String o' Pearls
Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Three Beautiful Moments in an Ordinary Day
Monday, March 30, 2026
Canonized and Yet-to-be Canonized: A Tale of Two Saints
Hello there, dear readers, and God bless you!
I meant to post something about our St. Patty's Day party two weeks ago, and also about the recent tragic loss of a young man who may not be as famous as Ireland's patron, but who was a brave victim soul in his short life and is probably up there shooting the breeze with St. Patrick himself as I write this...but such is the state of my blog these days. Well, better late than never, I guess.
Ever since we moved down to VA back in 2017, we have had a yearly St. Patrick's Day party at our house, on or close to March 17, for the sons and their families who live near us here. (For the first four years that we were Virginians, that was 4 out of 5 sons; these days, we still have 3 out of 5 living close by, and with 14 kids between them that still makes for a rockin' celebration of Ireland's patron saint.) There was just one year, 2020, when we cancelled our St. Patty's shindig, regretfully...because of all the dire warnings in the news about a novel, deadly virus spreading around the world. The night of the scheduled party was going to fall within that timeframe they called the "two weeks to flatten the curve," when supposedly having 10 or more healthy people gathered in a house together could be a life-threatening situation for all. GRRRRR.
Anyway, enough of drudging up those bad memories!
We almost canceled our party this year, too, because on March 12, the beloved 19-year-old nephew of our daughter-in-law Ginger (who is married to son #2) lost his heroic 19-month battle with brain cancer. (More about this extraordinary young man in a bit.) With her family in mourning, I wasn't sure it was appropriate to have a Pearl family party just days later on March 15. But when we asked son #2 if we should cancel, he wanted us to go ahead with it, saying that his five sons could use a diversion and his wife could use a few hours to herself to deal with things. The funeral had been scheduled for March 19, the feast of St. Joseph, and there was a lot to do to get ready for that. So he and his boys came, along with sons #3 and #4 and their gangs. And a great time was had by all, as always.
Our boys have lots of Irish blood in them. Their dad's side is almost 100% Irish. We've got a bit o' Celtic blood in us on my side, too; however, we're more of a mix--more British than Irish, with a few other European nationalities thrown in there for good measure. But the whole extended Pearl clan is crazy about all things Irish--including, of course, Notre Dame's football team--and we love to celebrate with the wearing o' the green and all that good stuff.
I made corned beef and cabbage for our party, but we had chicken nuggets and French fries on hand, too, for the young'uns who aren't into that sort of fare. The bar was serving Irish mules for the adults (ginger beer and lime juice, with Jameson's Irish whiskey in place of the usual vodka or bourbon). For dessert, there were plenty of options: iced shortbread cookies shaped like shamrocks, mini cupcakes, and a brownie trifle that had cream layers laced with a splash of Bailey's (an experiment that met with mixed reviews). And of course, we had lots of tacky St. Patty's party favors for all the wee lads and lasses.
It's always so much fun (crazy, but fun!) to get the grandchildren together. Not to mention our boys and their wives. I can honestly say that my own people are my favorite party guests. They're just such a joy to be around. They're the sweetest people I know, the smartest, the funniest--and I not only love them to the moon and back, I LIKE them. A lot!
Thursday, February 26, 2026
Just Over Here Bragging about My Baby
On Monday of this week, my husband and I returned from a week-long road trip to TN to visit our youngest son, his wife, and his two adorable little daughters (aged just-turned-one and about-to-turn-three). So of course the youngest of our five boys--our baby--is very much on my mind right now. How I wish he lived closer to us so that we could see him and his family on a regular basis! Saying goodbye after a visit really stabs at my poor heart. (This of course goes for his oldest brother, too, our firstborn, who's a two-day trip away in WI; but today, at least, this post is dedicated to son #5.) I am well aware that a mother's heart can be much more violently pierced by suffering than mine has ever been, God having thus far spared me any truly heartrending tragedies; but still, it pains me to have two of our boys living so far away from us. My husband and I cherish every minute we get to spend with them.
I adore this boy of ours. He was born an "old soul," in ways, and spent much of his childhood wanting to catch up to his older brothers. We had our first four boys in a span of four years and three months; then just about exactly five years after son #4 was born, our youngest joined the team. There was a bigger gap between sons #4 and #5 than there was between #1 and #4! And that gap must have seemed far too wide to son #5 for many years, because those older brothers were his heroes, and he wanted to follow directly in their footsteps. He wanted to be counted as one of the "big guys."
Well, that long-awaited day did come, that's for sure. I told you that he was five years younger than his next oldest brother; well, he got married five years after that brother did. They were both 26 years old on their wedding days. Do you see a pattern here?
And now, like the brothers he always looked up to and admired, our baby is also a father; and like them, he has embraced this role whole-heartedly. It was a delight to watch him interacting with his little blond angels last week, snuggling them, reading them stories, and tossing them on the bed in a game which his father used to call "Sack of Potatoes" but which in their household is known as "1-2-3!"
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| Our baby with his babies. |
These kids, these two young parents, are in a phase of life that's challenging and difficult, trying to manage a lot of moving pieces at once. Our son is working hard to make his freelance business a success, and his helpmate works as an accountant from home (mostly) while the girls are at a sitter's house nearby. We were happy to be able to take care of our two darling granddaughters while Mommy and Daddy were working from Monday through Friday, and we enjoyed daily outings with them--to the park, to the Discovery Center, and to the zoo (twice!). It was a tiring week for Papa and Grammy, but in the best possible way. And we know how much our son and his wife appreciated having us around.
The almost-three-year-old kept randomly telling us, "I'm glad you're here." We were glad we were there, too. Very, very glad.
And that boy who was about to graduate from Notre Dame in 2015 is now a married father of two little girls. When they grow up, they will know what to look for in a husband, because they will have their dad as a model: "a Godly and genuine young [man]...seeking truth."
Yes, dear girl, I AM a proud mama.
I always have been, and I always will be.
#ihavethebestboys #itsjustthetruth Does that sound like I’m bragging? I suppose I am, dear readers.
P.S. In my last post, I showed you a little birthday gift that I was working on for my granddaughter. I believe it was a success, if this picture of her playing with it is any indication.
Until next time, God bless you and yours!
Friday, February 13, 2026
Saints Everywhere I Look
I was sitting in my living room this morning, listening to the Hallow app, doing my morning prayer routine, and soaking in my surroundings with feelings of utter peace and contentment. Every wall, every tabletop in this room is decorated with reminders that our goal here on earth is to one day become saints in Heaven.
There are framed pictures of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary hanging above the loveseat, vintage prints that I discovered a few years ago buried in a box of paperwork in the basement of my husband’s a childhood home and was given permission by his siblings to take and cherish. There is an icon of the Blessed Mother and Baby Jesus hanging above the bay window, a souvenir that my husband brought home from a trip to the Holy Land, back when he was working as an international commercial pilot. And there is a statue of Our Lady of Fatima, which he purchased on a working trip to Rome, up high in a place of honor in a corner niche. Not to mention a little brass sign that reads "Rosary Room," because this is the quiet place where we often say our Rosaries.
You might think that some of the framed artwork and photographs in this room have nothing whatsoever to do with sainthood or our beautiful Faith, but there you would be wrong. There is a trio of lovely botanical prints on the wall above the loveseat, gifts from our oldest son and his wife. But they aren't just special because they're beautiful to look at; these prints are from a shop which many of you Catholic blog readers will recognize, Rose Harrington, and each of the five flowers depicted on each print represents a different mystery of the Rosary. (We have prints of the Joyful, Sorrowful, and Glorious Mysteries, but the shop sells the Luminous as well.) There's also a sweet framed photo of my husband holding our newborn oldest grandson, with me peeking over his shoulder, emblazoned with a quote about the importance of grandfathers--a gift from son #3 and his wife. Again, this picture reminds me of life's ultimate purpose--not only because grandparenthood is an unequaled joy and privilege, but because I'm confident that my husband, a man of deep commitment to practicing and living out his Faith, will be a saint one day. Hanging on the wall above the couch are canvas photo portraits of all of our grandchildren at age one, but again: I expect that these beloved children will one day be numbered among the saints. That's what I think of when I look at those precious faces.
I have added a few saints to the mix this past week. On the little table in the bay window of the living room, I have placed small framed portraits of two heavenly helpers about whom I knew very little before they wove their way into my fictional stories but who have become dear friends to me: St. Gertrude of Nivelles (patron saint of cats, among other things), to whom I dedicated Marguerite's Diary; and St. Barbara (patron saint of field artillerymen), to whom I dedicated The Boy in Blue. I also have a small framed cross-stitch image of Our Lady of Knock that means the world to me, for two reasons: because it was handmade by a beloved 12-year-old granddaughter and given to me as a Christmas present; and well, because that apparition of Our Lady took place in Ireland, and I love all things Irish (dontcha know!).
Saints everywhere I look, that's what I see when I sit in my living room. [Sigh...] Someday, I hope to see all of them together, in person--the great canonized saints and my own humble string of Pearls--in the glorious presence of Our Lord.
We're off to TN to morrow for a week or so, and I will probably be too busy enjoying my two wee granddaughters to think about blogging. See you on the other side, dear readers.
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
The Joy of Gift-making
Although it is not my first love language, I do so enjoy gift-giving; but I enjoy it most when I've been able to come up with an idea for something hand-crafted or homemade. The love language in which I am most fluent is time spent together (and that one is pretty much tied with expressing love for others through acts of service), so it makes sense that making gifts is so much more satisfying and fun for me than buying them. Homemade gifts truly do become labors of love, and my thoughts are focused so much on the recipients as I work on them.
(That's not to say that there haven't been store-bought gifts that have given me great joy to give; I'm just saying that, in general, making them is preferable to me.)
We are going out of town in a few days to visit our youngest son and his wife and two daughters. Both his 33rd birthday and his baby's first birthday happened in January; and his older daughter will turn three in early March; so we are bringing along gifts (and a cake) and will be celebrating all three of them while we're there.
Our darling almost-three-year-old granddaughter loves to play with little animals and dinosaurs, "small stuff" as she calls these kinds of toys. (I actually blogged about this recently in post called "Not-So-Small Stuff.") She already has miniature sets of zoo animals, farm animals, and dinosaurs; so when I asked what she might like for her birthday, our son advised me that perhaps a set of miniature woodland creatures would be appreciated. Grammy had them ordered within a few minutes of receiving the Amazon link from my boy.
Manufacturing plastic animal toys is well beyond my skill set; but I decided that perhaps I could fashion some kind of play mat to use with them. At Michael's, I got a 9x12" canvas stretched on a wood frame, and with the help of acrylic paints I proceeded to create a small landscape for my granddaughter's small creatures to inhabit. Once I realized that I had to throw the idea of "perspective" out the window and remember that this humble little canvas isn't going to be hanging in an art gallery, it was smooth sailing. And oh, I can't tell you how much I enjoyed making it!
The hippo and elephant can hang out at the watering hole, while the zebra walks down the dirt path...
The monkey can climb into the trees, the lion mountain can climb onto the rocks, and the cheetah can be restrained inside a zoo fence...
And although it is not an ideal size for them, larger toy animals like this thirsty elephant can make good use of this play mat, too...
I'm also stitching up twin dresses for those two precious little birthday girls, but I've got some work to do yet. (I got sidetracked by that painting project mid-way through my sewing project!) I'm trying something new, mixing two different (and not necessarily coordinating!) floral fabrics. I hope the end result will be pretty, but we shall see...My goal is to finish the dresses in time to bring them along on our trip to TN, and I'll try to get a picture of my granddaughters together, modeling them.
I'm glad I have so many indoor hobbies to keep me busy, because I sure don't want to be outside. It's been SO COLD here in VA--this is the coldest, snowiest, iciest winter we've had since we moved here in 2017. When we left NH, I thought we would no longer have to deal with these frigid Northeast-style temperatures, and I feel like I've been tricked! But that's a story for another day!
Speak your love languages loudly, dear readers. And have a great week.
Wednesday, January 21, 2026
Not-So-Small Stuff
Our youngest son texted me a few weeks ago to tell me that his older daughter, who will be turning three in a couple of months, was randomly "reminiscing about Grammy helping her with 'small stuff.'" (She is a petite little thing and was an incredibly verbal child from a young age. She has an enormous vocabulary now, and she's very in tune with what grown-ups are saying; so she's a tiny person who often says big things.) Awww...that text just melted me, and it made me start reminiscing about her family’s week with us in November, when they came from TN for Thanksgiving.
That adorable little girl loved being here--and she really loved playing in our basement. It's a bit of a kids' paradise down there, with ride-ons and building blocks and lots of vintage children's books and boy-friendly toys from when her daddy and his brothers were little, as well as lots of new (make that thrifted) items we've acquired over the years we've been in VA, such as a toy kitchen, dolls, dollhouses, etc. Every day we'd head down there and the first thing she wanted to do was to raid the dinosaur and animal bins to find all the smallest ones.
My little sweetie knew just where to look for the small stuff she wanted to play with, because Papa and I are insanely organized when it comes to putting things back where they belong after the grandkids have been wreaking havoc playing down there. I say "insanely" because we get teased about this by one of our darling daughters-in-law and her husband--my very own son, the traitor!--about how OCD-like we are when it comes to toy organization in our playroom. (They might have a point: we have separate storage areas for the "regular" dinosaurs and the much cooler Jurassic Park ones. Is that crazy?) But imagine if the small stuff was all mixed in willy-nilly with the cars and trucks, the blocks, the baby doll accessories, the Lion King toys...it would be mayhem, I tell you, utter mayhem! My little angel would have had to dump all eight bins in this storage unit every morning to find her favorite little animals and dinosaurs! Thanks to our much-mocked system, she only had to dump two! (One of these days, I'll treat you to a post all about our basement playroom and how organized it is. Stay tuned...or perhaps the better way to put it is be warned.)
So my little granddaughter and I would gather up all the small creatures and line them up and play with them, and that is how we spent many happy hours while she was staying with us that week. And then sometimes, all that playing would get too exhausting; once, she even crawled into my lap mid-play and crashed. I was, as her mommy and daddy call it, nap-trapped. And I was quite okay with that.
I miss that little peanut, and her baby sister. (Not to mention her parents.) It's hard for a mother not to have all of her chicks in the nest anymore, or at least to have the nests they're building with their own chicks a few trees over from hers. I have three of my five boys and their families living close enough to see regularly, though, and I count myself as very blessed. And thank goodness for FaceTime! Lately, whenever we FaceTime with this little girl, she reminds us, "I came to your house." Yes, she did. And I hope she comes here many, many more times in the years ahead.
We will be going to her house in a matter of weeks, and I can hardly wait. The fact that she was reminiscing about playing with small stuff with her Grammy here a couple of months ago made me realize that she's getting old enough to remember things between visits; so I look forward to making some new memories with her there.
The small stuff, it's really the big stuff. But you know that, dear readers.
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
Rules for the Living Room
That NH living room was a lovely sage green, or leaf green--I'm not sure what to call it. I painted it when it was still unfurnished (we couldn't afford to furnish every room right away, as we started out a bit "house poor" when we bought that just-a-tad-beyond-our-means dream home in late 1990, the beloved Colonial in which we raised our five boys and thought we might live forever). I just really wanted a green living room, don't ask me why. Then one day in 1994 when my husband and I were out grocery shopping at BJ's Wholesale Club, we saw a floral couch and loveseat set upholstered in fabric that had the same green shade as the walls of our empty living room, for only $600--and it was a decent brand, Bassett. We bought it and we've had it ever since. When we first toured the Virginia house which we ended up buying, I was delighted to see that its living room was painted almost exactly the same shade of green, incredibly, which meant that my trusty couch and loveseat would look perfect in there. It seemed like a sign that we'd found our new home.
I'm inordinately attached to that pink-and-green couch and loveseat set. It's probably a little weird. I suppose after all these years, I should be yearning for a change; but the exact opposite is actually true. If we didn't have it anymore, I wouldn't even feel like it was "our" living room. Our youngest son was only a year old when we bought it, and he's now about to turn 33 and the father of two little girls. At this point, I've developed a sentimental attachment to my vintage set. Through all the years when it was considered hopelessly dated-looking, I continued to love it. (On a side note: I've heard through the grapevine that couches upholstered in floral fabrics are making a comeback, proving the wisdom of the age-old advice that if you hang onto something long enough, it will eventually come back in style.)
One of my daughters-in-law has expressed amazement that we’ve had the same living room furniture for 32 years, and she can't imagine how it didn't get destroyed with five boys living under our roof. But you see, they never used the living room to jump around or roughhouse, or to play noisy games. There was no TV in that room, no video game player. No one was allowed to bring food in there. Without us having to really say much about it, it was understood that the living room was a peaceful place, where we did things like sit and talk, listen to music on the stereo, and pray our family Rosaries. Our boys had plenty of other rooms where they could hang out, where they could draw and play board games, eat popcorn while they watched a VHS movie, or whatever, and they didn't really gravitate to that room. For me, the living room was an oasis of calm, of peace and quiet, in a loud and sometimes crazy testosterone-heavy house. It's still that way for me here in VA, but the difference is that since this smaller house we live in has a more open floor plan, the living room is not separated from the other living spaces as much as our NH one was. So the grandkids often wander into this pleasant little room with food in hand and need to be reminded that it’s not an eating room. They sometimes stand and climb (and have on occasion even begun to wrestle!) on the couches, and they need to be reminded that only sitting properly is allowed, and that if they want to play energetic games they should head down to the basement playroom.
After all the Christmas festivities were over and our oldest son headed back to WI with his family, I gave the house a deep clean. And in the living room, there was some evidence that Papa and Grammy’s rules had been broken. Among other things, I found a ball point pen wedged between the couch cushions (it hadn't leaked any of its ink, thank goodness) and a half-eaten Oreo, a couple of M & M's, and a hard-as-a-rock chocolate chip cookie (so who knows how long that had been there!) on the floor underneath the loveseat. I knew that one of our grandsons had brought paper, scissors, and scotch tape in there to work on a little craft project, on a day when I was too tired to object, and there were pieces of tape stuck to the coffee table. None of this is the end of the world, I know; but if I don't nip it in the bud, I fear that I will lose my neat and tidy, calm little oasis--and that my precious floral couch and loveseat set might eventually even need to be replaced (NOOOOOO!).
So I went on Etsy to have a downloadable sign made up for the Rosary Room, one that I can point to if I ever see any grandchild bending or breaking the rules.
Anyway, wrapping this up: I've waxed poetic before about my not-very-special but very-special-to-me couch and loveseat set here at the blog, more than once; I'm probably getting a bit boring, and if you keep coming back anyway, then God bless you. I know I'm like a broken record sometimes. But you're aware that old people just like to keep repeating the same old stories, aren't you? Yikes, that's what I'm doing. Perhaps then it might be time to close up shop here for good, before I embarrass myself?! (Too late? Ha ha!)
Before I sign off, I thought I’d share just a couple of the many grandkids-on-the-couch pictures taken in our living room over the past nine years that we’ve lived in Virginia. A Rosary Room rule or two was being broken when these shots were taken, you might notice. But moving forward, maybe my pretty little Etsy sign will help?
You might also notice that the wall of canvas portraits looks different in those two pictures. It's a constantly evolving project of mine, as grandchildren keep getting added to our String of Pearls. By the end of the month, I’ll need to do a little rearranging in order to make space for a new canvas, as our youngest grandchild will be turning one and joining the gallery of cuteness hanging above the couch in her Papa and Grammy's living room. I can't wait!
Okay, then, I'm not going to blog about my couches anymore. Pinky swear. You've heard enough about them, surely. But I may share more kids-on-the-couch pictures, because we always seem to be taking those when we have our family get-togethers at this house. And while my stories may be getting a tad old, those precious faces of theirs will never get old (says their unbiased Grammy!).
















