So I read somewhere that a thin film of ketchup would clean copper. Shee-yeah, right.
If you, The Reader, are expecting revelations as to The Meaning of Life, this is not the place for you. Expect streams of conciousness and simple pleasures. Rants and raves. If you are expecting major impact, DO NOT READ MY BLOG. I fear disappointing you.
Sunday, November 30
Sooo Cool
So I read somewhere that a thin film of ketchup would clean copper. Shee-yeah, right.
Saturday, November 29
Charlie Bit Me
Black Friday
Walter Loeb, president of Loeb Associates, a retail consultancy, said there was shopping mania at Wal-Mart every year. But this year, he said, it seems “people are becoming irrational in their actions.”
At a Wal-Mart store in Columbus, Ohio, Nikki Nicely, 19, jumped onto a man’s back and pounded his shoulders when he tried to take a 40-inch Samsung flat-screen television to which she had laid claim. “That’s my TV!” Ms. Nicely shouted. “That’s my TV!”
A police officer and security guard intervened, but not before Ms. Nicely took an elbow in the face. In the end, she was the one with the $798 television, marked down from $1,000. “That’s right,” she cried as her adversary walked away. “This here is my TV!”
Friday, November 28
Tour of NYC Holiday Windows
In addition to the gorgeous, colorful pics, are the stories of how they came up with the concepts and how they executed them. Just in time for your blossoming Christmas spirit.
Enjoy!
Thursday, November 27
Thankful
I am thankful for variety. The smoothness of polished wood, the roughness of bark. Cold stormy days and the warmth of our fire at home. The complex tangle of life and the order of nicely folded laundry.
I am thankful to be a creative person. 'Cleanliness is next to godliness'? Cleanliness is always temporary. For me, creativity is next to godliness, as He is the original creator. He made me creative because I am made in His image.
I'm thankful I have a need to create. It makes me feel alive.
I am thankful for the creativity of others. It gives me joy to see what others can conceive. Their creativity inspires me to create.
I am thankful for time alone.
I am thankful for time with others.
I am thankful for water. I love to see it, to feel it, to hear it, and to touch it.
I am thankful for trees. For shade. For the shushing of leaves. For the microclimate they provide. For the dappled light on the ground beneath.
I am thankful for our pets.
I am thankful for children, their hope, their purity.
I am thankful for older people and the wisdom they have to offer.
I'm thankful for books. I'm thankful my parents taught me to love them.
I am thankful for the chances we have to help others. I don't deserve to be blessed. It's a gift, and helping others allows me to show my thanks.
Tuesday, November 25
Shocking report on Obama
from http://www.borowitzreport.com/: you gotta love it....
Obama’s Use of Complete Sentences Stirs Controversy
Stunning Break with Last Eight Years
In the first two weeks since the election, President-elect Barack Obama has broken with a tradition established over the past eight years through his controversial use of complete sentences, political observers say.
Millions of Americans who watched Mr. Obama's appearance on CBS' "Sixty Minutes" on Sunday witnessed the president-elect's unorthodox verbal tick, which had Mr. Obama employing grammatically correct sentences virtually every time he opened his mouth.
But Mr . Obama's decision to use complete sentences in his public pronouncements carries with it certain risks, since after the last eight years many Americans may find his odd speaking style jarring.
According to presidential historian Davis Logsdon of the University of Minnesota, some Americans might find it "alienating" to have a President who speaks English as if it were his first language.
"Every time Obama opens his mouth, his subjects and verbs are in agreement," says Mr. Logsdon. "If he keeps it up, he is running the risk of sounding like an elitist."
The historian said that if Mr. Obama insists on using complete sentences in his speeches, the public may find itself saying, "Okay, subject, predicate, subject predicate - we get it, stop showing off."
The President-elect's stubborn insistence on using complete sentences has already attracted a rebuke from one of his harshest critics, Gov. Sarah Palin of Alaska.
"Talking with complete sentences there and also too talking in a way that ordinary Americans like Joe the Plumber and Tito the Builder can't really do there, I think needing to do that isn't tapping into what Americans are needing also," she said.
Monday, November 24
Dogs
"Bones" is a beautiful dog, big and strong, with a sweet personality, well-hidden behind his fierce and sad exterior.
They don't have a fence, and I was surprised they had a dog at all, since their prior experience with ignoring dogs wound up with the gas meter reader suffering a nasty bite and the dog being euthanized.
So Bones was kept on a heavy chain in the backyard. He often wound it round things so that he, too, couldn't reach his food or water. When he could reach his water, he often flipped it so that he was in a huge puddle of mud, piss and dung.
He barked incessantly. He needed attention. Water. Food. Our summer days get long and hot and the 5-gallon bucket they filled with the hose was easily flipped. I longed to buy him a kiddie pool, totally unflippable, but hated to get involved. These neighbors are hostile and resentful.
About 2 weeks after he arrived, I approached the husband, the more approachable of the family, and shared that DH was having trouble sleeping during the day after working all night, as the barking was incessant. He said he'd take care of it.
Nothing happened.
Next I approached the adult son, who actually owned the dog. He had moved home after his trial with work/apartment/independence had not been so successful. He punctuated my every sentence with one statement: "It's temporary."
It was temporary for three years.
Undaunted, well, daunted but not yet beaten, I finally called the wife, who really resents me.
I called her on the phone, chicken that I am, and told her I really needed her help. I explained that DH works nights a lot and Bones' barking was interfering with his ability to sleep. "We don't hear a thing," she lied. "...and we don't even have nice storm windows like you do."
Hmm.
One Sunday afternoon Bones had barked for over an hour when I saw the husband on his front porch and mentioned it. He walked round to the back yard and ... KICKED THE DOG IN THE HEAD. The dog stopped barking. I never complained again.
The oddest thing we noticed over the three year sentence was that he had three distinct barks. He had the angry, I'll-eat-you-alive bark that he gave when he was trying to do his job for the owners.
He had the plaintive, look-at-me-I'm-just-a-playful-pup bark he gave when any of their family were outdoors. He'd flip the empty food bowl and it would bonk! back to earth. Bark! Bark! Look at me! Am I not the cutest? This bark was more of a cheerful, happy YIP!
And then there was just the normal bark, bark, bark, bark, please come outside and feed me, rub me, give me water, anything, just let me off this heavy chain for a minute.
During extremely rainy weeks they would chain him on their back porch, mounds of feces piling on the decking.
We endured, we fretted, we filled water and trembling, took it to him.
I never thought to offer to walk him. I can imagine the look I would have gotten if I had.
I admire DS for his ingenuity. It's a tough situation.
The adult son moved out about 6 months ago and Bones was sold to another family shortly thereafter. I hope they are taking care of him.
Good luck.
Sunday, November 23
Biggest Doggone Sweet-Gum Ball You Ever Saw
I remember the day one of my divorces was final. I had been alternately distraught, confused, panic-ridden, lonely, and angry, for the past year. I had to go to my attorney's office to sign something and in return, got the final papers.
I walked out of the office and for some unforeseen reason, I suddenly felt relieved: it's over. There was no turning back. There was no should-we-turn-back, no could-we-turn-back. It was over.
This unexpected lightness of heart was so welcome after months of misery. Years, if you count the last portion of the marriage itself.
I remember I had on a new suit and it was a cold and cloudy day. But my heart was light.
I walked down the sidewalk tap, tap, tapping my umbrella on the sidewalk. Tap, tap. It was a long umbrella with a crook at the top. Tap, tap.
I wasn't watching where I was going. I wasn't paying attention to what I was doing. I didn't know what lay ahead but I knew the divorce was complete and I had a new beginning ahead of me. Chin was up, shoulders were back, and I was walking quickly down the sidewalk. Tap, tap.
Suddenly, the tip of the umbrella caught in the metal grate in the sidewalk and it yanked me into a quick Louie there on the sidewalk. I spent the next 20 seconds or so pulling the umbrella until it ungracefully POPPED! out of the grate.
Without looking around to see who was looking at me, I humbly proceeded. Chin down. Eyes down. Shoulders rounded.
I never forgot it.
It all came back to me on Friday.
On Thursday, the state-wide glossy magazine had sent me a copy of the December issue, in which I have a small article. I had worked Friday morning at the newsroom at the paper, and walked afterward over to the local book store to see if the magazines were available for purchase yet. They were. I got two, one to send to someone special, and one to cut my article from, so it could be scanned for my upcoming website.
The world was my oyster as I walked the five blocks back to the car. It was sunny but horridly cold, with a biting wind. I clutched the magazines to my chest and walked as fast as I could. My mind was racing with possibilities: maybe I could write this for this magazine, or that for that magazine.
Only two blocks from the car, I stepped on the biggest doggone sweet-gum ball you ever saw. My right ankle rolled inward and I flew headlong to the sidewalk. Face-down, I slid along the concrete.
As is so often the case with a fall, my thoughts were amazingly lucid. "Jeez," I thought. "How long am I going to slide?" When I finally stopped moving, I lay there for a moment, face down, and took inventory. Nothing seemed broken. Slowly I got up. I was shaky but whole.
"You okay?" A young man stood at the door to the public library, across the street. "I'm fine," I waved to him as if I were only embarrassed, but in truth I was still badly shaken.
I picked up my magazines, now torn, and hobbled to the car. It wasn't until I got there that I realized I must have dropped my keys. I had to return to the scene and look in the leaves to find them.
I am so lucky not to be hurt. I scraped the tip of my nose; I look a tad like W.C. Fields. My chest was scraped through my silk turtleneck, my thighs scraped through my trousers. Three fingers on my right hand were bent backward and are still swollen, and my ankle is swollen but walkable.
If only I could remember not to get cocky to start with.
Saturday, November 22
Legend of 1900
- The opening dialogue was irresistible.
- The first two scenes totally sucked me in.
- I love the adoptive dad.
- The scenery was compelling.
- The sets were haunting.
- The story was totally unbelievable, but mind you, they SAID the story was unbelievable.
Thursday, November 20
Keillor...Again
Sitting on top of the world
Garrison Keillor
November 12, 2008
Be happy, dear hearts, and allow yourselves a few more weeks of quiet exultation. It isn't gloating, it's satisfaction at a job well done. He was a superb candidate, serious, professorial but with a flashing grin and a buoyancy that comes from working out in the gym every morning. He spoke in a genuine voice, not senatorial at all. He relished campaigning. He accepted adulation gracefully. He brandished his sword against his opponents without mocking or belittling them. He was elegant, unaffected, utterly American, and now (Wow) suddenly America is cool. Chicago is cool. Chicago!!!
We threw the dice and we won the jackpot and elected a black guy with a Harvard degree, the middle name Hussein and a sense of humor—he said, "I've got relatives who look like Bernie Mac, and I've got relatives who look like Margaret Thatcher." The French junior minister for human rights said, "On this morning, we all want to be American so we can take a bite of this dream unfolding before our eyes." When was the last time you heard someone from France say they wanted to be American and take a bite of something of ours? Ponder that for a moment.
The world expects us to elect pompous yahoos, and instead we have us a 47-year-old prince from the prairie who cheerfully ran the race, and when his opponents threw sand at him, he just smiled back. He'll be the first president in history to look really good making a jump shot. He loves his classy wife and his sweet little daughters. At the same time, he knows pop music, American lit and constitutional law. I just can't imagine anybody cooler.
It feels good to be cool, and all of us can share in that, even sour old right-wingers and embittered blottoheads. Next time you fly to Heathrow and hand your passport to the man with the badge, he's going to see "United States of America" and look up and grin. Even if you worship in the church of Fox, everyone you meet overseas is going to ask you about Obama, and you may as well say you voted for him because, my friends, he is your line of credit over there. No need anymore to try to look Canadian.
And the coolest thing about him is the fact that back in the early '90s, given a book contract after the hoo-ha about his becoming the First Black Editor of The Harvard Law Review, instead of writing the basic exploitation book he could've written, he put his head down and worked hard for a few years and wrote a good book, an honest one, which, since his rise in politics, has earned the Obamas enough to buy a nice house and put money in the bank. A successful American entrepreneur.
Our hero who galloped to victory has inherited a gigantic mess. The country is sunk in debt. The Treasury announced it must borrow $550 billion to get the government through the fourth quarter, more than the entire deficit for 2008, so he will have to raise taxes and not only on bankers and lumber barons. His promise never to raise the retirement age is not a good idea. Whatever he promised the Iowa farmers about subsidizing ethanol is best forgotten at this point. We may not be getting our National Health Service cards anytime soon. And so on and so on.
So enjoy the afterglow of the election awhile longer. We all walk taller this fall. People in Copenhagen and Stockholm are sending congratulatory e-mails—imagine! We are being admired by Danes and Swedes! And Chicago becomes The First City. Step aside, San Francisco. Shut up, New York. The Midwest is cool now. The mind reels. Have a good day.
Garrison Keillor is a radio host and author.
Wednesday, November 19
The Ill-Fated Trip
Tuesday, November 18
Windy
Monday, November 17
School Project
Friday, November 14
An Illustrated Life
I have almost always journaled. When I was a kid I routinely journaled in the recognizable black-and-white speckled lined books. I saved all these journals as well as my filled-to-overflowing scrapbooks into my adult life. When the kids and I lived in Virginia, our town experienced a 100-year flood and our basement was filled. Alas, my journals and scrapbooks were all a sodden mess. The lovely little dolls my father brought from his travels were lost as well.
The loss of all my journals broke my heart and set my journaling backwards for several years.
Nowadays I journal on paper as well as online. And, yes, they are different.
I am intrigued by the need to journal. Some folks have it -- some don't.
I had a gf one time who was horrified when her brother read the journals of their deceased mother.
My journals are intended to be read. If I sound grumpy, then, hey, it was a grumpy day. I don't have any hidden mass-murder plans in there or any hate vendettas. I am a basically happy person and I would think the journals probably reflect that. Yes, there are situations in my life that I am frustrated with. They're in there, but then, if you are my family, you already know about them, anyway.
I love to see folks journaling in coffee houses. I sometimes take the time to do it, myself. Unfortunately the coffee houses in our town don't afford a cosy corner or overstuffed chair, my favorite settings for journaling.
The film is from Danny Gregory, a fellow in NYC who draws and journals. I have written about him before. Can't wait for the book!
Wednesday, November 12
New Song
The producers have a wry sense of humor. Depending on the economic news for the day, they play one of two songs. On a good day, they play, "We're in the Money." On a bad one, they play, "Stormy Weather."
Today, they mentioned the prime minister of Australia, who had commented that the resolution to the global economic woes was a sunny outlook.
They closed the show with a new song, first time ever.
It was Bobby McFerrin: "Don't Worry, Be Happy."
Tuesday, November 11
Lester Brown
I remember one day years ago, when I was married to a very different fellow. He owned four restaurants. One evening, there was a festival and I was outside the first, main, restaurant, at the podium admitting guests with reservations. XH came outside. "Guess what! Larry Czonka is inside! Would you like to come sit on his lap?" Apparently inside the restaurant legions of giggling females were lining up to sit on the man's lap.
Confused, I turned to look at XH. "Why would I sit on his lap?" I was truly bewildered.
"Well, he won the Super Bowl 12 years ago!"
In retrospect, I realize XH was confused at my own confusion.
"Er, has he done anything lately?"
XH clearly thought I was being mean. I really just didn't get it.
Although this retelling clarifies why he is X-H -- parallel lines of communication, never converging -- it demonstrates my own feelings about celebrity.
Last night the local college hosted a speaker who is known round the world: Lester Brown. Please click on that hyperlink! It is amazing.
I had made reservations to go, last month when the college hosted two speakers who rehabbed 60's-style rancher houses, both in "green" fashion.
Our little college has clearly made a commitment to distinguishing itself by being involved in the environmental movement. We have a lovely Center for the Environment. The building itself is amazing. Heated by geothermal. Bamboo floors. Recycled carpets. Dual-flush johns. I forget all the bells & whistles. The director is recognized pretty much nationally. So they sponsor speakers pretty much every month.
I was considering not attending as I have a wicked cold, the second in a month.
LO was sleeping over with a gf, as today is a school holiday. DH was working last night. It was actually the perfect evening for some Me Time. Still, I was thinking about staying home.
I worked all morning, writing, and cleaned the LR in the afternoon. We had had a fire in the fireplace recently and all the furniture had a fine film of ash. I had not yet gotten the shutters or bookshelves when DH asked me if I, in fact, planned to go to the presentation. I really just did not feel too great.
"I don't know," I demurred. "I'm really on a roll in the LR."
"Listen," DH said. "The LR will always be right here. You admire Lester Brown and he is only here once. Promise me you will go."
So, I went. It was crazy as a gf called me to come over and help her on the computer. Then I had to ferry LO's bag to her gf's house. All this was between 5 and 6. The doors for the presentation opened at 6. I had to hustle.
But I did. It was... wonderful.
When Lester came out, he was just as humble as could be. It was sort of amazing. Pressed shirt, signature bow tie, sport coat, khakis and running shoes. At 75 or so, he is trim and fit.
You know how, when you watch a Shakespeare play, you stay a line or two behind in the dialogue as your brain translates the lines into what you can understand? Or when you are speaking with someone in your second language? That's how I was last night.
He reeled numbers off the top of his head with facility. I am wishing now that I had taken notes. He spoke with passion about opportunities for wind-generated electricity. A nationwide power grid. The cost of nuclear vs. wind. The opportunity to drive hybrid cars with the optional additional battery and plug-in pack, powered with electricity from wind. No emissions! -- not even from the power generation~! 142 mpg vs. the normal 48. This is only one elementary example of his many concepts.
I guess it was actually part of a book tour, as he was speaking from his latest book, Plan B, 3.0. If you haven't read it, please do. If you haven't read it, please don't slam his concepts.
I chose to skip the reception and book-signing. I did not want to sniffle and cough on folks, and really wanted to just put on my jammies and have a cup of tea. So I headed home.
My head was reeling as I left. I was so energized, so inspired, so motivated, that I actually had a hard time settling down for bed.
This is a conservative town. Yet the auditorium was packed -- mostly with adults from town, not college students. The man got TWO standing ovations: one when he completed his remarks, and one when Q&A was over. He humbly waved us off.
The man has devoted his adult life to making our planet a better place. He looks into the future to see what can be, and works to make it happen. He challenges us to do our parts. He meets with heads of state to consult on resolutions to perplexing problems. He could have retired years ago. But his work isn't done. So, he keeps working.
Now, that's celebrity.
Friday, November 7
With the Wrench
Normalcy
DH as always had another perspective. "I like to go up each aisle and see what they have." So we browsed the store and just enjoyed each other. President-elect Obama had just spoken and we were all comfy in our new-found happiness. So, we perused this and that.
Arriving at the checkout line with a buggy full of goodies, the young fellow asked us if we had a big Friday night planned. I pointed out our Redbox DVDs, popcorn, and taco shells. "Well, we have an extra 13-year-old tonight. We are making tacos, playing Clue, and watching movies."
At first he smirked at what a silly evening we had in store. Then he sobered up, and said, "Actually, a good game of Clue sounds like fun. I haven't played in forever."
While we were making tacos, another 13-year-old came over, so now we have 2 guests. We ate, played Clue and are preparing for movies.
It's been a great night. Normalcy. Highly underrated.
Thursday, November 6
Sports Banquet
Wednesday, November 5
Deal o' the Day
Tuesday, November 4
Looks Like
Call me skeptical. I want Obama to win. I really do. I was not alive when Truman won, but I did see the photo in the history book of Truman holding the newspaper that proclaimed, Dewey Wins! As the child of a newsman, it made an impact. So I'm not taking anything for granted.
IF this is true. If it can be. IF some crazy person doesn't do something really, really stupid, I will be so happy.
btw, did you see the film of Jesse Jackson crying? Tears streaming down his face. Not a trickle. A stream.
I'm not black. I cannot say I truly understand how he -- and many black Americans -- feel.
I can only say I have hope for America for the first time in a long, long, time.
We are flying our flag tomorrow for the first time in eight long years.
:)
Election Day
It's none too soon. During this presidency, we have been lied to, disappointed, ripped off, and our young people have been put in danger, injured, and killed. Our VA has often let them down, put them through hoops, failed to recognize mental injuries, and provided inadequate facilities.
We have declined to work with other nations to save the earth.
Ironically during the presidential term of an oil company owner, oil companies have made record profits -- at our expense.
Unemployment is at record highs.
People have lost their homes.
The budget surplus has evaporated and been replaced with record deficits, largely caused by a war we entered based on a LIE.
Sigh. I pray God The Sham is almost over.
Saturday, November 1
Halloween 2008
We used to get the same cop every year, but he has been promoted out of the parade beat. :) This guy mingled with the kids, handing out candy. He did a great job leading the parade. Lights, yes. Siren, no. It makes the babies cry.