Category: Everything Else

  • Attitude

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    Clothes are our weapons,
    our challenges,
    our visible insults.

    -Angela Carter

    Of all the things you wear,
    your expression is the most important.

    -Janet Lane

    Flies have noses! Big ol’ fleshy ones, in this guy’s case. He reminds me of Droopy Dog.

    I’m a bit grumpy today, the sky is gloomy, rain in the forecast, and I am again, profoundly tired, and I’m so glad it’s Friday.

    Cliche as it may seem, whenever I get down like this I like to dress up with some attitude. Fake it ’til you make it, as they say.

    Today I am thinking some cowboy boots will give me swagger (I’ve never outgrown that childhood love of clunking around in noisy shoes), and maybe something flowy will take the edge off.

    And a hat. Rainy days are a good excuse for a hat. I have a green cloche that is beckoning me.

    Huh, I feel better already.

    What I need is a swank umbrella that can take some abuse. Any suggestions?

    What are you wearing today? Hopefully a smile on your face (a smirk will do!)

  • Honeybees!

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    “What do you like doing best in the world, Pooh?”

    “Well,” said Pooh, “what I like best-“
    and then he had to stop and think.

    Because although Eating Honey
    was a very good thing to do,
    there was a moment just before you began to eat it
    which was better than when you were,
    but he didn’t know what it was called.

    -A.A.Milne

    I signed up for a bee tracking program earlier this summer and I haven’t seen any honeybees, and I was beginning to despair a bit. After learning about Colony Collapse Disorder, I wanted some first-hand reassurance that we still had honeybees in the area.

    Hoorah, I think this is a honeybee! They are smaller than the bees I normally see, so it’s quite possible they’ve been around all summer and I hadn’t noticed them.

    And there are lots of them! I’m so happy to be able to contribute something meaningful to the bee research in spite of the deer eating all my sunflowers.

    (Lots of good bee information here if you are interested in learning more about the importance of honeybees and developments in CCD research.)

    Now. Turning my attention to the Pooh quote.

    I’m not a Winnie the Pooh fan, really; but I’ve never read any A.A. Milne, so perhaps it is unfair to say that. After all, the Disney version of Alice in Wonderland is nice, but nowhere in the league of Lewis Carroll’s wonderful story.

    What do you think? Should I read the story- stories? Is there more than one? I’m woefully uninformed on the whole culture of the Hundred Acre Woods, outside what I overhear on the Disney Channel.

    I do love the character of Eeyore.

    And I relish this quote, its portrayal of anticipation. Like those moments as a child when you wake and you realize it’s Christmas morning, but not quite time to wake your parents… and your heart races, and you tremble all over, and you can’t wait…can’t wait

    You know, thinking on it, I don’t remember any of the actual opening of presents! I remember the agonizing excitement of waiting for it to be time, (I can feel it as I write about it, a sort of involuntary muscle memory), and I remember the sigh of satisfied relief, sitting back and looking over the chaos of opened presents and masses of wrapping paper.

    This makes me rethink a bit. Why do we as parents stress so much about the presents themselves? Evidently, to me at least, Christmas has never really been about the gifts at all.

    What is your most vivid memory of Christmas as a child?

    Do you mind terribly when I meander off topic like this?

    And- getting back to the quote-
    what do you like doing best in the world?

  • The Anticipation is Killing Me

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    Such is the state of life,
    that none are happy
    but by the anticipation of change:
    the change itself is nothing;
    when we have made it,
    the next wish is to change again.

    The world is not yet exhausted;
    let me see something tomorrow
    which I never saw before.

    -Samuel Johnson

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    These are two pictures of the same spot separated by a month’s time.

    Slowly, slowly the- what? flower? deepens into a royal purple.

    It looks for all the world like a present, a tiny jewel, and I can’t wait for it to open.

    What is it? A berry? A fruit?

    Will it blossom open, burst into flower?

    I’m really insanely curious. I can see the deer have been nibbling at it, and I hope and pray they don’t return and finish the job before I see the final result.

    Does anyone know what it is? Or want to hazard a guess?