Sunday, January 25, 2026

An Abundant Life - A Brother's Love

One of the things I've found as I've been revisiting the memories of my childhood home is the music of my older brother, Paul. I was able to connect with a friend of his recently, and as we have talked I've learned more about him and his guitars, his history of playing music and being a part of the music industry, and I've gotten more of an insight into my brother as a musician.

There's something very interesting about being related to someone who is very talented. I knew my brother my whole life because he was ten years older than I am, and I always loved him, but though I knew he was someone who loved to play guitar and who played in bands for most of his life all over the country and the world, and though I knew he'd started making CD's and producing his own music and I'd really enjoyed some of the ones that he'd sent to me, the music he was making was in a way so familiar to me that it just seemed like something he did. It's not to say in any way that I didn't recognize his talent. I knew how skilled he was, but I also didn't quite grasp how important his guitar playing and his music was to him until I started talking to his friend and remembering and being reminded of my experiences of my brother from the past.

Paul was never without his guitars. He traveled everywhere with them. And it was the same with his music. I have listened to the music I listen to in large part because of what I learned from him, growing up and listening to the music he played, the bands and performers and records and then tapes and eventually CD's he was playing and making. In so many photographs I have of him he has a guitar in his hands, or if he doesn't you get the feeling that it's somewhere nearby and he's about to pick it up again.

In speaking with his friend, I've learned that not only did he make CD's, but he was always working on new tracks and play lists, adjusting things, tinkering with things, trying to perfect what he was creating. One of the first things his friend asked me when we first started speaking, was whether I could send him copies of the CD's I have of Paul's music because his had been taken from his truck. I wasn't sure if I'd be able to make copies for him of the ones I have, but I remembered a box of them existed in the home I grew up in, and I looked for them and found them immediately. It was almost as if it was somewhere in my heart and mind already, as if I'd dreamed it or knew it, or was being shown where they were by a brother who wanted me to connect more deeply with him between the worlds where we both live.

When I found the box of CD's I saw that not only were there copies of things that I had that my brother had sent to me years ago, but there was one CD that I didn't have a copy of and several others that seemed to be works in progress or what he was describing as rough cuts, or in some cases what seemed to be working versions of the final CD's. I started listening to the ones that I hadn't heard before, listening to the ones that were not titled, and downloading and sending music to my brother's friend as I discovered it. At one point he asked me to send him the song lists from the CD's because he thought that there might be some differences in the ones that he had heard before. When I opened up one of the CD's that was one I'd always particularly loved, I saw that there was a notation on it in my brother's handwriting, dedicating it to me. The copy that I have does not have that written on it, and my mother had never told me about it. It hit me so deeply to see that, to know that this particular CD that had already resonated so deeply with me for years was one that he had dedicated it to me.

It's been many years since he has gone to live in the heavenly realms, and as I wrote in a poem at the time, his spirit is still so much a part of my life that there is some reminder at many different times of him, of his music, of his voice, of the way he spoke to me, of the way he took care of me, of the way I now know he loved me. Having that love in tangible form, calling to me from memory, is a precious gift, and one I have to give thanks to his friend for too, because he cared about my brother and his music enough to ask me to make copies to share with him and to listen with me deeply and carefully to the music and stories and creative journey of my brother's life.


A Discovered Gift
From My Brother Paul
Bringing The Past
Into The Present
With Love





Blessings,

Jannie Susan

Sunday, January 18, 2026

An Abundant Life - Flourishing Community

This past week I had the wonderful experience of two Mayoral Inaugurations in one day. The first at 1pm  was for the gorgeous Emily Jabbour, the new Mayor of Hoboken, and the second at 7pm was for the marvelous James Solomon, the new Mayor of Jersey City. I so much enjoy a wonderful celebration like this, and to have two in one day for two people who I admire was really a very special blessing.

During the course of the day, during the inaugurations and the different events surrounding and celebrating them, the topic everyone returned to was public service and how and what we do to support our communities and help each other and everyone to flourish and thrive.

In addition to the wonderful speeches and beautiful spaces we found ourselves in, there were musical performances of all kinds, including choirs and bands that celebrated the voices and talents of youth of all ages. Barbershop quartets, fife and drums, the Presentation of Colors, the Retiring of Colors, bagpipes, choirs, the Pledge of Allegiance, and speeches filled with encouraging words, all brought each one of us together in such a beautiful way. It was exciting to see and hear and enjoy every part of both events, and wonderful to experience and have so many beautiful memories of these two historic events.

Both Mayor Jabbour and Mayor Solomon, though well experienced and trained, are fairly young in years. I wish them both so well in their new roles, and am so excited to see and hear what they will bring to the two cities they now helm.



Two Wonderful New Mayors
And Two Wonderful Inaugurations
Mayor Emily Jabbour of Hoboken
And Mayor James Solomon of Jersey City
Celebrate With The Rich History
Of Their Two Neighboring Cities

Mayor Emily Jabbour
Hoboken, New Jersey

Mayor James Solomon
Jersey City, New Jersey 





Blessings,

Jannie Susan







Sunday, January 11, 2026

An Abundant Life - Remembering Beauty

I didn't have a chance to post last week at the time I usually do because I was away from my computer for much longer than I had thought I would be. There were some things that I needed to attend to and meetings with people I needed to see, some very unexpected along with others that had been planned. In the process I found myself arriving back at my computer with so much that I needed to follow up on that there didn't seem to be a good time to sit and write a blog post. Instead I decided to write something very short for this week, and to follow up in a future one. For this week I wanted to share this photograph of my childhood home, and I will share more memories of its beautiful history and some special stories soon.


Remembering The Beauty
Of A Childhood Home





Blessings,

Jannie Susan


Sunday, January 4, 2026

An Abundant Life - Dressing Up

On a recent holiday visit to the family home where I grew up, I found my Junior Prom dress. I had been looking for it for a while now, and it had been moved from where I had seen it before. As I went through some things with a childhood friend of mine, I saw it tucked away where I hadn't expected it to be, and seeing it again brought back so many memories.

As I was sharing about it with another long time friend, I looked in my collection of photographs and found one of me in that dress on the day of the Prom. I am standing in the yard of the house where I grew up, and it is such a beautiful late spring going into early summer day with the lushness of greenery growing profusely all around.

Looking at that photograph I remembered so many details of the story of that dress, and it is a special one. My family was very poor, and I had been working from a very very young age to take care of and provide for myself. But Prom dresses are expensive and an extravagance, and I didn't know how I would ever afford one. There were two dresses we had from the 1950's that had belonged to my much older cousins, and though one fit me perfectly my cousin was shorter and the style of the time was shorter. My Mother and I brought the dress to a woman in town named Maria who did alternations, and she made a longer chiffon net overskirt for the dress. On a trip to Saks Fifth Avenue I found a pink beaded clutch bag and pink strappy patent leather sandals in the discount bin and racks and my outfit was complete. I don't remember how my Mother had met Maria, but she was lovely, and the way she made that vintage dress look, I felt like a princess.

On a beautiful afternoon and evening, God provided a dress for this Cinderella to go to the Prom, and as I remember this story I remember that we can be blessed in ways we are not expecting. A cast off dress from a cousin, a lovely neighbor who is creative with the ingenuity of her seamstress designs, discount rack shopping, and the ability to be grateful and allow God to provide in a way I wasn't expecting made this dress and the memory of it all the sweeter. 



A Sweet Prom Dress Memory
With So Much Gratitude
For Divine Blessings
And The People Who Help Make Them So





Blessings,

Jannie Susan