destination than the soccer fields that we usually visit. There are several open fields even closer to us located next to abandoned shuffleboard decks and numerous tennis courts. These spaces never seem to have any visitors except us. What thrilled E this morning were the clusters of small purple three-petaled flowers, each of them containing dozens of plants. He picked as many as he could and we brought them home and placed them in this tiny vase that K found.
Primal screams in the park
Lunch is served

The remote work orders for LSU began on Tuesday, March 17th but by that date, I had already been self-isolating since the day before due to news we received that a child in E's daycare was being tested for COVID-19. We have eaten every meal--breakfast, lunch, and dinner--together at this table since that date.
Hello world!

🎵 Sarah Pagé is an experimental harpist who has collaborated with many musicians, including a favorite of mine, the late Lhasa de Sela. But her only full-length album, the instrumental Dose Curves, is my favorite of her works. The sound is luxurious but also very austere at times. It is only available on SoundCloud. This live recording from 2018 will give you an idea of what you are in for.
🎵 Claire Hamill, Voices - Sleep (1986)
I heard this song from Claire Hamill on mix from EchoOcho on mixcloud and just loved it. Composed almost entirely of 12-bit voice samples, the album, Voices, brought back to mind the first time I heard Laurie Anderson’s Big Science. Fond/Sound has a nice little review of Voices and its curious connection to the BBC Domesday Book (1986).
In the late 1980s, I heard Ken Nordine’s Word Jazz for the first time on KRCC in Colorado Springs. I just loved those spooky, funny, surreal shows. Years later, I went looking for the radio episodes but could only find his albums, which are wonderful but not the same. Miraculously, I happened upon recordings of these shows just yesterday. What luck! 🎶
🎵 Cordes Anciennes is a beautiful album. This morning I also learned that it can soothe babies into sleep while driving through my neighborhood.
In 1987, I took the bus downtown, went to Budget Tapes and Records in Colorado Springs, Colorado and bought my first tape.