Summer, Summer, Summertime…

Hello World!

As summertime officially kicked off last week, I have to pay homage to my absolute favorite season of the year!

Why do I love this season? Steamy weather, long days, flirty clothes, exotic vacays, fun parties and on and on…

I also find it sooo much easier to explore the A in the summer…In the winter time, I have a tendency to hibernate and watch TV and spend hours browsing on my computer (particularly FB)…Although I know I can bundle up and still hit the streets in the winter, something about being out in the cold weather for any amount of time is just unappealing…

But now that it is summer again, I plan to hang out on the weekends and sometimes even on week nights (such a departure from my ’20s when hanging out on a “school night” wadn’t nothin’…)

First of all, I plan to head to North Georgia for a zipline tour…I first explored  ziplining in Costa Rica (Check out my How page for a pic…)…I met, presumably, one of the owners of the North Georgia Canopy Tours last week and he handed me a brochure. He told me the tour was based on his own experience  in Costa Rica. Although it was scary to zip high above the trees in a Costa Rican rain forest, it was a thrill I must experience again!

Since I got my first massage in Puerto Rico, I try to schedule massages from time to time. As a part of my gift bag given to me for speaking at the Annual Christian Women’s Retreat, I received a gift card for Massage Envy! So I plan to schedule my appointment very soon…

I subscribe to  Livingsocial.com where you can get deals for all sorts of fun activities in the A, and if you go to the Web site right now, you can buy a tw0-hour sushi making class for $45! Sushi is soo yummy! Publix actually has excellent sushi!

I also think summertime is the perfect time to get fit…Since the days are so much longer in the summer, you have no excuse to not work out…you can work out before you go to work or after you come home and still be in before nightfall…so don’t trip!

Two of my fellow fitness instructors have created the M.A.F.I.A. Boot Camp! Makeba and Jameelah are wonderful instructors and will get your behind in shape fast! Jameelah is so bad that she can work you out and be eight months pregnant at the same time! I’m not playin’…And neither is she…

Although I’m still a baller on a budget, I do plan to replenish my wardrobe this summer…At long last, I will stop by So Very English! Boutique in College Park!  This boutique is owned by my new friend Nicole English…If her store is anything like her personality, it will be fabulous! Check Nicole out on this Web site! Nicole also has a YouTube channel. Her commentary is hilarious! She refers to herself as a “Sistah Revolutionary with a Gucci – because no matter the fight or the struggle, you still need to look good”… Okay…

Of course, I plan to explore outside of the A as well this summer, but if you can’t have fun in the city where you live, what’s the point of being there…

So what are your summer plans? By the way, I will also post about my summer book reading list in the next couple of weeks…Summer reading is a must…particularly when you are on the beach…

Of course, everyone has a to have a soundtrack for the summer…I’m very much uninspired by what is called music on popular radio stations nowadays so I have to think back to summers past…Obviously Will Smith’s “Summertime” gets you in the summer mood as demonstrated by the title of this post…

Since Will Smith’s son Jaden may have the blockbuster for the summer (that family is soo paid)with the remake of “The Karate Kid,” I have to mention “Cruel Summer” from the soundtrack of the original “The Karate Kid!” I love Bananarama!

Color Him Father, Color Him Love

an old school passport photo of my dad...

an old school passport photo of my dad...

Hello World!!!  (Note: I originally posted this last year, but since I love this post, I thought it would be okay to post again. Happy Father’s Day! )

Happy Father’s Day to all of the fathers out there!!!  In my Mother’s Day post, I mentioned that my mother is the heart of my family, but I am unquestionably a daddy’s girl!  I can think of all sorts of sweet childhood memories of my dad. First of all, my daddy is the ultimate Renaissance man. When my brother and I were young children, he would take us for long walks in the woods. We would feel the bark of the trees,  gaze into the sky and listen to the sounds of what we hoped were far away animals. Sometimes, he would walk ahead of us and we would hear him pronouncing different words over and over again. Diction is very important to my scholarly daddy.

On Saturday mornings, back in the day, I swayed to the old school reggae music my father played as he washed his car. Later in the day, he would wash my huge afro before sending me to my mother for her to plait it. Sometimes, we would go to arts festivals at Piedmont Park. At night, my father read Disney books to us before we went to sleep. I credit my father for awakening my desire to be a writer. I remember when my mother was pregnant with my youngest brother David, she had to go into the hospital for several months. She got pregnant with him when she was 40 years old so it was considered a high risk pregnancy. At any rate, the summer before my brother was born in October, my daddy was responsible for making  lunch for my brother Delvall and me.  Thankfully, the women at the church made our dinners. (My father has been the pastor at Central Christian Church for nearly 30 years – since I was six years old.) Anyway, my father, who can’t cook, boiled hot dogs and toasted buns almost every day for our lunch during that summer. I couldn’t even look at a hot dog without feeling sick for years after that summer…

My father has never been afraid to show his faith in public which was the source of utter embarassment to my brothers and me.  Whenever we would go out to restaurants to eat, the three of us would start to cringe as he asked us to bow our heads to pray. And then my father’s deep voice made more obtrusive by his Jamaican accent made us want to hide under the table. I used to get into a lot of fights with the neighborhood kids when I was a little girl. I think they used to pick on me because I went to a private school instead of the elementary school in the neighborhood. I think it was named Kathleen Mitchell Elementary School…Anyway, I may have been small but I had a mighty mouth, and I “wrote checks with my mouth that my actions couldn’t cash.” When my father got wind of these fights, he would sit down with the two of us on the front porch and talk to us about being peacemakers. I used to wish that my father would be the like the other fathers in the neighborhood who encouraged my friends to fight those who picked on them. But now I know it takes much more control to be a peacemaker than it does to lash out verbally and physically…still working on that lesson daddy…

I remember when my first high school boyfriend and I broke up. My father, who has always worked from home, heard me wailing in my bathroom and asked me what was wrong. With my red face and swollen eyes, I tearfully explained how Imani and I broke up before homeroom that morning. My father looked in my eyes and said, “Well, this kind of thing happens in life, and it won’t be the last time.” Those words weren’t exactly comforting words, but I recognized he was trying to comfort me. In hindsight, he was probably a bit surprised that I was finally old enough to be wailing over a boy.

I was on the drill team in high school. Being on the drill team was one of the ways I got out of the house on weekend nights because I wasn’t allowed to go to parties and dances until I went to college. (I was allowed to go the prom though.) One year, I really wanted to go to my school’s homecoming dance in the gym. I asked my father to go, but I was not surprised when his answer was simply,”No.” So I got to scheming. When we had away games, we often didn’t get back to the school grounds until midnight or after. So I lied and told my parents that we had an away game (although it was homecoming) and that he shouldn’t pick me up until at least midnight. I figured that would give me some time to enjoy the dance plus I never invited my parents to come to the games because I knew they would not appreciate some of the provocative dances that the drill team performed.

My dad and my nephew DeAnthony probably crying about not getting his way...

So I thought I had the perfect plan in place as I sat on the bleachers in the gym talking to my one of my high school hearthrobs, Brian. I swooned over him as he talked and enjoyed watching people dance. The gym was so dark it was hard to make out everyone until without warning, a door to the gym opened and light flooded in. Looking like Al Bundy from the hilarious but now defunct sitcom,” Married… with Children,” there stood my father in the middle of the light. You are not going to believe this. All the way from the bleachers, I could see that my father was wearing pajamas covered by his trench coat.  I felt like a deer cornered in the headlights. I could not move as my father looked around for a few minutes before getting to me.

Right in front of Brian, my father finally came up to me and said we had to leave. He escorted me out of the gym and to his car. To this day, I don’t know how my father figured out I was at the homecoming dance instead of the game. I don’t know what happened at school in the weeks afterward. I think I blocked it out of my memory I was so embarassed.

My father celebrating his 65th birthday...whew Dad, you gettin' old!

I have a vault of memories I could share, but I won’t. Consider yourselves lucky if you have a father that is in your life because I have learned that many of us did not grow up with fathers including my own father. He often shares that he met his father once in his life after he was already a grown man. I feel sad when I think of my father not having a father like the father that he has been to me. My father, who is by no means perfect, has enabled me to feel secure and cherished and I love him dearly for that…

Any thoughts?

There are countless songs about mothers but not as many, it seems, about fathers, but I have included two here. “Color Him Father” by The Winstons is about a stepfather’s love and the other song, “Daddy,” by Beyonce’ is about being a daddy’s girl…enjoy!

The List…

Hello World,

Happy Hump Day! Yay!

So this weekend, I will be attending the Faith & Fiction Retreat right here in the A. As the name suggests, some of the top authors in Christian fiction will be there. The featured authors are Tiffany L. Warren, who is actually the organizer of the event; Kimberla Lawson Roby, a New York Times best-selling author; Victoria Christopher Murray and Sherri Lewis, an Essence Magazine best-selling author. While these are the featured authors, many other authors will serve as author panelists at the retreat. It will be fun I’m sure! And I don’t think it’s too late to attend! Check the Web site for more info…

So I have been asked to moderate a discussion on Sherri Lewis’ book “The List.” Below is a description of the book from her Web site.

Single and satisfied? Not Michelle, Angela and Lisa. These saved but sexy, successful black women think they’re getting too old to keep waiting on God to send their soulmates. Under the protective eye of their more spiritual sistergirlfriend, Vanessa, and the scrutiny of newly saved manhater, Nicole, the ladies go on a hilarious adventure to “be found” by their husbands.

Armed with their list of essential must-have’s, would-be-nice’s, icing-on-the-cake’s, and total-deal-breakers, they start their search – but soon encounter issues specific to the saved woman on the dating scene. Is online dating okay for Christians? How long do you wait before you tell the hottie you just met that you’re celibate and plan to stay so until married? He’s too fine to pass up – how saved does he really need to be? And of course, how do you keep things holy when he’s oh-so-sexy?

It’s not long before they realize they still have to trust God to know what’s best for them and that He loves them enough to send them everything on The List.

Perhaps it’s synchronicity at work that I was asked to moderate a discussion on this book…At the advice of a spiritual mentor, I came up with my own list back in 2003 (the actual list I wrote back then is included in this list)…With 51 qualities, it is a list to rival Chilli’s!!! I must say my list kept me on track back then when I wanted to date a man just based on how he looked and the chemistry we had although he lacked other redeeming qualities…yes, I have dated some crazy but fine dudes in my day….but since then, I have learned that it is quite unrealistic to expect a man to have everything you want…

And in my fact, I have pared down my list to “essential must-haves!” And I have allowed God to direct my thinking as well…My father told me that only God truly knows what you need, and you have to allow Him to lead you to that right person list or no list…

So what are the qualities that your ideal man must have? Did you make a list? Are you planning to make one? Did you get what you need and what you want? What are your “essential must-haves?”

Please share…

Any thoughts?

Chilli from TLC discussing her own infamous list on the VH1 reality show, “What Chilli Wants.”