Raj in the California atmosphere.

The highlight of our Thanksgiving season was a visit from Kate and family, including that baby I met back in January, who came from India this month for various family get-togethers and his baptism. Glory to God!

He and Kate and Tom did land first in Colorado to meet our newly relocated clan family, a few days after I’d come back here. So I wasn’t present when Raj encountered snow.

Two days after my return, my part of the state was inundated with smoke and ash from the Butte County Camp Fire far to the north, and the day of Raj’s baptism far to the south I was not physically present. My friend and I were here in what looked for a few days like a thrift store, organizing donations to the fire victims. Myriah did not lose her house, but she did certainly lose her home.

As soon as Myriah drove on to theĀ  disaster area with lots of sweaters and socks and new coats, the Glad Group began trickling in, starting with Pearl’s family from Wisconsin and San Diego, and continuing with Raj and his parents, then Pippin’s people from northern California. Everyone wanted to meet Raj! And of course, to see his parents whom they’d been missing for a year and a half.

Until Wednesday, the smoky and cold air had continued to hang over our county oppressively. Then RAIN, glorious and cleansing, fell from the skies, and overnight the Air Quality Index fell from the 160’s (similar to what I experienced in Mumbai last winter) to below 20. All day Pearl and I baked pies, and yams in orange sauce, and prepped the turkey dressing. With the rain came milder temperatures overall, so we had to leave the door and windows open at times to vent all the oven and stovetop heat, and for two days we had the comforting background music of steady pattering and drumming. Pearl took lambs’ ears and dodonea from my garden to add to spider mums from Costco and created table decorations for the feast.

I had braved the smoke one day, wanting so much to get Pippin apples for pies, and drove a half hour to our favorite apple ranch where they still had stock of four varieties. I brought home Pippins, Romes, and Pink Ladies. It is still a sadly nostalgic thing for me to go there alone, but I am trying to embrace the joy of having such a rare and wonderful farm to go to, where I can find two or three dozen different varieties of apples over the course of the season. It makes me want to embrace and cherish apples more actively, too!

I looked and looked online to find a recipe for pumpkin-chocolate-chip muffins, the hankering for which had come over me when thinking of how to get ready for my crowd. I discovered just in time that I had my own “best” recipe right here on my blog. It made a generous batch, enough for everyone to enjoy while waiting for the primary offerings of the feast.

Fava beans

When the rain stopped briefly we looked at the newly-washed and radiant garden,Ā  and breathed in those scents that are like an autumn feast in themselves. A whole flock of bluebirds visited the fountain for baths and we wondered if they were washing off soot. My fava beans that sprouted when I was in Colorado are doing great. I cut a butternut squash down from the trellis to roast for soup, and Ivy found giant fruits on the arbutus (Strawberry Tree).

After everyone had arrived, the “usual” fun began. This time, I think the unique circumstances of my recent sojourn in Colorado, followed by the fire and smoke, followed by the rain that kept me from walking, all contributed to lack of sleep, so that I felt alternately flat and in a hole — maybe in a flat-bottomed hole? — for days. But I did manage to take a few pictures, so now in recovery I have the vision to see them as a cohesive expression of a moment in our Glad cultural history.

The Usual included wrestling and snuggling and staying-up-too-late-talking with brothers, daughters, aunts and uncles, and all the assorted kinfolk that one only sees once or twice a year anymore. Oh, it is hard being scattered over the continent and globe!

I didn’t have it in me to go with everyone to San Francisco, the aquarium etc. at the Academy of Sciences on Saturday, and to Fort Point, so the smiling picture of Raj I also stole. But Sunday after church Kate’s and Pippin’s families and I did go to the redwoods! It was a dreamy time to go, almost winter and after several steady downpours had removed every trace of dust from the big trees, and both Pippin and the Professor helped me in my ongoing botanical studies.

Lichen fruticose hanging from California Bay Laurel (Umbellularia)
Coast redwood needles – shorter/compact grow higher on tree

I learned that the lichens that hang from the trees like tresses are lichen fruticose, and that the needles in the tops of the coast redwoods (Sequoia sempervirens) resemble those of their cousins the giant redwoods (Sequoiadendron giganteum) that grow naturally in the Sierra Nevada. Big leaf maple and hazelnut trees made splashes of light and color in the groves that were dark in midday, the close canopy blocking the light from way up there. We made little impact on the deep quiet of the woods, strolling on the duffy paths — but that atmosphere was broken by a big crash and boom, the sound of a tree falling somewhere in the park. If everything hadn’t been thoroughly wet, we’d surely have seen some dust raised by that event.

When Raj was carried into my house last week and met the third or fourth new crowd of relatives in a fortnight, he did respond to my face and voice with a sweet smile. Perhaps the FaceTime sessions truly did help him to remember my voice, adding to whatever deeper memories were embedded from those newborn lullaby sessions with me nine months ago.

Now Pearl’s and Pippin’s families have departed, but Tom, Kate, and Baby Raj will be with me for a few more special days. A good rest and a forest walk have perked me up quite a bit, so I have hope of making the most of the rest of this week and entering into the joyful work and celebrations ahead.

I will close with a few lines [surprised to see that out of all the many stanzas we used, I chose the same lines three years ago to share here] from the “Akathist of Thanksgiving” that we read together on Thanksgiving evening, and which express my mood right now:

I was born a weak, defenseless child,
but Thine angel spread his wings over my cradle to defend me.
From birth until now Thy love has illumined my path,
and has wondrously guided me towards the light of eternity;
from birth until now the generous gifts of Thy providence
have been marvelously showered upon me.
I give Thee thanks, with all who have come to know Thee,
who call upon Thy name.

Thou hast brought me into life as into an enchanted paradise.
We have seen the sky like a chalice of deepest blue,
where in the azure heights the birds are singing.
We have listened to the soothing murmur of the forest
and the melodious music of the streams.
We have tasted fruit of vine and the sweet-scented honey.
We can live very well on Thine earth.
It is a pleasure to be Thy guest.

13 thoughts on “Raj in the California atmosphere.

  1. Such a happy family time. I went back a few times just to look at the photo of Raj and his adorable smile.

    So thankful that you finally got rain and the air quality improved.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. It is lovely to see the California I remember and love. Of course the news shows all sensational wide spread destruction. I keep praying the day will come soon when the real news is on each channel. Till then I have your wonderful blog and fabulous photography giving me the true picture. Thank you, Dear Heart. Love to the Glad Family.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Gretchen, I just got through looking over the recommended list of new memoirs from our Nashville independent bookstore’s blog and then came here. I must say that I would buy your memoir in a flash if it were available because just reading this post is my favorite kind of writing. I admit that I love memoir because I love reading about the daily life of families and no one does it better than you. I think I’m even beginning to get all your family names straightened out. (I read almost every one but am not great at always leaving comments.)

    Little Raj’s face is filled with joy! And I’m sure yours is too when you look at him, even if you did feel as if you were in a flat hole sometimes. I hate that feeling when family is here because those days are what I treasure but I often don’t sleep well then–too much excitement, maybe? I enjoy seeing all the photos, wrestling and snugging included! I went to your muffin recipe and printed it out and will put it in my Fall notebook for next year, on to Christmas baking now.

    Too long a comment but I have to add: do you have any idea how amazing it is to read that Sunday after church you went to the redwood woods? Just dropped in to walk under the redwoods after church? That’s a vacation trip people plan for and yet you just go after church! Pretty fabulous, my friend. And almost as unreal as we in the east feel as we’ve watched the unbelievable news footage from California recently. I am glad that your friend Myriah did not lose her house and I’ve been in shock that so many many families have lost theirs.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I was so happy knowing you had a full house this Thanksgiving. I love seeing all of those sweet faces and all of the things you managed to do. I felt flat when I got back and seeing all of the smoke as we drove in from the ridge. It just made me depressed and not being able to walk just made it so much worse. Not to mention those poor people now without homes.

    I thought and thought about your friend. I am so glad she didn’t lose her house.

    I am so thankful for the rain though. It helps to go outside now and smell fall.

    Thank you so much for sharing. I loved seeing the Raj.

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Sounds like a wonderful time with much of your dear family. I’m so happy that your family from afar was able to come, and you had more time with that precious grandbaby. I know your heart is full. The joy of having them there so briefly nearly hurts, and I always find myself saying, “They are here now, this moment,” as if trying to capture it in my hand and not let it pass.

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