family · My Thoughts · My Writing

I Found Some Jewels—Surprise, Surprise!

Jewels, yes, but not of the sparkling variety! Rummaging through folders on my computer and old journals, I found some of my poems & stories I wrote years ago—some real jewels!

Last year, I decided to gather all my poetry together and I thought I had enough for a three books series from the poetry just on my computer. But something whispered to me last fall—“you used to write with your students at the beginning of class each day.”

My two journals - jewels
My Two Blue Journals From Long Ago

So, out to the storage shed I went, and I knew immediately which box to look in. I found two large blue journals and squealed with delight! Yes, yes, yes! When I brought them into the house, I sat down and opened them, realizing one held my writing from December 7, 1995 to December 2, 1996. The other one dates from April 8, 1997 to May 20, 1997, ending one school year, and from September 4, 1997 to August 28, 1998, covering parts of two school years.

Because of recent life and health issues, I put them in a safe place out of the way but never completely forgot about them. They kept nagging at me!

Last week, they screamed at me, so I grabbed them and brought them upstairs to my computer and started dictating poetry out of the first one. Wow! I liked what I saw—I had written about middle school life and my students, writing, my dad’s death and horses! I caught myself thumbing through the journal and reading the prose, too. To my surprise I found a couple of stories too! So that poetry series might bust through three books to four or more!

Just now, I took a break and went out to the storage shed, thinking there had to be more journals. That thought overwhelmed me though! So far, I’ve dictated thirty poems and I’m not half-way through the first journal! I looked through my box of journals and found four more journals I wrote in with my students. In the same box, I also found personal journals that go back to the mid-80s!

My discoveries in all of this rummaging—I have lots of my personal resources to look through for jewels I can share with you. Also, don’t throw away any of your writing!

Here’s a story I found in the back of my first blue journal, dated December 2, 1996. Last night, I added the ending. Again, I dictated this into a Microsoft Word document. (In the dictation process of the thirty poems, I found out Scrivener, a writing app, also has a dictation tool, so now I dictate my poems straight into Scrivener. At first, I dictated into Word then copy and pasted it into Scrivener. This saves me a step.)

The elderly couple walked into the department store in their small country town to buy a special gift for themselves. Their feeble hands held tightly to each other—a steadying force that kept them both upright.

Her lips were pursed tight, holding back tears, she wouldn’t cry—not here, not now. His brow wedged a wrinkle so hard and tight it looked permanent. Just by their appearance, they faced an uncomfortable mission.

He cleared his throat as he prepared to talk to the clerk. She clasped his arm in her skinny trembling hands.

“Where are the VCRs?“ he asked in a soft, gentle voice.

“In the electronic section in the back of the store,“ she replied, taken back by the couple’s individual weak appearance, yet solid strength as a pair.

Slowly, they wobbled to the TV section, stopping once to catch their breath. Both panted deeply and leaned against each other for support.

Neither one knew what a VCR was, but they were bound to buy one – it was their special gift this year.

As she thought of the reason for the shopping trip, tears streamed down her cheeks. No, she wouldn’t think of it— not now—later, when she was home, and could cry in privacy.

His hands trembled as he wiped the tears from her cheeks with tears streaming down his cheeks, too.

They managed to purchase the VCR and get it home and attached to their TV. The helpful clerk had written out specific instructions for this task, and he followed it precisely. His hand shook as he turned it on and slid the tape in to play.

They moved their chairs closer to the screen. Sitting on the edge of their seats, they awaited the moment— the moment they would see their only granddaughter get married, their only granddaughter who lived 2000 miles away. Because of the distance and health reasons for each of them, they couldn’t attend in person. Their daughter came up with the idea of videotaping the wedding and sending it to them. The wedding had been three weeks ago, and they checked the mail daily for the bulging envelope with the tape. Finally it arrived, but now they had another problem—they didn’t own a VCR. But now they did

With squeals of joy, she clapped her hands together. There she stood, their beautiful granddaughter dressed in white in her grandmother’s wedding gown and her prospective husband, saying those words so familiar.

He whispered, choking back a sob, “She looks just like you did in that dress sixty years ago!” She whimpered a yes in response, knowing how her granddaughter felt in her wedding dress.

The grandparents both mouthed the “I dos,” as the young couple started their life together. When the ceremony ended, he stopped the VCR, and grabbed a Kleenex for both of them.

Yes, they didn’t get to see the ceremony in person, but they got the next best thing—to witness it at long distance and celebrate the beginning of this new life.

Clearing her throat, “I think we’re gonna like this VCR thing,” she said, with a smile.

He nodded in agreement but turned it off as the clerk had instructed him. He returned to his seat beside his wife of many decades, grabbed her hand, and they set silently in the bliss of this moment and remembering theirs from so long ago.


Finally, my writing comes from my heart, and to see what I’ve written before I seriously considered myself a writer astonishes me! I have a question: should I add to this story and enter it into a contest? Let me know!

Do you have any hidden jewels you can dust off and share with the world? Do it and let me know!


MAJOR SALE: Buy my first book, This Tumbleweed Landed, at a 60% discount at my Etsy Shop, Larada’s Reading Loft until February 29, so grab it now!

Enjoy my recent interview on the podcast, The Writing Table


Hair on Fire audiobook cover - jewels

Hair on Fire: A Heartwarming & Humorous Christmas Memoir available in audiobook format at the following places:

~SHOP TODAY FOR YOUR AUTOGRAPHED COPY! Shop at my Etsy Shop or my Shopify Store

Christianity · God · My Thoughts · poetry

Some Difficulties with Dictation But Still Great!

Woman excited about working a computer - difficulties

I had some difficulties with dictation last week! Yes, I experienced difficulties with two aspects: poetry and Spanish words. See what happened.

The second piece I found while rummaging around in files in my bookcase was a poem I wrote April 20, 1991 after driving from Raton, New Mexico to Chimayo, New Mexico on Good Friday. Finding this gem thrilled me, but again I didn’t want to type it up—these old arthritic fingers of mine groaned! So, I continued my experiment with dictating.

Because of the breaks in the lines, I had to deal with that. I tried saying, “Return,” but it just typed the word, so I had to stop reading the poem and press, “Return” for each line. I thought I could give the command and it would work. I need to research that!

When I read the Spanish words, Microsoft Word’s dictionary didn’t recognize the word. So, for the word “sanctuario”, it put in “saint.” I had to retype all the other Spanish words because it did the best it could do! In reality, there weren’t that many.

So enjoy my found treasure that I dictated!


A Modern-Day Pilgrimage to Chimayo

El Sanctuario de Chimayo - difficulties

April 20, 1991

A modern-day pilgrimage to a 
Very holy New Mexico spot for Good Friday–
El Sancturio de Chimayo!

I drove a car; others did too!
I worried I’d be the only one not walking.
I drove 180 miles – anticipating, wondering
About how absurd this waste of a day was, 
yet compelled to go.

Traditional pilgrims – walking miles
Sore feet and backs,
Walking sticks!
Sweat, blisters and dedication.

I studied the faces as I drove by;
Later, as I stood in line with these dedicated souls.
Old wrinkled faces who had done this many times before,
The young being introduced to a lifelong tradition,
Families – sharing a meaningful experience, 
an event mixed with the air of reverence and the joy of a picnic, 
mostly Hispanics, solemn.

Cowboys, hats, horses – expectant,
Shorts, backpacks – water bottles,
Anglos—capturing a borrowed tradition.
Dogs on leashes. An expectant atmosphere.
National Guard men carrying our two flags –
Blowing in the cool breeze,
United States – red, white, and blue
New Mexico – red and gold
waving softly.

I first saw pilgrims
At the east edge of Santa Fe –
A sprinkle. 
Miles from Chimayo.
A few deserted vehicles parked 
on the roadside.
The farther west, I drove the more they were.
Steadily the number increased
The closer we got to Chimayo.

Clouds hung low, threatening snow on this spring day.

We arrived.

Although I was alone in my car
With Windy, my ten-pound black poodle,
I felt a part – a piece of
Something so holy and special –
A part of a deep, reverent belief 
in a beautiful celebration.

Finding a spot, I parked, pulling off of the main road.
I followed the hordes of people.
I followed the sounds.
A priest saying the words of the day on a PA
System that could be heard from a distance.
I dropped down the hillside on a warn path
Into the sleepy New Mexican village, and

El Sanctuario De Chimayo.

Thousands of people milled around – some in line,
Waiting to enter, eating spicy burritos,
Some had accomplished their task early
 and enjoyed the leisure time afterward.

Large, wet snowflakes, drifted down lazily,
	A New Mexico mountain gift.

I stood in line – silent, hopeful, drinking it all in,
Anticipating the event I had
Driven three hours for, yet wondering.
The Spanish language caught my ear – 
The rhythmic voicing of words, 
So beautiful!

First, we passed through an old wooden gate, 
Worn and sacred with the hands that came seeking,
Old, dilapidated and marked
With weather and time. 
No rush, no hurry, no worry!

I touched it. 
I touched life and pain and times before me. 
Other hands had touched it.
Thousands of hurting, hopeful people ready for the blessings
This place had.

Step-by-step, we meandered our way 
into the courtyard which is a cemetery. 
The buried people here in this place, special and honored. 
Trees shaded this place – peaceful and serene.

We neared the door to the sanctuary, 
Closer and closer,
		Massive wooden doors guarding this mountain treasure.

Now I entered. 
The dirt floor inside the door slanted downward.
A charged energy – anticipation – filled the air –
Solemnity of the moment.
No voices, a holy silence.
Incense, chili, burning cedar – luscious smells mixed 
with our anticipation.
People expectant of something –
A miracle.

Reredos lined the walls of the church.
Faded, colorful pictures – 
Meaning
Sacred stories told.

Shoulder to shoulder, two lines threaded their way toward the altar.
People sat in the pews  
praying, 
absorbing the spirit of the place.

As we approached the altar, first, something appeared
As diamonds laying there, 
Sparkling and shine.
Then I realized – bags of dirt,
Holy dirt
Healing dirt
Why I came!

Finally, the altar rail—
I’m there!

As I touched the bag that is mine, 
I felt it, the power.
On the altar, a bultos stood, El Señor Santiago,
riding his horse, sacred.

We slowly threaded our way
Into a small side room.
0h, be careful—low doorway.
Then another small room to the side.

The source of this holy soil,
The hole in the ground.
I knelt down and touched it,
Prayed with it in my hands, 
Rubbed it in my fingers,
Wondering what I could do 
to commemorate this moment – 
Pray, sing, dance, or scream for joy?
No, out of the place—not appropriate.

Upon leaving, I passed through another room, 
Lined ceiling to floor with evidence – 
Thankful letters, abandoned crutches and braces!
So many pieces of
Evidence of healings – 
Miracles!

I left the church.
Outside, I walked around the grounds,
Shaded with tall cottonwood trees,
Almost in a daze. 

Light puffy clouds still filled the sky.
I felt so peaceful, 
Connected 
Grounded to the Earth.
My hands still dirty and moist.
Alone, no one knew my name – yet a part of something
Larger than me!

I wanted to stay! 
To drink in the peaceful liqueur of the moment
To watch more and soak it all in,
But the snow returned.

Reluctantly, I left – to go home.
Windy slept peacefully in the passenger seat
	But happy for my return.

The mystery of this age-old tradition filled me 
My healing came with a connection with
Like-minded people
A sacred place
And my God!

A day taken from my busy schedule.
A step back in time
A day spent alone— yet a part,
Reflecting –
Listening from my heart –
And fulfilling a dream –

Good Friday at
The Sanctuario de Chimayo.
Gate into courtyard of El Sanctuario de Chimayo - difficulties
Gate into courtyard of El Sanctuario de Chimayo

Ash Wednesday is this Wednesday, February 14. Sharing this poem now is timely as we face the forty days of Lent. Hopefully it inspires you to do something memorable this year to commemorate this special time of the year.

Finally, have you tried dictation on your computer this week? Hopefully, my experiment last week spurred you on. Let me know if you did!

Lin standing at the gate of El Sanctuario de Chimayo - difficulties
Lin standing at the gate of El Sanctuario de Chimayo

In April 2015, Lin and I visited El Santuario de Chimayo, and once again, I experienced the sacred atmosphere of this holy treasure of New Mexico.


MAJOR SALE: Buy my first book, This Tumbleweed Landed, at a 60% discount at my Etsy Shop, Larada’s Reading Loft!

Enjoy my recent interview on the podcast, The Writing Table


Hair on Fire: A Heartwarming & Humorous Christmas Memoir - difficulties

Hair on Fire: A Heartwarming & Humorous Christmas Memoir available in audiobook format at the following places:

~SHOP TODAY FOR YOUR AUTOGRAPHED COPY! Shop at my Etsy Shop or my Shopify Store

My Thoughts · Technology · Writing

How About Dictation? A Great Author’s Tool

Dictation on a computer

Dictation? Use it as an author’s tool? Last week, I found two treasures I wrote many years ago: a story and a poem. Dictation helped me quickly type up both. This is how dictation has changed over the years.

In 2002, I chaired the National Singles Square Dance Festival here in Albuquerque, New Mexico and had to type up over 600 registrants’ names, addresses, phone numbers and email addresses. I bought DragonSpeak, a dictation program, hoping so save my hands. The program had to learn your voice, so you had to practice a lot. It just didn’t live up to its promises, so I put it aside and hand-typed all that data.

Then in 2018-2019, I faced typing up 258,000 words transcribed from interviews with Marshall Flippo for his biography, and a tech friend suggested dictation using Microsoft Word, but I couldn’t make it work. So again, I typed it all up.

Since then, I have used the dictation tool on Google Docs, but last week, I returned to Microsoft Word and found its dictation tool to be greatly improved. The story below is 738 words, and I dictated it in about five minutes. The poem I found is 779 words and again, using the dictation tool, I finished it again in the same amount of time.

Grandma’s Yellow Bowl

Grandma's Yellow Bowl - dictation

It’s a large yellow bowl – a mixing bowl – yellow on the outside; white on the inside. Glass. Big enough to make bread in it!

            My grandmother’s been dead for five years (1988). I’ve had it in my kitchen since my aunt and mom sorted her belongings. Breakable glass – yet never broken. Memories live inside this container, this antique.

            Grandma was a simple woman, went to the fourth grade and stopped. The family needed her to help pick cotton; school was extravagant! But what a cook she was!

            Her cooking style was simple – fresh – no recipe, just a sense in her touch, the texture, the smell, etc. The bowl she owned, probably many years. Why didn’t it break? What stories could it tell?

            Transfixed I stared at the bowl on display at the flea market in Albuquerque, New Mexico.. The warm New Mexico Sun beat down on my head, yet I didn’t realize it. That’s just like grandma’s bowl – her favorite yellow bowl, and only $.50.

            “Just big enough for bread, Child!” She told me every time she took it out of the cupboard. With pride, she had sat it on the counter, touched the edge with her fingers delicately and smiled.

            “Lots of good meals in this bowl!“

            All this came crashing down on me as I stared at the bowl at the flea market.

            “Honey, honey, let’s go – or did you want that bowl? You’ve been staring at it for two minutes. What’s wrong?“ My husband asked as he tugged at my elbow.

            “No – no – I have one at home. Just like it.“ I said slowly coming out of my fog.

            “I’ve never seen it,” he answered.

            “I know. I put it away to save it. It was Grandma’s favorite,” I  say grabbing his arm and feeling a tremor go through me.

            The rest of the day of shopping, I thought of nothing else but that bowl. For some reason, I was anxious to get home and find it – hold it – touch it!

            When we pulled up into our driveway, I jumped out of the car before it stopped and sprinted to the door. My husband hollered something to me, asking if I was sick. Fumbling for my keys, I dropped them in the grass by the door. Searching for a second, I picked them up, found the door key and throw open the door.

            Tossing my fanny pack on the couch, I ran through the kitchen, where our answering machine blinked off and on, signaling a message. Who cares right now! I bolted down the ten steps to the basement, knowing exactly where it was, where to look. The dusty box sat on the shelf I had put it on several years ago. I had put it away so I wouldn’t break it. Carefully, I picked it up and carried it upstairs to the kitchen table.

            The box wasn’t too heavy, yet its possessions were some of my treasures. No, they weren’t worth much – you see the bowl was for sale at the flea market for $.50, yet it’s value to me was priceess.

            I grabbed a butcher knife and snapped the masking tape off the top. Crumbled newspaper bounced out of the box like popcorn. Carefully, I waded through my treasures – a serving crock bowl and lid from my great grandmother, and then my bowl – my yellow bowl.

            My husband joined me in the kitchen with a puzzled look on his face. I showed him the bowl and he still seemed confused.

            “Larada, what’s this about? What’s so important about this bowl?”

            “I made a promise to grandma before she died many years ago to myself to what this bowl stood for – cooking for my husband and family – and making sure that the meals I prepared in it would be prepared with love.“

            Tears ran down my cheeks. Our marriage had been slowly deteriorating. My career had taken me out of the house more frequently, and my husband had received my frustration in the form of angry words, snide remarks, and an undercurrent, taunt with stress and intention.

            As I looked at grandma’s bowl and held it close to my heart, I heard her words again, and realized that a lot of the recent problems in our marriage had been mine, not ours.

            “How about a homemade pie for dinner?“ I said to my husband as I wiped the tears for my cheeks, knowing somehow that bowl had changed me drastically that day.

            Only worth $.50 – who cares? To me it’s worth a million!   


Finally, today’s dictation tools excite me so much because I have lots of poems I’ve written but not typed up yet. I see this time-saving device as a lifesaver for sure.

Have you ever used the dictation tool in Microsoft Word? If so, how did it work?

PS – Ever since then, that yellow bowl has had a prominent place in my kitchen, and I use it regularly.


Hair on Fire: A Heartwarming & Humorous Christmas Memoir - dictation

Hair on Fire: A Heartwarming & Humorous Christmas Memoir available in audiobook format at the following places:

~SHOP TODAY FOR YOUR AUTOGRAPHED COPY! Shop at my Etsy Shop or my Shopify Store