Wednesday, January 14, 2026

2025 Reading Year in Review

I started doing a specific "Reading Year in Review" post in 2020. I figured that since I was doing an overall year in review post (which includes some book information anyway), and a blogging year in review post -- and since keeping track of my books is a big thing I normally do on my blog -- my reading life deserved its own year-end wrap-up post too.  :)  

(Note:  I have not linked to all the books mentioned here, but they are all reviewed on this blog.) 

How did I do?  

I increased my Goodreads Reading Challenge goal from 36 books in 2021 to 45 books in 2022, kept (and met) that goal for 2023, and retained it for 2024 & 2025 -- although, unfortunately, I was not successful in reaching my goal in either year.  
  • My Goodreads 2025 Year in Review report tells me I read 38 books with 12,413 pages (versus 37 books with 15,320 pages in 2024, 48 books with 16.980 pages in 2023 and 50 books with 17,047 pages in 2022). That's one more book than I read in 2024, but still 7 books below my goal of 45, or 84%.  (My best result ever: 59 books in 2021.) All the books I read this year were reviewed on this blog and tagged "2025 books." 
    • The shortest book I read was "Peter West" by D.E. Stevenson (130 pages);  the longest was "A Place of Greater Safety" by Hilary Mantel (772 pages).  
    • Average book length was 326 pages (down from 414 pages in 2024, and 353 pages in 2023). 
      • (Note that one of the books I read in 2024 was "War and Peace"...!)
    • The most popular book I read ( = most shelved by Goodreads readers) was "Yellowface" by R.F. Kuang  (2.3 million readers);  the least popular was this one, a memoir written by my dear late friend R. (42 readers).   
    • The highest-rated book I read was "I'm Sorry for My Loss" by Rebecca Little & Colleen Long (4.38 stars). 
    • My average Goodreads rating in 2025 was 3.8 stars (lower than the 4.2 from the previous three years).  
  • In 2021, I also started tracking books on The StoryGraph, which provides slightly different stats (and even more, with a paid subscription -- although I don't have one of those!). 
    • StoryGraph reports that I read 38 books with 12,688 pages (slightly more than Goodreads recorded). 
    • Average book length according to SroryGraph was 334 pages (slightly more than Goordreads reported). 
    • Average time to finish a book: about 20 days. (This would be in good part because of the readalongs/slow reads I take part in...!) 
      • Fastest read/least time spent:  "Peter West" by D.E. Stevenson (3 days).
      • Most time spent:  "Anne of Windy Poplars" by L.M. Montgomery (143 days = not quite 5 months, part of a chapter-by-chapter readalong and discussion with my Montgomery Readathon Facebook group). 
    • This year, StoryGraph provided a "mood map" of my reading during the year:  you can see a steady upward trend in the moods of my books over the year. 
      •  The top/most dominant mood of my books was once again overwhelmingly "emotional" (value: 15 vs 16 last year), followed by "funny" (12), "reflective" (11), mysterious (8) and dark (7). 
    • Like Goodreads, StoryGraph logged the longest book I read as "A Place of Greater Safety" by Hilary Mantel (768 pages), but the shortest according to StoryGraph was "Wonderful Adventures of Mrs. Seacole in Many Lands" by Mary Seacole (200 pages).   
    • The vast majority of my books were medium-paced (69%). 19% were slow and 11% fast. 
    • 53% of my 2024 books were 300-499 pages;  45% were less than 300 pages and just 3% were over 500 pages. 
    • Most pages read/finished:  1,852 in October. 
    • 84% of my 2024 books were fiction;  just 16% non-fiction. This is a big change from recent years! (I credit the many book clubs I take part in, which mostly focus on fiction.)
    • My most-read genre in 2025 was historical (value: 13), followed by literary (9), contemporary (7), mystery (5) and thriller (5)(similar to 2024).     
    • StoryGraph also tracks the format of your books, but selects print as the default. The majority of my reads this year -- 76% -- were recorded as digital, vs 24% print.  (Note that some books do not have a "digital" option, in which case I choose print.) 
    • Most-read authors in 2025:  D.E. Stevenson (7 books) and Richard Osman (3).  
    • Average rating 3.81 stars (vs 3.8 on Goodreads, and 4.06 last year).  
      • 5-star reads in 2025:  "I'm Sorry for My Loss" by Rebecca Little & Colleen Long and "The Impossible Fortune" by Richard Osman. 
      • My highest average ratings came in June (4.25); the lowest was in August (3.38).
    • Most shelved book:  "Yellowface" by R.F. Kuang (445.598 users). Least shelved/popular: this one, a memoir written by my dear late friend R. (1 user, i.e., me!  lol).  
    • Highest rated:  "I'm Sorry for My Loss" by Rebecca Little & Colleen Long (4.43 stars;  my rating was 5 stars). 
    • I explored the work of 22 new authors, read 10 books that were part of a series, and revisited/re-read 5 books. 
  • I read 6 books in October, my most prolific month, and just 1 in July. 
  • I continued to take part in several online book clubs/groups/readalongs, which provided me with lots of reading/discussion pleasure, and helped boost my 2025 reading totals: they were responsible for 25 of the 38 books I read in 2025 -- more than half!   
    • Sadly, the L.M. Montgomery Readathon on Facebook, which began with "Rilla of Ingleside" in 2020 during the height of the pandemic, concluded earlier this year with one final book, "Anne of Windy Poplars" (review here). (The group still exists on Facebook, and members still post Montgomery-related content there, but we are no longer doing readalongs together.)  
    • I continued to co-host the Childless Collective Nomo Book Club, where we read & discussed a book a month together ( = 12 books).  
    • My D.E. Stevenson fan group read & discussed 3 DES books together in 2025, chapter by chapter (currently on #4). (I read each book first myself, and then counted our group read as a re-read.)
    • I initially thought I would repeat one or both of Footnotes & Tangents' 2024 slow reads ("War & Peace" by Leo Tolstoy and Hilary Mantel's Cromwell Trilogy) -- but I soon realized there were lots of other books calling my name, and abandoned that idea. Perhaps someday... I do highly recommend the experience, especially if these are books you've always wanted to read!  
    • I did take part in the 4 other slow reads offered by F&T in 2025, including "The Siege at Krishnapur" by J.G. Farrell, "A Place of Greater Safety" by Hilary Mantel, "Things Fall Apart" by Chinua Adebe and "The Blue Flower" by Penelope Fitzgerald.  
Goals for 2026
  • As noted above, I ended the year with 38 books read. I did not reach my Goodreads Reading Challenge Goal of 45 books (nor did I come anywhere near equalling my 2021/best-recorded total of 59 books, when my goal was 36).  I initially thought I'd keep my goal of 45 books in 2026 -- but, given the recent events in my life, reading has taken a back seat for the time being (sadly, I have yet to start a book in January).  So I've decided to downsize my 2026 goal slightly to 40 books (and hope to do better than that...!). It's still a "stretch" goal, based on the past few years, and still works out to 3-4 books per month on average). 
    • While I'm grateful for my book groups and the boost they give to my reading totals, and while I intend to keep up with them in 2026, I'm hoping to be able to read more of my own choices this coming year too.  :)   
2025 Highlights:  
  • It's always very hard for me to pick a single book as "the best" that I read in any given year. I read some really good books this year, a few really great ones  and very few "meh" choices (3.8 stars on average.)  A few of my favourites, listed in the order I read them (I haven't linked to them here, but they're all reviewed on Goodreads, StoryGraph and this blog): 
    • "Yellowface" by R.F. Kuang. I still find myself thinking about this one! 
    • "The Mermaid of Black Conch" by Monique Roffey.  A lovely surprise. :)  
    • "The Wedding People" by Alison Espach. A depressing-sounding premise that evolved into something absolutely delightful, especially as a childless-not-by-choice reader!  
    • "I'm Sorry for My Loss" by Rebecca Little & Colleen Long. Both infuriating and validating.  
    • "Rules for Visiting" by Jessica Francis Kane. This one grew on me as I read it! 
    • "Kills Well With Others" by Deanna Raybourn, So much fun!!  :)  
    • "Mania" by Stuart "Woody" Wood. I enjoyed reliving my days as a teenaged Bay City Rollers fan through the words of my favourite band member. 
    • "The Ministry of Time" by Kaliane Bradley.  Love, love, loved this one. If I had to pick just one favourite book from 2025, this might be it.  
    • "We Solve Murders" and "The Impossible Fortune," both by Richard Osman. Osman does it again -- both of these were pure delight.  
Did you meet your reading goals for 2025 (if you set any)? What great books did you read this past year? 




Tuesday, January 13, 2026

New year, new grief

(**CONTENT WARNING:  Sudden death;  some graphic details.**)

My first experience with death came when I was about 4 years old. We'd briefly had a puppy, Honey -- the only dog we ever had -- who proved to be more of a handful than my parents had bargained for. We'd rehomed her with my grandparents on their farm, who loved animals -- but she was run over by a car, a few months later.  :(  

I vividly remember sobbing in my mother's arms when she told me Honey was gone, and how she tried to comfort me by telling me that Honey was in heaven now, and that the streets of heaven were paved with gold.  I asked Mom if there would be lots of bones in Heaven for Honey to chew on, and other dogs to play with, and she said she thought so, and that made me feel a little better.  

Who is going to make me feel better now? 

My mom collapsed and died at home, late in the afternoon of Thursday, Jan. 1st (New Year's Day), just a few days shy of her 85th birthday. 

We got here on Dec. 21st, and had a nice Christmas together, Dh & I set up and decorated the tree (and Mom thanked me and complimented me on it at least twice).  My sister & I did much of the food prep, cooking & cleanup (with contributions from Dad, who still fries the fish on Christmas Eve, carves the turkey and monitors the progress of the potatos & veggies.  :) 

Mom has complained about her sinuses for as long as I can remember, and she's always been a night owl.  Since she retired, about 20 years ago, she has prowled around the house for half the night, every night (shuffling around with her cane, these last few years) -- and then languished in bed until at least noon (and often much later). But she was up early the day after Boxing Day, I think, complaining that she'd had a "terrible night." My sister & I took turns bringing her tea and toast in bed, and noticed she had a horrible rattling cough in her chest. She hadn't had either a covid shot this fall or a flu shot (hadn't had one since she worked in the school).  After a couple of days of this, my sister threatened to take her to the doctor if she wasn't feeling at least a little better the next day. The next day she WAS feeling a little better (but still not eating a whole lot), but still spent most of her time in bed. She didn't play cards with us on New Year's Eve, or stay up till midnight, I think? 

Weirdly, she was up at 7:30 AM when I got up on New Year's Day (!). She sat in an easy chair in the living room for a while and I brought her tea and toast while she watched the Rose Bowl Parade. She dozed on & off through the day, then asked for a glass of Coke and a chocolate chip cookie (! -- that was my mom...!). I managed to persuade her to have a bowl of cereal and a glass of apple juice instead, and got those for her. My sister & her partner had to work the next day and left to head back into the city shortly after 4 PM. Mom hobbled upstairs to the bathroom and was washing up while I checked the supper situation. 

We'd used up most of the Christmas leftovers, the fridge was pretty bare, and most stores and restaurants in town were closed for the holiday. It was looking pretty bleak (and my hungry dh was NOT HAPPY), but then I remembered we'd frozen some of the leftover fish we'd had on Christmas Eve. There was enough left for a couple of pieces each for the four of us. I asked my dad how about that along with some baked potatos & veggies for dinner? and he thought that was fine, but said, "Ask Mom." 

The door to the bathroom was closed, I knocked and went in, and asked her about the fish, and for the first time in days, she kind of perked up and seemed interested in food. So I closed the door and headed back downstairs to the pantry in the utility room on the ground floor at the far end of the house. I was picking out some potatos to bake when I heard a loud THUMP.  Dh yelled at me that it came from upstairs and that I should check on my mom.   

I went upstairs and knocked on the closed bathroom door.  

No response. 

I opened the door -- and saw my mother's legs, on the floor (partly blocking the doorway). 

I pushed the door open -- and my mom was laying on the floor.  

There was no blood, but her eyes were open, staring vacantly. I screamed and called to her (over and over) and squeezed her hand -- but there was absolutely no response, no flicker of recognition. There might have been a slight movement of her chest at first, but it was soon gone. She let out one long, raspy breath, and then, nothing. Dh & my dad came upstairs. My poor dad took one look at her, started crying, and retreated to his chair in the living room.  

I yelled to dh to call 911, and he did. He put the operator on speakerphone and she coached me through CPR while we waited for the police and paramedics to arrive (which took a while, as they serve a large rural area)... but I knew in my heart she was already gone.  :(  Dh also called my sister (on my cellphone) and told them to come back quickly (they were almost to the city by then).  The police arrived first (three guys in three separate cars, one after the other) and then the ambulance, and they worked on her for a while but could not revive her. It is likely just as well.  Mom was already so frustrated by her poor physical condition and limitations. She would not have wanted to linger in a life that was less than the one she was already living.  

I had to tell my sister when she arrived that Mom was gone. (She later told me they'd had to park out on the street because of all the cars in the driveway, and that every house in the bay had its lights on with neighbours looking out the windows... she called it "the perp walk"...!)  

Dad asked me to call the minister at Mom's church, and she rushed over. The EMTs had laid Mom on the floor of the room where dh & I were staying (!), and covered her up with an afghan, but I could see the top of her hair sticking out the top, and her foot out the bottom. I took the minister up there and she prayed over Mom with dh & I present. When she was done, I pulled the afghan down a little, but I could see Mom's eyes were still open, so I pulled it back up again. I watched as the undertakers wheeled her body, in a black bag, out of the house, and watched as their van (not a traditional hearse, thank goodness) pulled out of the driveway with Mom for the last time.  

Dh & I were supposed to return home on Sunday, Jan. 4th. We immediately made plans to rebook our flights (and were able to do it relatively easily online, albeit at a cost of $400 more than what we'd already paid for our already-expensive tickets...!), and will now be heading home this weekend instead -- two weeks later than originally scheduled. By the time we get back, we'll have been away an entire month!  BIL has been checking on our apartment, starting the car to keep the battery alive, collecting the mail and watering my one poor surviving plant. 

The next week went by in a blur. I was getting just 3-5 hours of sleep a night (it's gotten a little better since then).  I was EXHAUSTED.  (I even took a couple of afternoon naps. I RARELY take naps!)  Endless phone calls and messages to make and take, kind neighbours dropping by to offer condolences and food. At one point we had something like 6 or 8 dozen buns in the house (!), many of them homemade. (Gotta love small towns...!)  We ate some, put some in the freezer, gave some to Parents' Neighbours' Daughter (PND), and my sister and her partner took some home as well. 

Notably, one of my best friends from high school showed up at the door on Sunday afternoon, after driving an hour-plus from her home, bearing a couple of containers of lasagna and cannelloni from a deli in the city, as well as homemade banana bread (which was delicious).  She stayed for half an hour to chat and then drove home again.  And one of my dad's former coworkers brought over an entire dinner one night -- a big chunk of excellent roast beef, mashed potatos, gravy, veggies, homemade buns, and a dessert called Harvest Cake with thick caramel icing that was absolutely fabulous.  (My sister remarked that this woman missed her calling;  she should be a chef instead of a realtor, lol.)  My sister took home some of the leftovers, but there was still enough for another dinner for dh, Dad & me, as well as meat for sandwiches for lunch for a couple of days too.  

I could only make so many of those kinds of calls in a day. I called my mom's childhood best friend/matron of honour and her cousin/surrogate big sister (also my godmother), back to back, and that just about finished me off.  They both already knew from other people, but I still felt that I should call them, and they were still very emotional calls. Eventually, I asked my dad & sister if it was okay to just post something to social media, and did.  I felt badly that some people found out that way, but by then we'd made funeral arrangements, and wanted to get the word out to as many people as possible, as quickly as possible.  

And, yes, we had a funeral to arrange. Dad asked the funeral director if he could come to the house, and he said of course (again, gotta love small towns...).  That was a marathon 2-3 hour session.  Dad wanted to get the funeral over with as quickly as possible.  The medical examiner did not think an autopsy was required, but she did ask if they could take Mom to the city to be tested for flu & covid. That would have delayed the funeral by a few more days, so Dad decided no. So we will never know exactly what happened.

Mom was cremated (the funeral home in town has its own crematorium). My sister & I picked out a nice outfit for her to wear (although we chose not to see her again), and dh & I picked out an urn for her ashes. My sister has taken it home with her, but we will pick a plot or niche at the local cemetery in the spring for her and Dad, and have a private family internment ceremony then, when the weather is nicer.  The funeral was Jan. 8th, one week after Mom died.  I did not think I had the time or the emotional bandwidth to write and give a eulogy or to organize a photo slide show (and my sister thought pictures would upset Dad more than he already was), so we left most of the service to the minister, and she said some nice things about Mom herself.  

I did write the obituary that appeared on the funeral home website and in several newspapers. On an ALI (adoption/loss/infertility) note, you can bet I made sure that "granddaughter Kathleen  (Katie)" was mentioned.  On another ALI note, one of my mom's cousins offered to send me some photos. I told her photos are always welcomed -- but I was rather taken aback when she emailed me a zip file -- labelled with my mom's name, but in addition to photos she'd taken of my mom, there were photos of her parents and family, including her little grandson.  Needless to say, I did NOT need to see photos of someone else's grandchild (and/or the reminder that my mother never had any living grandchildren, not will I have them myself), especially just then...! 

Being Christmastime, and winter ( = iffy weather/driving conditions), and lots of illness going around, plus the issues with the border right now (and many Americans not having passports), we were missing a few people who might otherwise have come to the funeral.  But there were still 75 names in the guest book, and probably about 100 in all. My aunt/dad's youngest sister came out from the city with her oldest son (my cousin), and a couple of my other cousins on my dad's side, many of whom I hadn't seen in years.  My mom's cousin's daughter made the trip over the border from their hometown in northwestern Minnesota. My sister's best friend since junior high came from the city -- I hadn't seen HER in at least 30 years. And I was absolutely floored when Mom's childhood best friend walked into the church hall after the service with her husband!  They came all the way from South Dakota to be with us. Our neighbours/best friends from childhood were unable to come, because their sister/aunt's funeral was the same date & time (!) in the city, but the middle sister and her husband took a slight detour en route home and stopped here for about an hour to visit. I hadn't seen her in about 10 years, and that made a hard day better.   

My sister and her partner returned to the city this week. Dh & I have been keeping Dad company, playing cards every night, doing jigsaw puzzles, etc.  Making sure he's eating.  Poor Dad.  :(  They bickered endlessly -- but 65 years of marriage is 65 years of marriage, you know?  We're pretty confident that he can manage most things by himself, short term, anyway -- he's slowed down a lot in the last year or so, but he's generally in better shape than Mom was, and he has some really wonderful neighbours who look out for him/them regularly as it is --but (much to our relief) he is planning to put the house up for sale within the next year, and find something smaller/easier to keep up, likely within one of the local seniors housing developments. 

Needless to say, dh & I will be back here a few more times than usual over the next year, helping him out, and helping my sister and her partner with the huge cleanout that will be necessary before a move takes place.  We've already started:  Dad asked us to put away Mom's personal things, which we did right away.  Then we spent a couple of afternoons emptying out the night table and sorting through the contents, as well as some of the contents of the drawers and closet in the room where I sleep when I'm here.  There were LOTS of books, and we packed the best into a box and took it to the local library to donate to their sale table.  We also gathered up all of Mom's coats and jackets from three or four different closets around the house (Mom collected coats & jackets like some women collect shoes & purses...!) and took them to the local thrift store. I also emptied out Mom's drawers in the bathroom vanity, and tossed a LOT of stuff from there. (Umpteen half-used tubes of lipstick and cover stick... eye drops, nasal spray, ancient tubes of Benadryl cream, etc. etc.). (Not just one, not two, but FOUR almost-empty bottles of Jergens body lotion, anyone??)  We want to go through her closets and make at least an initial cull of her clothes, before I leave.  

Monday was my birthday -- my 65th birthday. (I am now officially a senior citizen!!  and I will be receiving my first Old Age Security payment from the federal government next month!... eeeekkkkk....)  I keep saying that one of these days, I'm going to spend my birthday on a beach somewhere. I thought for sure I'd do it for my 60th, but that was during covid, when everything was shut down and no one was going anywhere.  Obviously this birthday wasn't it either.  It wasn't the birthday I wanted or imagined -- but this is where I need to be right now. It was, as you can imagine, a pretty low key day. My dad did not remember!! -- and I told dh not to remind him. I knew he'd feel bad about it.  Of course he remembered today -- Mom had written it on the calendar that sits beside the telephone. I told him I didn't feel in a party mood anyway, we had more important things on our mind, and that dh will take me out for dinner or something when we get back home.  I did get some lovely messages via text, email and social media, and my friend who stopped by to see us after the funeral -- who will turn 65 later this year -- called me and we talked for an hour.    

Back to the opening of this post:  Mom told me when I was little that the streets of heaven are paved with gold.  In my mind, I've decided that if there is a heaven, it looks a whole lot like my Grandma's kitchen (only a whole lot bigger) -- and Grandma, Grandpa, Mom, my uncle (who died in 2024) and all the aunts, uncles and cousins we've lost are all gathered around the kitchen table, laughing and talking and drinking coffee from a pot that's endlessly percolating on the stove, just like they used to when I was growing up.  And they're just waiting for the rest of us to join them.  

That gives me some comfort. 

As I said in my 2025 Year in Review post, "Life is short, and tomorrow is not promised. I am more and more aware of this with each passing year."  

Hug the people you love;  tell them what they mean to you, spend that time with them.  You will never regret it. 

*** *** *** 

So that is why I have not been present here lately. Not a great start to 2026.  :(  We've been busy since we got here on Dec. 21st -- I don't think I even opened my laptop until a few days after Christmas! -- and obviously our stay here has been longer and more eventful than we had planned.  I do intend to publish my Year in Books soon, and possibly my Year in Blogging (both drafts in progress). I'd already started drafting a "Right Now" post for early January;  I'll probably combine that and do a double post for December/January in early February. 

One more thing:  my family has played Kinsmen Jackpot TV Bingo (from Winnipeg) for more than 50 years now, at least since I was a teenager.  My parents have continued to play every Saturday night, and whenever I'm here, Dad will buy extra cards & I'll play along with them. We had cards for last Saturday's game -- and I WON.  The initial jackpot was $60,000+;  after 50 numbers it dropped to a guaranteed $10,000. Which doesn't mean that I/we will get $10,000 -- there's usually several winners every week, and they had already declared at least one by the time we managed to get through on their phone line. Last night, we learned there were 24 winners, which means we'll each get somewhere in the vicinity of $400+.  It's not $10,000, but it's something!  (Either Mom was pulling some strings, wherever she is now -- or she's really pissed off that I won the minute she left the picture, and she missed it all.  ;)  ) 

Wednesday, December 31, 2025

2025 Year in Review

In 2023, I tried a new "Year in Review" format. It was shorter and easier to write than what I had done in previous years, and felt fresher -- so I've kept it since then. :)  The format/list of questions came from the long-gone scrapbooking magazine Creating Keepsakes, January/February 2013 issue (!). 

*** *** *** 

1) What was the coolest thing you did or that happened to you last year?

This was actually a tough one...!  I can't think of too much that was "cool" that we did in 2025 (isn't that pathetic??).  

One thing that came to mind:  en route to dh's cousin's cottage in September, we made a short side trip to Petroglyphs Provincial Park, which was pretty cool to see.  (It's considered a sacred spot to the Indigenous people, so no cameras/photos allowed.)  

2)  What major milestone(s) did you or a loved one experience last year?

Dh & I celebrated our 40th wedding anniversary in July! Nobody remembered :p  and the trip I wanted to take never materialized... but 40 years is still 40 years, right?  We did go out for steaks.  :)  

3)  What was your favourite celebration last year?

The great-niblings' birthday parties were all fun and I'm glad we didn't miss any of them!  (Even if I did get horribly sick after Little Great-Nephew #1's party...!)  

4)  What was your most memorable holiday of last year, and what made it special?

Christmas with my family is always memorable, even when it's on a much smaller scale than our Christmases of yesteryear. I am well aware that my time with my parents is not unlimited, and so I appreciate the opportunity to spend time with them while I can -- especially for holidays like Christmas!  (Even when they drive me nuts sometimes...!)  (We're still here, and they've been bickering a little less than they were this summer, which has been nice...!  lol) 

The holidays we spent with BIL, SIL, the nephews and their families -- including Easter and (Canadian) Thanksgiving, as well as family birthday parties -- were very special too. It's always fun just to be together, eat good food and see the kids. 

5)  What family vacation or activity was the most memorable, and why?

Our annual cottage weekend in September with BIL, SIL, dh's cousin & his wife, and (new this year) another one of dh's cousins, was a lot of fun (as usual).

Here's to (hopefully!) travelling further afield in 2026...!! 

6)  What big goal did you or a loved one achieve or work toward last year?

I can't think of anything for this category??   

7)  What's something that changed in your life last year?  (something new, a loss, etc.)

Both dh & I were told in late October (2024) by our family doctor that our cholesterol levels had reached concerning levels. (I'd been warned last year that my numbers have been trending upward over the past few years --and that yet another prescription might be in my future :( ).  By eating better and trying to be at least a little more active, we were able to get much better bloodwork results in January (2025). Unfortunately, my November bloodwork showed that my numbers were up again :(  -- so one of my new year's resolutions will definitely be to refocus my efforts and get my numbers down again by the time I have to repeat the bloodwork in March...!  (After we get through the Christmas holidays, of course...! lol) 

8)  What was your favourite movie, book, album or song from last year, and why?

We haven't been to the movies (in theatre) since early 2020 (before the pandemic began) :(  and I don't follow music the way that I used to either. I will be posting my 2025 Reading Year in Review soon, and as I say there, it's hard to pick one favourite book -- but I've listed a few! 

9)  What world, national or local event or news story affected you most?

World: The return of the Orange One, south of the border. I am so, so tired of him and his cronies (and I'm not even American! -- although this story obviously has huge implications for my country -- see below). 

National: The U.S. president's subtle and not-so-subtle threats toward my country's very existence, the wave of patriotism it has inspired, and the impact it had on our federal election in April. 

Local:  The Conservative government (inexplicably) won yet another majority government in our provincial election last May. I will give the premier credit for standing up to the Orange One, but he's really just a lighter, folksy-er shade of orange himself:  the populist rhetoric, the policies and contracts that favour big business donors and ignore the local & environmental impacts, the blatant corruption... 

10)  What life lesson did you or a family member learn and take to heart last year?

Every year for the past few years, my answer to this one has been the same:  Life is short, and tomorrow is not promised. I am more and more aware of this with each passing year...! Too many people I knew and/or loved -- many of them my own age or younger -- departed this life in 2025, including (but not limited to) fellow blogger Bamberlamb, my friend M. from our pregnancy loss group, my cousin, not just one but two of my high school classmates (within about two weeks of each other this summer), as well as our English teacher, and most recently, my dear friend of 41 years, R.  

"The Impossible Fortune" by Richard Osman

Having cleared my book club obligations for the next while, I eagerly dove into "The Impossible Fortune" by Richard Osman -- book #5 in his Thursday Murder Club series -- which has been at the top of my TBR pile since its release this fall.

The book begins with Joyce's daughter Joanna's wedding, where Elizabeth is approached by a guest for help -- a friend of the groom -- who then mysteriously disappears. At stake is a fortune in bitcoin, buried in a remote cold storage facility. 

All I can say is Osman has done it again. Like his other books (TMC & otherwise, all read and reviewed on this blog), this was quite simply a whole lot of fun, with plots twists and red herrings galore, (And lots of laughs.)  Along with the quartet of senior sleuths who make up the Thursday Murder Club, several supporting characters from the previous books make appearances. 

5 enthusiastic stars on both Goodreads & StoryGraph.  

This was Book #38 read to date in 2025 (and Book #3 finished in December), bringing me to 84% of  my 2025 Goodreads Reading Challenge goal of 45 books. I am 6 books behind  schedule to meet my goal -- and not likely to do so at this point (note the date of this review...!)  :)  However, this book brings my 2025 reading total to one more than last year, which does give me some satisfaction.  :)  

You can find reviews of all my books read to date in 2025 tagged as "2025 books."  And I'll be publishing a 2025 Reading Year in Review in the near future too.  :)  

"How to Kill Your Family" by Bella Mackie

Reading a book with the provocative title "How to Kill Your Family" (by Bella Mackie), while spending two weeks mostly housebound with two demanding elderly parents who adore watching annoying game shows (!) (plus my sister and her partner, on & off), in frigid Manitoba, might not have been the best choice (lololol...). But it's the January pick for my Childless Collective Nomo Book Club, and I decided to get a head start! 

Our narrator, Grace Bernard, breezily admits to killing six members of her extended family -- and getting away with it. But she's still in prison -- for a murder she did NOT commit.  The book bounces back in forth in time, from the present (Grace in prison, awaiting an appeal), and the past (why Grace decided to murder her relatives, and how she carried out each crime). 

I'll admit, Grace's family seemed pretty despicable, for the most part, and I can understand her motivation.  But that's still no excuse for murder.  And the details were sometimes a bit gruesome. I was thinking 3 stars, maybe 3.5, as a rating.  

BUT!  There's a major, clever plot twist in the last few chapters that redeemed the book for me somewhat, and boosted my rating. 

4 stars on both Goodreads and StoryGraph.

This was Book #37 read to date in 2025 (and Book #2 finished in December), bringing me to ?% of  my 2025 Goodreads Reading Challenge goal of 45 books. I am 6 books behind  schedule to meet my goal (and not likely to do that at this point...!), but this matches my 2025 total of books read, which makes me happy. :)   

You can find reviews of all my books read to date in 2025 tagged as "2025 books." 

Friday, December 19, 2025

Pre-Christmas odds & ends

  • Counting down to Little Great-Nephew #2's birthday party, and our flight west for Christmas... 
  • I mentioned our most recent plumbing issues in my last post, and that I wound up taking a shower in the second bathroom for the first time in nearly 10 years (!). 
    • What I didn't mention was that the tub walls are quite high,  my left knee is rather stiff and it was a bit of a step to get in and out. And I slipped and banged the back of my left thigh, just above the knee, on the edge of the tub as I was getting out. 
    • It ached briefly, but I didn't think much about it -- until dh, seeing my bare leg on Wednesday morning as I was getting dressed (three full days after I banged it), said, "You've got a big bruise back there!"  I ran to the full-length mirror. 
    • Sure enough, there was a big purple blotch, about the size of my palm.  Greeeaaaat... Cue the anxiety and the consultations with Dr. Google:  "Flying with a bruise."  (Yikes.) 
    • Since then, I've been taking ibuprofen and using an icepack a couple of times a day to attempt to reduce the swelling and attempting to elevate the leg when I'm sitting (albeit that can be awkward...!). I bought (and began using) an arnica-based gel that's supposed to help relieve muscle aches and bruises, etc., a neoprene compression sleeve that fits over the knee and covers the bruise, a wrap-around tensor bandage (in case the neoprene sleeve feels too tight), and a pair of compression stockings (that only go up to the knee). I've been trying both wraps out at home and will probably wear one of them on the plane. 
    • Any tips for me??  
    • (Like I need one more thing to worry about...!) 
    • (For what it's worth, dh thinks it's looking a little better than it did on Wednesday? But it's still very much there...) 
  • I've discovered an alternative to the dearly departed Pocket! Anne Helen Petersen of Culture Study has been recommending Instapaper to her readers as a way to get around paywalls for at least some (if not all) weblinks.  I signed up, downloaded the app to my phone, and gave it a try with a couple of links. Worked like a charm. :)  I was even able to import my Pocket links (which I'd downloaded to my laptop before Pocket's demise). 
    • Another alternative I'd been using that often works:  Archive Today
  • Timely:  A friend from the Childless Collective shared this article from British "agony aunt" Philippa Perry: "My 10 rules for a happier Christmas."  Applicable for everyone, but childless people who are often torn over what to do about the holidays will likely appreciate some her advice. 
  • In "2025 Childfree Trending," Laura Carroll -- author of the groundbreaking book on pronatalism, "The Baby Matrix" (reviewed here), offers some thoughts on the state of pronatalism in 2025, and the positive developments in the childfree movement, including online community building, and the growth in the number of businesses that are marketing to non-parents.  
  • In Life Without Children, Charlie Brown explains "Why We Must Stop Assuming The Fertility-Challenged Eventually Get Their “Miracle Baby”."  (Hear, hear!!)  
  • Also in Life Without Children, Charlie Brown also explained "Why I Want To Help Break the Silence That Surrounds Infertility." (While I'm not as likely to talk openly about my experiences, I could relate to just about everything Charlie wrote!)  
  • Katie Dunn at Afterglow describes what it's like "When every friend has a baby" and "How I went from feeling left behind and left out, to grateful and thriving." 
Do you know the feeling? That sharp, visceral sting when your heart aches for something you don’t have, while everyone around you celebrates exactly that? For anyone navigating infertility or baby loss, being the only non-parent in your circle can be absolutely brutal.

  • This Toronto Star article gave me the heebie-jeebies. :(  "She wanted a natural pregnancy and childbirth. It ended in tragedy." (Gift link.) 
  • Also in the "heebie-jeebies" category (but worth a read):  "They Answered an Ad for Surrogates, and Found Themselves in a Nightmare." (Gift link.)
  • The New York Times's Modern Love column explores "Why It’s Best to Imagine the Worst" and why "I can't imagine" is one of the worst things you can say to someone.  
    • Subheading:  "After learning devastating news about our young son, we needed to feel connected to friends and family, not just exist beyond their imagination."
  • A recent post by The Nomo Book Club Substack features "A collection of non-fiction books that are building a community of non-mother voices."  I've read many of these books myself (and others are in my massive to-be read pile). Worth checking out!  
    • This was followed up more recently by another post about "solo NoMos":  "A collection of memoirs by solo women who are embracing lives outside the mainstream narrative." I've read and can enthusiastically vouch for several of the books on this list. 
  • And Lisa Sibbett at The Auntie Bulletin posted about "The Best Novels I Read in 2025." There's actually a lot more than novels listed -- 70 books in all!  And coincidentally, or not, many of them are relevant to aunties, chosen family and friendship. (I see at least a couple that I've read and loved!) Enjoy! 

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Pre-Christmas annoying things (and a few small pleasures)

 Annoying things

  • I was trying to comment on a WordPress blog recently -- and when I hit "publish," up popped a note from WordPress:  they had blocked my password and I had to create a new one?!  This took some doing, but I finally managed to change my password (grrr...). 
    • Related annoying thing:  My comment disappeared into the ether, and had to be recreated.  
  • I went to the nail salon last week to have the gel/shellac polish on my toes removed. I've been going there for occasional manicures & pedicures since we moved here, almost 10 years ago now. My SIL goes there too and suggested it to me when I asked her for a referral. It's near where she & BIL live, and the prices are pretty reasonable.  (She & I ended up in pedicure chairs side by side the day before Older Nephew's wedding rehearsal, totally unplanned!) 
    • Back story:  I'd had a pedicure in late September, just before we headed to dh's cousin's cottage for the weekend. I had asked for just a regular pedicure with regular enamel polish  -- but the nail tech pushed (hard) for me to have a shellac/gel pedicure. "It lasts much longer! You don't have to sit under the dryer for as long!"  she pointed out brightly. 
      • (What she didn't point out:  it was more money, and thus = potentially a larger tip for her.) 
      • I didn't really CARE if the polish lasted longer;  I just wanted it to look decent for the weekend. I don't get pedicures very often, and I like being able to remove the polish myself once it starts to chip and look ragged. Plus I am not entirely comfortable with the unnecessary UV light exposure. 
    • Anyway, she talked me into it (eyeroll), and brought out a polish that she said was very close to the regular polish I had already picked out. Annoying thing/Spoiler alert:  it was not. I had picked out a teal blue;  the polish I wound up with was more of a teal green. It was nicely done, but not quite what I had wanted -- and obviously more expensive -- and I left feeling a little annoyed that I hadn't stuck to my guns and gotten what I really wanted. 
    • While at the cottage, I stubbed the toes on my right foot on the leg of our bed -- TWICE.  
    • I didn't think much about it until about a month later, in late October, when I was in the shower. My nails had started to grow out from the nail bed, and while I was lathering up my feet, I noticed a black spot on/under the nail of my right second toe.  I have no idea how long it had been there -- I mean, how often do you look closely at your feet?  Plus I obviously didn't have my glasses on in the shower. Most of the spot was (of course) UNDER the polish -- which I could not remove myself (grrr....). 
    • The logical explanation, obviously, is that it's a bruise from when I banged my toe on the bed leg at the cottage a month earlier. (I had a previous black toenail after hitting my toe on the corner of a wall, some years ago. It turned totally black, lasted for months before eventually fading away -- and my nail eventually fell off. Thankfully, it did eventually grow back.) 
    • EXCEPT.  I couldn't help but think of the younger brother of my best friend from high school. He died of melanoma at the far-too-young age of 40, leaving a wife and two young boys, as well as his parents & four sisters. It started -- you guessed it -- under the nail of one of his toes. He thought he just had some weird sort of nail fungus. By the time he checked it out with his doctor and they figured out what it actually was, it had spread, and it was too late. :(  
    • We had checkups scheduled with our family doctor in late October, and I showed the spot to him. He was pretty sure it was a bruise too, but since he was referring me to a dermatologist (for other reasons), he suggested I have that doctor check it out. (And that I should get the polish fully removed before I went.)  
    • So last week, I headed back to the nail salon. I explained, both over the phone and at the counter, that I wanted my gel/shellac polish removed. They could trim my nails, remove the dead skin, etc., but I did not want more polish, even clear. 
    • Wouldn't you know it? I got the very same nail tech. And this time, she started in on the hard sell for a paraffin wax treatment. "The skin on your feet is very dry... the paraffin helps seal in the moisture. I really recommend it,"  she said. 
    • I've had paraffin treatments before, and I knew she was going to keep pushing, so once again I caved and said yes. 
    • She brought out a plastic bag filled with liquid wax. It was HOT, As she squished it over my foot and slipped a terrycloth bag over the plastic, I felt like the bottom of my foot was burning. "It's HOT... please, take it off!" I said.
    • She did NOT take it off. "It won't burn you, the temperature isn't hot enough," she assured me brighly, as she put the other bag of liquid wax over my foot -- which was also hot. 
    • I was honestly afraid my feet were going to be burned. They weren't -- my feet are fine -- and she did do a nice job on cleaning up my feet and smoothing down the rough spots -- but I wasn't particularly happy. I didn't have enough change to leave even a 10% tip  (I had enough for a larger tip on the regular pedicure I thought I would be getting...!), and frankly, I didn't feel like she deserved one.
    • The girls there don't wear nametags, so I'm not sure who else I could ask for. I'm debating whether to ask my SIL, or just try to find a different salon, maybe one closer to where we live. I've been happy with the service and the results in the past;  I just don't appreciate the hard upsell.  :p   
    • The kicker?  When I got to the dermatologist's office this week, I COMPLETELY forgot to ask him about it!  (eyeroll) 
      • In my defense, he was a busy guy & spent no more than five minutes with me before sailing out of the room and on to his next patient. Sigh. 

  • I found a typo in this year's edition of the annual Christmas letter that I send out with some of my cards. (I mean, I used to be my department's go-to editor & proofreader...!) 
    • Related annoying thing:  Of course I found it AFTER I had put the cards into the mail...!  
    • Not only that -- what I THOUGHT I had written ("The trip we’d hoped to take didn’t materialize, but maybe next year…!") turned out to be "The trip we'd hoped to take didn't maternalize...").  Freudian slip??  :p 
  • You may or may not recall that we had some plumbing repairs done in late August that turned out to be far more complex (near-disastrous, in fact) -- and WAY more expensive -- than we had anticipated. 
    • I wrote about this in brief, general terms at the time. To summarize briefly: We wanted a few things done, but my main concern was the water spout in the shower cubicle in our master bathroom. (Like the water spout in a bathtub, but in a standalone shower cubicle. Apparently it's a Canadian thing:  a lot of people refer to it as a "toe tester," lol.)  It had been dripping for months. The dripping sound was driving me crazy, and it was a constant battle to keep the mildew at bay. I figured all that was needed was likely to replace a rubber ring behind the tap handle. 
    • I'd mentioned the issue at least twice to the plumber recommended by our property manager, who does the general plumbing repairs & maintenance for the building, both in person and in an email, but annoyingly, he never got back to me. I asked dh if I should try one more time or try someone else, and he said to try someone else. I did a bit of Googling, read some reviews, picked a name and called them up. 
    • As I said above, what we wanted done turned out to be a LOT more complicated (and the bill was MUCH higher) than we'd anticipated. We weren't very happy with how it all unfolded (let alone the bill!!) -- but the good thing was that they did fix the dripping. (Eventually!) . 
    • Since then, however, we've noticed the water runs nowhere near as warm/hot as it used to. Even when I crank the tap handle all the way over on the "hot" side, the best it gets is just nicely warm. Some mornings, it's just lukewarm. Also, the water pressure seems a lot weaker.  
      • Note:  We have no issues with the warm/hot water anywhere else in the unit. 
    • One recent morning (less than a week before we leave on holidays), dh emerged from the shower to tell me the water was cold.  Not freezing cold (yay?), but not even lukewarm -- like, barely tepid. 
    • I got in the shower, turned on the water and stuck my foot under the spout (without turning on the actual shower). "Oh hell no," I said.  
    • Luckily, we have a second bathroom, with a regular tub/shower unit. Dh had taken a few baths in there, and I'd used the tub to fill buckets and wash large items (like window screens), but in the almost 10 years we've lived here, we'd never tried out the shower...!  
      • Well, no time like the present...!  
      • The water was wonderfully warm and the spray was strong.  
    • His cold shower was the last straw for dh:  he's resolved to call the plumber -- the building-approved plumber -- when we get back from Christmas holidays, and ask them to come have a look. They may be hard to get hold of sometimes, but they have done a good job for us before, and their prices have been very reasonable.
    • We are definitely NOT calling the other guys back -- even though it's really their issue to fix...!  

  • A to-do list that never seems to get any shorter...!  (especially as we head towards Christmas...!) 
Small pleasures
  • The decorated Christmas tree, especially the lights.  
  • Little Great-Nephew #2's first birthday party on Saturday!!  :)  
  • I'm still lacking some stocking stuffers, but the great-niblings and Little Princesses are well taken care of.  :)  
  • Heading west for Christmas in a few days' time too!  :)