Tag Archives: Chicago

late summer, chicago, and quick catch up

Despite returning from band camp mid-August, I haven’t yet fully unpacked the last bits of sandy gear still stowed in the garage. I was back to work for a week before heading off to Chicago, my favorite city (sorry Detroit, you are a close second). We stayed in a South Loop loft with a view of an Al Capone hangout and a slice of the river and watched “Murder She Wrote” reruns. We visited the Gilded Age Driehaus Museum and the Art Institute for the Gustave Caillebotte exhibit and hosted a happy hour for some of Brandon’s college friends. The highlight was joining the Gallagher family reunion with 50,000 other Oasis fans on a windy, cool evening at Soldier Field. 

Then after we got home, we had a few days to do laundry and soothe the cats’ mad feelings and catch up at our respective jobs, and we welcomed Brandon’s family to stay for a few days.

My kiddo’s last year of high school has now started and it will be an autumn of marching band and football games and band competitions and “lasts”. The weather has taken a cool turn so the afternoons are honeyed and the evenings downright crisp. I’m sure we’ll have at least one more return to summer weather  before it’s all said and done. 

Watching: La Vuelta (last of the cycling Grand Tours for 2025)

Reading: I’m in between books right now after finishing two excellent reads – “The Buffalo Hunter Hunter” by Stephen Graham Jones and “Silver Nitrate” by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. 

Making: a custom bag charm by request (my kiddo wearing hers around is great advertising), a pair of vanilla socks that I started during band camp, and if you can believe it I still have to finish the Perfect Knit T-shirt which I said I’d do in July.

Wearing: shorter hair after getting 6 inches chopped off; my Adidas sambas, boyfriend jeans, loving my Katie Kime monogrammed Oxford, and a new pink Teddie sweater from J. Crew. 

friendly reminder to have the day you voted for!

august ahead

July has flown by and here we are with August ahead, which used to be a summer month (albeit an elderly one) but is now the back to school month. The kid has a driving test on Sunday, and then the hustle begins with pre-band camp, band camp, her sweet sixteen, picture day, and then the first day of school before Labor Day.

Brandon is still in Iowa but we managed to carve out a long weekend for a Chicago museum spree. (And gosh, I love Chicago. Maybe being a Midwesterner makes me biased, but that city has a vibe and an easygoing indifferent accessibility – a history and a style – like none other.) We stayed in a glass loft on the South Loop with a view of the rail and the river on one side and a glittering expanse of Lake Michigan on the other. It was blistering hot and stormed at night, lightning brighter than the city lights all around us.

Eventually, I think Chicago will be the most beautiful great city left in the world.” – Frank Lloyd Wright

We saw Georgia O’Keeffe’s ‘My New Yorks’ exhibit at the Chicago Institute of Art and although I’ve never been a huge fan of her flowers or Southwest motifs, seeing the city through her eyes and brush changed my opinion on her altogether.

“New York Night” by Georgia O’Keeffe
“The Shelton with Sunspots”

I’d vastly prefer my mister to be here, but with him gone, the structure of the summer has softened and turned uncertain. With more time to myself, I turn inward. There have been lots of summer evenings on the front porch with books, watching the sun wheel through the western sky and come down in sprays of green and gold through the leaves of our old tulip tree. I’ve read some really good things this summer – I loved a book of Kate Atkinson short stories ‘Normal Rules Don’t Apply’, and Lev Grossman’s ‘The Bright Sword’ was wonderful (and the last sentence flooded me with unexpected emotion and tears). I am reading a fantastic biography of Georgia O’Keeffe that reads almost like a novel and having these other little worlds to dive into after the workday is done (and sometimes before evening calls with my colleagues in Japan as we negotiate a thorny contract) has been like a swim in a very cool pool when you’re hot and sticky.

I head out on a business trip tomorrow which will likely be a short and uninspiring parade of a boxy interstate hotel and strip mall restaurants and then home for a weekend of hopefully not much by the pool with Georgia as she meets Alfred Steiglitz. There is a cardinal sitting in the pine tree outside of my open home office window singing for the feeders to be refilled. August ahead looks – busy? and short with all of the activity. It is a birthday month for a few very important women in my life – mother, grandmother, and the kid. Anyway, I hope to greet it on the porch with a book and possibly armed with a knitting needle. Be well and enjoy the last heavy breath of summertime.