blogtober

Yes…it’s finally here.  I know fall officially started about a week ago, while it was still September, but for me, today is the first day of fall.  October 1st.  Or as we call it around here—Blogtober. 

Today was not only the first day of October, but it was also my first day of training for the two mile Light the Night Walk for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society on October 9th.  I took the dogs to the dog park today and walked the track for half a mile.  Start slow, as I always say.  Tomorrow I may try for a whole mile.  I’m sure I can do it.  After all…it was just a week ago when I broke into a full on run to escape the falling tree.  My ankles are pretty much healed, and the weather is perfect for walking, and the dogs loved getting out there and walking the track, followed by a fun time running free in the off leash area.  I had every opportunity to eat bad foods, and lounge on the sofa all day, but I didn’t do either.  I absolutely love fall (as I’ve said a million times already) and I was perfectly content to spend the day in the breezy sunshine with my daughter and the dogs. 

Once the dogs were thoroughly tired, and I was satisfied with my healthy activities, I headed home and cooked dinner.  Yes.  Me.  I actually cooked dinner—it had been a while—but it was a welcome change, and everyone who ate enjoyed it.  So I might have to do it again tomorrow.  It’s going to dip into the 40s tonight, so I think I might be ready for a nice pot of chili.

Mike and I have a full weekend ahead.  He will be working on the Land Rover, and repairing the fence where the tree broke through.  I will be assisting.  And training for our two mile cancer walk.  I only have a week to get ready!

A special thank you to those of you who were kind enough to donate to the cause today.  And thank you in advance to those of you who will donate in the days to come.  We appreciate it, as does the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society. 

Until the next time…I’ll be sleeping under a quilt tonight!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

blogging for the cause

I’m ready for a cup of steaming apple cider and a raging fire.

Have I mentioned how much I love fall?  I’m sure I have.  And tomorrow is the first of October…my favorite month of the year.  I can’t wait to find a corn maze to get lost in and pick up a few perfect pumpkins for the front porch.  I started my annual Halloween shopping today.  I will decorate the house this weekend.  I’ve been intentionally ignoring the spider webs in the corners as preparation for Halloween.  What?  It’s free decorating! 

This year, October is not only my favorite month because of the crisp air and the spooky decorations.   This year, I have a new reason to love October—Light the Night.  Light the Night is The Leukemia & Lymphoma Society’s evening walk and fundraising event.  The two mile walk celebrates the memory of the many wonderful people who were taken too soon by cancer and the thousands who need our support as they continue to fight.  My husband is team captain of his corporate volunteer program, and they are supporting the cause by walking with the thousands of supporters in the Atlanta metro area on October 9th at 7pm.  I have been asked to support the cause as well, and of course, I was more than willing to get involved—even if it does entail walking for two whole miles. 

I told my husband that I will even reach out to my readers, in hopes that anyone who has ever been touched by cancer, or has known anyone who was touched by cancer will donate—either time or money, whatever you can spare—to the cause. 

Please visit our team’s homepage and give what you can.

Until the next time…I’ll be trying to tell the difference between the real spiders and the plastic ones!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

sweet dreams are made of...cheese?

I think it might actually be fall. 

For the third morning in a row, the air was cold when I got up.  When Vivian picked me up for breakfast this morning, there was even a heavy coat of dew on the roses.  I have no complaints at all.  I absolutely love this time of year.  As far as I’m concerned, we can keep the cool weather coming!

I had a great time eating breakfast with the girls this morning. It had been way too long since we'd gotten together, and let’s face it, girl time is essential to the soul.  It meant getting up really early, and not just getting up, but showering and getting dressed really early too.  But it was worth it.  Even if I did have to leave my dream somewhere in the middle...again.

So, tonight I’m bound and determined to get to the dreaming early.  I’ve taken my dietary supplement to aid in peaceful sleep, I’ve seen to it that Indy is comfy and cozy in the bed (snoring as usual), and I’m putting the finishing touches on tonight’s blog.  And just as an added insurance policy for good dreams, I’ve taken the liberty of eating the same thing I did the night before that really good dream a few days ago. 

A nice piece of cheddar cheese. 

Baseball players are strong believers in honoring the streak, so can it be that far off base?  (Cheap pun, I know.)  But if I have to eat a piece of cheese every night with my dietary sleep aid to ensure good dreams, then so be it. 

Until the next time…sweet dreams!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

life is but a dream

The dogs woke me up at seven-thirty this morning, dragging me (kicking and screaming) out of a really good dream.  I absolutely HATE when that happens.  All of the groundwork for a perfect dream had been laid and I was just getting to the good part when the sounds of Indy whimpering to go out filtered into my unconsciousness. 

I tried to ignore it…to fall back into the dream…and I even managed to slip back into the fantasy world a few times.  But it was no use.  Indy wasn’t taking “shhh” for an answer.  And ultimately, it was a good thing I got up…he really had to go. 

It was really cold and dark this morning.  The sky was still spitting the last of the rain from the past two days, and it finally felt like fall.  I wasn’t really complaining, I love fall, but it made me wish for a few more hours of sleep…and another go at that dream.  So after filling the dog’s bowls with their morning meal, I crawled into the sofa with a pillow and a blanket and drifted off to sleep. 

I was able to grab almost an hour of extra sleep. After eating his, and probably half of the other dog’s breakfasts, Indy cuddled up on the floor beside me, snoring away as I slept. 

I never did get back into the dream again.  I’m going to try again tonight.  I took a dose of melatonin (perfectly safe and legal dietary supplement) to help me sleep.  I’m getting up early to have breakfast with my two best girl friends in the morning.  You know you love someone when you’re willing to wake up before eight just to eat breakfast with them.  I suppose I’d abandon the great dream to have breakfast with them too—even if it means foregoing my chance to be Bella Swan for a brief moment.  Hopefully I won’t have to…if I’m lucky I’ll find my way back into the dream well before the sun comes up.

Until the next time…I’ll be heading to bed to find sweet (sparkly) dreams!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

when it rains…it comes down in heavy buckets!

Day two of torrential downpours after what was essentially weeks with no rain.

Again, I woke to the dark gloomy skies, and a trio of dogs whining to go out.  They had to go, but at the same time, they had no interest in stepping across the threshold into the rain.  Only Cybil (the wise old Labrador) knew that she had no real choice in the matter.  She went easily into the spray, and the others reluctantly followed suit. 

It wasn’t just rainy and dark, it was a cold morning.  Not quite cold enough to turn on the heat, but definitely cold enough to toss on a light sweater and long pants. 

Unfortunately, today was not a lazy Sunday wherein I could just lounge around without a care in the world.  No, today was a Monday.  And as often happens on a Monday, someone missed the school bus, making me the substitute driver.  One of my least favorite things to do on any day, let alone a Monday, is to battle the traffic at the high school. 

I tried to grab an extra hour of sleep when I came back, but that never seems to work out as planned.  I managed to grab a few minutes, here and there, in between a giant paw to my forehead, and several toxic dog farts that could have awakened the dead!

Most of the day was uneventful, as many a Monday can be.  I tried to get a little housework done, took the puppy to the vet for his weekly weigh in (he’s tipping the scales at just under 77lbs) and managed to squeeze in a little writing for good measure. 

I really need to devote more time to the writing, especially with two unfinished books in the works, and one that could use a little editing.  Motivation, people…that’s what I need!

The day seemed to clear up somewhere around the middle and it even warmed up to the point where shorts and t-shirts were required.  I did a quick change and back out to run errands I went.

The shorts and t-shirts decision was a bit premature.  When I came back, it was cold and raining again.  It was getting heavy, so I made a mad dash to the house just in time to miss the overturned buckets coming down from the sky…and the flashes of lightning, and deafening claps of thunder. 

Ordinarily, I would have been delighted to sit in the house and listen to the sound of the storm, but I was supposed to meet Mike for wings (yes…I know…we need to stop eating the damn wings! After tonight, we probably will.) I knew he would be waiting for me, but I was hesitant to leave the house with the storm raging outside. 

As if someone up there was listening to my thoughts, the rain slowed to a trickle, and I made a fresh mad dash to the Land Rover to meet Mike at the Olde Towne Tavern to see if they could replicate the perfect wings yet again. 

FYI…they couldn’t.  Not tonight at least. 

After eating our mediocre wings, we were set to go our separate ways.  He was going back home, and I was going to pick up the girls from a friend’s house. 

I have decided to be thankful for three things.

1)      We were only a few miles from home.

2)      Mike was directly behind me.

And

3)      It wasn’t raining anymore.

The Land Rover ceased to function as I was driving out of the parking lot. 

At first, I thought it just stalled.  I cranked it again, gave it some gas and it started up again only to stall out after a few feet.  I quickly alerted Mike to my dilemma, and he pulled up behind me while I tried again.  Finally, he shooed me out of the driver’s seat to drive it himself.  I had surely done something wrong to cause the problem. 

A few minutes later, we were calling a tow truck.

There is nothing like calling a tow truck on a wet and dreary Monday to put a cap on your night. 

Unfortunately for Mike, I still had to retrieve at least one of the girls from where she was, which left him waiting in the dead Land Rover for the tow truck driver to arrive. 

The thirty minute wait for a tow turned into an hour, and Mike was a real trooper to have endured it alone.  I can add that to my list of things to be thankful for, because I’m fairly certain the flurry of obscenities flying around the inside of the darkened Land Rover would have shocked even me! 

The funniest…if you can call it funny…perhaps you would call it the most ironic thing was, after he paid the tow truck driver the ninety dollars to drag the thing just over two miles to our house, Mike decided he would give the Land Rover one last go, and he cranked up the engine.  It drove right up the driveway to where it is currently parked.  No tow necessary, it would seem.

Who knew?

I guess it’s true what they say…when it rains, it pours.  Only sometimes it’s raining money…but someone else is getting all wet. 

Until the next time…we’ll be waiting on the Land Rover manual to arrive in the mail!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

lazy sunday

I woke up this morning to a dark, gloomy sky.  The air was cool…fall like…and the rain was falling in a heavy mist.  I had to take the dogs out, despite my desire to crawl back under the covers for a few more hours of sleep.  They don’t seem to understand the “rainy Sunday” schedule.  So I got up, took them out, fed them breakfast, and then crawled back into bed for another hour or so.  I had to pull Indy into the bed too, so he would lay still.  We slept until he was restless.  And then it was back to the kitchen to make breakfast.  I pulled out the waffle iron and discovered that the last person who made waffles had left it dirty.  Not just waffle dirty…it had melted chocolate burned into the little squares.  I would have rather thrown it away and bought a new one, but instead I cleaned it and made waffles for breakfast. 

The rest of the day was very literally spent lying around watching movies and reading books.  We didn’t cook.  Mike went to the store for ready-made comfort food—fried chicken, mashed potatoes, and macaroni and cheese—from the grocery store deli.  I took another nap in the middle of the day.  The kind of nap you only take when you have the flu…or it’s just a rainy, lazy, Sunday.

I wish I had some Jiffy Pop, some vanilla pudding, and a Walt Disney World DVD to pop in the machine.  Oh, and maybe a pair of footie pajamas, and a fuzzy blanket. 

I think it’s supposed to rain tomorrow too. 

It won’t be the same.  It will be Monday.

Until the next time…I’ll be listening to the sound of falling rain hitting the window.

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

timber!

It’s no secret that I don’t run.  I have joked repeatedly that it would take a something akin to a zombie invasion to cause me to break into a sprint. I’m just never in that big a hurry.  And I would rather engage in almost any other form of exercise rather than break a sweat (or an ankle) running.  

I was wrong about the zombies, not that I wouldn’t run from them, I would.  But I have discovered, purely by accident, that there could be no more compelling motivator for me to suddenly attempt the twenty yard dash through a dangerous obstacle course of fallen limbs, loose rocks, and overgrown brush, than the terrifying cracking sound a tree makes as it falls in your direction. 

And in the process, I have decided that my darling husband is completely off his rocker.  

And not because he has been planning the removal of an unwanted, potentially hazardous, southern pine from the fringes of our back yard for weeks.  The quote to remove the tree professionally was ridiculously high, so he came up with this plan to cut it down himself.  I almost understand that. It is a guy thing to want to play with power tools and cause a bit of legal destruction.  And of course, it would require access to the new chainsaw that he just HAD to have.  Who doesn’t want a nice new chainsaw, after all?   

I tried to talk him out of it.  My arguments?  “It’s too dangerous!”  “You’ll get killed!”  “It’s a perfectly good tree!”  I knew that the potential for disaster was great, but he was determined…and he had the proper tools.  He was using a borrowed winch, (my sister’s husband cuts trees down with some regularity without killing anyone or causing property damage) he had a brand new chainsaw, and the tree was already leaning away from the house, so it was unlikely to fall into a wall.  I relented.  He was allowed to cut down the tree.  I would gladly watch from the safety of my house while he risked life and limb.  I needed to be there just in case I needed to call 911. 

 He had other plans for me. 

Off his rocker…remember?  He wanted me to control the winch! That alone proves the insanity defense if anything would. Who in their right mind would let ME of all people operate the tool responsible for making the tree fall in the right direction? 

I was dressed in capri’s and flip flops—not proper dress code for the amateur lumberjack—but as I was given exactly three minutes notice before being tasked to head up the hill to the man the winch, it would have to do.

The upper yard was even more jungle-like than it was in the spring. I carefully maneuvered the narrow path where the cables had been stretched and ultimately attached to the tall narrow pine. I looked up at the tree and squinted against the sun. I was trying to gauge how tall the tree was and how far it would fall. It looked suspiciously like it would be tall enough to fall right where I was standing. And my entire role in this Greek tragedy was to manually crank the winch to tighten the cables attached to the tree in the hopes that it would fall in my direction. 

The proverbial “red flag” was flying high on my side of the yard.  I brought this scenario immediately to my husband's attention but he laughed it off saying that the tree was nowhere near tall enough to fall anywhere near me. He even went so far as to show me precisely where the tree would fall...if everything went according to plan...which it seldom ever does.

Within a few minutes, the chain saw had roared to life and the sound of chain chewing through tree filled the air.  I was cranking…winching the tree until the cables were tight enough to play music…when Mike suddenly shouted, “GO, GO, GO!” from across the yard.  The cables abruptly went completely slack and I heard the sickening crack of the tree beginning to fall.  “GO, GO, GO!” was enough for me!  I took off like I was shot out of a canon.  I don't think I have ever run so fast in my life, hurdling the underbrush and the fire pit like an Olympic athlete.  

Or at least, that’s how it seemed in my head as I ran. 

When I reached the furthest point I could go without scaling the six foot fence, I turned around to look back at the place where the tree had been.  The tree was no longer standing, and the spot where I had been cranking the winch had been showered with pine needles and branch debris from where the tree clipped the edge of the fence, both shattering the fence, and scattering parts of the tree throughout the area.  My husband came dashing too my side of the yard, wondering why I stopped cranking the winch.  “You told me to run!” I said, completely out of breath.  “I told you to winch faster.” He replied.  

I adamantly disagreed. 

“GO, GO, GO, translates into RUN, RUN, RUN…NOT winch faster!”  

He clearly should have said, CRANK, CRANK, CRANK…or WINCH, WINCH, WINCH, if he wanted me to continue to man my post.  Which thankfully, I had abandoned in order to run.  There is no way I could have cranked the manual winch faster than gravity had pulled the tree to the ground.  And this tale could have had a completely different ending if I hadn’t had the quick reflexes of woman stalked by flesh eating zombies! 

I think I might need some ice for my ankles though…it’s not every day I run a twenty yard dash through a dangerous obstacle course, after all.

Until the next time…I’ll be nursing my twisted ankles, and thanking my lucky stars!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

are you sure you want to go camping?

All of this excitement surrounding the purchase of our North Carolina mountain property has caused a renewed interest within me for camping. My husband grew up hunting, camping, and fishing.  I did not.  My experience with camping was largely limited to tents made out of old quilts and the dining room chairs. 

Still a valid option, if you ask me. 

I wasn’t a girl scout.  I never went to summer camp.  I didn’t have a tent pitched in the back yard.  As a child, I camped only twice.   One night in a tiny cabin—just a short run from the main house on my Aunt’s farm—and one night in a state park during a brief stint as a member of a 4H group.  Both occurred before I was twelve years old. 

Fast forward to a few years ago when our (former) neighbors invited us to spend a weekend camping with them in the Chattahoochee National Forest. 

We packed up the truck with tents, and chairs, and sleeping bags…enough food and water to survive a natural disaster…and off to the woods we went—with both of our teenage girls, and my niece. 

It took what seemed like an eternity to find the campsite as we drove up the winding mountain roads in the dark.  When we finally arrived, we realized that our neighbors had invited more than just us. 

There were our neighbors (Mr. and Mrs. Lifeoftheparty and their two young children), Mrs. Lifeoftheparty’s nymphomaniac younger sister and her two young children, Mr. Lifeoftheparty’s stick in the mud older brother and a former army buddy…and the five of us.  All on one campsite. 

It would seem as if there were too many people in one campsite and according to the camp “police”, there were.  The group was cautioned to keep the noise down or leave.  This, after driving nearly four hours to the site! 

We quietly put up our tents and set up our camp chairs around the raging fire.  The neighbors and their little group had started drinking hours before we arrived.  Mrs. Lifeoftheparty, despite her love of a nice glass of wine, kept her drinking in check that evening due to the presence of small children.  No one else in her extended family followed her lead.  With the exception of the children, they were all well on their way to cirrhosis of the liver.

Before long, the younger children were all tucked into their sleeping bags, and Mrs. Lifeoftheparty (my only friend at this little soirée) took her leave of the rambunctious band of drinkers.  My teenagers (including my niece) set up camp in their own little tent, with a nice supply of purloined marshmallows, chocolate bars, and graham crackers for midnight s’mores. 

That left Mike and me to sit around the fire with Mr. Lifeoftheparty and the rest of his drunken crew. 

I didn’t sit with them for long.  Mr. Lifeoftheparty was loudly lamenting that his wife “hated” him, and wanted to divorce him.  Something she had not said, but he was certain nonetheless.  

I retreated to our tent for the night, while Mike had a few drinks by the fire. 

I couldn’t sleep.  Instead, I lay awake, listening to the fireside conversations get out of hand.  Mrs. Lifeoftheparty’s married sister was flirting quite brazenly with Mr. Lifeoftheparty’s brother and his army buddy.  The men were clearly convinced that they had a chance, and were competing for her attentions.  The laughter carried over the night air like the cackling of a coven of witches around a burning caldron, making me uncomfortable. 

My husband finally dragged himself away from the raucous party and climbed into our tent…but not before telling Mrs. Lifeoftheparty’s sister to shut up.  She said something rude, and probably deserved the retort, but she didn’t take it well.  She wondered out loud what we were doing on their family camping trip.

After Mike zipped us into the tent, the hysterical laughter around the fire got louder, and the fire spiked into a raging inferno as the four adults that remained proceeded to throw things into the flames that have no business in a camp fire. 

Mike toyed with the idea of leaving in the middle of the night—something I was dead set against, as it had been nearly impossible to find our way into the forest, let alone back out again.  

In time, the sounds faded away…either because they wandered off or because they passed out…I wasn’t sure. 

The light of morning brought silence from all four of the late party goers.  I did discover that Mr. Lifeoftheparty had wandered off and fallen into the nearby river, almost drowning as the current took him down river several hundred feet before the others fished him out.  

Morning also found one of Mike’s shoes among the missing.  He had left them right outside our tent when he came to bed, but they were conspicuously missing when he went to put them on.  Mr. Lifeoftheparty lent him a pair of sandals (perhaps due to a guilty conscience, as we found out much later that he and the crazed bunch around the fire had thrown Mike’s shoe in to watch it burn). 

Despite Mike’s desire to “get the hell out of there” we spent a few hours fishing, and exploring the river with the girls.  They didn’t seem to notice anything out of the ordinary, and actually had a pretty good time.  Mike even caught and cooked a lonely little fish while we were there. 

We were invited to spend a second night, but under the circumstances, we declined.  Instead we drove home and set up the tent in our own back yard where the girls spent the next night…camping close to home.  It wasn’t the same, I suppose, but that was fine with me.  I was ready to sleep in my very own bed…where I wouldn’t hear wicked laughter…or smell burning shoes.  I think I might rather pull out an old quilt and stretch it over the dining room chairs next time I want to camp. 

Ironically, Mr. and Mrs. Lifeoftheparty were divorced not long after the infamous camping trip, and they no longer live in the neighborhood.  We almost miss them…

Sort of.

Until the next time…I’ll be planning our next camping trip to our own little piece of paradise!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

how did that get in there?

I got a splinter in my finger today. 

This, in and of itself, is not overly noteworthy.  There was a little twist to the tale, however.  I got a splinter in a finger on my right hand.  I’m right handed.  And if you remember…my left hand is there for nothing but balance and decoration.  So the splinter is still there. 

I’ve tried everything. 

I have tried using tweezers, teeth, fingernails, tape, and a needle.  So far, I have done nothing to dislodge the splinter.  I enlisted an assistant to attempt to remove the tiny sliver of wood, to no avail. 

So the splinter is STILL there.

I have vague memories from childhood, of my mother using some sort of black sticky salve to draw out wood splinters, but I couldn’t begin to guess what that might have been.  If it’s still there in the morning, I may call her.  In the mean time, I will be wrapping my finger in a Band-Aid to prevent further injury to an already tender wound. 

I’ve said it before, but it bears repeating…I need finger armor. 

I might just need full body armor, but that would make getting around a little difficult.  Plus, people would laugh at me.  Not that I’m worried about that so much, but Mike would be embarrassed to be seen with me.  Sort of like when I wear the crazy hot pink sweater.  Or my red rubber “doo doo” boots.  Or anything that may have been given to me as a Christmas present from someone who shops the sales rack at JC Penney’s (someone who will remain nameless.)  I still wear these things.  I just have to walk several feet behind Mike, and pretend we don’t know each other, when I do.  It’s a small price to pay.  I love my pink sweater, my “doo doo” boots, and almost everything from the Penney’s sales rack.  Everything but the white polyester pant suit I got three or four Christmas’s ago.  The one that still hangs in my closet, just in case it actually comes back into fashion sometime in the future.

But right now, I’m hardly worried about what not to wear; I’m worried about getting the fragment of lumber out of my finger.  Maybe I’ll soak it in soapy water.  I don’t know if it will help, but it probably can’t hurt, and it might feel nice.  Maybe I should soak my whole body that way…as in a bubble bath. 

Maybe the splinter was trying to tell me something…I need to relax, and pamper myself.

Or maybe it was telling me to stop touching things in the sporting goods store.

Until the next time…I’ll be neck deep in Mr. Bubbles!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

nothing wrong with a little boring in my life

My husband has officially turned in his man card. Well, in spirit anyway.  We were watching a movie this evening, and he noticed that one of the actors in the movie was also in Twilight—something no self-respecting man should notice.  This—right on the heels of him quoting a character from Twilight just the night before—prompted him to state, quite regrettably, that he needed to turn in his man card. 

My son has said more than once, (in his own harsh terms) that watching the Twilight Saga would cause him to “grow a vagina,” and so he adamantly refuses, no matter how often his girlfriend pleads. 

I’m just glad my husband will tolerate my obsessions, no matter how silly they may seem on the surface. 

My obsession for today was rest.  After a long weekend, followed by a busy Monday and Tuesday, I took the opportunity to lounge around the house for most of the day.  I didn’t worry about house cleaning, or laundry, deciding instead, to watch a movie for the bulk of the morning. 

It felt fantastic to do nothing. 

That is, until somewhere around two when I felt a sudden surge of guilt.  So I got up and quickly did the dishes, ran a load of laundry, and packed the dog into the car to run a few errands. 

After stopping off at the pet store for a few bags of organic dog treats, we headed to the local dog park for a bit of socialization with other dogs…and maybe a bit of exercise for me while we were at it. 

It was another scorcher of a day, but that didn’t stop us from taking the trails in the shade until we reached the off-leash area.

Words to the wise…when you carry a pocket full of doggy treats, be prepared to be the center of attention.  It was like I was wearing eau de chicken or something.  Every dog in the park wanted to sit next to me on the bench.  My own dog, who of course, knew that I was packing treats…he saw me pack them…sat by politely waiting for his snack while the other dogs pretended that we’d been friends for ages.  It was a good thing I packed enough to share.  You know what they say, if you don’t have enough for the whole class…or something like that.

By the time we left the park (right around the time the treats ran out, and so did my appeal) both Indy and I were exhausted.  Back at home, it seemed appropriate for us to grab a nice midday nap.  The heat of the day was followed by a brief thunderstorm this evening, and I don’t think I could have asked for a more perfectly boring day. 

Sometimes it’s just what the doctor ordered. 

Until the next time…I’ll be planning more excitement for tomorrow.

 

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

and the adventure begins

Well, we did it.  We signed the papers today to purchase our two acres of North Carolina mountainside. 

Now we just have to wait the requisite thirty days before the property is ours.  I don’t exactly know how I feel about this yet.  It’s quite exciting, but at the same time, just a bit scary.  We are beginning a new adventure.  And the name of the game is back to nature. 

Mike has grand plans to build our house with his own two hands (and I imagine mine will be involved to some degree as well.)  It should make for good blogging, if nothing else.  And what more could a writer ask for than loads of new material? 

Unfortunately, I have very little new material to share for today.  I spent the bulk of my day running errands and sweating in the hot sun.  The temperature was in the high nineties today, and I hardly think that’s fair considering that according to the calendar, it is officially fall.  I’m ready for my cool weather any time now.

I’m looking forward to a little down time tomorrow.

Maybe I’ll even have lunch with a friend…any takers? 

Until the next time…I’ll be waiting for the lunch invitations to start rolling in!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

zombies, ninja kitties, and a really cool phone!

Fall is almost upon us—one more day if memory serves—and with fall comes the inevitable…high school football games and homecoming dances. 

I took the girls shopping today to search for homecoming dresses.  Lauren is taking Alexa as her “date” to the dance, and now that the girls have effectively “made up” from their last row, how could I decline them the benefit of another new dress for another homecoming dance? 

They promised to stay within the budget, so off to the mall we went.

I can’t remember the last time I had set foot in the mall, and I had completely forgotten why I hate to go there.  As I walked down the main concourse from one end of the mall to the other, I was repeatedly accosted by kiosk zombies thirsting for my attention, starving for my presence, and hungering for my business.  The first zombie was at a mineral eye shadow kiosk…one that I’ve shopped at many times before, so I already own every shade that I would even remotely wear (and I few that I never will).  First there was a woman, thrusting her hand toward me with an informational card that she was determined for me to take from her.  When I refused, she skulked off and a man took her place, trying to convince me that I looked a bit peaked today and could use some brightening up.  He was more than willing to do the brightening with his expensive mineral eye shadows!  I quickly focused my attention on my phone, forcing myself to pull eye contact away from him, and scurried off. 

I didn’t get far. 

I was still clicking through the screens on my phone when I heard someone go, “Psssstt.” 

I looked up to see a man holding a tray of what looked like wrapped homemade candies.  This was too cliché for words… “Want some candy little girl?”  He didn’t say it, but it was in his eyes.  “For you.” Is what he did say, in what sounded like an Italian accent.  He tried to hand me one of the wrapped squares.  I couldn’t help myself…I put my hand out to take the item before asking, “What is it?” 

Mineral soap sample.

He had me.  That stupid little soap was like a live worm on a hook, and I had bitten. 

He dragged me (hardly kicking and screaming or anything) into the little shop off the concourse and asked me about wrinkles.  We agreed that we both hated wrinkles.  Who doesn’t?  And he proceeded to exfoliate the skin on my hands while I was oblivious to the impending sales pitch.  “Doesn’t that feel so much softer?  Wouldn’t you feel so much younger?  Don’t you deserve something this luxurious?”

Bastard!

They know exactly how to reel you in, don’t they?  Of course, my skin felt softer.  He had just put cream on it.  Of course, I wanted to look as young as possible for as long as possible. I can’t imagine anyone over the age of twenty-one saying they want to look any older.  Of course, I deserve it!  Yes! I want a bottle of that miracle cream.  Wrap it up.  How much is it?

Seventy-eight dollars????  Are you serious?

Phone in hand, I scurried out of that shop as quickly as I could without looking back—without collecting my free mineral soap sample.  I wasn’t about to go back and get it. 

I wasn’t about to get pulled into another kiosk or little shop again. 

I plopped down into a comfortable lounge chair in one of the cozy rest areas in the main mall courtyard and pulled out my still fully charged cell phone…excuse me, “cell phone” is an insult to this extraordinary device.  Today it was playing the part of a television as I watched a movie while I hid.  Talking is one of the lesser used features on my new HTC EVO android smart phone.

And no…Sprint did not pay me to advertise their product.  I am doing this for free. 

I am in love with my new phone.  It does everything.  I can surf the internet with the speed and convenience of a tiny laptop.  I can take pictures with the quality of an expensive camera.  I have GPS navigation that rivals any of the navigation units I’ve seen in action.  I can listen to music and watch movies.  I can send and receive my email, my Facebook and Twitter, text messages, IMs…and yes I can even talk. 

I think it might even load my dishwasher. 

I am having an illicit affair with my “cell phone”, and my husband is only jealous that he doesn’t have a phone like mine.  But it can’t do everything.  It can’t drive the car to pick up the newly recuperated ninja kitty, Henry Chow. 

Henry Chow has been spending the past several days as a guest at the spa (the vet) having his wounds tended to.  He is mostly healed, and was able to come home today.  He was cleaned from head to foot, and shaved like a poodle to reach his injuries.  He didn’t seem to mind.  In fact, he seemed to enjoy the constant attention.  And like all good ninja kitties, he managed to engage his hosts so entirely that when I went to pick him up, they were all using the same Chinese accent when speaking to him that we use in our house.  There is just something about Henry Chow that makes you want to speak his language.  He is Himalayan after all!

So as I settle in for the night, I am satisfied with my Monday.  I survived a trip to the mall, and found both girls suitable dresses in a single trip!  I discovered a multitude of new functions on my new phone whilst I hid out from zombies and other assorted mall creepers, (and I’m sure there are countless others that I have yet to unearth…have I mentioned how much I love my phone?)  And I retrieved the ninja kitty from his spa vacation at the vet.  Could the day have possibly been any better?  Oh did I mention I had really good wings for dinner too?

Nothing like perfection on a Monday…

Until the next time…I’ll have very high hopes for Tuesday…I may even play the lottery!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

looking forward to monday?

Have you ever had a weekend that was so full, and so busy, that you were sort of glad when it was over?  I’m sure my husband would disagree (he's back to work in the morning), but for me, this was one of those weekends.  And don’t get me wrong, I love the weekend…but I need a Monday to recuperate! 

I did spend a lot of time taking pictures of the North Carolina property to post in the gallery—per a few special requests—so I hope you like those.  (You need to sign up for a free premier membership for access to the photo gallery.) The camera on my phone is pretty amazing, so I didn’t even need to pull out the big camera. 

If I wasn’t so busy trying to defend myself from a swarm of killer gnats, I would have taken more. 

The bugs in the woods are truly impressive.  I definitely need to get a refill of the organic bug spray!  But it was a very productive weekend. Finally, we have completed all of the preliminaries for buying the property, and now we just have to wait for the septic permit to be approved, and the sale will go forward.  I’m pretty excited. 

I have a busy week ahead, as well.  The girls are on fall break from school, and we are supposed to shop for Homecoming dresses.  It never ends, does it?  Oh well…they’re only kids once…thank God! 

Until the next time…a shopping I will go!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

the news bee brings good tidings

I’ve come to the realization that it is not nature that I have issue with.  In fact, I love nature!  Nature is wonderful.  I could spend the entire day enjoying all that nature has to offer.  No…I don’t dislike nature.  It’s what LIVES in nature that I have a problem with!

Mike and I drove up to our property today to meet with the surveyor who was marking the property lines.  Buying land is very involved. We had to wait for the property lines to be marked…so we could mark where we want the barn house to go…so we can apply for the septic and well permits, per our contingency.  Essentially…no septic…no property.  North Carolina has strict building codes.  If you can’t get septic approval, you can’t build.

So there we were…out in the woods…marking the corners of the barn house with stakes and pink ribbon.   

Mike was armed with a machete. 

I was armed with my phone. 

It’s a new phone.  It has a camera, and a compass, and GPS navigation with satellite imaging.  All necessary things when one is out in the middle of nature without a big weapon.  But it’s not much protection against bears.  Or snakes.  Or spider webs. 

Some of the things that live in nature.

I couldn’t see Mike.  He was walking the property lines, taking pictures.  He wouldn’t let me follow him because the property went down a steep hill, and he was certain I would fall down it.  Probably wise advice, but I still didn’t like being left alone in the middle of the woods. While I waited, I took lots of pictures to post in the gallery, and I promise to do that tomorrow. 

After taking pictures of every possible angle, I decided that I would try to catch up to Mike on the other side of the lot.  That meant trekking through the woods. 

There was a well travelled path that cuts through the property leading from the top to the bottom.  It’s a nice gentle slope that even I could traverse.  I traded my flip flops for my tacky red rubber “doo doo” boots, as I call them, and set off on my journey.  I had gone less than fifty feet when I walked straight into an inhabited spider web. 

I had to use a stick to get the giant spider off my arm, and I’m very proud of my composure as I did.  I didn’t scream, or pee my pants, or anything of the sort.  I remained perfectly calm despite having a big black spider tangled up in his own web, clinging to my bare arm.  He could have been poisonous!  He could have been deadly! But somehow I survived.  It was very pioneer-like of me.  But that was enough nature for one day.  I retraced my steps back to the Land Rover where I waited for Mike to make his rounds on the two acres of mountain land that would be ours.

Back at the car, I ducked and weaved as a bee buzzed around me.  It had been there all day...even the day before...showing up the minute I got out of the car.  It looked suspiciously like a yellow jacket to me (a very nasty bunch, those yellow jackets) but according to the surveyor it was a friendly bee.  He called it the news bee, bringing good luck wherever it went.  I wasn’t interested in the news.  I was interested in no bees flying around my head. 

Mike thought it was a little creepy. 

But that’s the country I suppose.  People operate in a different pace—where bees are messengers, and spiders are weavers.  I don’t know how we’ll fit in with that bunch…but I guess we’ll find out. 

We’re pretty exhausted tonight.  I don’t even know what we’ll do tomorrow.  I guess we’ll find out about that too.  Tomorrow is another day after all.

Until the next time…I’ll be scrubbing nature off my skin with a nice hot shower!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

I was only kidding about the camel!

It is almost eleven o’clock at night, and I am just now sitting down to my computer to attempt to put the day’s events into words. 

As I lay in my bed, my five month old puppy, Indiana Jones (or “wrecking ball” as we might nickname him if he continues to crash into doors and furniture), is playing with a loud squeaky toy as he runs from room to room, spending the pent up energy he stored while sleeping in the Land Rover all afternoon.  I suppose I don’t mind.  He does seem to be having fun, and the more he plays now, the better he’ll sleep tonight.  And I really need a good night sleep.  It was a long, long day…in a good way…but still.

Back to North Carolina we went…

After giving the aging Land Rover a good “once over” Mike packed up the safari vehicle like we were trekking out to deepest Africa on a quest to hunt down the elusive “white tiger” or something.  Alas, the only animal on our safari would be Indiana Jones, himself.  Indy (after several failed attempts to “boost” him up to the backseat) was finally loaded and ready to roll. 

One of the major problems with buying a mature vehicle is that you inevitably run into the occasional inoperative components.  In our case, a broken switch for the electric seat control for the front passenger seat would be my primary nemesis.  I wouldn’t be so put out with it if not for the fact that it is broken in the forward most position, thus putting my knees firmly against the dash for the entire ride. I  suppose this wouldn’t be an issue if not for my ridiculously long legs and big feet.  Both of which are now miserably sore. 

Nothing a few Advil can’t fix.

As uncomfortable as the ride may be, I was very glad to be securely strapped into our safari vehicle once we started up the steep climb to the property in Murphy, NC.  It had rained quite a bit since we were last there, so the “roads” that are already barely roads were even more uneven, and washed out in places. 

My right hand is still cramped from gripping the “oh shit” handle as Mike navigated the Land Rover up the rough terrain.  I made several joking remarks comparing the Land Rover to a camel.  Mike was not amused.  He loves his new toy…and camels spit. 

Once we were safely at the top of our part of mountain—tucked into the little nook where our property starts—I could relax and enjoyed the scenery.  The views from the top are beautiful.  I think I might even be talked into living in a yurt if it meant I’d be able to move there sooner.  Well…let’s not go that far.  I have visions of bears breaking into a yurt with little to no trouble at all.  And we all know I’d rather not get eaten by bears…or anything else that is inclined to snack on my flesh (such as the zombie raccoon that may or may not have attempted to feast on my poor ninja kitty). 

We were barely up the mountain when it was time to come back down again. 

We had to turn around and get back to the other side of Atlanta in time to pick up our youngest daughter from her mother’s house.  According to the GPS navigation (which we know never lies) it would take us less than two hours to get there. 

Almost three hours—and a treacherous, winding mountain road—later, we arrived to pick Mady up.  An hour after that, we were back home. 

This is when I discovered that I had not peed since leaving the house that morning.  When I made those remark about the camel, I wasn’t talking about me.  But I did have several bottles of water and a diet coke on the way, and never noticed a moment of discomfort.

And you know what they say…if the storage capacity fits…

Until the next time…we’ll be up at dawn to head back to the mountains!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

let the weekend begin! (early)

Thursday…one day until the weekend.

That is until I decided to start the weekend a day early. 

Thanks to some fancy footwork and a little behind the scenes schmoozing, Mike was able to get today and tomorrow off.  It was a perfect opportunity to spend some much needed quality time together.  Right after my parent teacher meeting at my daughter’s school, and Mike’s (day off) conference call. 

By the time we had completed all of our required tasks; it was close to the dinner hour.  We didn’t let that stop us from having a nice evening together walking around the bookstore looking for more books on building timber frame barns.  You just can’t discount an evening spend doing nothing important.  It’s very relaxing.  We have another busy day ahead of us tomorrow. We’re driving to North Carolina again to take care of a few minor details for our land purchase.  Indy will ride with us again…he’s becoming a regular “world traveler” like his namesake.  And since he decided that he would take a shower this morning, he’s nice and clean for the trip. 

But I don’t want to talk about Indy without mentioning that our poor ninja kitty, Henry Chow has been on an extended “spa” visit at my favorite vet’s office.  Henry has been in another scuffle, and this time he was left with some pretty serious wounds.  It’s not like he was defenseless, mind you…he is a ninja kitty after all…but that didn’t stop a rival ninja from taking him down a few pegs.  Of course, I don’t know what the other cat looked like after the fight.  Henry Chow may still be the baddest ninja in the neighborhood.  He certainly looked quite intimidating as he walked across the room with his front arm in a full cast.  Even the dogs were too afraid to investigate.  But he needed a bit more care than he could get at home, so he’s spending a few nights at the vet.  I got an email from him just this evening (through his interpreter) and I hear he is enjoying the extra pampering.  Hopefully, he will come home tomorrow or Saturday.  I think he will be staying inside for a while either way. 

I suppose I should be glad that I have such a wonderful vet…but I really wish I didn’t see her quite as often as I do.  It’s getting expensive!

Oh well…you can’t just let your ninja kitty suffer in silence. 

Until the next time…I’ll be waking up early to go on another mountain adventure!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

a yurting we will go?

Speaking of roller coasters…

It looks like we will be getting a lot of use out of that old Land Rover we bought.  Our offer on the land in North Carolina was accepted, and if all goes well, we will be driving that old safari vehicle up the mountains a lot in the coming months.  We are pretty excited about that. 

Mike has plans to camp on the property while we do things like clearing some trees for the barn/house.  I don’t know if I like the idea of camping up there.  It’s not that I don’t like to camp.  I do.  But there are actual bears out there in the North Carolina mountains.  And if I have a choice, I would rather not get eaten by bears.  But I suppose I will be camping just the same.  I can always sleep inside the Land Rover if it gets to scary out there.

But there are still things to do before the camping can commence. 

For starters, we need to close on the property. I suppose I can’t count my chickens before they hatch and all that.  Tomorrow will be a busy day.  Lots of phone calls to make, and errands to run.  So without further adieu, off to bed I go.

Until the next time…I’ll be wondering if wild bears can dance too.

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

stop the ride, I want to get off

I hate roller coasters.  Never liked them, in fact.  But in the course of my life, I have had the displeasure of riding a few, so I the images are permanently burned into my memory like a bumper sticker that won’t come off.  And I don’t know what part is the worst…the sudden, life altering drop from the top…or the slow, steady click, click, click leading us to that inevitable fall.  For me, the panic attack starts from the moment I am strapped into my seat. 

More recently, I’ve come to hate the ride more so because of the uncanny parallel between roller coasters and life. 

And my life seems too much like a roller coaster lately—flying around the sharp corners at a blinding pace, my hair blowing wildly in the wind it creates, heading for the gradual climb and the click, click, click signaling the journey to that sudden plunge over the edge. 

I feel the anxiety—squirming like a living creature inside my gut…burning like a lit match under my skin—just knowing its coming.  I can maneuver the scary turns—even the dangerous pitch as I careen around them—but I can’t stop thinking about what’s right around the corner.  Even thinking about it brings about the feelings of dread.  And all of life is basically that measured climb to the top of the hill, and then falling over it at a dizzying speed as if it’s a race to the bottom.

My fear of heights could find its way into this metaphor on life.  But I’m not sure if it’s really the heights I’m afraid of, or rather, falling from them, and that would put it at the foundation of all of my phobias.  It just makes sense that if you have a fear of falling, your fear would be multiplied by falling from high places.  I fall off my own feet quite regularly, and although I don’t like it, I wouldn’t say I’m afraid of it.

I have dreams sometimes about falling from high places—speeding around a dark corner at night, trees in the wash of my headlights, and then the road disappears and I’m free falling over the edge into the dark abyss. 

I always wake up before the sudden stop.

So how do we get off this roller coaster called life without ending the ride too soon?  Can’t I just trade my ticket for a nice leisurely boat ride?  One that doesn’t end up going through a patch of angry rapids on the way to a cascading waterfall as hungry dinosaurs try to eat me from the sidelines? 

I guess not.

Maybe I just need to give a yank on my seatbelt and get comfy.  I intend on being here for a nice long ride…like it or not…and I’m not about to miss a single turn along the way.  It’s probably a good thing I don’t throw up too easily.

Until the next time…light meals and frequent bathroom breaks for me for a while!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

under the big top

Ah…book club.  How often have I skipped the book for better things, only to show up at book club, Cliff’s Notes in hand, muddling through the topic until it was time to play the game?  Too often, I’m sure.  But this time I actually read the book.  It was a good one.  Water for Elephants, by Sara Gruen.  And since it was my turn to host, I decided that I would do a circus theme. 

We ate caramel popcorn, mini hotdogs, chips, and frosted cookies.  I forgot to buy the animal crackers, or we would have had all bases covered.  As usual the book discussion was brief so we could move straight to the game.  And what a game it was!

We played a game called Boxers or Briefs, and if you have occasion find the game in your travels, I can’t recommend it enough.  I don’t know when I’ve laughed as much, and the others in our group said the same.  After all…it’s not every day that you have an opportunity to engage in a little bawdy humor with your neighbors!

It was a fun time had by all…more on that tomorrow.  I’m exhausted!

Until the next time…I’ll be dreaming of funnel cakes and fancy elephants!

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.

isn't it romantic?

I decided—for some bizarre reason that I may never understand—to speak in Charlton Heston’s voice this evening.  I was trying to be all romantic, using this, “damn dirty apes” voice like the one he used in the Planet of the Apes…probably the same voice he used every day, but that’s where I remembered it from.  I don’t know why I did it…it defies reason…but it was funny.  My husband laughed, but suddenly didn’t want to kiss me.  I guess it was something about the late actor and NRA spokesperson being decidedly male that put a kink in the romance.  So much for that idea.  Oh well…it’s late on a Sunday night, and Mike has an early day at the office tomorrow anyway.   

I guess the most important part of this statement is…Mike and I are back to normal again.  And yes…using weird voices for comedic effect is quite normal in my house…and Charlton Heston has shown up once or twice before, as has Katharine Hepburn, and Carol Channing just to name a few.  I suppose I should try Marilyn Monroe or Rita Hayworth if I want to segue into romance in the future. 

Romance is great and all that, but laughter is truly the best medicine, and we laugh a lot around here.  That’s probably at least one reason why he keeps me around.

I mean…what could be funnier than the sound of three dogs snoring in harmony in the background as Charlton Heston makes lewd comments as you step out of the shower?  I don’t remember exactly what I said…it might have been something about assault rifles or something... (Insert rim shot here…bah dum bum)

On another note...we had a great weekend.  The weather (aside from a bout of thundershowers late yesterday) was spectacular.  We drove up to the mountains to scope out the piece of land in North Carolina that we have been thinking about buying.  

We bought an old Land Rover Discovery to drive up the mountain roads that haven’t been used in years.  It was an adventure…and Indiana Jones, the (huge) puppy, went along for the ride.  Indy has decided he really likes to ride in the car now.  He goes almost everywhere with us now. 

It was peaceful in the mountains.  It made me so relaxed, I was almost willing to say yes to a yurt.

Almost.

I suppose I might be willing to go camping in a yurt, but I prefer a bit more substantial walls for my permanent residence.  So no yurt in this life.  Maybe the next one…

I really need to get a little rest tonight.  Tomorrow night is book club/game night and it’s my turn to host. 

Believe it or not, I actually read the book this time! 

Until the next time…I’ll be getting ready for the circus big top...animal crackers anyone?

Copyright © 2000-2025, Erica Lucke Dean. All rights reserved. Any retranscription or reproduction is prohibited and illegal.