Saturday, May 17, 2025

Poetry -The Heart That Beats.

 I heard your beat for the first time today and it brought tears to my eyes.

I never thought the sound of you would make me want to cry.

You have been with me since the beginning

And you will be with me until my life is finished.

My love for you transcends space and time.

My life with you has been sublime.

You are that constant in a life well lived.

I know you won't waver until the end.

You have been with me from the start.

I will love you until death do us part....

In this life, we walk together.

My heart my love, my until forever.


SK Virtue

May 17,
2025










Friday, May 16, 2025

SNIPPETS - Flying Clothes -A Moment in Time

 In 1964 when I was 4 years old my dad went to work at a copper mine in Butte Montana. He took the bus, and we all stood and waved goodbye to him. At the time he didn't have a place to stay except in the man camp, but he finally found an apartment in some row housing for the mine. A month later he came home and packed up our 1957 Chevy Nomad, with five kids, my mom and all of our belongings and headed through the Rocky Mountain switchbacks with no brakes and a jar full of pennies. My littlest brother slept in a cradle in the back.

I remember we lived on the bottom floor of the apartment building. And I remember that my little brother slept in in a dresser drawer. I also remember that my mom and dad friended a couple and their children that lived in the apartment above us. This couple argued. We could hear them almost every night. I don't think they beat each other or their kids. They just yelled, mostly when he didn't come home right after work. That is when the spectacle began.

 We kids couldn't wait to watch the show. We knew it had started when the husband's shoes fell on the ground in front of our apartment window. Then every single article of his clothing floated down as the wife threw them out the window. It usually happened once a week.  Mom and Dad would laugh and say, "Guess So and So stayed out too long."

 Hours later, when he did get home there was a lot of yelling followed by silence. About fifteen minutes later the kids would come down and collect the shoes and clothes in a basket and take them upstairs again.

We eventually left the town of Butte when the miners went on strike and Mom told Dad it was time to pack up and leave. It wasn't a very safe job for my dad either. A few miners had been blown up in the tunnels and the working conditions were pretty bad. So once again we packed everything in the 1957 Chevy Nomad and made our trek through the switchbacks, no brakes and all. That was the last time my dad ever went underground. He went back to farming and never looked back. As far as the family of flying clothes we never heard from them again.

 

Berkeley Pit Butte Montana

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Poetry - It Is Finished

“It is finished.” …you softly sighed.

As you hung on the cross and died.

My heart broke into tiny pieces,

Tears of shame I cried.

 

“How could this be?” I sobbed aloud.

“That you would die for me.

I am no one in this lonely world.

In me… what do you see?”

 

“Is your love for me so very true?

That it can see past all my flaws.

Can you give me a life so new?

And forget all that ever was.”

 

I felt your whisper in my heart.

 “Your sins have been forgiven.

My child, I’ve loved you from the start.

You’ll be with me in heaven.”


SK Virtue - 3/14/25


Thursday, April 17, 2025

SNIPPETS - THE DAY I ALMOST...

 The year was around 1965. My family lived on a farm just outside of Myers Montana.  My dad was the hired hand on the farm. We lived in a house that was sided with tar paper that looked like brick siding. I remember a lot of things about this time in my life but the most vivid is the day I almost died. 

Being a farm kid meant that you had pretty much the whole place for a playground. As farm kids we played in the haystacks and small irrigation ditches. We ran in the pastures and rode our bikes down dirt roads. We played hide and seek in the barns and outbuildings. We pretty much stayed out of my mom's hair for the day. She had her hands full with house chores and taking care of my younger siblings. 

I remember the day was hot. And I remember my mom telling us to go play but stay away from the big ditch that was close to our house. We played hide and seek, rode pretend horses and played cops and robbers.

 But kids being kids we eventually forgot my mom's warning and ended up standing on the bank of the ditch. We were all hot and sweating and I remember we stood looking down into that cool water. I don't exactly know how it began but I do remember we started teasing each other about being pushed in and how we were giggling and playing around.

 Suddenly I felt a push and I remember falling into the water and sinking. I could see the bubbles surrounding me as I was floating under the water and I tried to come up for air, but the water kept me cocooned. I was in a dark place, and I felt like I was being sucked through something and then it was light again, and I felt hands pulling me up out of the water and onto the ditch bank. I took a deep breath of fresh air and started coughing and gagging. I remember my mom yelling and my sisters and brothers crying. 

Apparently and I say apparently my brother had pushed me in to see if I could float and if I could fit through the culvert that was farther on down the ditch. The good news was that I did fit through that culvert, but the bad news was that I and my siblings got the spanking of our lives from my mom and were banished to the fenced yard for a week. To kids a week meant forever!

Years later I asked my brother why he pushed me in the ditch, and he said, "I just wanted to see if you would fit through the culvert."

 Hmm! Guess I did! And I lived to tell the story!


SK Virtue





Tuesday, April 15, 2025

A Life Well Loved - Stories of my Parents - Elvis


   ****Back story. My mom and dad were married in 1957 at the very young ages of 15 years old and 17 years old. Mom was pregnant at the time and Dad wanted to marry her. My dad is Hispanic, and my mom is Irish. Mom's sisters and brothers were very much against my parents getting married. But my grandparents weren't. Both my grandmothers went to the courthouse with my parents and signed the consent for them to get married.  My parents were married for 66 years and had seven children. Mom passed away on April 2, 2023, and Dad is still alive at the time of this article writing which is March 2025. These are the stories of their life according to them. ******

Elvis Comes to Town - by Dad


Dorie and I had been going out for some time, when she told me one afternoon after school that Elvis was coming to town. All the girls in school were so excited to go. They couldn't believe that Elvis was coming to Montana. I asked Dorie if she wanted to go. She said no. She didn't much like Elvis. So, we didn't go. A few days later she climbed in the car after school, and she was laughing. I asked her what was so funny. She said all the girls had dressed up and went to see Elvis. They came to school the next day madder than hornets. They saw Elvis alright. Elvis the monkey. All the hype was for Elvis the monkey. I am sure glad we didn't go. 

By SK Virtue as told by Gonsalo Victoria Morales Jr.





Tuesday, April 8, 2025

The Stories I will Tell

 When I am old and gray

 And my time to go is near.

The stories I will tell those that lend an ear.

When my days are getting numbered

 And my eyes are getting weak

 The stories I will tell those who hear me speak.


When time is not what matters

 and I wander from room to room,

 The stories I will tell who or what or whom.

I will tell of memories of yesteryears

And of time gone by

I will reminisce of days of old

And ponder at the sky.


I might not know a name or what I ate that day.

But I can tell you about old memories that don't go away.

So, if you have a chance to sit with me today.

Listen to my memories and what I have to say.

And somewhere down the road of life if you feel you want to share

Pass on the stories of my life to those that lend an ear. 


 by SK VIRTUE

 copyright


4/8/2025









Saturday, April 5, 2025

SNIPPETS - RIGHT PLACE WRONG CAR

 I was so excited to get a new SUV.  It was a 2000 Hyundai Santa Fe. It was one of the first to come off the assembly line. And I loved it. it was sleek. It was silver and it had curves in all the right places. My Santa Fe was special to me. 

I lived in Wyoming at the time. My husband worked at the coal mine and both my kids were in junior high, and I was a stay-at-home mom who worked out of my home doing alterations. 

We had new cars before, but this one had all the bells and whistles that I wanted. Power heated leather seats, Awd, silver, lift gate, roomy and even looked good.  This was my beauty that I had picked myself. 

I loved to drive my SUV to deliver my alterations and get groceries and I knew I would recognize in any parking lot. It was a beauty to behold. People noticed it. One day I came out of the grocery store and saw a man running his hands along its curves. I stopped in surprise. He looked up and saw me watching. He laughed and said, "She sure has curves where you don't expect them."  It felt a little weird that a man was running a hand along my SUV's curves, but I put that thought aside.  I grinned and said, "Sure does!"

I knew my Hyundai from inside out and I could pick her out of a dozen cars in the parking lot. Or so I thought I could. I went grocery shopping one day. I parked in my usual row. I locked my little beauty. I went in and did my usual shopping and visiting. The bag person bagged my groceries and asked if I needed help taking the groceries to my car. I said thank you, but no, I could handle it. I proudly pushed the cart of groceries out to my silver, 2000 Hyundai Santa Fe. I pushed the key to unlock the back lift door. I lifted the door. I then preceded to put my groceries in the back, all the while humming to myself. I got a whiff of cigarette smoke and wondered where it came from. I didn't smoke and my husband hadn't used the car yet. Hmm...that was strange. I looked around to see if anyone was smoking as they walked by me. No one there. Then a I heard a strange sound come from the car. A baby's coo. I bent and looked into the car. There was a lady, looking at me in the mirror of my SUV, smoking a cigarette. Behind her sat a baby in a car seat.  I stood up and looked around. Just two cars down, the row was another sleek silver Hyundai. I pushed the button on my key fob and the lights of the one, two cars down flashed. That one was my Hyundai. 

I looked at the lady in the front of the car and spoke. "I'm sorry. I thought this was my SUV." I grinned embarrassingly. I started taking my groceries back out and putting them in my cart.

"I thought you were the bag lady, and just bringing my groceries out to me." she replied.

We both laughed. Well so much for me knowing my SUV. I put my groceries in my SUV and went home. Later I bought black pin stripes and put then on the side of my Hyundai, so I could recognize her in a parking lot. And I made dang sure I checked to see that it was my SUV each time, I came out of the grocery store!

SK VIRTUE 





A Life Well Loved - Blonde!

 My Dad is 87 years old now and I take him lunch almost every day. And every day he tells me the story of my birth. As soon as I walk in the...