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Last Night The Integrative Life Center Launched A Noble Food Makeover: A Fantastic Time Was Had!

June 15, 2011

Hey y’all!
I’m jonesin’ for a break, whew – the beach is calling me and I can’t get there fast enough. We leave for Florida on Friday and I have not felt the excitement of going on vacation in a long time – usually I suffer from “Travel Anxiety”, meaning a few days before we leave I get all hooked into my world and feel the need to cancel – this time I’m counting the minutes to loading up the MTP.
Maybe it’s summer time in the city that is squeezing me or just all the scheduling that goes on every day around here. Even though the girls are in camp there is still a ton of organizing that goes down and I am desperate after the school year to escape structure and commitment – I wanna cook food, hang w/my family, finish up my book and loaf…. Just like when I was a little girl and my grandparents house offered an escape, I once again am running to their arms – I still need to be close to them, as I know that time is moving quickly and will soon move them on to their next experience.

My Grandma & Poppy

What a great way to wrap up my week, yesterday we held the Noble Food Makeover at The Integrative Life Center on Music Row. I wasn’t sure how it was going to go down and let me tell you Shorty it was fantastic!  Fred, Justice, Mary Alice & Jane Ellen and her wonderful tribe of youngin’s poured through the door, I’d had Bailey her 14 year old help me all afternoon in the kitchen prepping for the class, Bailey is a total sponge and because she runs the kitchen on their farm she is totally down with cooking REAL food. I’m telling y’all working with kids and & getting them to eat REAL food is easier than we think – all we have to do is educate them.
Not only did we pack the room but everyone that came out was 100% present – listening, wanting and ready to shift their relationship with food. There was no convincing, just hunger to live whole lives.  I felt so super supported as so many people that know of what I’ve been doing in North Nashville but had not yet been able come to previous events found their way to Music Row. If y’all remember reading my blog at Christmas time I wrote about a couple The Lewis’s, they were our Ranch Managers of the Tennessee Ranch as well as Lee’s family Ranch in Walden, Colorado – The Big Horn. When I met Mrs. Lewis she was suffering something fierce from Pancreatic Cancer, she’d filled the table at the ranch Christmas party with stories of my mother in law as a younger woman and all the adventures of a ranch life together. I felt this huge need to support Mrs. Lewis as she had supported my mother in law; it was my honor calling me to the table – or kitchen. I told her what I do, cook meals that support the body and aid in healing. We agreed that after the holidays I would begin to send food to her via Lee on the days he worked out on the ranch. Four weeks later, just as the holiday rush passed Mrs. Lewis died. I was never able to support her in the way I had wished.

D. Lewis (The daughter of Mrs. Lewis)

A Mother & A Daughter: Taking a new road.

Last night her daughter showed up, it was fantastic – I was moved beyond belief. How cool? There is more, a mother and her 14 yr old daughter made their way into town from out near the ranch. She has Crohns disease and has been seriously ill. Our foreman from the cattle company sent her to me. As I sat with her and her daughter afterwards we talked about how scary it is for the children of a sick parent – I felt my momma and remembered being the daughter of an ill parent, my gaze shifted and I remembered being the momma too, I have sat in both seats. I explained that shifting our relationship with food is the most empowering thing we can do for ourselves and children, getting well and taking care of our health is not just about “us”, but also our family members – what a great message to pass on to our children, one that says, “I value my life, my health and I am not addicted to crap, and I am devoted to parenting and part of parenting is setting a healthy table of food for my family.” Showing our kids that we DON’T KNOW and are willing to still learn something new is a fantastic, fantastic, fantastic MIRROR!
Seeing all these folks show up from out by the ranch I heard God, I’m going to bring the Noble Food Makeover to our cookhouse on the ranch. Rural areas are surprisingly food deserts too, the markets out there lack in fresh whole foods and most folks have also lost a relationship with what to do with beans, grains and veggies – but they too want to know, as our health across this wealthy country is falling to pieces. So peep it, in August the Noble Food Makeover will be offered in 3 different parts of the city!
This morning I received an email from a woman who has been suffering from Crohns disease for many years, her gastroenterologist sent her to my website and saying that I might have some dietary tips! Y’all don’t know this but 2.5 years ago I couldn’t find a doctor anywhere to even listen to the idea that food could influence my health condition. God is not just talking to me but to other people and we are all opening new doorways in our minds.
Thanks y’all for showing up and for holding a candle to my vision whether you are far away or chopping veggies alongside of me, believing in what I’m doing is fuel for the light that guides Mee.

 

Nobility In Nashville: Cooking Classes for Kids & Adults

March 8, 2011

A cooking class with Mee isn’t just how to prepare the food but why, and this past Thursday I was invited to cook for a group of women.  As you all know my life is about finding out what I don’t know and learning it.  Cooking for groups of people other than friends and family is something I’m learning to do, so when opportunities appear I’m sure to take them. I’d first met Judy the host of the party and class through a dear friend of mine, her husband is a gastroenterologist and a year ago we’d spent one evening at a cocktail party chatting non stop about the digestive track and of course my favorite subject POOP!  Yep, I’m down right obsessed as we all should be with what our poop is looking like, how it comes out and of course how often.  I chatted Judy’s husband up about my health and diet, which I had changed to an ANCESTRAL path – one with NOTHING fake in it and full of known foods that support the immune system.  He told me that what I was doing was great and it’d be wonderful if more folks would do the same, one to prevent illness and two to assist in their healing processes.  He said the problem is that most folks DON’T WANNA CHANGE” and therefore want to take a pill or have an operation so that they can keep eating their fake foods. I learned a lot from him that night and mainly I walked away feeling good about my path and my poop – ’cause according to the poop doctors I got gorgeous movements happening & good looking Pooh is a sure sign that all is well in ones body. What does a gorgeous movement look like you ask?  Long, connected, round, log like, brown not black or light yellow and comes out with ease – at least once a day. OK, back to the cooking class…Judy attended my USN cooking class I taught in February and wanted to find a way to spread the news about the Noble Food Makeover & encourage her friends to shift their relationships with food.  Her close friend is moving away and this was a perfect opportunity to introduce meals that heal, as she is open to change. The kitchen quickly filled up with amazing women, highly educated and interested in what and how to support their bodies in simple ways.  You see the food I cook is simple, as it should be so that our bodies are not burdened with the complication of processed foods with additives that we can’t pronounce and the body can’t identify.  I was completely blown away by Judy’s kitchen – not only the physical beauty but what she filled her pantry and fridge with – she has shifted and is doing it, cooking whole ancestral foods!  She had everything I needed, this is a grand compliment.

I’d struggled to connect to folks here in Nashville my first year, those days feel far away as I am totally in awe of how many wonderful people I am connecting with and Judy’s dinner party left me glowing with the level of fabulous gals that inhabit this fine city.

As I’ve written before about my life that I have lived in a broad range of social classes, giving me a larger perspective on life and how we navigate it I am still moving between the worlds.  Cooking for the private classes located in close proximity to the freshest whole foods available in the city to teaching in what is known as the cities food desert I am able to once again grasp a complete picture of just what is going on with our food relationships.  You see there may be neighborhood differences, economic gaps, color and ethnic demographics; what spins me is that we all have a common thread, we want to feel well, we want to prepare food that has purpose and can support our lives, we also want to take better care of our families and very few of us have any idea what foods heal and support us.

Of course we don’t know what to eat since everything is first approached from a weight loss point of view – Calories, sugar & fat. Food should have very little to do with vanity and everything to do with health and the ability to feel well enough to participate in our lives. What we should be asking is WHAT’S IN IT – and if it’s hard to read or pronounce how can our bodies identify it? We are all coming back to the table, an old school table that is.

I totally understand the historical road that led us away from the family garden and a functioning kitchen. In the 1950’s processed food was introduced and milk formula was available to infants – nursing your baby was seen as low class. When I first told my mother in law of my pregnancy she said “I do hope you get that baby some nice formula”, I told her I was going to breastfeed, you would have thought I told her I cleaned toilets at the Winn Dixie for a living, she explained to me that in her day nice women of a certain class did not nurse their children. Processed foods gradually found their way to the table, they were expensive and seen as luxury items to the wealthy and “treats” to the middle; poor folks ate real food from their gardens. By the 1970’s the great family divide was on and divorce became a common part of our culture, women went to work and cooking was about cheap and quick.  Being a child of this exact era I understand what happened, I watched as more and more families bought processed pre- cooked foods – however in the 80’s they were still too expensive for our family so my momma cooked basic foods and canned veggies.  By the 1990’s processed food prices went down, junk food went down and soda became cheaper than water.  The kids that were raised by working mommas in the 80’s or mommas who cooked convenience foods are now women and mommas themselves – they NEVER learned to cook, as there was no teacher.  Home economics classes are also a thing of the past no longer available as again we have seen spending time in our kitchens as wasteful.  I cannot tell you how many stay at home momma’s I know and have met that don’t cook complete meals where NOTHING comes from a package. I too had bought into this thinking and cooking, preparing food that was half prepared by a factory somewhere, but with the end of cheap oil, a shattered economy and preventative illnesses on the rise we must take our kitchens back. Saturday I met up with Pastor Fuzz and a handful of gals from Corinthian Baptist Church and a woman Amy, that I met at the Integrative Life Center – she was one of the people that I wrote about that came towards me with their arms out wanting to participate. Well she did and the 7 of us sorted through boxes of donated items, cleaning out the kitchen and riding it of FAKE foods.  There was a moment where the project felt way to big and way impossible, one of the women questioned it all and asked just who I thought was going to really do this? She asked, “Are you going to get up every Sunday and cook for these people here?”  I then explained that “It might be the 5 of us that shows up every week, that it may be tough but if we can do it we’ll be a mirror for the rest of the congregation and the entire city, so all we gotta do is pull it all up close to our face and focus on one task at a time – today’s task is cleaning up this kitchen and getting it functional enough so that I can teach tomorrow.” Sunday morning I entered the church plugged in my hot plate (we don’t have a working stove yet) ready to teach 21 kids how to make coconut Oatmeal w/kombu seaweed (click for recipe). There was a full film crew making a documentary on the food and health crisis, they are working with Restoring Nashville and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The cooking class went to so well, the kids loved it and ate every drop – do you know that not one of them had eaten oatmeal not poured from an instant envelope, even Pastor Fuzz said he’d not eaten oatmeal in it’s whole form but once since his childhood. We didn’t have enough bowls so we used coffee cups and of course we were way short on spoons so we used forks and as soon as one child was done we washed their cup and utensil for the next.  We’ve only got a few glasses but I’m sure the universe will provide and more folks will continue to donate kitchen items, I just keep thinking if we build it and do this it will all come.

I had some moments on Sunday, listening to the choir sing brings up such amazing feelings of gratitude for being in their presence and then I was moved to tears as one of the little girls 8 years old read a letter she wrote to Michelle Obama for the film crew, she invited Mrs. Obama to be a guest at Corinthian Baptist church so that she could share The Noble Food Makeover.. My heart filled with joy and pride, I remembered climbing the stairs of the Basilica of Guadalupe just 2 years ago, Senora Gina holding my hand, each step a struggle.  I bowed down before the Tilma and asked for a miracle – to get well.  I pledged my word to do God’s work; I had no idea what that work would be and here I am teaching about real soul food, that comes from the earth and as I like to believe God.

Nashville Mobile Market & Princess Know It all!

February 9, 2011

I grew up in a food desert in a poor African American neighborhood in Oberlin, OH, which is shocking to most because Oberlin is known for its incredibly conscious class of people.  I was the daughter of a single mother who suffered a digestive disease, causing her to spend many  days in the Cleveland Clinic.  At 6 years old, my 9-year-old sister and I were in charge of managing the food stamps and making our way to the closest market – a convenience store that rarely stocked fresh produce. At our young age, we didn’t know what to do with the little veggies and grains that were available.  Of course we purchased only what we knew how to cook, white bread, chipped ham, mayonnaise, milk & cereal.

Eventually we changed locations after my mother went back to school, got a better job and bought her first house.  However the market was still a ways away and my sister and I remained in charge of the kitchen when our momma was not well; this meant walking through the cold Ohio tundra like winters in search of groceries.

One of the greatest gifts I’ve been given in life is to have lived in so many different social classes, from poor, to middle class, college student, Hollywood hip chic as a wanna be actress living the chic life w/ a diamond dealer and eating in the best restaurants in the world, to marrying into a truly southern family dynasty that has it’s roots in cattle and grocery stores.  I’m now a rancher’s wife and a well-rounded food gal myself.  All of these different experiences have given me an aerial point of view when it comes to what life is like in America’s kitchens.

The social divides within society have been the obvious, money, education & stuff, however today that divide is found on the dining room table and in the pantry.  The wealthiest people and the poorest share something in common – they eat processed unhealthy foods, and the majority of folks wealthy & poor no longer have a clue what to do with whole grains, beans & most fresh produce. If it doesn’t come in a box & have a picture on it then we are lost.

One thing that I know is processed food is processed food, regardless of brand name, being labeled organic, or generic – crap is crap and the cheapness is that it lacks the natural freshness, vitamins & fiber that our bodies need.

FOOD DESERTS ARE NOT JUST LOCATED IN POORER NEIGHBORHOODS BUT IN THE AVERAGE AMERICAN KITCHEN.

Some folks live in a food desert and others have a whole foods market down the road and yet still most of us don’t know what to do with what is available.

I was definitely one of these people, most of the meals I prepared in the past were at least HALF processed, and maybe I added some veggies or meat.  Had I not gotten super sick I probably wouldn’t have learned what I learned; now I’m cooking meals to prevent illness in my kids.

But have no fear ‘cause life is changing and if I have my way PKIA will deliver nobility via a cooking class every where I go.

This past weekend was packed with greatness I taught a USN evening cooking class and met a bunch of great women all well educated and attempting to do their best to make healthy food choices for themselves as well as their families. Just like the rest of us they are swarmed and torn with WHAT is healthy and what is not.  Here is my rule if it’s fresh, low in sugar, found in it’s complete form not shipped off to a factory before arriving on your table it’s healthy.

I prepared a kid friendly meal of Miso soup with daikon greens & steamed tofu, millet mash with a yummy kuzu gravy – that was slightly watery – oops, collard greens w/olive oil & garlic, Israeli “schnitzel” tofu wrapping it all up with an apple kuzu drink for desert.  These folks loved it and I felt the sweetness of success, as I’ve taken the basics of macrobiotic cooking and ancestral simple foods and created meals that heal.

On Saturday I met with Ravi Patel, the founder and creator of Nashville’s Mobile Market – his goal is to bring food into food deserts.  This past Saturday he did just that.

First, I gotta give you the run down on what a MOBILE MARKET is, it’s a giant trailer that has been turned into a full on market packed with mainly fresh veggies and some grains like brown rice.  The city of Nashville has been attempting to bring better grocery stores into the city’s food deserts but we all know how difficult a process this can be and why would a pricey market want to enter a poor neighborhood where most people can’t afford to shop.  Ravi Patel decided to not wait and instead created the Mobile Market that comes to the all food deserts and sells fresh produce at a greatly lower price.  By the way ANYONE can drive to where ever the Mobile Market is and shop it!

*FINALLY we are catching up to third world countries where this is how most folks get their produce and foods, via the back of a truck.

This past Saturday he was at the Edge Hill Projects and folks were shopping. I was like a Chihuahua as I moved through the Mobile Market, ‘cause my main goal has been how to bring the food to the neighborhood surrounding Corinthian Baptist Church where the Noble Food Makeover is taking place, I practically jumped on Ravi Patel when he said he would not only bring his mobile Market to my Open House Event on the 26th of Feb. but, that he would work with me to bring the food truck to Corinthian Baptist Church on the days I taught cooking classes – what does this mean?  It means that the neighborhood surrounding Corinthian Baptist Church will no longer be a FOOD DESERT but instead be a FOOD OASIS!

Yahoo, my plan is to eventually work with this Mobile Market to enter all the food deserts and teach classes with what they have on the truck that day.

Saturday night I climbed into bed exhausted and inspired, the gals from the USN cooking class encouraged me to keep my feet moving by being so open and kind, the Mobile Market & Ravi Patel were a message that THIS IS HAPPENING….I closed my eyes and drifted off to sleep knowing that soon Nashville will be connected by A MEAL THAT HEALS….

RESILIENCE!

October 12, 2010

We are a houseguest house, we’ve got 2 guest rooms and we keep ‘em full.   This past week Dr. Joan Borysenko came to stay.

When I first met her years ago, I sat across from her at dinner. Bella was just a tiny baby and I was a new young mom asking every question I could regarding health and wellness – after all I was now making choices for another humans life.

I’ll never forget this particular encounter, you see, being married to Lee McCormick has made many an interesting dinner. Lee draws to him some of the most amazing thinkers in the health in wellness world and as a result I have made some pretty fabulous friends.

What I didn’t know when I met Dr. Joan Borysenko was that she was going to share a piece of information with me that in my future I would cling to, she was laying the groundwork for where life was fixn’ to take me.  You see she is one of the only Harvard Cellular Biologist that has studied Cancer & HIV cells and the effect of ones faith upon these cells. What she learned is that Cancer is 80% environmental – meaning food, water, air, earth.  The rest is a combination of emotions & genes.  She has proven that where we place our faith determines the direction of our life and our illnesses.  Folks that “believed” deeply in their wellness found ease and the diseased cells lessened.

When I was faced with a 50% chance of having intestinal cancer I had to walk it out “shorty” and dance with me, figuring out just where I was gonna place my faith, deciding just who I was gonna be and this brings me to the piece that Dr. Joan Borysenko brought to my dinner table again this week. Joan came into town to speak on behalf of Vanderbilt University, The Ranch, and Integrative Life Centers (Lee’s new project) at The Belcourt Theater. As I sat in the audience I watched Joan (she is a fantastic story teller) I felt as if I was watching a member of my own family shine. If I love you, I love you like family – to me there is no point in dividing up the way I care for those in my life.

Resilience – that’s what she/we talked about for 4 days, one of her recent books (she has written 15) “It’s Not the End of the World: Developing Resilience in Times of Change”, she shares her point of view on who is resilient and what makes us resilient, according to Joan 50% of our resilience is inherited/learned the other 50% is CHOICE – that’s right y’all we get to choose who we become.  Like most folks I wanted to know if I was resilient, so I looked into my life and took the test:

1.)  Do I face things head on – NO ROSE colored glasses? YES

2.)  Do I find hidden meanings in my experience – good or bad? Yes

3.)  Do I turn against myself when things go bad?

Joan told a very funny story of how she and her kids were stranded in a boat and she turned on herself.  I answered NO I’m not like that and then I remembered– OK well maybe for a minute, EVERYDAY!  That’s right at least once a day I go against myself with the same inner conversation “What am I doing? Can I really write books, will they really like the food I’m preparing, do I actually KNOW anything and the worst – am I really well?”  I always let the list run and then I cut it off kicking those crazy thoughts to da’curb – however non- resilient folks stay there in the crazy thoughts and can’t get out of their own way.

4.)  Can I improvise?  Hell yeah shorty, whatcha’ think this website is all about? Lol…

5.)  Do I Learn something from the experience and take it out into the world – participating with life? I’m gonna have to say yes again.

So, there I was taking the am I resilient test and feeling good about it, then I had a thought how can I teach this to my girls?  Yeah they will have 50/50 shot at inheriting but what can I do?  According to Joan, teach ‘em to complete – yep that’s right folks resilient folks are masters at completion.  They start and finish everything.

The emotional piece for me this week with Joan was hearing once again that the direction of my faith is determined with where I place it – meaning do I see myself getting well?  Do I see my cells as healthy?  And is my opinion of me what really matters?

I was tested, my blood pressure dropped REALLY low and so I went to see a new Doc, immediately they looked at my records and not me the person in front of them – Mee healthy, glowing, upbeat, pain free and 20lbs heavier than I was 1 year ago.  They read my old diagnosis and then projected onto me their opinion “ I will never be really well.”  Hmmm, this got me spinning – mind you they’d not done ANY blood work only taken my blood pressure.

I knew what I had to do, get right with me inside again – ‘cause you see minus low blood pressure I feel really, really good. Part of being a resilient human is being mindful of others projections upon us.  That Doc has no idea the walk I’ve been walkin’ and in her mind disease is a dinner guest that never leaves, but in my faith I’m showing this “Over Stayed It’s Welcome Guest” to the door.

As I dropped Joan at the airport I hugged her goodbye, my eyes welled up with tears and I climbed back on my horse again ready to ride.  Life is amazing; a mirror always appears when I’m ready to really see Mee and this week a message came loud and clear; See my own resilience.

Role Models…

July 3, 2009

I’m gonna make this a fast one..
We made it to Florida!
First stop, PALM BEACH!!!
Gosh it felt so good to arrive! The blue-green water of South Florida and the flavor of Miami really fueled that part of me that loves the “get down” part of life!!!
I could definitely live in Palm Beach/Miami!!!
I decided this time I was not going to mess around and pack my own food! Our first stop: Whole Foods. I got my Miso supplies together, my ume boshi plum tea and healthy snacks…not forgetting about “Hi I Hold On To Things”, I bought a really cool little device. It looks like a teakettle but you can remove the lid and use it as a pot to for boiling. It’s an all-in-one hot plate/pot! I got to mixing up my necessities right away, and yes, I’ve been eating out a bit too. Like I was saying, I did not want my own “Hi I Hold On To Things” to run the show so I kept trying to find balance in the world and avoid living in guilty fear of slipping backwards because I ate out. I’m actually really psyched ’cause now I know what is good fo’ ya and what is not…
The best part is that I’m learning to calm myself. I used to think that I could only relax via yoga or a mediation session, but this is not true. Ginny Harper has got me breathing and focusing and let me tell you, it’s SO COOL!!!! Let me tell ya how to do it: I take a breath just deep enough into my belly to bring the air in and then let it out. I’ve even got Lola and Bella doing it! And no, we aren’t some freaky folks making a scene- we are just learning to relax ourselves, something that we aren’t taught to do.
After 4 days in Palm Beach we drove to Orlando and spent two days with my Poppy and Grandma. Poppy just finished Chemo and is really doing well. I love that man so much; the two of them are still great role models for me.
They moved to Florida about 15 years ago when Poppy retired from a steel mill. He and Grandma wanted to escape the brutal winters of the Northeast. My husband calls the place they landed: “A Yankee Trailer Park for Retirees”.
They live in the cutest little house/trailer. They ride their bikes everywhere, swim at the club and now Poppy is rolling a golf cart around. They have friends and activities everyday and a life that matches who they are inside – comfortable.
My Poppy attends mass EVERY morning.
They live within their means: rent for the land is $250 per month, their car is paid off, and their other bills, such as gas & electric, are both under $100 bones a month. They are happy.
Whenever I visit them I am reminded of simplicity: the power of one’s faith that if you believe your life is good enough, then it is…hmmm…
Of course, they were shocked to see me so thin (why so thin- this makes the reader wonder what happened- is this intentional?) , but Lee told them “She used to be in pain 28 out of 30 days, now she is pain free 28 days out of 30. It’s working…”
Grandma was great; she sat in Chemo with Poppy for months and the entire time she was wondering, “Why are we all so sick?”
She was asking questions!
She then showed off her new frying pans – all Eco friendly and healthy!
She went on to tell me that many years ago, in 1953, she bought her current set of stainless steel pots and pans after realizing that the thin aluminum was leaking into her food! (I’m confused about this sentence- which set is the current one? Which one was leaking? Hard to rework the sentence b/c I’m not sure what’s going on)
She said “Those pots were expensive, but I valued our health over anything else. Folks gotta start reorganizing where they place their values.”
Hmmmm..so that’s who I come from? Nice…..
I didn’t want to leave them nor did I want to leave the memory of them. All my life my grandparents hugged and kissed on us and they still do. I climbed into our rented red mini-van and headed North to Jacksonville.

It’s an extremely different world that Lee and I come from.
You see, Lee comes from one of the oldest and, at one time, most powerful families in the South. In fact, he really comes from a bit of a dynasty!
The house is the spitting image of Tara from Gone With The Wind… a home like this doesn’t exist many places anymore. It is decorated with the most beautiful and tasteful items of the Antebellum style, and it sits on the St. Johns River with Spanish Moss draping everything. There is a staff of workers that tend to every specific detail, from the lady who comes only to dust and the other who only waters the plants. There is a cook in the kitchen cooking up some old school food on a daily basis – fried chicken, ham, sweet potatoes, greens, biscuits and there is always a beautiful cake frosted and ready to be sliced.
Idora has been working for Lee’s mother for over 50 years; she’s now close to 95 years old. I’ll never forget the first time I met her: I walked into the kitchen and she was standing at the sink washing and humming. I asked her, “Doe what are you singing?” She responded, “Sugar Lump this is an old slave hymn.”
I was shocked!
Then she schooled me on where she came from “I was born on a Plantation in Georgia. My daddy was a share cropper and my granny was a slave in her time.” Doe is really someone from another world and her stories can hold you captive for hours…I can’t bother you with all of them but in my second book I really uncover the dealio’.
My girls call her Grandma Doe. They don’t know that she’s not their grandma- after all she raised Lee!
Now she sits in the kitchen all day sleeping in her rocker and overseeing the house.

I cooked my “food” today: black-eyed pea Croquettes, brown rice and veggies and Miso soup. I watched her eyeing me while I worked and then she ate it! I thought she might not like it, but she LOVED it! Part of the reason I cooked such a big meal was for the staff. Wanda, the current house cook, had breast cancer and suffers from the radiation. Diane, one of Ms. Pauline’s attendants, (Ms.Pauline is my mother in law) has arthritis & Fibromyalgia (also and autoimmune disease) and her daughter has Crohn’s Disease!

STOP: the kids are getting off of the elevator. They’ve been swimming and I know any second the “Momma help me’s” are coming.

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