KEEPING IT IN THE FAMILY

My family, like most families, has a lot of inside jokes. Many of them have beginnings so obscured by time, it would take at least two of us to nail down its origin story. Most of them are throw away lines we laughed disproportionately at in the moment. Others weren’t that funny to begin with, but repetition and the occasional perfectly timed delivery through the decades have made them set pieces of our repertoire. Some have not only endured but thrived to become such a part of our lexicon that we forget there are only four of us who know what we’re talking about. Those are the jokes we make to the people who weren’t there – the phrases we toss out to strangers, not recognizing we are talking nonsense until the look of confusion, and possibly low-level fear, on our companion’s face registers in our brains. Then we can either try to explain the joke or apologize for slipping and making a joke whose target audience is exactly three other people.  

In my family, the joke that I make to non-family members the most is, unfortunately, of the “wasn’t actually funny to begin with” nature. Like many jokes of that ilk, it started with a dad. Before Mike was officially my stepdad, but when it was clear he dug my mom enough to stick around even with the two young kids she had, we started doing family outings. We had a good time. However, like all kids stuck in a car for more than five minutes, my brother and I would begin to demand ETAs for our destination. Mike decided that the appropriate answer to that question was “twenty minutes.” Actual time or distance was irrelevant. The answer was always twenty minutes. We would leave our house in New Jersey, be on the road for ten miles, ask how long the drive to the Poconos is, and would be immediately told, “Twenty minutes.” 

My brother and I were 10 and 11ish, certainly old enough to tell time. We were also precocious enough to have poured over road maps with our mom, trying to figure out the distance using the provided scale. There was absolutely no way it was twenty minutes. Exasperation and cries of, “Miiiiiiiike! For real how long?” would come from the back of the car. But Mike was unflappable. It was twenty minutes. There was a philosophical argument that the trip was a series of twenty-minute increments, and that it was always twenty minutes to the next set of twenty minutes until there would be only the last twenty minutes remaining. The counter argument was that Mike could out annoy a couple of kids cooped up in the back of a minivan. 

Through the decades, we have waited twenty minutes for anything you could possibly wait for. If one of us asks how long for a given thing, there is a strong possibility of the answer coming in unison. It’s not uncommon to hear things like, “When are they coming? And don’t say twenty minutes!” Our automatic response to anything involving time was, is, and always will be, “twenty minutes”. 

It was never a funny joke on its own. The humor was always in seeing how long you could stick to your guns before a vein started popping out of the forehead of whomever you were antagonizing. There are moments of rejoicing when the answer truly is “twenty minutes”. We giggle if we have to set the microwave timer for twenty minutes. No matter how sincerely you say something is going to be twenty minutes, it is met with heavy skepticism in my house. 

Tonight, over thirty years after Mike decided a third of an hour was the base unit of time for our family, I overheard my parents in the kitchen. Mom was making “Mikey Surprise” for dinner. It’s a dish involving Fritos best described as “Thank God Mike met my mom when he did because my dude had been single for way too long”. It’s also delicious. Deferring to the recipe’s creator, she asked Mike a perfectly innocent question: “How long does it cook for?”. 

“Twenty minutes,” was, once again, his answer. 

My mom replied the only way she could at this point, “For real twenty minutes?” 

I found myself smiling in the other room as I listened in. Mom walked into that one, and even if it were true, Mike has earned the distrust. An innocuous unit of time has become part of the private language of our family. It’s a nothing phrase that unites us, drives us crazy, and makes us laugh. 

There is an entire lifetime in twenty minutes.

Guest post by my daughter – Amanda B. Moretto

BEAUTY IS IN THE EYE OF THE BEHOLDER … SO BEHOLD THIS!

I’ve added about a gazillion more photos to my FineArt site since this post first appeared, and would love to have you visit for a bit of diversion during these trying times!

Stern Words

I’m not just another (fill-in-the-blank) face!

I don’t always lock myself away, soaking my keyboard with the tears of a desperate writer. 

I peek at the outside world . . . occasionally.

And when I do, I like to bring my camera along.

Some of the results of my foray into the great wide world beyond my writer’s cave can be found here:

https://fineartamerica.com/profiles/1-linda-stern.html

If you can spare the time . . . take a look, and let me know what you think.

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I LOVE CLEANING DOOR KNOBS!

I am staying safe at home, because I am lucky enough to have one.

In order to stay safe, we’ve been advised to disinfect all hard surfaces in our homes…this includes door knobs and handles…kitchen cabinet handles, dresser handles, toilet flush handles, to name a few.

But, my favorite thing to be able to clean are door knobs.

Weird? Not at all. Stay with me on this…

Having more than one door knob confirms you have more than a front door to your home. It means you have multiple doors leading to multiple rooms! And this is the best gift we could have during this pandemic.

Consider: if each person in your family can spend a bit of time in separate rooms, you will probably survive staying home –  without doing permanent damage to each other physically, or mentally! Relationships will still be strong when the all-clear order comes.

More door knobs also means if someone in the house does become sick…there is a separate space where they can keep to themselves until they are healthy again…without the risk of spreading the virus.

And so, as I go about spreading the pungent odor of disinfectant throughout my home, I am grateful for all the door knobs. Each one is a blessing!

 

A LETTER FROM SANTA

Christmas snuck up on me this year, so I’m cheating with this reblog! Merry Christmas everyone, and a very healthy and happy 2020!

Stern Words

It’s a crazy-busy time of year, so I thought I’d share one of my yuletide favorites—it is a Letter from Santa!

I’m writing this note to inform you that

misfortune has taken away,

The things that I need for my visit…

My presents, my reindeer, my sleigh.

Now, I’m making my rounds on a donkey

who is old, and feeble, and slow,

So, if you don’t see me this Christmas…

You’ll know I’m out on my ass in the snow!”

Hope you all have a fantastic holiday!

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Why you should take signing and inscribing your books very seriously…

WHO KNEW? Now you do!

Ramblings from a Writer's Mind

event_image_2073But first, here are a few bits of book lore authors may not know.

By tradition and convention, authors should always sign their books on the title page, the page which has the author’s name printed on it, generally under the printed title of the book or nearer the foot of the same page.

If the author wishes to add an inscription, a message along with their signature, it should also go on the title page if it is very short, about a word or four in length. Longer inscriptions should be written on the half-title page, the page preceding the title page, or on the front endpaper, sometimes referred to as the flyleaf, if of a serious length.

An old tradition has the author put a line through their own printed name when they sign their name on the title page.

There are, by historical anecdote, two views of…

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AFTER I’M GONE…

Question:

Why do we wait until after someone dies to tell the world what we thought of them?

Another Question:

Why do we wait until someone is dead to express (to them) how we feel about them?

I think about these questions whenever someone of prominence passes away, and we hear all their former colleagues, friends and family members talking about what an amazing, kind, brilliant, etc. etc. person they were.

The death of a true American patriot, Elijah Cummings, this week, brings these questions to mind once again.

Lesson: 

Don’t wait.

Tell the world now.

Tell that person now.

Deathbed cartoon

 

—Deathbed cartoon credit: https://condenaststore.com/featured/here-he-is-folks-straight-from-his-deathbed-jack-ziegler.html?product=wood-print

 

 

 

ASKING FOR A FRIEND…

I suck at asking for favors, so…

Recently, during a meeting of my writing critique group, when I was asked if I had gotten input from my Beta Readers on my latest book (before self-publishing) — I said, “No.”

 

Gasps of disbelief rippled around the table.

I felt like a leper.

I could feel the writers nearby withdrawing to safer, more purified air.

 

“WHY?” poured from every pair of lips, as they glanced uncomfortably at each other, while offering suggested excuses for my being such a scourge on the writing community at large.

“What are you afraid of?” “Lots of people are willing to be Beta Readers!” One individual even offered to trade — “I’ll read yours if you read mine.” (Reminded me of days long gone by on the playground, with the little boy who lived down the block…but, I digress.)

 

Initially, they almost had me convinced that “yes” I was afraid for others to read my work. But, as the inquisition continued, I found my own voice, and told them:

 

“I think it’s an awful lot to ask of someone in this crazy-busy world we are living in, to spend many hours (if not, days) reading another person’s work. Thus, I have avoided this part of the process.”

 

The whole experience reminded me of a piece I wrote many years ago, about everyone wanting a piece of my pie/time —but, that’s a story for another day.

 

Dear Readers:  Please click on the comment button above, and tell me how you deal with asking for a chunk of other people’s time…I may be looking for Beta Readers for my next book, and could use your sage advice!

 

 

ANNIE MAE IS BACK IN TOWN!

Standing Ovation (The Mari Mort Theater Trilogy – Book Two) has finally made it’s debut!

Annie Mae Steinberg continues her adventures in Los Angeles in the year, 1900!

This, my latest offering, follows Mae’s first appearance in The Mari Mort Theater Trilogy- Book One:  Mae’s Revenge.

 

https://www.amazon.com/Maes-Revenge-Mari-Theater-Trilogy/dp/154707874X
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1081355034/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i3

I hope will enjoy both! And stay tuned for Book Three:

 Encore! Encore!

 

BARKING UP THE WRONG (FAMILY)TREE!

dog and trees revised

So…I grew up with the last name of Bennett (along with all my siblings.)

Since my sisters and I all married and took our new husband’s last names,  and my brothers would not be having children…I decided it was up to me to save the “Bennett” family name from extinction.

I gave both my children “Bennett” as their middle name. Brilliant – right?

Not even close!

Through extensive research on Ancestry.com for my first book: Bosses and Blackjacks, I discovered my paternal grandfather had changed his last name when he entered the Marines in the late 1800s.

David Steinberg became David Bennett.

Who knew? Obviously, not me!

So, my Ancestry.com research took a very sharp turn and my kids are preserving a false moniker!

(But, it does give them a funny story to tell their friends about their crazy mother and her obsession with ancestral connections!)

 

Question, Dear Readers:

Have any of you made such discoveries in your own family tree? Let me know in the comments section.