Dear Michelle,
I read your book, I’m pen pals with Barack and I miss you. I would love to have you over for dinner. I feel like I know you, like you are a good friend, a kindred spirit. I’m so proud of you.
But who I’m I?
Some kind of backwoods stalker?
No.
Well, maybe.
But in a good way.
I loved your book. What a wonderful story and so transparent, no filters. Oh sure; I caught the quick reference to a little pot smoking in the car with a boyfriend. Or sleeping at your boyfriend’s place since you lived in an upstairs apartment in your parents house. I appreciate the full disclosure. It makes you even more real and authentic. Qualities I admire most. I received your book as a Christmas present from my daughter, she bought two, one for me and one for her boyfriend’s mother. My mom was reading it at the same time. My best friend was reading it as the same time. My other friend, who I promised to give my copy to, couldn’t wait and downloaded it on her kindle. I may donate my copy to our local library. I live in a conservative county located in a red state that is slowly turning purplish; I believe; or hope. It will be nice to see you displayed on the “new” bookshelf right when you walk in the door of the library.
Yes, it’s true. Not sure if Barack has told you, but we have corresponded by mail. He can come to dinner too. I wrote a letter to him as one of my blog posts and decided I might as well print it and mail it to him. Several months later, my work phone rang, I answered, and it was someone from the office of the President of the United States.
“Hi, is this the Lisa Poe who wrote a letter to President Obama?”
“Um, well, yes….I did write a letter to the President.”
“Great. The President receives thousand of letters a day and selects ten to read each night. He hand writes replies to some of them and has written to you; we need an address to send it to.”
Who writes to the President of the United States and doesn’t include contact information?
Me! Apparently. I gave my information to the person on the other end of the line. She emailed me a copy as well.
I was so excited. I shared the email with my family, my co-workers and even included it in my next blog post.
Clearly, I’m the one to drop the ball as I have not written back to him.
And yes, I miss you. I miss you so much and Barack. I so enjoyed the part in the book where you tried to be as gracious and eloquent in your transition with the new first family as George and Laura Bush had been to you. I’m not sure how you pulled that off. I’m not sure how you didn’t call in sick that day. Is someone still looking after the garden? Or was that turned back into a fertilized green lawn?
I work in a school and was part of the optimistic drive to see the new school foods policies you implemented enforced in an atmosphere full of fear in the changes. Lunch ladies across the state fighting to give our kids more chicken nuggets and white bread so they would be full. Our school received a Farm to School Grant and hired someone to over see the program. The lunch ladies were happy that we hired a local graduate from our school. A neighbor. As they told this new young hire; “We were afraid they’d hire one of Lisa’s flower smelling hippie friends”. I don’t believe they meant this as a complement.
Thank you for sharing your life with us. Your thoughts. Your past. Even intimate details. I made your book one of my book picks in my blog “Wild About Books”. Which is a great resource for book lovers in case you find yourself without a book. If you’re like me, that is one of my biggest fears.
In conclusion, we need to pick a book for this post. This past year Montana Public Radio participated in the Great Montana Read in search of Montana’s best-loved novel. Thirty-one books were potentials and the winner is our new book selection. “Perma Red” by Debra Magpie Earling takes place in the 1940’s on the Flathead Indian Reservation. The author’s writing makes the reader feel as if they are in a dream or in a spirit world. Guided by something bigger or a belief in something bigger to get through the suppression; shame; “Wash the Indian out of you”. Why do we do this to people?
This book will be part of my live book club. Where people actually get together after having read a great book and share a pot luck meal while discussing how the book affected them. Friday April 5th at 6:00 at my house. Dinner theme to be determined. So far in the book, there is a lot of fry bread and beer, we can start with that. Please let me know if you will be coming. If Michelle comes, we might have to rent the clubhouse, no worries. Oh, and Michelle I’ll have my daughter pick you up at the airport on her way. Hope you don’t mind being labeled as one of my flower smelling hippie friends.
See you soon.
Lisa
Both Christmas presents, socks from my assistant daughter Shelby, and the book from my daughter Hannah. I’ve got a new batch of kombucha brewing on the stove. I’m enjoying a hot cup of herbal dandelion blend beverage with nut pods creamer. My kittens Ruth and Bader are running around the house like wild banshies and my 5 month old lab is outside chewing on some fresh deer bones from a recent butchering and meat grinding session in the garage. Later I plan on making lintel soup for tomorrow to take snowboarding and then rip out the sweater I knitted and write my own pattern for a pussy hat. After listening to NPR this morning about all of the marches and people trying to repel Roe vs Wade, I have this burning desire to knit a pussy hat out of my wrecked sweater. Yep. Just your average Saturday afternoon.
located on the Bitterroot River, isolated from any other houses, with views of the snow capped Bitterroot Mountain Range. The rainy days of June let up on the wedding day allowing us to set up outside by the river. The sun beamed on us in the morning as we did yoga in the lawn. Soon after yoga the hair and makeup women showed up at the front door with bags of supplies to make us “pop” for the photos. The men went to lunch at the local brewery while the women spent their day taking turns with hair and makeup. A makeup pause for a champagne toast and gift opening as Louisiana grandma was heard saying while nodding her head “Uh uh….. Mawmaw knows what a man likes….” ,

by The Old 97’s, followed by the bride, father of the bride dancing to “
swing dance began. We danced as if we had choreographed and practiced our groom, mother of the groom dance; right down to the end when Zach flipped me. The dance floor was wide open after that. The party began.






message. The sticky note message was on all the copies on the shelf. I lifted the note to read the description and immediately realized this was where the spoilers and misleadings were. I stopped reading the back before finishing the first sentence and erased what I had read from my mind, as much as one can.
love and respect the women in their lives. You are the majority and we love you back. Hooray for the men who roast us brussel sprouts, let us cry tears of frustration with them, wash the dishes, wait patiently as we browse in a store, fill up our freezers with game meat and share the experiences of the natural world in speechless appreciation.