Sunday, September 23, 2007
Wednesday, September 19, 2007
Camy Tang is having a contest -- you could win an iPod and a BASKET OF BOOKS!
Camy Tang's first book, Sushi for One, just came out. To celebrate (and to generate interest in the book) she is hostessing an awesome contest. The grand prize, first place winner, will receive an 8 GB iPod! Plus a lot of books (I didn't count them all ...)
For more information, and to enter, go here:
http://www.camytang.com/contest.html
You will need two things
- you'll need my email address to put in the contest entry form -- SuseADoodle at gmail.com. Please be sure to use that, okay?
- a Yahoo ID so you can join her Yahoo Group, Camy's Loft. And you will WANT to join her Yahoo group because every week she gives away books!
An author who whole-heartedly believes writers are readers too!
The contest runs till October 31, 2007.
The book sounds like a wonderful read. It is on my list of "GET THIS SOON!" Books and I've scheduled an afternoon to read it cover-to-cover. Want to know a little more about it? Check out:
http://christianfictionblogalliance.blogspot.com/2007/09/sushi-for-one-by-camy-tang.html
or
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0310273986
or
http://www.christianbook.com/Christian/Books/product?item_no=273981&netp_id=479128&event=ESRCN&item_code=WW
Monday, September 17, 2007
Saturday, September 15, 2007
FAIR TRADE CHOCOLATE EVENT
Who doesn't like chocolate? There are very few people who don't. (They were probably given chocolate as a kid but were told it was calves' liver or something like that.)
Did you know that about half of the world's chocolate is produced with slave labor? For more information, visit http://www.stopthetraffik.org/
If you like to cook and would like to win a goodie bag of Traffik-Free Chocolate, stop over here: http://rkhooks.net/2007/09/03/stop-the-traffik-chocolate-event/
If you participate, stop back here.
In the comments section leave your name and the url to your blog post that you use to enter r k hooks' event, using Traffik-Free Chocolate.
I'll be posting this info about the event at each of my blogs. Feel free to leave your comment and link at each one. (One comment entry per blog please, though.) From all of the comments posted, there will be a random drawing and I'll send out a chocolate-related thank you to three winners.
Thursday, September 6, 2007
DREAM ... Share your Talents, too!
You MUST check out this awesome video that Kay has posted at her blog, Loop de Loops:
http://loopdeloops.blogspot.com/2007/09/dreams-can-come-true.html
Go there NOW! I'll wait. Go, click on the video (after you pause her music -- Jimmy Durante -- well, pause him after you enjoy that ... personally, I love Jimmy's voice :-) but I'm a 60s kid who loved 40s music growing up ...)
DO NOT read anymore of this post until you've watched the video ...
Okay, now I'll tell you that I heard about this on the radio. I listen to classic music radio in the car. Turned on the radio in the middle of a discussion about this.
There was a debate whether it is okay that a non-professional could sing opera so well and whether it was proper that he did so well in a "popular" venue like that. Opera snobs are upset. Music lovers, though, are ecstatic.
Never belittle YOUR dreams! They are a gift. Your talents are yours and are also a gift.
Live While you are Alive!
Create Your Life -- don't let it just happen to you.
Rejoice in each day's blank page to make your mark on.
http://loopdeloops.blogspot.com/2007/09/dreams-can-come-true.html
Go there NOW! I'll wait. Go, click on the video (after you pause her music -- Jimmy Durante -- well, pause him after you enjoy that ... personally, I love Jimmy's voice :-) but I'm a 60s kid who loved 40s music growing up ...)
DO NOT read anymore of this post until you've watched the video ...
Okay, now I'll tell you that I heard about this on the radio. I listen to classic music radio in the car. Turned on the radio in the middle of a discussion about this.
There was a debate whether it is okay that a non-professional could sing opera so well and whether it was proper that he did so well in a "popular" venue like that. Opera snobs are upset. Music lovers, though, are ecstatic.
Never belittle YOUR dreams! They are a gift. Your talents are yours and are also a gift.
Live While you are Alive!
Create Your Life -- don't let it just happen to you.
Rejoice in each day's blank page to make your mark on.
Wednesday, September 5, 2007
Wednesday, August 29, 2007
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Monday Madness (001)
Here are some weather-related questions ... Thank you for playing and have an awesome week! =)
1. Where you live, what kind of weather (or weather-related tragedy) do you fear the most?
I live on top of a hill, and there are almost no trees of any size on our property. This is in the Upper Midwest. And being a flat-lander from the eat coast, I am not familiar with cloud formations or the weather patterns of this part of the country. So, the scariest weather is tornado or flat-line wind (tornadic-speed wind without the spin).
2. What kind of weather do you MOST enjoy?
Having said that, as long as I am inside, it is going north or south of us but is visible, and I am not out driving in it, I actually enjoy thunder storms. The lightening is amazing as it arcs across the expanse of sky and zaps the ground.
Otherwise, I also enjoy snow as long as I am not out in it or have to go out in it soon. The silence that seems to surround the falling of snow, or the muffling of sounds, is comfortable like a favorite old quilt to sleep under.
3. What kind of weather do you LEAST like to drive in?
Anything that makes it hard to see: rain, snow, sleet, or even the normal everyday weather of dusk!
4. What is the scariest weather-related experience you've had in your lifetime?
While I was a student at the University of Minnesota, I had to take classes during the summer to be able to graduate when I wanted to. So, I took a course in my major, studio ceramics, as a night class. It was during my first six months in Minnesota after moving from New Jersey. I'm used to fire sirens at noon as a daily system test because we still had volunteer fire companies that respond to the "fire whistles." Well, that night, July 1, the sirens went off around 8 PM -- meaning a tornado had been sighted within x-number of miles.
We were in the basement already so there was no where else to go. Then the rain started and well, we ended up with 8-10 inches of water on the floor of the studio (huge double room) where extension cords were under water. When the water first started coming in we ran around and unplugged all the cords we saw. Missed one. (The water would have been deeper but students up the ramp from us in the metal studio filled sandbags and blocked the doors to keep more water from running in.)
One very brave student waded over to the outlet and yanked out the cord.
There were reports of water geysering out of storm drains, cars in water up to their windows, cars floating away.
By the time I left the studio that night around 10:30, other than a puddle here and there, you wouldn't have known the storm had been so bad. There were some homes flooded by a flash flood in one of the Twin Cities' northern suburbs. And on July 3, the Twin Cities outer Metro area had FROST!
The guy I am now married to, lived along a street in residential St. Paul, where flat-line, during that storm, winds hit and took out most of the huge trees that had once lined the street a couple of blocks away. A huge limb landed on his car and crushed it.
5. Share a "weather picture" with us!
Monday, August 27, 2007
Mute Monday has a Theme and I didn't know it ...
The theme is "The City" and here's my idea of a crowded place to be -- as far away from the city as possible.
Something To Ponder
I received this in an e-mail today and thought it was worth sharing:
(A) The number of physicians in the U.S. is 700,000
(B) Accidental deaths caused by Physicians per year are 120,000
(C) Accidental deaths per physician is 0.171.
Statistics courtesy of U.S. Dept of Health Human Services.
Now think about this:
Guns:
(A) The number of gun owners in the U.S. is 80,000,000.
(Yes, that's 80 million...)
(B) The number of accidental gun deaths per year, all age groups, is 1,500.
(C) The number of accidental deaths per gun owner is .000188
Statistics courtesy of the FBI
So, statistically, doctors are approximately
9,000 times more dangerous than gun owners.
Remember, "Guns don't kill people, doctors do."
FACT: NOT EVERYONE HAS A GUN,
BUT
ALMOST EVERYONE HAS AT LEAST ONE DOCTOR.
Please alert your friends to this alarming threat
We must ban doctors before this gets completely out of hand!!!!!
Out of concern for the public at large,
I have withheld the statistics on
lawyers
for fear the shock would cause people to panic
and seek medical attention!
Wednesday, August 22, 2007
Monday, August 20, 2007
Friday, August 17, 2007
And you thought summer was bad where you are ...
Over at author, Angela Hunt's, blog -- there is this post about how hot it gets in Florida. A "way cool" (oops, sorry about that bad pun) laugh:
http://alifeinpages.blogspot.com/2007/08/its-hot-how-hot-well.html
http://alifeinpages.blogspot.com/2007/08/its-hot-how-hot-well.html
Thursday, August 16, 2007
Monday, August 13, 2007
Friday, August 10, 2007
Origami to WOW You!
PAINTED THREADS is listed on the Blogs of Note list at the Blogger Dashboard. WOW! You really need to check out this blog, and especially this post about an origami show that her son's work is part of.
Painted Threads: Ty's Big Night- The Origami Opening
Painted Threads: Ty's Big Night- The Origami Opening
Wednesday, August 8, 2007
My European City:
You Belong in Amsterdam |
href=http://www.blogthings.com/whateuropeancitydoyoubelonginquiz/
What European City Do You Belong In?
What European City Do You Belong In?
Monday, August 6, 2007
Saturday, August 4, 2007
Haven't added to flickr lately
It's kind of a bummer, really.
I spent an afternoon and probably into the night going through the recent downloads from my camera and my husband's. I crop, rotate, etc. to get the shots ready to upload to the flickr albums.
Notice how blotchy the shots of the dragonfly are down a couple posts ago? Well, ijit here forgot I had been using the graphics program to build a small animated movie. I forgot I had changed the save compression to deliberately degrade the image resolution while working on the animation. And I saved those hours of work on the photos at a 61% quality instead of the 100% quality .jpg setting.
Now I need to go back, delete all the edited shots, retrieve the originals and do all the editing all over again. :-b
So ... when I get up the energy to go back through all those photos, I will upload a brand new set of photos to flickr. More herons. More sandhill cranes. More hummingbirds. New bitterns and tricolored herons. Lots of sunflowers and lilies. And the dragonflies.
In the meantime, enjoy a respite here or one of my other blogs for a spell.
I spent an afternoon and probably into the night going through the recent downloads from my camera and my husband's. I crop, rotate, etc. to get the shots ready to upload to the flickr albums.
Notice how blotchy the shots of the dragonfly are down a couple posts ago? Well, ijit here forgot I had been using the graphics program to build a small animated movie. I forgot I had changed the save compression to deliberately degrade the image resolution while working on the animation. And I saved those hours of work on the photos at a 61% quality instead of the 100% quality .jpg setting.
Now I need to go back, delete all the edited shots, retrieve the originals and do all the editing all over again. :-b
So ... when I get up the energy to go back through all those photos, I will upload a brand new set of photos to flickr. More herons. More sandhill cranes. More hummingbirds. New bitterns and tricolored herons. Lots of sunflowers and lilies. And the dragonflies.
In the meantime, enjoy a respite here or one of my other blogs for a spell.
Notes on "Scene at the Pond"
I had to admit to my husband that -- well, I'm not actually surprised, but -- I am pleaseantly pleased with something that happened this week.
I was heading home from the dentist. He finally put in the final bridgework and took out the awful temporary bridgework that had kept my gums sore and raw for five or six weeks. And it seemed like a good idea to take a different route home than I would usually take. I'm not sure which is the quicker route. Probably the usual route because the route I took offers too many opportunities to observe the Remnants of Nature in Our Midst.
I do live in farm country. Quickly, though, the fields are waking up one fine sunrise to find a "for sale" sign dangling out by the road. The corn, hay or soybeans groan and the ground just wants to crack up and crawl away at the thought of being turned into one more housing plan or gotta-look-like-a-golf-course lawn.
Knowing I would be driving very slowly past the little ponds and marshy areas, looking for turtles and heron, for trumpeter swans floating in the ponds, for sandhill cranes in the fields, and tricolor herons or bitterns in the trees, I turned on the four-way flashers instead of just my blinker light. As I was shooting a heron in one of the larger ponds, the cardinal flew over the hood of my minivan and landed in the tangle of tree and weed next to me. I tried to shoot him but wasn't sure what I got. Was happy when I got home and downloaded the pictures to see that he turned out so well.
As I crawled along about four miles of road, stopping often to shoot through the open windows of the minivan, I actually had three different people stop to make sure everything was okay and that I wasn't broken down.
It's nice to know there are people out there who aren't afraid to stop to help a neighbor in need. Thanks.
I was heading home from the dentist. He finally put in the final bridgework and took out the awful temporary bridgework that had kept my gums sore and raw for five or six weeks. And it seemed like a good idea to take a different route home than I would usually take. I'm not sure which is the quicker route. Probably the usual route because the route I took offers too many opportunities to observe the Remnants of Nature in Our Midst.
I do live in farm country. Quickly, though, the fields are waking up one fine sunrise to find a "for sale" sign dangling out by the road. The corn, hay or soybeans groan and the ground just wants to crack up and crawl away at the thought of being turned into one more housing plan or gotta-look-like-a-golf-course lawn.
Knowing I would be driving very slowly past the little ponds and marshy areas, looking for turtles and heron, for trumpeter swans floating in the ponds, for sandhill cranes in the fields, and tricolor herons or bitterns in the trees, I turned on the four-way flashers instead of just my blinker light. As I was shooting a heron in one of the larger ponds, the cardinal flew over the hood of my minivan and landed in the tangle of tree and weed next to me. I tried to shoot him but wasn't sure what I got. Was happy when I got home and downloaded the pictures to see that he turned out so well.
As I crawled along about four miles of road, stopping often to shoot through the open windows of the minivan, I actually had three different people stop to make sure everything was okay and that I wasn't broken down.
It's nice to know there are people out there who aren't afraid to stop to help a neighbor in need. Thanks.
Thursday, August 2, 2007
Sunday, July 29, 2007
A few thoughts
I had not intended that Ant Thymes would turn into a site of photos. But with the black background I chose for the set up of the blog, they look pretty good here -- well, I think they do, at least. :-)
Maybe it is good that photos look so good against the background, because not much has been happening to be worth writing about lately.
This week will be a bit busy for me. Today and tomorrow are scheduled to be spent getting ready for the FUNshop on Tuesday night at the home of my friend, Sherry. I've got the catalogue notebooks to prepare, all of the handouts, all of the project kits, plus figure out all of my demonstrations and which will be the make-n-take projects. **sigh** Feels like a lot to get done in so few hours.
It will be a great FUNshop anyhow!
Then Tuesday will be spent at Sherry's and I'll put her to work helping cut the cardstock for the make-n-take projects. We've been getting together for the last few Tuesdays to make cards and have fun.
Wednesday is my last dental visit to get all of the bridge work done! HIP HIP HOORAY! No more "under construction" signs hanging off my swollen lips. Well, it has been almost six weeks since I was there last and the temporary bridge was put in. My lips and gums were swollen and bruised for forever it seemed. All except one tiny spot, along the front of the top gum, has "returned to normal" -- and I hope that the finished bridge fits better and that won't be a problem anymore after Wednesday.
Well, maybe not so busy after all. Just seems like it will be looking at it from this vantage point.
And, the weird thing is, when I am in the middle of needing to get one thing finished, ideas for the next projects come into my head. They demand to be put on paper, at least, because they know that if I don't write them down, they will be forgotten and lost forever. Sometimes, it is worse -- it is not an idea for a craft or art project, but for a writing project. These demanding little nagging bits and pieces require so much attention to get them down on paper with enough detail that they aren't forgotten, or the main point isn't lost, that they often overpower the project at-hand that is under some kind of time constraint.
That happened to me this last week. I felt I needed to go through all my rubber stamp sets to see which ones are actually from The Angel Company (tm) and then, of them, see which ones are in the current catalogue/idea book. To use them for swap projects, for samples to show off at FUNshops, or to use for demonstrations or the A-N-G-E-L or Treasure Hunt Games, they need to be current sets. Every time I sat down with a pile of stamp sets to go through, another new idea would pop into my head for a story I have been working on and demanded to be put into writing so I wouldn't forget it. Does anyone know why that happens?
I have, jokingly, said that it is "avoidance behavior." There are times when it is. I've been working on some writing projects that are non-fiction and sort of mentally draining to work on. I'm not in the habit of consistency with my writing, but attack it with gusto in spurts. I overwhelm myself and burn out on it very quickly. I allow other projects or ideas or pressing matters (like vacuuming, laundry, dirty dishes) to distract me from getting back to work on those projects.
In the case of going through the rubber stamps, it shouldn't take more than half an hour or so. I don't understand why my brain is throwing up road blocks to getting that accomplished. Maybe it is just the concept of "this needs to be done" that just makes my brain rebel. I dunno ...
Well, as soon as I hit "post," I better go look at that pile of stamp sets and see what is what ... oh, wait, there are some dirty dishes in the sink I should take care of first, and then maybe I should run to the grocery store for that milk we need tonight while it isn't busy in the store, and then maybe I ought to see if my hubby needs any laundry done for work tomorrow and then ...
Have a blessed week, ya'll!
Maybe it is good that photos look so good against the background, because not much has been happening to be worth writing about lately.
This week will be a bit busy for me. Today and tomorrow are scheduled to be spent getting ready for the FUNshop on Tuesday night at the home of my friend, Sherry. I've got the catalogue notebooks to prepare, all of the handouts, all of the project kits, plus figure out all of my demonstrations and which will be the make-n-take projects. **sigh** Feels like a lot to get done in so few hours.
It will be a great FUNshop anyhow!
Then Tuesday will be spent at Sherry's and I'll put her to work helping cut the cardstock for the make-n-take projects. We've been getting together for the last few Tuesdays to make cards and have fun.
Wednesday is my last dental visit to get all of the bridge work done! HIP HIP HOORAY! No more "under construction" signs hanging off my swollen lips. Well, it has been almost six weeks since I was there last and the temporary bridge was put in. My lips and gums were swollen and bruised for forever it seemed. All except one tiny spot, along the front of the top gum, has "returned to normal" -- and I hope that the finished bridge fits better and that won't be a problem anymore after Wednesday.
Well, maybe not so busy after all. Just seems like it will be looking at it from this vantage point.
And, the weird thing is, when I am in the middle of needing to get one thing finished, ideas for the next projects come into my head. They demand to be put on paper, at least, because they know that if I don't write them down, they will be forgotten and lost forever. Sometimes, it is worse -- it is not an idea for a craft or art project, but for a writing project. These demanding little nagging bits and pieces require so much attention to get them down on paper with enough detail that they aren't forgotten, or the main point isn't lost, that they often overpower the project at-hand that is under some kind of time constraint.
That happened to me this last week. I felt I needed to go through all my rubber stamp sets to see which ones are actually from The Angel Company (tm) and then, of them, see which ones are in the current catalogue/idea book. To use them for swap projects, for samples to show off at FUNshops, or to use for demonstrations or the A-N-G-E-L or Treasure Hunt Games, they need to be current sets. Every time I sat down with a pile of stamp sets to go through, another new idea would pop into my head for a story I have been working on and demanded to be put into writing so I wouldn't forget it. Does anyone know why that happens?
I have, jokingly, said that it is "avoidance behavior." There are times when it is. I've been working on some writing projects that are non-fiction and sort of mentally draining to work on. I'm not in the habit of consistency with my writing, but attack it with gusto in spurts. I overwhelm myself and burn out on it very quickly. I allow other projects or ideas or pressing matters (like vacuuming, laundry, dirty dishes) to distract me from getting back to work on those projects.
In the case of going through the rubber stamps, it shouldn't take more than half an hour or so. I don't understand why my brain is throwing up road blocks to getting that accomplished. Maybe it is just the concept of "this needs to be done" that just makes my brain rebel. I dunno ...
Well, as soon as I hit "post," I better go look at that pile of stamp sets and see what is what ... oh, wait, there are some dirty dishes in the sink I should take care of first, and then maybe I should run to the grocery store for that milk we need tonight while it isn't busy in the store, and then maybe I ought to see if my hubby needs any laundry done for work tomorrow and then ...
Have a blessed week, ya'll!
Friday, July 27, 2007
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)