Monday, April 30, 2007

Fun in Annapolis

IN THE NEWS: According to the Press of Atlantic City, "A woman who authorities say is obsessed with Sandra Bullock was arrested after she allegedly tried to run over the actress' husband in a confrontation outside the couple's home. Her husband was not injured and the woman left before authorities arrived. Authorities said it was not the first time the woman showed up at the celebrity couple's home. On several occasions, Bullock and her husband had found the woman lying in front of their garage door."

Well, we had a FANTASTIC time in Maryland. We drove down Saturday and stayed with our friends--who happened to have a very beautiful large brick home. So it was so much better than staying at a hotel!

Our little girl played so hard with their girls that my daughter is STILL sleeping even as I write this post--which is just unheard of. (She should have been up an hour ago)

I'll cut to the chase and say that we went to Mike's Crabhouse and had--what else?--crabs. And mussels. Yum! Then Sunday, after church, we drove into downtown Annapolis and walked around. There, we had sushi and ice cream. Quite a combo.

Hey, it worked for us.

I love Annapolis. I'm so gald we have people we know there. It's so historic and lovely. And if you like to eat like me, there's no shortage of restaurants.

What did you do this weekend?

Friday, April 27, 2007

TGIF: Funny Sayings

MENTAL STATUS: "Excited". Going away this weekend to Annapolis, MD with the family! Yay! Visiting good friends--who enjoy sushi just as much as we do. LOL!

Anyhew, since it's Friday (and we all know how much I look forward to Fridays), I've got some funny sayings/thoughts from my favorite local newspaper columnist, Joe Gilbert. He listed quite a number of lines in the Sentinel, but I'm listing just a few of them here for your Friday viewing pleasure.

** Borrow money from pessimists... they don't expect it back.

** All those who believe in psycho kinesis, raise my hand.

**The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.

**Why do psychics have to ask your name?

**Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm

**What happens when you get scared to death twice?

**My mechanic told me, I couldn't repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder.

**To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism. To steal from many is research.

**The problem with the gene pool is that there's no lifeguard.


(HA! The psycho kinesis one is my personal favorite)

Have a great weekend!

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Thursday Thirteen #2

Thirteen Things that make me
feel 50 years older than I actually am

1…Having to switch the radio station half way through Justin Timberlake's "Sexy Back" because it gave me a headache.

2...Actually looking forward to watching political news at night.

3...Having my twelve-year-old niece ask, "Who's Brooke Shields?"

4...One alcoholic drink puts me asleep--and usually under the table.

5...Not being able to have coffee or any caffeine beverage after 2 PM

6...Bedtime is now 9PM--unless I violate #5

7...Watching American Idol and hearing them announce "Fergie", then expecting Sarah, The Duchess of York to walk out on stage.

8...Text Messaging is too confusing for me.

9...Gravitating toward bigger cars.

10...Not having to pluck my eyebrows any more, but fill them in.

11...Weighing the same I did in high school, but not being able to fit in the same clothes. (How does that happen?)

12...Having the weather be 60 degrees and sunny, but still needing a parka.

13...Almost calling the police on some teenagers who I thought were playing "too rough" at the playground.


Sad, isn't it?



Wednesday, April 25, 2007

The BEST best advice

IN THE NEWS: According to World magazine, "Neither Elsie McLean nor her playing partners saw where the 102-year-old's tee shot went on the par three fourth hole at Bidwell Park in Chico, CA. It turns out the ball came to rest in one of the unlikeliest places for a 102-year-old golfer's first shot: in the cup. Her hole-in-one not only helped her scorecard, but also set a record for oldest person to notch an ace on a regulation course."

You know what? I love reading advice from best-selling authors, agents, publishers and editors.

Now, don't get me wrong. I get a lot of support from friends at my writing forums, but seeing words of encouragement from "experts" really carry a lasting imprint in my feeble little mind.

This one from Chip MacGregor is one of the best I've seen. In fact, I'd love to print it up (with permission from Chip) and make some sort of Christmas card for writers out of it. Or at the very least, print it out and hang it by my computer desk.

Yes, it's that good.

Check it out. Advice on Writing.

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Do You Write BIG?

MENTAL STATUS: "Smug". The Yankees aren't doing well. Mu-wah-ha-ha-ha. Yeah, I know Boston's winning streak ended yesterday, but as long as the Yankees lost, too, then it just doesn't matter.

Anyway, back to the topic at hand: Writing BIG.

No, I don’t mean do you write about Plus size heroines. I mean, are your stories "big"?

Last week Agent Kristen wrote an article over at Romancing the Blog about having a big enough story for a single title book. At one of my writing forums, this topic prompted a lot of interesting discussion.

If someone had asked me if my story was big enough for single title about a year ago, I would have thought, Huh? Sure. My story is 75,000 words. It’s big. It fits the requirement. That’s enough to try to sub it to an agent. End of story. Now please remove yourself from my presence as I compose my query letter.

Oh, how much I’ve learned since then.

Actually, I pitched one of my stories to Agent Kristen about a year ago. She thought it sounded too category, but she was willing (and nice enough) to take a look at thirty pages for me anyway. And then it was rejected. Big surprise. Of course, I can see where I went wrong with my thinking. My story was nowhere NEAR as “big” as it should have been for a single title. I realized that with more single title books I continued to read.

If for some reason you can’t see the difference yourself, Agent Kristen went on to give a few examples on how to tell if your story is big enough:

1. It can refer to a main story concept or idea that’s big enough to drive the story. **Okay, we’re off to good start with my story. Check.

2. It can refer to the emotional depth and complexity the writer taps into for the hero and heroine (and it’s much deeper than what a category line page restriction allows). **Eeww. Hmmm. No check.

3. It can refer to the writer’s ability to introduce secondary characters and a possible development of a secondary story that intertwines with the main plot. **Hmm. Subplot? Oh dear. What’s a subplot? No check.

4. It can refer to how the writer handles the point of view shifts between the hero and the heroine and how developed each narrative is before switching. **Check.

5. It can refer to how individual scenes are handled. Are they too dialogue-oriented (which tends to be more true in category romance) or are the scenes more complex with more description (and yet the addition of either doesn’t slow the plot)? That might be the hardest balance to capture when switching to single-title. **Ugh! I’m a dialogue oriented writer—thus far. Need practice. Need instruction. I’m sending out an S.O.S. No check.

6. It can refer to having more than one subplot. **Whoa, back up. I don’t even have ONE subplot. Sheesh. Now you’re asking for more? Obviously, no check.

7. It can refer to having a fully realized and developed villain or nemesis. **Whew. Does not apply. ( I think) Check.

So as you can see, I’ve learned a lot within the last year. I see the differences now. But seeing the differences and writing the differences are two different things. And I don’t think I can do it. Yet.

So for right now, I’ll stick with writing a category romance.

Do you write BIG stories?

Monday, April 23, 2007

Post Doo-Dah

IN THE NEWS: According to FOX News, Miss America 1944 Venus Ramey, confronted a man on her farm in south-central Kentucky last week after she saw her dog run into a storage building where thieves had previously made off with old farm equipment.
Ramey, now 82 years-old, said the man told her he would leave. "I said, 'Oh, no you won't,' and I shot their tires so they couldn't leave," Ramey said.
She had to balance on her walker as she pulled out a snub-nosed .38-caliber handgun.
Ramey then flagged down a passing motorist, who called 911.

Well, we had a lovely day at the Doo Dah Parade. We laughed a lot. Especially at those cute little basset hounds. I tried to take a lot of pictures, but somewhere in the middle of the parade (and to the disgust of my hubby) my camera battery got exhausted. Oh well. We'll all live.

Here's some of the pics I managed to get before my camera died:


This woman (who is in her 70's) is sitting in her bathing suit--yes, true--on a throne made of ice. Yes, also true. Brrr.
Jack Benny impersonator

"Brie" the Grand Marshal of the Basset Hounds



Basset Hound in a cowboy hat


This little pup was in a homemade shower contraption which squirted out bubbles as he was pulled down the street. Really cute!




Some pooped pups.




I think that's pretty much the highlights. The dogs were so funny. There was one owner who stopped to BRIEFLY chat with someone in the crowd. The dog wasted no time plopping right down in the middle of the parade stretched out on its back with its tongue out. My daughter laughed so hard.
Of course, there was a truck that would pick up all the "pooped" pups, too.
Then we went out to lunch and later dinner that day. Not too shabby of a weekend.
What did you do?

Friday, April 20, 2007

TGIF: Yippity-DOO-DAH

MENTAL STATUS: "Amused". My daughter is going to visit the Firehouse today for a school trip. She's really looking forward to it. It's so cute.

Ah, Friday again. End of the work week, date night, yada yada. Happiness all around. The weather is supposed to warm up this weekend, too. Finally. That will be nice for when we go to the Doo Dah Parade this weekend.

The Doo what? you ask.

Oh. The Doo Dah Parade.

**cue the blank expression from the blog reader**

Well, allow me to explain the event:

The Doo Dah was born in our town on April 19, 1986 to celebrate the end of the income tax season. It features unusual brigades including bed rollers, Alphabet Soup, motorcycle and beach chair drill team contingents; impersonators of legendary comedians such as Abbott and Costello, Groucho Marx, Harpo Marx, Jack Benny, and Lucille Ball.

Over the years, comedians such as Mickey Rooney, Carol Channing, Soupy Sales, Frank Gorshin, Larry Storch, and Charlie Calas have attended to receive a life time achievement awards.

In essence, this parade celebrates humor.

(Um, I don't know if you know this but I kind of enjoy stuff like that. )

Nine years ago, the Basset Hound Rescue League asked to be part of the parade, too. This Saturday the League will showcase over 500 of those sweet little pups from 25 states and Ireland. (Most will be dressed up for the occasion like the picture below)

All who march in the Parade will receive a free "I Was a Hotdog for a Day T-Shirt" and a hotdog lunch from Parade major sponsor Dietz and Watson. The Parade concludes in front of our Music Pier and Pie-in-the-face Pioneer Soupy Sales will preside over the annual Pieasco. Participants sit in bleachers and when Soupy gives the signal, they smoosh each other with shaving cream pies.

Hokey? You bet. But I like it that way.

Have a great weekend!

Thursday, April 19, 2007

THURSDAY THIRTEEN #1

Yes! I've given in to peer pressure and decided to do a Thursday Thirteen
So, here's THIRTEEN MOVIES I've NEVER seen--but want to before I die

1) Blazing Saddles ** I loved Spaceballs and Young Frankenstein. Why am I not running out to Blockbuster to rent this?

2)Titanic ** So romantic... so depressing. But I feel as though I'd still be missing something if I don't join the club and see this one.

3) Raging Bull ** I don't know. I guess I just want to see it because of Robert De Niro.

4) Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid ** Paul Newman--when he was hot! Nuff said.

5) Dreamgirls ** If only to see Jennifer Hudson belt out that one number...

6) Annie Hall ** Never been a big fan of Woody Allen, but this movie's been talked about enough that I actually DO want to see it.

7) Thelma and Louise ** gasp** True. I am a woman and I've never seen this movie. I know I need to. That's why it's on the list.

8) Brokeback Mountain** Okay. I don't know if I REALLY want to see this movie, but maybe I do want to see what all the hub-bub was about.

9) Risky Business ** Yes, yes. Tom Cruise in his underwear. But who hasn't seen that part? That's why it's low on the list.

10) Fantasia ** No, not the singer. The movie. And yes, I've never seen it. I'm hoping my 5 year old daughter will enlighten me soon.

11) Schindler's List** I really want to see this one. But the time commitment is a killer for me.

12) Braveheart ** Again, the time commitment. Mel, please make a shorter version for us with small attention spans.

13) Terms of Endearment** I'm a crier, so I feel I will need 20 boxes of tissues around me if I watch this. I think that's why I keep putting it off.

Get the Thursday Thirteen code here!


Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Looking for a Kick in the Pants

IN THE NEWS: According to Happynews.com (I figured we could use some happy news), "The Walt Disney Co. has teamed with bridal designer Kirstie Kelly to create a collection of gowns inspired by the favorite Disney princess characters, Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, Snow White, Ariel from ''The Little Mermaid,'' Belle from ''Beauty and The Beast'' and Jasmine from ''Aladdin.'' But Kelly is quick to point out that ''inspired by'' doesn't mean gowns that look like they came from the animated movies, which have been translated many times over into dress-up costumes for little girls. Instead, the designs attempt to channel the personality of each princess in terms suitable for a real-life, modern woman."

I have a busy morning, so I need to jump in the shower ASAP. And I'm already late.

I'll make this short.

I'm going through one of those "phases" now with my writing. You know about phases, right? Especially the one that constantly whispers in your ear, "You suck. You'd have a better chance of winning the lottery. Why bother? You really suck. Take up knitting instead." And so forth...

In order to exercise these demons in my head, I've decided I need a kick in the proverbial pants--and ordered some books. Not just any books. Writing books. Oooh. Ahhh. Yep, I did. And it's not even my birthday. It was my hubby's birthday yesterday, so I guess that's close enough.

Here's what I ordered:

Donald Maass Writing the Breakout Novel

and

Dwight V. Swain Techniques of the Selling Writer

** cue the crickets chirping **

Yeah, I know. I'm a little "behind" the times on reading these two. Well, I'm going to read them now. So there.

I'm hoping one of these books can give me a little guidance. I'm in the mood to learn.

Teach me, oh writing masters!

What's your favorite book on writing?

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

A Moment of Blog Silence

I'm not going to blog today.

Unfortunately, we have yet another sad reminder that we live in a fallen world.
I pray for all the students, faculty and families involved with the VA Tech. shooting yesterday.

Remember to pray, too.

God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble.
Psalm 46:1

Monday, April 16, 2007

A "Depart" From My Usual Movie Liking

MENTAL STATUS: "Distressed". Hubby's birthday is tomorrow and I still need to get a gift. Worse trouble is that the weather from this nor'easter is making it extremely difficult to want to go out. Wah!

Well, despite the warnings of this nor'easter, we spent a nice family weekend together. Went out to dinner, spent some time outside (yes, it was actually nice before all this rain and wind started), and on Saturday night the hubby and I rented a movie.

What did we rent? We watched "The Departed".

I'm apparently living in a box, because I had never heard of the movie before, and it wasn't until AFTER we watched it and I looked it up online that I realized this was the movie that won Best Picture and the reason Martin Scorsese finally won an Oscar, too.

Duh. I do kind of remember that now.

(I guess I need to watch the Today show again, instead of FOX Cable news. I'm totally out of the entertainment loop. )

Anyhew, back to the movie...

This movie wasn't my idea. The hubby talked me into renting this. It had all the makings of a movie right up his alley: 1) it's a mob movie and 2) it's set in Boston. How much better could it get for him? Well, there also was an all-star cast. Jeez, so many big names in this movie. I had no idea. So I gave in. I must make him watch about 50 romances/ romantic comedies a year, so I have to throw a bone to him every once in awhile and watch what he wants. I'm glad I did.

I REALLY enjoyed this movie. The acting was incredible. I thought the directing was a little funky every so often, but I guess that's Scorsese's style. Whatever. It didn't affect me liking this movie, so we'll ignore.

Nothing was as I expected, and the whole time of this cat-and-mouse chase I was absolutely dying because I couldn't wait to see how it was all going to wrap up. (Yes, I'm one of those people who'll peek at the end of a good suspense thriller novel) Unfortunately, this movie didn't have a wrap up. It barely had an end. And the end didn't have a nice red HEA bow on it--which is what I'm used to. I guess they were going for realistic. Mission accomplished.

Warning for delicate women like myself: (I AM delicate! No snickering!)
1) this movie is bloody
2) this movie is violent (hey, it's mob movie)
3) this movie--particularly Mark Wahlberg--uses language (see #2)

Otherwise, I highly recommend. :) In fact, I'd watch it again. I bet there was some cool things I missed.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Who said History was Boring?

IN THE NEWS: According to World Magazine, teenagers' choice for breaking up isn't a phone call or an in-person conversation. It's MySpace.

I love learning little trivia and such, so when my hubby pointed out this article in our local paper to me, I jumped at the chance to blog about it. The author, Joe Gilbert, always posts interesting facts every week or so, and this article is no different.

Here are a few of the facts about sayings derived from life in the 1500's he wrote about:

Over 500 years ago, most people got married in June because they took their yearly bath in May, and still smelled pretty good by June. However, they were starting to smell, so brides carried a bouquet of flowers to hide body odor. Hence, the custom of carrying a bridal bouquet.

When people obtained pork, it was quite special. When visitors came over, they would hang up their bacon to show off. It was a sign of wealth that a man could "bring home the bacon". They would cut off a little to share with guests and they would all sit around and "chew the fat".

Lead cups were used to drink ale or whiskey. The combination would sometimes knock them out for a couple of days. Someone walking along the road would take them for dead and prepare them for burial. They were laid out on the kitchen table for a couple of days and the family would gather around and eat/drink and wait to see if they would wake up. Hence the custom of holding a wake.

In England, the local folks started running out of places to bury people. They would dig up old coffins and take the bones to a bone-house and reuse the grave. When opening those coffins, one of out 25 coffins was found to have scratch marks on the inside. They realized they were burying people alive. So, they would tie string to the wrist of the corpse, lead it through the coffin and up through the ground and tie it to a bell. Someone would sit out in the graveyard all night--"the graveyard shift"--to listen for the bell. Thus, someone could be "saved by the bell" or was considered a "dead ringer".

Cool, huh? And now you learned something.

Have a great weekend!

Thursday, April 12, 2007

That's Subjective Biz

MENTAL STATUS: "Uncomfortable". My dentist made me a temporary piece in my mouth for the tooth I had pulled. It's a cross between dentures and a retainer. Lovely. It makes my mouth sore and gives me headaches. The good news? I only have to wear it for 3 to 5 months, and I suppose things could be a lot worse.

After reading Kristin Nelson's blog last night, I had renewed hope in my writing. She went on to post two "no" responses from different editors on a book (she obviously loved) that she'd submitted for a client.

As depressing/frustrating/maddening something like that must be for that writer, it gave me (a newbie, non-agented writer) a lot of hope. This business IS very subjective. Sometimes I forget that just because you have an agent that loves your work, it doesn't mean an editor will love your work. Or even readers will love your work.

Although I heard stories like that before, it's nice to have that reality check again. It actually gives me the confidence to start submitting again. I've been holding off, tinkering, but maybe I should just try to see what happens. After all, it is all about finding the right fit.

Do you like to hear stories like that or does it frustrate you?

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Feeling Nostalgic...

IN THE NEWS: According to World Magazine, "Usually an accidental injury during a Civil War reenactment would add an element of realism to the faux melee. But not in this battle. One man playing a Confederate solider in a reenactment of the Battle of Anderson County suffered a gunpowder wound and apparently needed stitches for a cut when he was hurt by a blank powder charge from the muzzle of a vintage weapon. Problem: No Confederate soldiers were injured in the May 1, 1865 battle."


My friend--and fellow New Englander--Ed sent me this link, which I highly enjoyed. The hubby and I used to live about 14 miles north of Boston and while we only lived up there for a short time and do not live there now, we still consider ourselves Bostonians anyway.

Enjoy.

(PS.) We found 16, 46, 48, 65, 95 & 99 VERY funny.

(A true Bostonian will know why.)

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

A Bit of a Rut

MENTAL STATUS: "Edgy". Want to write. Can't write. Dying to write. Can't write. By the time I have the time to write, too tired to write. Ugh. And so it goes.
Oh, and I have a dentist appointment today--but it's just a cleaning this time. Whew!

This is techinically the third day (not counting the weekend of course) of my daughter's spring vacation and all I have to show for it so far is a Build-a-Bear mermaid suit and red wig, a half eaten bunny cake, the high score on "Zoo Keeper", the ability to say I have watched The Planet of the Apes movie and two sentences to my current work in progress.

I'm beginning to think I need a better writing plan.

But, after my dentist appointment and visit with Mom, I will the take the little girlie to her friend's house for a play date and see how much I can get done today. My goal is 3 pages. I should get an A for determination at least.

Hope this vacation week is treating your writing better than mine.

Monday, April 9, 2007

Just Like Mom Used to Make

IN THE NEWS: According to FOX News, "Betty and Bob Matas have retired and are moving to Arizona, but like many New Yorkers they don't drive, and they don't want their cats to travel all that way in an airliner cargo hold.
Their solution: "Hey, cabbie."
They met taxi driver Douglas Guldeniz when they hailed his cab after a shopping trip several weeks ago.
They got to talking about their upcoming move, and "we said 'Do you want to come?'" said Bob Matas, 72, a former audio and video engineer for advertising agencies. "And he said 'Sure.'"
It was initially a gag, Matas said, but as they talked over the ensuing weeks it became reality.
They plan to leave Tuesday on the 2,400-mile trip to Sedona, Ariz., with Guldeniz driving his yellow SUV cab 10 hours a day for a flat fee of $3,000, plus gas, meals and lodging."



Our family got together for Easter dinner yesterday, and in the words of my southern friend, "We had ourselves a big time." It was one of the best holiday meals I had in a LONG time. Why, you ask? Well, I'll tell you.

My sister-in-law and I didn't cook it.

Okay, that's not entirely true. My sister-in-law made a ham (tad dry--ooops. Sorry!) and mashed potatoes (very good), but my mom cooked a small turkey breast with stuffing and made the sweet potatoes. Now that was delicious. (Oh and don't ask me why we had two kinds of meats. I was left out of that decision) My job was to make the bunny cake. Also very good. But desserts I can do no problem.

I always enjoyed my mom's meals--especially the holiday meals--growing up, but I took them for granted. I realized this yesterday as I inhaled everything on my plate and then went back for seconds. That's something I haven't done in years. When I got married, I started taking over the tradition of cooking holiday meals and unfortunately I haven't enjoyed a holiday meal since. I can cook, too! Honest! But for some reason, my cooking just can't compare to Mom's.

**sigh** She gets the prize. All those many years of subscribing to Gourmet magazine and Bon Appetit have been in vain. Sometimes there's nothing like old-fashioned simple recipes?

Does food taste better when your mom cooks, too?

Sunday, April 8, 2007

Happy Easter!!

HAPPY EASTER!

LUKE chapter 24:1-9

Now on the first day of the week, at early dawn, the women went to the tomb, taking the aromatic spices they had prepared. They found that the stone had been rolled away from the tomb, but when they went in, they did not find the body of the Lord Jesus. While they were perplexed about this, suddenly two men stood beside them in dazzling attire. The 11women were terribly frightened and bowed their faces to the ground, but the men said to them, “Why do you look for the living among the dead? He is not here, but has been raised! Remember how he told you, while he was still in Galilee, that the Son of Man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and on the third day rise again.” Then the women remembered his words, and when they returned from the tomb they told all these things to the eleven and to all the rest.

Friday, April 6, 2007

Good Friday

MENTAL STATUS: "Happy". Hubby's home from work. Going to an Easter Egg hunt on Saturday and I don't have to cook on Sunday. Yay!

For those of you who aren't Christian, today is Good Friday--not just a day when the stock market closes and children are home from school.

This is the day on which Jesus was crucified outside the walls of Jerusalem, at the top of the Calvary hill. The Christian belief is that Jesus sacrificed himself for the men's sins. This day is marked by solemn observations in memory of Jesus' crucifixion. For, by dying, Jesus accomplished a reconciliation between God and man.



So, now that you've had your Christian religion lesson, I'm going to go and relax, take the "day off" myself and spend some time with the family.

We'll see if I take time off from writing and totally relax, though. In the words of Bart Simpson, "I can't promise I'll try, but I'll try to try."

Have a blessed and happy Easter weekend.

Thursday, April 5, 2007

Things that make you go "hmmm"

IN THE NEWS: According to FOX News, "EVERETT, Wash. — Everett police have accused a 30-year-old woman of posing as a boy and assaulting a 14-year-old girl. Papers filed in Everett District Court say Lorelei Josephine Corpuz presented herself as a 17-year-old boy named Mark. Police told the Everett Herald she befriended the teenage girl in 2005 at a shopping mall and the family allowed "Mark" to live with the family as the young girl's boyfriend. The true story came to light after "Mark" was pulled over for a traffic stop on Sunday with the girl in the car. Officers were told that Corpuz allegedly had beaten and sexually assaulted the girl. Sergeant Robert Goetz says the family was surprised to learn that Mark was a 30-year-old woman. She is jailed in Everett for investigation of rape."
(Very strange)

Anyhew, as I was looking over my daughter's recent birthday presents, I came upon something that puzzled me.


Meet Art Teacher Barbie:

See how short Art Teacher Barbie's skirt is:


See the 4 inch stilettos Art Teacher Barbie wears to work on a regular basis:




Hmm. Is it just me, or do you see a problem here?

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Spoiling: Every Mother's Right

MENTAL STATUS: "Disgusted". The temperatures outside are dropping again. I am so ready for spring, yet it just doesn't want to come yet. My spring bulbs are still little stubs in the ground too, so I doubt they'll be big blooming flowers by Easter. Wah.

Well, this past weekend was my baby girl's birthday. GASP-- I can't even say baby girl any more since she turned 5. But I guess, she'll always be my baby girl. **snif sniff**

As my God given right as a mother, we spoiled the little one and gave her two parties. For her friends party, she wanted none other than...




A BUILD-A-BEAR Party!!!

Yikes. Seeing how this was my first children's party, I discovered a few things. If you're throwing a Build-A-Bear party, invite exactly the number of kids you want to have--no extras in case you think people won't show or will have other plans. Trust me. NO ONE will have other plans. Every mother and/or child clears their entire month's schedule to attend one of these things.

So I had all 11 girls RSVP. Even the girl who was out sick from school for 2 days prior to my daughter's party miraculously showed up. I'm now convinced a child could have an IV sticking out of her arm and still rally to come.

Lesson learned.

Anyhew, here's all the little ones gathered around the bathing/washing section, cleaning their new little animals.


Here is my daughter's final result: "Lovie" Lamb

My daughter informed me that Lovie's favorite thing is to have under her chin scratched. She also eats grass and applesauce. FYI.


The next day was the family party. I ordered a Snow White cake, and planned on cooking. So I asked my daughter what she wanted for dinner. I said she could have anything she wanted. I'm thinking I'm going to get an answer like pizza, hot dogs, mac and cheese. That kind of thing. You know, easy. Nope. What does she ask for?

Beef Stroganoff.

So there I was after church on Sunday making enough Beef Stroganoff for 12 people. I won't mention the headache I had when my daughter and all 4 cousins asked for the Moon Sand to be opened. Grrr.

Moon Sand=Evil toy.

Oh well. She'll only be 5 once.

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

I've been Tagged!

IN THE NEWS: According to FOX News, "Unable to come to terms with the death of their pet dog, a childless couple in southern India hanged themselves. The bodies of 67-year-old retired soldier C.N. Madanraj and his wife, Tarabai, 63, were found Sunday in their home in a suburb of Hyderabad. Police said the childless couple had held a burial ceremony for their dog of 13 years, called Puppy, and hosted a feast for friends before hanging themselves in their bedroom."
(How sad)

Well, my fellow blogger pal, Priya, has decided to spread around the torture--er, I mean love. HA!

She's tagged me to share 5 Things That You Don't Know About Me.

Hmm. Since I talk about myself probably way too much on this blog, some of these things you may already know. But what the hey. We'll list them and you can decide if they're new to you or not.

1) I love watching the State of the Union address. Yep. It doesn't matter the political affiliation or who is in office (well..okay. I do have preferences). I just LOVE the whole pageantry involved as well as the political commentary that follows. The only that makes it better is if I have a tub of buttered popcorn and my feet propped up.

2) I'm the youngest of three children. I have two older brothers. One is 9 years older and the other is 16 years older. (That spread wasn't planned, by the way)

3) I have a real passion for Disco, Opera and 80's music. (A bizarre mix, I know)

4) I'm exactly half Polish and half Lithuanian.

5) I'm not a vegetarian, but I LOVE ordering vegetarian meals in restaurants. I always gravitate to them. Besides being healthy, they're always so tasty and light. If it wasn't for my hubby, I could easily see myself becoming a vegetarian. But my hubby would rather divorce me than give up meat and I'm not cooking 2 meals, so I'm stuck with just pretending to be one when we're out.

Hey, maybe you found out something knew about me--or maybe you didn't. Oh well. At least I filled up some blog space.

In return, I'm tagging... Chicki Brown, Elle Fredrix, Margo Lukas and Debora Dennis-Mills.

ENJOY ladies...

Monday, April 2, 2007

Wishing on Dandelions by Mary E. DeMuth

MENTAL STATUS: "Exhausted". Had TWO birthday parties for the little one. A lot of fun, but a lot of work. I need a mental health break today.

Since it's the first (or second as the case may be) of the month, that means it's time for a taste of a new book from Fiction In Rather Short Takes. This month's author, Mary E. DeMuth, is also one of the First Day Blog Alliance Members.

Please take the time and enjoy her first chapter of Wishing on Dandelions.

Introduction:
I still can’t tell my story up close, like it was me in it,breathing the tangled wisteria on the fence posts of Burl, Texas. There are times I still can’t bear to say it was me. The book of my life continues to open, painful word by painful word, page after page. I get real close to typing the whole story with the word I in it, but I hit delete every time, replacing me with she.

Zady tells me I’m ready to write my story honest, but I’m not so sure. She says she’s there to help me remember my healing,even as she puts an arm around my shoulder when a tear slips through. “It hurts,” she says. “Real bad. Lord, I wish it didn’t rip at you so.”

She tells me I survived that story — that I should be proud — yet her presence brings back its horrid validity written on the backdrop of her tender love. Reminds me in a kind, wild way that this is my story even if I can’t seem to admit it on the page.
***


Summer 1983Burl, Texas


Uncle Zane appeared disheveled when Maranatha pesteredhim. His silvery hair, normally combed and parted in the exactsame place, was instead bunched and unkempt, his part like awinding Burl road.

“Camilla and me, well, we want to go to the fair. Can you drive us? Please?” Maranatha practically danced, shifting her weight from one foot to the other.

“No,” he shouted, an odd outburst for such a quiet man.

Gangly and with a sinewy will of her own, she pled, “C’mon,Uncle Zane. Everyone will be there. Besides, Camilla promised we’d shoot the fair — ride every single ride from the merry-go round to the Zipper. This year I promised her I’d do it without getting sick.”

“I said no.”

Three plain words. Maranatha almost turned away in a thirteen-year-old huff, but she lingered long enough to see him sit down in a parlor chair, then bend forward, pressing palms to temple.

“We’ll ride our bikes,” she told him. The room echoed her words. “I’ll be back later.” Her words stung even as she said them, particularly because Uncle Zane, usually a man without reaction, looked up at her with a strange sort of look in his blue eyes. A look that pleaded, Please stay.She left him there. And didn’t look back.


***

Camilla and Maranatha raced down the road toward the embrace of the fair, miles away. “You’re going to barf on me, I know it,” Camilla teased.

“I will not. My stomach’s better.”

“Oh, right. Now that you’re a teenager, you’re not nauseous? If I were you, I’d be cautious. I don’t trust your stomach. Neither should you.”

They raced, tire to tire, until Camilla saw a wrought-iron gate and, behind it, a burnt skeleton of a house. “I smell mystery,” she said. She stopped her bike. Maranatha nearly crashed into her.

In lieu of a ride on the Tilt-a-Whirl, and despite Uncle Zane’s pained blue eyes, Maranatha and Camilla climbed over the gate. They searched the scorched scene, pretending to be arson investigators.

They concluded a cat had set fire to the house, taking feline revenge on an evil master. “All scary houses have names. This one’s Black, sure as night,” Camilla said.

As the day’s shadows lengthened, after they’d explored the woods behind the house whose once-grand pillars stood charred against the Texas sky, Camilla said, “I want to come back here another day.” She put her hands on her hips and tilted her head back. “Let’s go back to Black.” She wailed and screamed the words like AC/DC. Maranatha laughed so hard, she nearly wet her pants.


***

Maranatha and Camilla never made it to the fair.

Tired from their investigating, they pedaled lazily back to town. “I’ll see you soon, baboon.” Camilla waved a good-bye to Maranatha.

Something niggled at Maranatha as she walked the stairs of the big white house. Everything looked the same, but nothing felt that way.“I’m home, Uncle Zane.” Her voice echoed, bouncing off tall ceilings. She called Zady’s name, though she knew it was unlikely the housekeeper would be there on a weekend. She shivered. Loneliness pierced her.

She walked past the parlor to look out the kitchen window at Uncle Zane’s parking spot, figuring he’d probably left to look for her — again. He had swung on a wild pendulum from disinterest to over protection the day her name changed from Mara to Maranatha three years ago, but his protection kicked into high gear when she turned thirteen. On her birthday, he gave her a bike that sported a crudely shaped bow. He handed her a hockey helmet. “Be careful,” he said. And he meant it.

She stopped in front of the window. Uncle Zane’s white Cadillac sat silent in the driveway, the same place it’d been when she’d ridden away earlier.

Panic ripped through her.

Maranatha ran to the parlor. On the floor, Uncle Zane lay prostrate, face kissing the oriental rug, arms and legs outstretched like he was making a prone snow angel.

“Wake up,” she wailed.But he didn’t. An ambulance came and whisked him away, while the word stroke hung in the hot Burl evening.

***
Zady’d tried to soothe Maranatha during his long rehabilitation. “It’s not your fault, Natha,” she said. “I should’ve checked on him. He seemed altered, and I should’ve known.”

Though Zady wore guilt in the lengthening lines around her eyes, she pestered Maranatha with all sorts of don’t-blame yourself words, meaningless blather that never made it past Maranatha’s terrible heart. The best way Maranatha could explain it to Camilla was that she and Zady stood before a giant chalkboard, with the words should have and could have scrawled over and over again like naughty kids’ sentences. While Zady tried to erase Maranatha’s coulds and shoulds, Maranatha rewrote them line by line.


O n e
Summer 1987Burl, Texas


Every year on the anniversary of his stroke, and many times in between, Maranatha retraced the route she and Camilla had ridden that day. In front of her bike tire beckoned a serpentine of gray pavement radiating heat. The more her shirt clung to her body in a sticky embrace, the better she liked it.

Penance.

She’d learned the word from Bishop Renny. He said something about trying to make things right by abusing yourself. Said Jesus took the need for all that away. But she knew Jesus would say something different to her, considering how she’d nearly killed Uncle Zane because of her selfishness.

The hot Burl breeze tangled Maranatha’s hair so that it whipped and wrangled about her face. She didn’t mind, didn’t even brush a casual hand to her face to clear the hair from her eyes. At seventeen, she welcomed the wildness, wearing her tangles like a needed mask. A gust of sideways wind whipped the mask from her face.

Maranatha passed the costume shop where, behind a cracked front window, one headless mannequin sported a faded Santa suit and another, a sequined Twenties dress. She pedaled past the farm implement shop whose yard was dotted with ancient rusty plows. This strip of road held most of Burl’s broken dreams — a turn-of-the-century white farmhouse, now converted into a bed and breakfast that no one visited, a handpainted For Sale sign declaring the dream dead. A mobile home stood way back on a fine piece of property, the structure tilted oddly to the left where the cement blocks had deteriorated. A goat preened on its roof, claiming it for himself. Four years ago, children had played out front. She and Camilla had even waved to them. So carefree for such a day.

Wiping the sweat off her forehead with the back of her hand, she glanced down at the too-small bike, despising it, as if it had once held her hostage, carrying her away from Uncle Zane’s need four years ago when she and Camilla had been drawn toward the lure of cotton candy and caramel apples.

Maranatha veered onto the familiar gravel driveway flanked by crepe myrtles. She stopped, straddling her bike, catching her breath. She listened for cars but heard only the labored noise of a tractor, far away, until the engine sputtered and died.

The silence roared at her.

It should have blessed her with peace; instead, she remembered Uncle Zane’s hair askew and wondered why God let a selfish girl like her take up space in this world.

She looked behind her. Her thoughts shifted as a deeper worry played at her, taunting her. Though she never voiced it, she lived with a constant fear that someone would burst from the silence and grab her. She hated that she always looked behind, like she was expecting some crouching phantom to nab her. She’d been running from monsters bent on destroying her ever since General first drawled, “Hey, Beautiful” in her ear. Even though she was sheltered in Uncle Zane’s white house and safety was no longer elusive, she always felt the presence of evil five steps behind her. Ready to suffocate her.

She glanced at her wrist to soothe her fears. Circling it was her name, maranatha, each sterling letter separated by a bead. Zady’d given it to her a year after she found out that her real name wasn’t Mara but Maranatha. Part of her quest in discovering her identity was a need for a name that meant more than “bitter.” When she learned that her real name meant “Come, Lord Jesus,” a part of her heart enlivened, as if it knew she was named that all along. She touched each letter, thanking God that He added Natha to the end of her name, that He changed her from bitter to a heart where Jesus could live. If He wanted to, that is.

She got off her bike. The same wrought-iron gate stood erect before her, chalkboard black and foreboding, with an out-of-place silhouette of a squirrel at its arched top. It always reminded her of Willy Wonka’s gate, the gate that prohibited children from seeing the mysteries within the glorious Chocolate Factory. She laid her bike in its familiar dusty place behind the crepe myrtlesand approached the gate. Locked.

As usual.

Heart thumping, she tried the handle, a ritual she performed every time she ventured to this place, the scene of her selfishness. Why she thought it would magically open today, she didn’t know. When she tugged at it, the gate creaked a warning, but it didn’t budge. Looking back toward the road, she listened again. Nothing. Only the sound of a dove calling to its lover and the crackle of too-dry grass rubbing against itself like a fiddle against its bow. She breathed in the hot air and touched the angry wrought iron. She returned to the bike, unzipped the pouch behind her seat, and stretched on her bike gloves. Attacking the gate again, she pulled herself up, up, up until she could swing her leg over the gate’s pointed top. She scampered down, preferring to jump the last three feet.

Maranatha smiled. Before her was an open field whose hair was littered with dandelions past their prime. Bits of dandelion white floated in front of her like an idle snowfall, only these flurries drifted toward the sun, away from the ground, in lazy worship. Beyond the field stood the remains of the charred mansion.

Now shaded by the house’s pillars, she remembered Uncle Zane’s eyes the day of his stroke. The smile left her face.

She ran to the middle of the field, trying to shake the memory — her laughing, laughing, laughing while Uncle Zane pled for her. She stopped. Maranatha picked one dandelion, held it to her mouth, and blew a warm breeze over its head, scattering wishes toward the has-been mansion. Jesus, You know my name. I want to live up to it. I want my heart to be a place where You want to come. But I’m afraid it’s too dark there. What I’ve done. What’s been done to me. . . . I’m sorry I’m so needy, but I have to know, have to know it in my gut. Please show me You love me anyway. Whatever it takes.

It had been her wish since she met Jesus under the pecan tree at her home, back in the days when Uncle Zane had a quiet will and Zady, his housekeeper and her friend, kept house without the intrusions of Georgeanne, who had invaded their peaceful home with her schemes. Zady dished out helpings and helpings of His love every day at Uncle Zane’s table, but Maranatha never seemed to be able to digest even a scrap. She experienced Jesus at church, surrounded by Mama Frankie and faces darker than her own. When dark-skinned Denim spoke or his pale-faced stepdaughter Camilla rhymed truth, Maranatha thanked God for making unique folks, for giving her friends. Still, Jesus’ love seemed far away, and she, undeserving.

A portion of her little girl’s heart had been abducted by General, the boy-turned-man who violated her so many years ago. His pocked face visited her in nightmares where she had no voice, no safety, no escape. He seemed to lurk behind every stray noise. He didn’t haunt Burl anymore, but he lived firmly in her mind, igniting dread. She feared he’d stolen the only part of her that could have understood God’s love. She feared he held the middle piece to the puzzle of her life.

Am I wishing for something I’ll never have?

Maranatha shielded her eyes from the pursuing sun and walked toward the burnt house. Four once-white pillars stood tall, blackened by angry flames. She remembered when she’d first seen Uncle Zane’s home nearly a decade ago, how it loomed large on its street, how she’d longed to be the owner there someday. But reality was more complicated than that. Sure, she lived there now. Little by little, she was renovating it to splendor, but lately the joy of transforming it had waned thin, like a pilled swimsuit at summer’s end. Fixing things was hard. She’d painted and painted until her fingernails were permanently speckled. Then the pier and beam foundation settled further, cracking her handiwork.

As she gazed upward at the four pillars that reached for the sky, where the abandoned house’s roof once lived, she wondered if she’d ever have a home of her own, children about her legs, a husband to love her. The thought of marriage both repulsed her and pulsed through her. Hatred and longing — all in one girl.

She walked through the rubbish, darkening her red-dirted shoes, looking for a sign from heaven. She played this game sometimes, asking God for signs, for sacred objects that showed her that He saw her, that He knew she existed. That He cared.

Something glinted off and on as the sun played hide-and-seek through the trees. She bent low to the ashes, her body blocking the sun. The glinting stopped, so she stood and let the sun have its way again. There, spotlighted beneath the gaze of the pillars, was a simple, thick-banded gold ring. She retrieved it, dusted the ashes from the gold, and examined it, turning it over and over in her hand.

Inside the ring was a faint engraving. Forever my love.

“Thank You,” she whispered, but her words melted in a hot wind. Dark clouds obscured the sun. The sky purpled. She’d seen a sky like that before. She slipped the ring into her shirt pocket and ran toward her bike, climbed the hot gate like a criminal pursued, and dropped on the other side.

She mounted her bike. From behind she heard a bustled scurrying, like the furious bending of too-dry alfalfa.

Then darkness.

Someone’s hands suffocated her eyes, obscuring the day, stealing her screaming breath. She kicked her leg over the tenspeed, struggling to free herself from the firm grip, and tried to holler. Like in her nightmares, she was mute from terror. Though she knew General’s presence was illogical — he’d been shipped off to some sort of juvenile-offender boot camp — she could almost smell his breath as she gasped for her own. She heard a laugh but couldn’t place it. It sounded familiar, like family.

She kicked and elbowed like a kindergarten boy proving his manhood against a playground bully, but the hands stayed enlaced around her eyes.

More laughter. Even more familiar.

She took a deep breath and screamed. Real loud.

Thunder answered back.
**************************************

Sample from Wishing on Dandelions / ISBN 1576839532 Copyright © 2006 NavPress Publishing. All rights reserved. To order copies of this resource, come back to http://www.navpress.com/.