Thursday, April 30, 2009
Trying to Work
I was trying to work at home this week, but Blinky insisted on being in the middle of things. She walked all over my desk, even though I kept removing her time and time again. She even had to check out the box that I used to bring files home. Finally, I borrowed the "cat mat" from my sewing room and convinced her (with some difficulty) to stay atop the file cabinet next to my desk. Where she promptly fell asleep, tired from all her snoopervising.Speaking of my sewing room, I don't think I showed you my "new" lamp, bought from my friend, Liz.I like the snake arms because I can direct the lights exactly where I need them to be. They need to point downward where my work is, not up toward the ceiling like most stationary floor lamps. Blinky has to thoroughly inspect anything new that comes into the house.
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Connect the Dots - 35
There hasn't been a correct answer given for yesterday's puzzle. Maybe I should consider a hint.
Find the common bond of three things and leave a comment with your answer.
Find the common bond of three things and leave a comment with your answer.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Monday, April 27, 2009
Best Find at Publix Today
I saved 71% at Publix today, and as happy as I am about that, I was ecstatic to find what someone had left in a shopping cart... ... all these sets of Sunday coupons... almost as good as finding money. Actually, I think it's better because I would feel compelled to turn in money if I found it.
Connect the Dots - 33
Find the common bond of three things and leave a comment with your answer. Dave got it again.
Sunday, April 26, 2009
A God Like No Other
I haven't shared one of my hymns in a while, so I thought I'd do that today. I haven't written anything in a long time, but an idea was swirling around in my brain last night as I was drifting off to sleep. Stay tuned to see if it finds its way onto paper and into blogdom.
A God Like No Other
Meter: Common Meter (8.6.8.6.)
Tune: Martyrdom (Alas! And Did My Savior Bleed)
Was there ever a God like this
Who left His heav’nly throne?
Abandoned riches, joy, and bliss
To make the earth His home.
Was there ever a babe like Him
Who chose His mother’s womb?
Who knew the cup He came to drink,
By violence, meet the tomb.
Was there ever a man like Him,
Full mortal, divine Son?
The One in whom no guile was found,
Perfect, obedient one.
Was there ever a love so great?
He suffered and He bled.
The curse of God’s wrath for man’s sin
Heaped on His sinless head.
Was there ever a mighti’r power?
He burst forth from the grave.
Defied the foe, crushed sin and death
For those He came to save.
Was there ever a God whose grace
Could cover all my sin?
My works are filth, my love a fraud;
But His love took me in.
All glory, laud, and honor be
To Him! Exalted high!
There is no other God, but One,
And Him we magnify!
Soli Deo Gloria
Joan Jordan
© 2005
A God Like No Other
Meter: Common Meter (8.6.8.6.)
Tune: Martyrdom (Alas! And Did My Savior Bleed)
Was there ever a God like this
Who left His heav’nly throne?
Abandoned riches, joy, and bliss
To make the earth His home.
Was there ever a babe like Him
Who chose His mother’s womb?
Who knew the cup He came to drink,
By violence, meet the tomb.
Was there ever a man like Him,
Full mortal, divine Son?
The One in whom no guile was found,
Perfect, obedient one.
Was there ever a love so great?
He suffered and He bled.
The curse of God’s wrath for man’s sin
Heaped on His sinless head.
Was there ever a mighti’r power?
He burst forth from the grave.
Defied the foe, crushed sin and death
For those He came to save.
Was there ever a God whose grace
Could cover all my sin?
My works are filth, my love a fraud;
But His love took me in.
All glory, laud, and honor be
To Him! Exalted high!
There is no other God, but One,
And Him we magnify!
Soli Deo Gloria
Joan Jordan
© 2005
Friday, April 24, 2009
Eye-poppin' Purple
Have you ever used any shampoo this color? I didn't think so. Me neither. But I did today. I had a $2 Pantene coupon, and this shampoo was on clearance at CVS for $1.99. So if it's free, my shampoo can be any color of the rainbow. And since my hair has several colors of the spectrum, including plenty of silver, this'll work. I must admit that the fragrance is a bit too perfumed for me, though.
P.S. Feel free to read my palm, if you'd like, since I've given you such a clear shot.
P.S. Feel free to read my palm, if you'd like, since I've given you such a clear shot.
Connect the Dots 32 (Pause the Pictures)
For you literary types who do better with words than pictures:
- Sweet
- Pancake
- Hot
Thursday, April 23, 2009
Ever Hopeful
She's already been fed tonight and there's nothing left in the bowl. But in feline logic, staring long enough just might cause food to appear.
Notice how my cat and my blog are color-coordinated?
Notice how my cat and my blog are color-coordinated?
Wednesday, April 22, 2009
Connect the Dots - 30
Find the common bond of three things and leave a comment with your answer. (I've reloaded the center "image.")
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
It's Officially Gone
Several weeks ago I wrote about the end of an era. The end has come, and here is the proof.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Connect the Dots - 28
Find the common bond of three things and leave a comment with your answer. Dave has gotten the correct answer once again.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Then and Now
October 22, 1977
Joan, Sharon, Verona
April 17, 2009
Verona, Joan, SharonPlease read the next post to learn what brought us together.
Precious
(Written yesterday.)
I was there today when my best friend from adolescence buried her mother. But let me start at the beginning.
Sharon and I first became friends in 7th grade. We’d left the secure nest of different neighborhood elementary schools and were thrust into a scary junior high school. I’d heard rumors of fist fights in the halls and bullies beating up 7th graders in the stair wells. (At least no one brought guns in those days and most of the stories turned out to be suburban legends.) As teenagers, Sharon and I lived almost two miles apart. Before we could drive or had cars, we would walk to one another’s houses, setting out at the same time, and meeting half-way. Even that simple bonding act is lost among today’s youth. She and I remained close friends throughout high school and young adulthood. But as the laws of God and nature dictate, we married and began our families (our oldest being born within a month of each other), and we were no longer in close contact. Still, we never lost touch completely, and each time we were able to see each other again, it was all the more sweet.
But this is about her mother. Sharon is the youngest of five children, all but the oldest of whom were still living at home when we first became friends. If you were a friend of one of Mom Rex’s children, then you were enfolded into the family. Her influence is profoundly impressed upon my teenage years and I still bear that imprint today. Although one or two memories are as crisp as today’s headlines, most of them are as fuzzy as new puppies. What I recall is that she was perpetually happy, usually singing, never idle, and continually mindful of heavenly things. Wherever she was, or whatever she was doing, if I came following behind Sharon, I was welcomed and included. She started calling me Joansey, and the way Sharon’s siblings are likely to know me today is if I re-introduce myself that way. Just remembering her calling me that is like a warm blanket wrapped around my heart. And that’s what it felt like to a mixed-up, insecure, awkward teenaged girl… a place, a family, a person that was warm, secure, unwavering. And that’s the heart of it: On Christ, the Solid Rock, she stood, and I believe, although I don’t recall her verbalizing it to me, that she knew or sensed I was in desperate need of a rock. The Rock. It is no accident that today I also stand on that Solid Rock, having first drunk from the well springing up in Sharon and her family.
Her mother died on Sharon’s birthday. That was the first thing that hit me when I heard the news. I was so choked up I couldn’t even tell James. Earlier in the week, Sharon was grieving over that “coincidence,” when her daughter comforted her with these words: Mom, she loved you the best and she wanted to tell you Happy Birthday, but she knew she couldn’t on earth in the body she was in. Does Sharon really believe, that in a family of five children, her godly mother would love her “the best.” I doubt it. But those were words she needed to hear at that moment. What a wise-beyond-her-years and compassionate daughter Sharon has.
At the chapel today, the first words spoken by the pastor were these: We preach our own funeral service every day of our lives. Each person there could have simply echoed, “Amen.” Mom Rex’s testimony of loving service to the Lord and His people lives on. Undoubtedly, she had her eyes fixed on Him and on things to come. A small slip of paper with faint, barely perceptible writing was found in her Bible. It read, I want to wear a flowered dress so that Jesus will know how happy I am. Precious in the sight of the LORD is the death of his saints. (Psalm 116:15) Precious, indeed.
I was there today when my best friend from adolescence buried her mother. But let me start at the beginning.
Sharon and I first became friends in 7th grade. We’d left the secure nest of different neighborhood elementary schools and were thrust into a scary junior high school. I’d heard rumors of fist fights in the halls and bullies beating up 7th graders in the stair wells. (At least no one brought guns in those days and most of the stories turned out to be suburban legends.) As teenagers, Sharon and I lived almost two miles apart. Before we could drive or had cars, we would walk to one another’s houses, setting out at the same time, and meeting half-way. Even that simple bonding act is lost among today’s youth. She and I remained close friends throughout high school and young adulthood. But as the laws of God and nature dictate, we married and began our families (our oldest being born within a month of each other), and we were no longer in close contact. Still, we never lost touch completely, and each time we were able to see each other again, it was all the more sweet.
But this is about her mother. Sharon is the youngest of five children, all but the oldest of whom were still living at home when we first became friends. If you were a friend of one of Mom Rex’s children, then you were enfolded into the family. Her influence is profoundly impressed upon my teenage years and I still bear that imprint today. Although one or two memories are as crisp as today’s headlines, most of them are as fuzzy as new puppies. What I recall is that she was perpetually happy, usually singing, never idle, and continually mindful of heavenly things. Wherever she was, or whatever she was doing, if I came following behind Sharon, I was welcomed and included. She started calling me Joansey, and the way Sharon’s siblings are likely to know me today is if I re-introduce myself that way. Just remembering her calling me that is like a warm blanket wrapped around my heart. And that’s what it felt like to a mixed-up, insecure, awkward teenaged girl… a place, a family, a person that was warm, secure, unwavering. And that’s the heart of it: On Christ, the Solid Rock, she stood, and I believe, although I don’t recall her verbalizing it to me, that she knew or sensed I was in desperate need of a rock. The Rock. It is no accident that today I also stand on that Solid Rock, having first drunk from the well springing up in Sharon and her family.
Her mother died on Sharon’s birthday. That was the first thing that hit me when I heard the news. I was so choked up I couldn’t even tell James. Earlier in the week, Sharon was grieving over that “coincidence,” when her daughter comforted her with these words: Mom, she loved you the best and she wanted to tell you Happy Birthday, but she knew she couldn’t on earth in the body she was in. Does Sharon really believe, that in a family of five children, her godly mother would love her “the best.” I doubt it. But those were words she needed to hear at that moment. What a wise-beyond-her-years and compassionate daughter Sharon has.
At the chapel today, the first words spoken by the pastor were these: We preach our own funeral service every day of our lives. Each person there could have simply echoed, “Amen.” Mom Rex’s testimony of loving service to the Lord and His people lives on. Undoubtedly, she had her eyes fixed on Him and on things to come. A small slip of paper with faint, barely perceptible writing was found in her Bible. It read, I want to wear a flowered dress so that Jesus will know how happy I am. Precious in the sight of the LORD is the death of his saints. (Psalm 116:15) Precious, indeed.
Saturday, April 18, 2009
Friday, April 17, 2009
Yesterday
There's still no correct answer for yesterday's Connect the Dots post. I've added a small hint.
I kept Caleb & Alexa as usual yesterday, and here they are at a couple of their favorite activities: playing in Mom's closet and wearing goofy hats.
While Alexa was napping, Caleb had his afternoon snack and watched a "mooby" (movie) while wearing sunglasses.Then he tried balancing on his head for a while.
I kept Caleb & Alexa as usual yesterday, and here they are at a couple of their favorite activities: playing in Mom's closet and wearing goofy hats.
While Alexa was napping, Caleb had his afternoon snack and watched a "mooby" (movie) while wearing sunglasses.Then he tried balancing on his head for a while.
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Connect the Dots - 26
Find the common bond of three things and leave a comment with your answer. Here's help with what the pictures represent: PENNY, HANG, BED.
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Connect the Dots - 25
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