Monday, December 31, 2007

2007, At Long Last, Good-Bye

2007 was an extreme year for me.

Tremendous ups.

Desperate lows.

I saw the Law of Attraction in spades.

One bad situation occurs, and the next thing you know, you're up to your neck in a crap storm.


But it turns around. It turns around.

I've never felt this way about a year, but, all in all, 2007 is one, I'm glad to bid adieu.


Sunday, December 30, 2007

Hummmm . . .

The night the hummingbird feeder looked like LAX

Friday, December 28, 2007

Friday Fill-In

From Fond of Snape and the movies.

1. "I don't expect you will really understand the beauty of the softly simmering cauldron with its shimmering fumes, the delicate power of liquids that creep through human veins, to leak out noses and eyes."

2. "Why is the rum always gone?" Yes, Johnny, yes. Why?

3. "Harold, *everyone* has the right to make a mistake."

4. "Nine companions, so be it. You shall be less than 10."

5. "Nonsense, I have not yet begun to whine."

6. "Mama says they was magic shoes. They could dance."

7. And as for the weekend, I have no plans!

Bull Fight

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Fractal

Saw a baby, 18 months maybe, being wheeled around Walmart, while she babbled into a toy cell phone clutched to her ear.

It's the end of the world as we know it.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Come Again?

I swear this thing winked at me after I took the picture.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

12/25/07

Merry Christmas to all.

Monday, December 24, 2007

Night Before Christmas

We have a dinner of comfort food.

We watch our Christmas movies.

and

Then, off to bed, to toss and turn, while waiting impatiently for

Christmas Day.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Montana Movie Trivia

Brad Pitt walked through this famous room at MSU Bozeman.

Guess which one.

Room or movie?

Either.

Saturday, December 22, 2007

Friday, December 21, 2007

Friday Fill-In

Last year during Holidailies is when I become enamored of Memes.

1. Snow white.

2. I'm looking forward to Christmas!!

3. This holiday is the best holiday ever! Except for my birthday, but not all of you get to celebrate that one. :P

4. One of my favorite old TV shows is Mr. Ed.

5. I'm done with regrets.

6. The most enjoyable thing around the holidays is the atmosphere.

7. And as for the weekend, tonight I'm looking forward to rest, tomorrow my plans include family coming home, and Sunday, I want to prepare for our Christmas Eve tradition!

Meme gratefully lifted from here.

Fractal



By the light of two candles,

we drank Mojitos

and

mocked Yuppies.

What could be more fun?

I like rum.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Happy Birthday, Baby

It was snowing in Missouri MUMBLE MUMBLE years ago.

I don't doubt it's snowing in Montana right this minute.



Make it a good one.

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

By the Light

. . . of a really old lamp.

Monday, December 17, 2007

Ecclesiastes 9:11

“Again I saw that under the sun, the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the strong, nor bread to the wise, nor riches to the intelligent, nor favor to the skillful; but time and chance happen to them all.”

Neither skill, strength, wisdom, or talent will save you.

Shit happens.

Sunday, December 16, 2007

If Animals Could Talk

My favorite Bible story is Numbers 22:22.

Some unfortunate named Balaam is riding his donkey to Moab, and this pisses off God.

God sends the Angel of the Lord to stop Balaam. The donkey sees the Angel standing in the middle of the road with drawn sword and spooks, thus carrying Balaam to safety.

If I saw an Angel of the Lord standing in the middle of the road, I’d be spooked too.

But, Balaam brooks no such nonsense and beats the donkey until it returns to the road. This goes on two more times until the Lord gives speech to the donkey. The donkey explains the situation, and Balaam returns home a repentant sinner. The talking donkey is heard from no more.

Now, it has often occurred to me, when I am most frustrated with my animal companions, if somehow they were given the gift of speech in that moment, they’d say, “You dumb ass. I’m only trying to help.”

Saturday, December 15, 2007

Well, Duh.

Ever do something that seems like a good idea at the time, but ensuing events prove otherwise?

Put liquid dish soap in the dishwasher once.

Seemed like a good idea at the time.

The resultant flood proved otherwise.

Thought red wine might be a nice addition to Christmas dinner.

Wiped everyone out with a red wine headache.

Seemed like a good idea at the time.

Ran all around the house with the brand new carbon monoxide testing device. Said to Husband Dearest, “This thing doesn’t work. I can’t get a reading.”

He said, “Good.”

Um, right.

Went out to the garage. Started the car. Waved said testing device under the tailpipe. CO detector shrieked with alarm. Flashed the message, RUN FOR YOUR LIFE!

Seemed like a good idea at the time.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Antiquities

I love to photograph old buildings. They interesting quirks and hidden secrets.

No Comment

Thursday, December 13, 2007

How I Wish it Was Summer Again

Because it is snowing today.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

One Scientific Question Answered

According to this article in USA Today, human evolution is speeding up.

Blue eyes, apparently, are relatively new to the population.

One scientist proclaims, "What do people with blue eyes have that made them have more children?" Hawks asks. "I dunno."

'Cause we're cuter, that's why.

Butte Montana, Just Passing Through

Back door to the opium den.

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Public Service Announcement

... so you don't wake up dead in Heaven.

If you’ve joined our program, already in progress, let me bring you up to date.

I’m an EMT – First Responder with a rural fire department. My job, in an emergency, is to take care of the patients until the ambulance arrives. In my community, that takes about 30 minutes, unimpeded, on dry pavement. We are often, first on the scene of tragedy.

Well, I’m usually third on the scene because both my partners move faster than me, so I’m left in the dark, gathering my equipment, wondering, which way did they go, but I digress. Which reminds me, and I digress again. PRIMUS, VOLENS ET POTENS is Latin for First, Willing and Able. I wanted that on a tee shirt, but realized, one dark night, that mine should read, Third, Willing and I’ll Give It My Best Shot. End of digression.

A small group had rented a community hall and were staying overnight – sleeping on the floor until their program was over. Several of the group went to the ER for the flu, where it was discovered, what they actually had, was carbon monoxide poisoning.

We were paged to the hall at 5 AM, in zero degree weather, to assess and make sure we didn’t have a multiple casualty incident. Everyone was fine (carbon monoxide detector) Sleepy and cold, when we were through, but alive. The patients were exposed in their car on the way to the gathering.

Here are the scary, deadly facts about carbon monoxide:

Odorless, tasteless, and nonirritating,

Most common type of fatal poisoning in many countries.

Symptoms include headaches, vertigo, and flu-like effects.

Inhaled, it takes the place of oxygen in the blood.

For more information, click the picture of the carbon monoxide molecule.

Protect yourself and your loved ones. Relatively inexpensive carbon monoxide monitors are available everywhere. They look and work like smoke alarms. You don’t want to wake up some cold dark night with a fireman staring you in the face.

Or worse.

Monday, December 10, 2007

Sunday, December 09, 2007

Shop 'Til You Drop

When I placed my purchase on the counter at the video store, the pubescent clerk asked, "Picking up a gift?"

"Yes," I replied.

"Figured so. Didn't make you for a Schwarzenegger fan," he grinned.

Oh really.

Now, if I had said, "I've been watching Arnold movies since before you were born," would I have proved his point or mine?

Alas.

If you want me, I'll be on the porch, in my rocking chair, clutching an ear trumpet, yelling "WHAT!" at passers by.

Saturday, December 08, 2007

Friday, December 07, 2007

Everyday Horses

Remember this commercial – metro-looking dude holds up an egg and says, “This is your brain.” He cracks the egg into a hot frying pan. “This is your brain on drugs.”

It took me f o r e v e r to get that. Fried, right? Duh.

The human brain is amazing. The mind generated in the human brain is confounding in range of abilities. A human mind can conceive art, justice, love or murder. It is truly one of this world’s wonders.

The brain of a horse, on the other hand, is the size of a fist, operates a mainly manure producing device and can barely conceive of grass. A tiny brain motivating 1,000 plus pounds makes a horse a liquid-eyed, silken skinned catastrophe in motion.

I grew up reading stories of courageous, trustworthy, equine companions who not only stood by their human friend, but often came to his rescue. Saturday mornings I sat mesmerized in front of the television while Fury, Flicka, Champion, Buttermilk, Diablo, Scout, Silver and Trigger emoted loyalty, intelligence and love all over assorted cow men and women. Did Trigger ever let Roy down? No.

The sad truth is, my dears, what comes over TV is not the truth. A horse in real life is more apt to kick his cow person in the head and run off. Even in the face of this major character defect, people remain serious about horses.

When I went to see Return to Snowy River, I joined an audience filled with cowboys, little girls and single women. The highlight of this film, as in the original, is when the Australian cowboy jumps his horse off a cliff and rides all the way down. However, in Snowy River, Part Two, halfway down, the villain shoots the horse. At this point in the film, I heard a female voice behind me say, “Why that dirty son of a bitch.”

Serious. Yes indeed.

Horses are the reason I walk with a limp, have a bad back and an elbow that predicts the weather. I’ve finally developed, what I consider to be, a mature relationship with my equine neighbors. I admire them from afar. They don’t try to kill me. Détente.

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Mountain Cows

When I was a child, my family lived in California's San Joaquin Valley. My parents' favorite week-end trip was a two hour drive through the mountains to the coast. We'd have lunch, play in the ocean, stroll through the shops, then drive home.

I guess a person's not technically a flatlander, living in a valley surrounded by mountains, but the Pacific Coast Range up close did awe and inspire my nine-year-old self. Back then, California wasn't quite so paved. Genuine farmers used the sea side of the coastal hills for pasture.

To me, it seemed those mountains went straight up from base to top. So, I asked my mother, how it was those cows peacefully grazing up there, managed to stick to those steep mountain sides.

"Well," she said, "Those are special mountain cows. The legs on one side are shorter than those on the other."

That informational tidbit was tucked away in my nine-year-old brain, unquestioned and unexamined.

When I was 22, my sweetheart wanted a romantic location to propose marriage, so he drove us through the mountains to the coast.

As we passed one farmer's pasture I said to my sweetie, "See those cows. Those are special mountain cows. The legs on one side are shorter than those on the other."

My potential fiancé wasn't a flatlander or a Californian. He had never heard of such unusual heredity. He stared over at me and asked, "How do they get back to the barn? Do they have to walk all the way around the mountain?"

He thought I was kidding. I didn't realize I was. He believed I was quite a wit though, and married me anyway.

Abraham Lincoln said, you can fool all of the people some of the time and some of the people all of the time, but he imagined the consequences of lying would ultimately catch up with the liar. So, when I told my mother about the man-eating marmots in Yellowstone Park, that was just fair play.

This post won a BEST OF HOLIDAILIES award.

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Aging Gracefully

Who are they kidding?

I was 22 when I got married. My sweetheart was 28. My sister was 17. She thought 28 was so old. Old like, time to go to the rest home, old.

When my husband turned 30, my sister and I got together and gave him an over-the-hill party. We thought it was hysterical. When I turned 30, I didn’t think it was all that funny.

I used to say, I felt old age creeping up on me, but when I looked, it was only my husband. I don’t say that anymore.

Three times in one week, I left the grocery store followed closely by the bag boy and couldn’t remember where I parked the car. It’s hard to be hip when your memory’s slipped.

I went to the doctor, and he told me I was getting to the age where I had to learn to live with certain things. The last time my husband went to the doctor, the doctor told him, when a person reaches a certain age, they start imagining things are wrong.

I consider that progress. In a few more years all the aches and pains I’ve had to learn to live with will all be in my mind.



I used to say,
old age is creeping up on me
but
when I looked, it was
just my husband.
Then I’d laugh,
but
now,
I think old age is creeping up on me
and when I looked, it was
me
clinging to the hand rail going downstairs
it was
me
turning on all the lights to read
it was
me
asking, what’d he say?
it was
me.

Tuesday, December 04, 2007

A Thoroughly Modern Dilemma

My daughter started dating a musician. Boy, he could play. I added his music to my iPod.

Way cool.

Daughter breaks up with musician.

Bummer.

Do I have to take his music off my iPod?

“Nah,” she says, “If you change all the track names to !@#$*%e.”

Do you kiss your mother with that mouth?

So, Blog Surfers, in the interest of further education (mine) please vote the poll at right. Let me know if I’m violating a Universal Law of Motherhood or damaging the cause of Female Solidarity.


And the votes are in!

55% said keep the music.
44% said, dump the fool.

Monday, December 03, 2007

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Decorate the Tree

Back in the day, my mother handed my sister and me, one strand of tinsel at a time.

One.

Of course, back then, tinsel was actual tinsel, not a plastic approximation, but still.

One.

At a time.

Which is why, at my house, the task of decorating the tree was not to make the most beautiful tree on the block. The object was for the kids to have fun.

And we did.

Saturday, December 01, 2007

Day 1 - Good Grief

In the spirit of I don’t have time to do everything I need to do, let alone all the stuff I want to do, I thought I’d add one more something else to the list. I signed up for Holidailes 2007.

"Holidailies is a free community writing project. All Holidailies 2007 participants promise to update their personal web sites every day from December 1 to January 1."

I did this last year and clearly remember thinking, I’m not going to do this next year.

Oh well.

My Number 1 Fan cheered when she heard. Something new to read every day. Don’t put up too many pictures, she said.

Silly girl.

We’ll see how long it takes this year before I’m down to dog stories.

Happy Holidailies.