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Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows

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Did you happen to notice this????

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I

After the meeting at the start of the film, Lord Voldemort‘s wand switches hands between shots after he takes it out.

Sex and the City 2

The day Carries arrives in New York: June 11, 1986 was Wednesday not a Tuesday.

The A Team (2010)

They are present at Frankfurt, Germany. But with a closer look,  you see a Cathedral on the right side.  The Cathedral and the Central station is located in Cologne, Germanay. They are about 22km apart.

Burke and Hare

The Royal Lyceum Theater referenced in the film, did not exist in 1828 as it was not built until 1883.

The Expendables

Towards the end of the movie, when Steve Austin is on fire during the fight, you can see it is a stunt man wearing a burn suit for a split second.

Letters to Juiliet

In the scene where Juliet is seen walking out of the New Yorker building, her shirt is tucked in in the first shot, untucked in the second shot and in the third is tucked in again.

Paranormal Activity 2

During the last night Martine is working for the Rey family, she is shown saying prayers in the kitchen and the family room.  During that time, the kitchen camera shot shows spices, knives and a chopping board on the counter, but in the next kitchen shot, everything is replaced by a fruit bowl.

Robin Hood

On the cliff top before the battle on the beach, you are treated to a lovely if fleeting glimpse of the 12th Century wind farm turbines.

The Twilight Saga – Eclipse

In the last scene where Edward and Bella are sitting in the sunny field, Edward is not sparkling.

Dear John

John’s staff sergeant military shoulder epaulet markings become upside down in the scene when he and Savannah are having dinner at her house when he comes to see her after his dad died.  In a later shot, shortly after, they are correct.

Jimmy Hoffa

James Hoffa

Week 31-FOLLOW  the trail!!!!! This week the trail to the White House or rather those who aspired to be there becomes really clear.  Read it and read it again and you’ll be shaking your head in disbelief. BUT the names are there, look them up for yourself.

AMONG THE MISSING

Robert Kennedy had pursued Teamster President Jimmy Hoffa since the 1950’s, when he served as chief counsel for the Senate McClellan Committee, which exposed organized crime in labor unions.  On becoming Attorney General in 1961, Robert turned up the heat, and over th next few years his “Get Hoffa Squad” brought multiple indictments against Teamster officials.  By 1962, the pressure was intense, and a teamster informant quoted Hoffa as saying “Somebody needs to bump that son-of-a-bitch off.  Bobby Kennedy has got to go”.  After the assassination, Hoffa told a reporter, “Bobby Kennedy is just another lawyer now”, but despite his bravado, he was convicted of jury tampering in 1964 and sent to prison, where he remained till 1971, when President Nixon pardoned him.

Under Hoffa, the Teamster Central States Pension Fund (CSPF) was managed by Chicago gangster Allen Dorfman, who made low-interest loans , involving kickbacks, to Las Vegas casino developers.  Some CSPF loans were political : in 1963 25 million was lent to the firm Webb and Knapp, financiers behind the Great South West Corporation, a shady Texas land deal backed by the Murchison family and controlled by their lawyer Bedford Wynne.  With this loan, Webb and Knapp bought 625,000 shares of over-valued real estate stock from a company run by Texas Democratic Party Chairman Eugene Locke, in whose offices the fateful Dallas motorcade route was planned.  Looke became Lyndon Johnson’s ambassador to Vietnam in 1967-8.  Webb and Knapp went bankrupt in 1965.  Hoffa vanished in 1975, and rumors persist that the mob killed him and buried his body in Jersey’s Meadowland Stadium.

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

The Louvre Museum has 8.5 million visitors per year. This blog was viewed about 86,000 times in 2010. If it were an exhibit at The Louvre Museum, it would take 4 days for that many people to see it.

In 2010, there were 383 new posts, not bad for the first year! There were 1094 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 198mb. That’s about 3 pictures per day.

The busiest day of the year was September 25th with 13,761 views. The most popular post that day was Ten Tips Thursday-Cucumbers Rival WD-40.

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were stumbleupon.com, mail.yahoo.com, mail.live.com, mail.aol.com, and alphainventions.com.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for bundling board, bundle board, don draper smoking, original candyland board, and top ten movie mistakes.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

Ten Tips Thursday-Cucumbers Rival WD-40 August 2010
112 comments and 3 Likes on WordPress.com

2

All About Me February 2010
13 comments

3

Thursday’s Ten Tips to use WD-40 July 2010
51 comments

4

Don’t Pass (up) the Salt! July 2010

Peanut butter 14juni09 001

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Late, late just like the White Rabbit who sings: I’m late / I’m late / For a very important date. / No time to say “Hello.” / Goodbye. / I’m late, I’m late, I’m late.” Not late with this recipe BUT this bark is supposed to be a Christmas present for my daughter and I’m making it tomorrow!

PEANUT BUTTER SWIRL BARK

Smooth peanut butter and two types of chocolate make up this version of the beloved peanut butter cup.

Vegetable oil cooking spray

12 ounces bittersweet chocolate, chopped

4 ounces of milk chocolate, chopped

1/4 cup creamy peanut butter

Coat a 9-by-12 1/2-inch rimmed baking sheet with cooking spray, and line with parchment, leaving an overhang on ends.  Melt bittersweet chocolate in a double boiler or a heat-proof bowl set over a pan of simmering water, stirring.  Pour into baking sheet, and spread in an even layer.

Melt milk chocolate with peanut butter in a double-boiler or a heatproof bowl set over a pan of simmering water.  Drizzle chocolate-peanut butter mixture over bittersweet chocolate, and swirl with a skewer.  Refrigerate until firm, about 1 hour.  Break into pieces.

Recipe from Martha Stewart Living magazine

New year - which direction?

NEW YEAR - Which Direction?

Not a great way to kick off the New Year of blogging by being one day late with my Monday blog.   Well I guess today is going to be catch-up day, first this blog, then I have to come up with something tasty for Tasty Tidbits Tuesday.   I also have to be available for Verizon to install service in my daughter’s new apartment, put a ginormous bag of photos and stuff in some order, put away some Christmas stuff that has been washed and finish two very belated Christmas gifts – have the Kings come yet?

New Year, new diet, less fat – Susan Celtic Lady

41 and running out of gas – Weez

Soon snow will be a memory – Gail

90 years, putting me to shame – Heide

Time to revise my 50 goals! – Me

And now a few from the book, Not Quite What I Was Planning – Six Word Memoirs by Writers Famous & Obscure:

Never should have bought that ring – Paul Bellows

Sold Belongings. Became Itinerant Poetry Librarian – Sara Wingate Gray

Tombstone won’t say “had health insurance” – Dean Haspiel

Stranded by ten-thousand -mile crush – Will Cockrell

Wasted time regretted so life reinvented – Vicky Oppus


A Decade of Disasters

Texas Tech alumnus Rick Husband was the final ...

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I have lived through six decades already and I don’t remember one that had more disasters, natural and/or man-made than this past one.  These ten years were filled with tragedies brought on by mankind  and horrific natural catastrophes.  Looking back there were so  many events to choose from, that my original plan of naming 10 disasters, one for each year had to be abandoned.  So now what we have is a list of some of the most notable events in each of the Ten years – making a Decade of Disasters.

2oo1:

Terrorism

Regardless of what other catastrophes occurred during this first year of the 21st century, the only one remembered throughout the world is 9/11, the terrorist attack on the twin towers of the World Trade Center, the attack on the Pentagon and the hijacked plane which crashed in Pennsylvania.   There is no need to elaborate on the details of this man-made horror as they are indelibly engraved on the minds of every person who was age seven or older at that time.  The official death toll for that day was 3000 victims and the 19 hijackers.

2002:

Earthquake

March 25th an earthquake with a 6.1 magnitude struck the regions of Nahrin and Baghlian Province in Afghanistan and Pakistan.  1000 people were killed, several hundred more were injured and approximately 20,000 people were left homeless.

Arson- Civil Unrest

In February the Sabarmati Express train was attacked by a large group of Muslims in the city of Godha, India.  59 Hindu passengers, mostly women and children were burned alive.  The incident prompted widespread retaliatory massacres  on Muslims resulting in the deaths of 790 Muslims and 254 Hindus and 223 missing persons.  A total of 523 places of worship were destroyed.

Man-made

The Senegalese government-owned ferry, Le Joola capsized off the coast of The Gambia on September 26th.   The disaster resulted in the deaths of at least 1,863 people.  The ship was built to accommodate 580 passengers and crew.

2003

Fire

The Columbia Space Shuttle exploded during re-entry into the earth’s atmosphere killing the 7 astronauts – it was the Shuttle’s 28th mission.  The tragedy occurred February 1st.

Also in February an arsonist sabotaged a subway train in Doegu, South Korea.  189 passengers were killed, 140 injured.

On February 18th, a fire broke out in a second floor Chicago night club.  21 people were trampled as they tried to escape the flames.

Disease

For several months in the spring of 2003, a virulent outbreak of the SARS virus affected 8,300 people and killed 755, primarily in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan.

Heat Wave

A 3-week heat wave in May, with temperatures rising above 120 degrees killed over 1200 people in India.

2004

Hurricane

Hurricane Charley was the third-named storm and second major hurricane of the 2004 Atlantic hurricane season.  It lasted from August 9th to August 15th and at its peak attained 150 mph winds making it a category 4 hurricane.  The storm made landfall in southwestern Florida.  Charley also assaulted Cuba, the Dry Tortugas.  The hurricane traveled north along a northeast corridor of Florida damaging Punta Gorda, Arcadia, Sebring and Zolfo Springs to name a few. Damage to the state totaled over 13 billion dollars.

Earthquake-Tsunami

On December 26th, the day after Christmas, an undersea megathrust earthquake struck off the west coast of Sumatra, Indonesia.  The resulting tsunami known as the Indian Ocean Tsunami or the Boxing Day Tsunami killed over 230,000 people in 14 countries and inundated coastal communities with 100 ft high waves.  Indonesia was the hardest hit, followed by Sri Lanka, India and Thailand.

2005

Earthquake

A 7.6 magnitude earthquake hit Asia in October killing 73,300 people; 72,000 were in Pakistan.

Hurricane

The photos and TV footage could not begin to convey the scope of the tragedy when Hurricane Katrina hit New Orleans and caused the levees to break.  It was the costliest natural disaster as well as one of the five deadliest hurricanes in the history of the United States.  Overall the damage was reported to be 135 billion dollars.

2006

Man-made – Human Error

Delta flight 5191 was a U.S. domestic passenger flight from Lexington, KY to Atlanta, GA and crashed upon take-off killing all 47 passengers and 2 of the 3 man crew.  The aircraft was assigned Runway 22 but used 26 which was too short for a plane of this size.  The sole survivor was the co-pilot who, according to the black box, was piloting the plane at that time.

Natural – Mudslides/Earthquake/Tsunami

In February a combination of continued heavy rains and a minor earthquake caused rock/debris/mudslides causing widespread damage and loss of life.  The official death toll stands at 1,126.

In July a 7.7 magnitude earthquake struck Java and caused a tsunami, both events killed a total 668 people and injured 9,299.

2007

Heat Wave

Approximately 500 people succumbed in Hungary during a week-long heat wave in July. At one point the temperature hit 107 degrees.

Cyclone

The storm formed in the Bay of Bengal reaching  160 mph, landed in Bangladesh on November 15th .  The estimates of fatalities varied from one agency to another; Save the Children reported the death toll to be between 5000-10,00.

Floods

After a week of torrential rains, North Korea suffered severe flooding in the southern half of the country and including the Capital.  The death toll was reported as 454, 156 missing, 4,351 injured.

2008

Earthquake

Natural disaster struck in the form of 8.0 magnitude earthquake in the Sechuan Province of China killing 69, 197 people, injuring 374,176 and 18,222 listed as missing.

Cyclone

Myanmar suffered catastrophic destruction and at least 138,000 dead.  The government stopped reporting the death toll after it hit 138,000 to minimize political fall out.  Cyclone Nargis was the deadliest named cyclone in the North Indian Ocean Basin.

Cold Wave

The winter of 2008 was the coldest recorded in Afghanistan in 30 years.  The temperature dropped to -22 degrees and eventually killed 1300 people.

2009

Disease

Swine Flu was responsible for the lives of over 1000 people in the United States.  The 2009  flu pandemic was a global outbreak of a new strain of the H1N1 influenza virus. A state of National Emergency was declared by President Obama once the death toll reached 1000.

 

2010

Snowstorm

Washington DC and the U.S. Eastern seaboard were paralyzed by a severe snowstorm.

Man-made

In April, a massive explosion aboard an oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico caused a catastrophic oil spill killing 11 people and which eventually spread to the coast of Louisiana destroying the fishing industry and killing wildlife by the thousands.

Mine Collapse

In August 33 miners became trapped in a collapsed mine.  17 days later it was discovered that they were alive in a safety chamber.  Despite 24/7 rescue efforts, the men were not rescued until October.




Founder of the Republic of Turkey Mustafa Kema...

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In true New Year’s Eve tradition, my husband and I went to a local restaurant/coffee shop (The Mansion) which was hosting a private party for their regular customers.  This was the first year we were around to go and it was just delightful.  The counters were laden with crackers and cheese, smoked salmon, salad and deli meats and as promised in the invitation an endless supply of cheeseburgers and pigs in a blanket were passed among the guests.  AND the champagne flowed and flowed and flowed.

The invitation indicated it was “Black Tie” and we decided we would definitely dress accordingly.  I wish I had insisted on taking his picture before we left the house because Peter was quite the dandy in his White Tie and Tails.  YES he did wear “tails”; a beautiful custom-made tail coat from 1947 with a white vest and white tie and black patent leather shoes!   I was a little creative in my outfit, donning black pants and black camisole with one of Peter’s white bow ties around my neck and I wore a shawl-collared tuxedo jacket.  When we sat down at our table, there were black Fedora hats for the men and silver and black tiaras for the women as well as horns and noise-makers.  The whole place looked great!

We planned on attending this gala event with our old friend, Cary; he and Peter have been friends for about 40 years!  We arrived first and secured a nice booth in the front room, first glass of champagne in hand.  Shortly after we sat down, I noticed a young woman sitting at a nearby table by herself.  At first I thought perhaps she was waiting for someone to join her but on second thought since she was already eating, it occurred to me she might be alone.  So I suggested to Peter that he ask her to join us – not my usual style and very spontaneous.  And Catherine happily accepted our invitation.  One of the comforting aspects of the evening was  most likely the party-goers would be neighbors of ours, since this is a local diner.

Catherine proved to be an enchanting addition to our table and Peter and Cary enjoyed regaling her with stories.  We soon found out that her parents were expected to arrive any moment and that they lived two doors down from us!  Catherine had a previously made plan to join a friend for the rest of the evening but we soon dissuaded her from that idea – she should stay with us!

Eileen (sp?) and Frank, Catherine’s parents arrived and joined us and it quickly became the more the merrier. The ‘thing” about The Mansion and more specifically Phil and John is that the welcoming atmosphere encourages neighbors to meet and talk with one another.  Before the evening ended, we were sure that we had found neighbors who we would welcome meeting again.  Cary is a singer and entertainer and performs weekly at The Triad theater and what better way to extend the conviviality of the evening by other than making a plan for all of us to attend his show.  The plan is tentative at this point but I  am hoping we can all go in mid-January while my son, Joel is visiting.

A long and winding tale I know, to get to the crux of the story and title of the blog, however, I do believe New Year’ s Eve  is  the best night of the year to ring out the old and ring in the new  with old gold and new silver friends.

Epic Fail

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I was really excited when I saw the subject line of an email I received from my friend, Gail; you know, my chief contributor of fact, fiction, trivia and minutia!  I went to the site, read it and experienced an AHA MOMENT, I thought great; Let’s end 2010 by banishing certain over-used, mis-used and conf-used words.  Here is the list compiled by Lake Superior State University. I’M JUST SAYIN this list has the WOW FACTOR and by publishing it, I hope my blog goes VIRAL, read by all the MAMA GRIZZLIES, that I get an EPIC number of hits. I’m going to GOOGLE and FACEBOOK it and if read by all THE AMERICAN PEOPLE, it surely will not be a FAIL. And as we enter into a new year, I do hope all of you will LIVE LIFE TO THE FULLEST!

VIRAL

“Often used to describe the spreading of items on the Internet i.e. ‘The video went viral.’ It is overused. I have no objection to this word’s use as a way to differentiate a (viral) illness from bacterial.” Jim Cance, Plainwell, Mich.

“This linguistic disease of a term must be quarantined.” Kuahmel Allah, Los Angeles, Calif.

“Events, photographs, written pieces and even occasional videos that attracted a great deal of attention once were simply highly publicized, repeated in news broadcasts, and talked about for a few days. Now, however, it is no longer enough to give such offerings their 15 minutes of fame, but they must be declared to ‘go viral.’ As a result, any mindless stunt or vapid bit of writing is sent by its creators whirling around the Internet and, once whirled, its creators declare it (trumpets here) ‘viral!’ Enough already! If anything is to be declared worthy enough to ‘go viral,’ clearly it should be the LSSU Banished Words list for 2011!” Lawrence Mickel, Coventry, Conn.

“I knew it was time when the 2010 list of banished words appeared in Time magazine’s, ‘That Viral Thing’ column.” Dave Schaefer, Glenview, Ill.

“I didn’t mind much when ‘viral’ came to mean an under-handed tactic by advertising companies to make their ads look like pop culture. However, now anything that becomes popular on YouTube is suddenly ‘viral.’ I just don’t get it.” Kevin Wood, Wallacetown, Ont.

“Every time I see a viral video on CNN or am asked to ‘Let’s go viral with this’ in another lame e-mail forwarded message, it makes me sick.” Lian Schmidt, Bandon, Ore.

EPIC

More than one nominator says the use of ‘epic’ has become an epic annoyance.

Cecil B. DeMille movies are epic. Internet fall-outs and opinions delivered in caps-lock are not. ‘Epic fail,’ ‘epic win’, ‘epic (noun)’ — it doesn’t matter; it needs to be banished until people recognize that echoing trite, hyperbolic Internet phrases in an effort to look witty or intelligent actually achieves the opposite.” Kim U., Des Moines, Iowa.

“Over-use of the word ‘epic’ has reached epic proportions. Tim Blaney, Snoqualmie, Wash.

“Anything that this word describes in popular over-usage is rarely ever ‘epic’ in the traditional sense of being heroic, majestic, or just plain awe-inspiring.” Mel F., Dallas, Tex.

“Standards for using ‘epic’ are so low, even ‘awesome’ is embarrassed.” Mike of Kettering, Ohio.

“I’m sure that when the history books are written or updated and stories have been passed through the generations, the epic powder on the slopes during your last ski trip or your participation in last night’s epic flash mob will probably not be included. This may be the root of this epic problem, but it seems as if during the past two years, any idea that was not successful was considered an ‘epic-fail.’ This includes the PowerPoint presentation you tried to give during this morning’s meeting, but couldn’t because of technical problems. Also, the ice storm of ‘epic proportions’ that is blanketing the east coast this winter sure looks a lot like the storm that happened last winter.” DV, Seattle, Wash.

FAIL

One nominator says, “what originally may have been a term for a stockbroker’s default is now abused by today’s youth as virtually any kind of ‘failure.’ Whether it is someone tripping, a car accident, a costumed character scaring the living daylights out a kid, or just a poor choice in fashion, these people drive me crazy thinking that anything that is a mistake is a ‘fail.’ They fail proper language!”

“Fail is not a noun. It is not an adjective. It is a verb. If this word is not banned, then this entire word banishment system is full of FAIL. (Now doesn’t that just sound silly?)” Daniel of Carrollton, Georgia.

“When FAILblog.org went up, it was a funny way to view videos of unfortunate people in unfortunate situations. The word fail is now used by people, very often just to tease others, when they ‘FAIL.’ Any time you screw up in life — a trip up the stairs, a bump into a wall, or a Freudian slip, you get that word thrown in your face.” Tyler Lynch, Washington, Iowa.

“Mis-used. Over-used. Used with complete disregard to the ‘epic’ weight of the word. Silence obnoxious reality TV personalities and sullen, anti-establishment teenagers everywhere by banishing this word.” Natalie of Burlington, Ont.

“It has taken over blogs, photo captions, ‘status’ comments. Anytime someone does something less than perfect, we have to read ‘FAIL!’ The word has failed us all.” Aaron Yunker, Ishpeming, Mich.

WOW FACTOR

“This buzzword is served up with a heaping of cliché factor and a side order of irritation. But the lemmings from cable-TV cooking, whatever design and fashion shows keep dishing it out. I miss the old days when ‘factor’ was only on the math-and-science menu.” Dan Muldoon, Omaha, Neb.

“Done-to-death phrase to point out something with a somewhat significantly appealing appearance.” Ann Pepper, Knoxville, Tenn.

A-HA MOMENT

“All this means is a point at which you understand something or something becomes clearer. Why can’t you just say that?” Audrey Mayo, Killeen, Tex.

BACK STORY

“This should be on the list of words that don’t need to exist because a perfectly good word has been used for years. In this case, the word is ‘history,’ or, for those who must be weaned, ‘story.'” Jeff Williams, Sherwood, Ariz.

BFF

“These chicks call each other BFF (Best Friends Forever) and it lasts about 10 minutes. Now there’s BFFA (Best Friends For Awhile), which makes more sense.” Clare Rabe Forgach, Ft. Collins, Colo.

MAN UP

“A stupid phrase when directed at men. Even more stupid when directed at a woman, as in ‘Alexis, you need to man up and join that Pilates class!'” Sherry Edwards, Clarkston, Mich.

“Another case of ‘verbing’ a noun and ending with a preposition that goes nowhere. Not only that, the phrase is insulting, especially when voiced by a female, who’d never think to say, ‘Woman up!'” Aunt Shecky, East Greenbush, NY.

“Can a woman ‘man-up,’ or would she be expected to ‘woman-up?'” Jay Leslie, Portland, Maine.

“Not just overused (a 2010 top word according to the Global Language Monitor) but bullying and sexist.” Christopher K. Philippo, Glenmont, NY.

“We had to put up with ‘lawyer up.’ Now ‘man up,’ too? A chest-thumping cultural regression fit for frat boys stacking beer glasses.” Craig Chalquist Ph.D., Walnut Creek, Calif.

REFUDIATE

“Adding this word to the English language simply because a part-time politician lacks a spell checker on her cell phone is an action that needs to be repudiated.” Dale Humphreys, Muskegon, Mich.

Kuahmel Allah of Los Angeles, Calif. wants to banish what he called ‘Sarah Palin-isms’: “Let’s ‘refudiate’ them on the double!”

MAMA GRIZZLIES

“Unless you are referring to a scientific study of Ursus arctos horribilis , this analogy of right-wing female politicians should rest in peace.” Mark Carlson, Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.

THE AMERICAN PEOPLE

“These politicians in Congress say ‘the American People’ as part of what seems like every statement they make! I see that others have noticed it, too, as various websites abound, including an entry on Wikipedia.” Paul M. Girouard, St. Louis, Mo.

“No one in Washington can pontificate for more than two sentences without using it. Beyond overuse, these people imply that ‘the American people’ want/expect/demand all the same things. They don’t.” Dick Hilker, Loveland, Colo.

“Aren’t all Americans people? Every political speech refers to the ‘American’ people as if simply saying ‘Americans’ (or ‘people’) is not enough.” Deb Faust, Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.

I’M JUST SAYIN’

“‘A phrase used to diffuse any ill feelings caused by a preceded remark,’ according to the Urban Dictionary. Do we really need a qualifier at the end of every sentence? People feel uncomfortable with a comment that was made and then ‘just sayin” comes rolling off the tongue? It really doesn’t change what was said, I’m just sayin’.” Becky of Sault Ste. Marie, Mich.

“I’m just sayin’…’I’m not sayin”’…Actually, you ARE saying…A watered-down version of what I just said or intended to say….SAY what you are saying. DON’T SAY what you aren’t saying.” Julio Appling, Vancouver, Wash.

“Obviously you are saying it…you just said it!” Catherine Wilson, Granger, Ind.

“And we would never have known if you hadn’t told us.” Bob Forrest, Tempe, Ariz.

“When a 24-hour news network had the misguided notion to brand this phrase as a commentary segment called, ‘Just sayin’, I thought I was going to wretch.” Casey Conroy, Pleasant Hill, Calif.

FACEBOOK / GOOGLE as verbs

“Facebook is a great, addicting website. Google is a great search engine. However, their use as verbs causes some deep problems. As bad as they are, the trend can only get worse, i.e. ‘I’m going to Twitter a few people, then Yahoo the movie listings and maybe Amazon a book or two.” Jordan of Waterloo, Ont.

LIVE LIFE TO THE FULLEST

“It’s an absurdity followed by a redundancy. First, things are full or they’re not; there is no fullest. Second, ‘live life’ is redundant. Finally, the expression is nauseatingly overused. What’s wrong with enjoying life fully or completely? The phrase makes me gag. I’m surprised it hasn’t appeared on the list before.” Sylvia Hall, Williamsport, Penn.

Current title card

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The Blizzard of 2010 arrived as predicted (so we can’t say we didn’t know it was coming) and in less than 3 hours our world was blanketed in a white powdery mantle.  Oh it looked so pretty coming down in big flakes.  And I noticed how quickly it was accumulating and decided to chronicle the snow storm – see previous blogs beginning with: Chronicle of a Snow Storm  .

Taking pictures from the front door or the back door only took a few moments so uh now, what do I do?  The photos in the Chronicle blogs tell the story of how white your world can be when 28″ – 30″ of snow fall in 24 hours but what was going on inside the house.  Well when you are house-bound for four days, you gotta do something!!  It was definitely easier for me than my husband, basically because I always do more things AND I have my computer.

  1. Playing on my computer has to be number one because I was on it a LOT every day;  I played  Scrabble with my Facebook friends, checked email, wrote blogs, cruised through Ebay and read other blogs.
  2. Nothing like daylight and the reflection of bright snow to show you where all the finger prints on doors and drawers are.  I spent some of each of the four days with Simple Green in one hand and paper towels in the other.
  3. Paid a lot of bills online.  Actually wrote out a couple of checks but couldn’t mail them!
  4. Because I was sleeping later and really had no where to go, I made breakfast for my husband. Yeah, really, bacon and eggs and coffee and an English muffin.
  5. Watched Dr. Phil and Judge Judy every afternoon – love them both!
  6. Ate Christmas dinner left-overs.  We had dinners of soup, stuffed shells, salad and broccoli. And dessert every night!!!
  7. Started to put away some of the Christmas decorations;  I would have done much more except that we couldn’t get to the garage to retrieve the bins.  But I did get to the back of the closet and organize a couple of boxes.
  8. Wrapped each piece of the Christmas china and packed in the one bin I had in the house.
  9. Knitted – I am way behind on a project, a gift for my new granddaughter, Francesca.
  10. Cut up the newspapers I needed for another little project.  Couldn’t seem to get beyond that part though.

Yay late last night the plow came up our side of Broadway, a sign that perhaps life outside of these four walls could start again.  I heard the truck and plow make a least two more passes.  I was hoping that the plow had not pushed a new wall of snow up against the car.  I mean let’s not forget that this cleared parking space cost me $ 40.

We had ventured out yesterday in hopes of putting Peter on the train back to NYC and his version of civilization.  Since the majority of my readers don’t have a sense of the roads and towns around us, I can’t relate the horror story of that adventure.  Let me just say that we left at 1:15pm and got home again at 4:15pm AND Peter never got near the train station!!! State highways remained un-plowed and abandoned cars littered whatever pathway we tried to take.  AND to add to the stress of this total misadventure, we were in an accident.   Yup, an ambulance side-swiped our car and we were STOPPED on the side of the road.  Well that all happened in Day 3 and this is supposed to be about Day 4.

Today Peter decided to dig a path to the shed.  Why? Well it wasn’t to retrieve the 50 lbs of salt he had stashed in there, and it wasn’t to get the folding shovel that is supposed to be in the car at this time of the year but for some irresponsible reason was still in the shed!!  NO, he wanted to get at the bird seed so he could at least toss some seed on the snow so that our little feathered friends and our furry little squirrels would have some sustenance!  Digging his way to the bird feeder would be another day – the drifts are just too high.

Ocean GRove, La Vie en Rose, shed, blizzard, snow removal

Going to the Birds!

Ocean Grove, bird seed, La Vie en Rose, bird feeder, blizzard

A Banquet for the Birds