Tuesday, January 6, 2026 -- Mattie died 827 weeks ago today.
Tonight's picture was taken in January of 2006. Mattie was three and half years old and that day I brought in two homemade gingerbread houses to Mattie's preschool classroom. I wanted to do an activity with the children and Mattie's teacher asked if I would take on gingerbread houses! So I did! But keep in mind that I had NEVER made a gingerbread house from scratch in my life! So I first had to figure out how to bake gingerbread, construct houses, and make royal icing! When it came to Mattie.... I always found a way! That day, I brought in all sorts of candies and plenty of royal icing for the children. I can't tell you how much they loved this project! One student was stunned that royal icing was edible and it wasn't glue! Decorating the houses was a big hit and at the end of the event, we got to take them home! You can see Mattie with the finished product! Mattie was very happy that we came up with this creative project for his classroom, and actually the project was such a hit, that all the other preschool classrooms rotated into the room that day to also help decorate the houses!
Quote of the day: Grief is like a moving river, it's always changing. I would say in some ways it just gets worse. It's just that the more time that passes, the more you miss someone. ~ Michelle Williams
One of the zillion things that I manage now is car service and maintenance. Again, I never dealt with this throughout my married life! However, each December, I typically take my mom's car in for its annual service visit. But I had so much going on in December, especially with my dad's hospitalization, that I pushed this visit to January. Tomorrow, I am taking my mom's car in for service and I have to say that I absolutely hate this car dealership. It is a night and day experience from where I take my Ford. My Ford dealership makes service appointments super easy, as they pick up and drop the car off to my home. My mom's dealership is another story!
Given that it was in the upper 40s today, I decided to wash off both cars and vacuum them. I refuse to take them to a car wash, for multiple reasons. Since both cars need service this January, I like to send the cars in for service cleaned! At first I was just going to do my mom's car, but then decided since I was outside and had everything out there with me, I might as well manage both cars. It took me close to three hours to clean the inside and outside of both cars and then I cleaned out all the leaves and debris that blew into the garage from the last wind storm.
Once I was done with that, I came back inside to deal with laundry. I had promised I would take my parents out for frozen yogurt, so though it would have been nice to pause and regroup, I did not have the time. Even though it is cold outside, as long as it isn't snowing, I try to get my parents out of the house daily. It is good for both of them, as it gets them walking, seeing other people, and engaging with the world. For my dad this is crucial, because with Alzheimer's it is very easy for him to retreat into his own world. It takes great thought, energy, and determination to keep my dad active and absorbing things around him. If I spend much time thinking about it, his situation is quite depressing, as his mind is a complete blank to his former life and most of his current life for that matter. My dad doesn't remember any of the houses he used to live in, he has no recollection of living in California (where he lived for over 30 years!), my dad doesn't remember most of the people he used to work with, remembers nothing specific about friends, his own parents, his brother, and the list goes on. So now I am his memory and it is a daunting responsibility! When you move from your parents' child, to being the adult on duty and responsible for everyone, it is sobering.










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