Monday, July 30, 2007

Family is great

I love my family. They are the best. Now, not to slight anyone, but I am going to talk about my Mom and my sister, Sharon. But first, let me back up.

I have already mentioned that I am decorationaly challenged. In April I went to Sharon's house. Her house is so cute. The paint, the decorations, the way it is all put together. And she used really bold colors on the walls. I have always been afraid to do that. When I got home, I realized again how much I hate my house, my living room especially. So I decided to have Sharon help me out. I also thought I would get my Mom's input, because she is so good with color, and hue, and what goes well with what color. Sharon hadn't been to my house in a few years, so I took some pictures of my living room (clutter and all) from a couple of different angles and e-mailed them to her. Here is one of them.

The only thing you can't see in this photo is to the right, there is a wall with an opening that goes into the kitchen. This is where my boys tend to drop everything- books, shoes, folders, junk. This room is hardly ever used. It acts as a pass through from the hall to the kitchen. When someone like the visiting teachers or home teachers are coming over, we do a quick run through and pick up the junk and put it away (or probably more correctly, throw it away).

Well, Sharon looked at the pictures and gave me some hints and ideas. I was able to do one of them immediatley- move the furniture. I went to Ikea and got a cupboard to put the piano music in and then I went to a furniture store and bought a sofa table. My boys helped me clean up the piano music and transfer it from the filing cabinets and rubbermaid tub to the cupboard. We then moved the piano and couch. This is what I have now.





I am going after paint tomorrow. I have material to make new curtains. I am going to paint the white rocker, red for a pop of color and I will be refinishing and recovering the blue chair. It is going to look so cool when I am done. But here is the best part so far. Today my visiting teacher came by. When she walked in she said, "Oh, you changed your furniture. Wow, look at your living room. It looks so nice in here. I can't believe that just moving your furniture made this difference. It feels so..... so.... welcoming, warm, inviting." Then she commented on it 3 more times and again as she was leaving.

So, Mom and I have been discussing colors and what goes with what I have chosen. Sharon is telling me how to move my furniture (well, Mom gave me a plan as well, I just haven't tried that one out yet.) And if Sharon gets a chance, she is going to come and help me put the knick-knacks in place and hang things on the walls. If she doesn't get a chance, I will do my best with what she tells me in e-mails. And I am finally going to have a warm, inviting and nicely decorated home. (I am going to do the basement next). Isn't family great?

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Standoff

I just finished "Standoff" by Jeff Downs


The premise is this: The elite crime fighting unit, TOR, has a new enemy. One that is using copy cat crimes to gather intelligence against the unit and copy their sophisticated crime fighting tools. This enemy then intends to use these same tools to defete the TOR unit and inflict mayhem on the world. Unless the TOR unit can figure out the who, what, where and why of the enemy first.

I like this book. It is a small book, only 244 pages, but Jeff packs a lot into those pages. The dialog felt real and I admire that, because dialog is not something I am good at when it comes to writing. The action was never so fast that it was hard to keep up, but the book didn't drag, either. The one LDS character in the book, used his faith to help him in his job, but he was not preachy about it and all the non-members did not end up baptized. They acknowledged his religious convictions and that was it- like his not drinking when the rest of them went to a bar for a celebration, they noted for the new guy that that was the reason "Roach" was not in attendence.

On the side of being truthful, I did have one small gripe, though. While there is only one LDS character, and this is essentially a crime solving novel. In most crime solving of this magnatude, someone dies. However, when one of the good guys gets kidnapped by the bad guys, she is able to disarm them. Ok, believable in the way it happened. But this is where I didn't believe it, she knocked them out and then just tied them up and left them to be found! In real life, in this situation, I think that there would have been more deadly force used. I might be wrong, here, but the magnitude of the crime commited seems to me that just leaving the bad guys laying around for anyone to find seems irresponsible. So the getting rid of the bad guys seemed a little sanitary to me.

But all in all, I liked this book and would recommend it for a quick read.

Hope Springs Eternal

You Are Spring!

Hopeful
Playful
Sweet
Fresh
Airy

Friday, July 27, 2007

Gratefulness

Things to be grateful for today-

*I got most of my office cleaned out and straightened up
*It wasn't too hot today
*Rainshowers
*Computers that work
*garbage bags- lots of garbage bags
*Food that doesn't take too long to fix
*Water to drink
*Librabries
*E-mail with my family
*Letters from Trevor

Thursday, July 26, 2007

Some Good news and Some bad

It's been that kind of day. Yesterday I got an e-mail from Pier 1 telling me of a 50% off web only sale. I went over and checked it out. Wonder of Wonders, the plate I wanted to go in my living room was on sale, for 50%0ff!!! But the shopping cart wouldn't work properly. So I called customer service this morning. It didn't work because they are all sold out of most of the merchandise that was in the sale. Shelly at Pier 1 told me that they had people online ordering by 4:00 yesterday morning. What!! I didn't get my e-mail telling me of the sale until after noon yesterday! Ah well, I will just go into the store and pay full price for it. Bummer, but I had already budgeted the full price, I was just excited that I could have some extra decorating money.

But there was good news today as well. As I have already told you, I really really want Covenant to publish David G. Wooley's next book in his Promised Land series. Well, to that end, every once in awhile, I call or e-mail Covenant and ask about the status of the book. I do this with the impression that if I bug them enough they will do something about it. (that could be any number of things: *ideally they publish the book *they tell me to go away and leave them away * or they just ignore me, but publish the book already). So, after I blogged about "Secret in Zarahemla" by Sariah S. Wilson, and so rudely interrupted the blog with a rant about the Promised Land series (sorry Sariah, please forgive me for not giving your book the attention it was due. If you haven't had a chance to read this book and want to, do it for your next book reading. It really is a good book and Sariah does the story justice), anyway- this morning I sent an e-mail to Covenant again asking about the status of book #4. This is the reply I got this afternoon:

Hello, We do have the 4th installment of this series in house. We are hoping to release the book in the spring of 2008.
thank you for your interest.
Linda Olsen,
Covenant Communications


Now, I used to work for a publisher, so I know that there are all sorts of things that can change, go wrong, go right, make a difference etc. between now and the spring, but still. There is a light at the end of my waiting tunnel!!

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Go me!

I just finished the financial test. I only missed one question! Isn't that great. The bad part about that is that I had that one right and second guessed myself and changed it. But anyway, I got a 96% so it is all good.

Now, it would be great to get an interview and a job offer in the next week. I will be happy to go back where I am now, but would love the $ and benefits of one of these other jobs to go with it.

Moving forward

Change is all around and happening all the time. Just take a look outside today at the clouds around us. When I woke up this morning, it was dark and raining (that felt and sounded good). Within a few hours, the rain had quit, the sky was blue with just a few clouds in it and it was muggy, steam hot outside. Now it is hotter ad the clouds are building and billowing once again, and the wind has started to blow a bit harder than a breeze, but not hard enough to be a real wind.

I am thinking about change today, because I have applied to change my job. The new job would make more money than I make now and I would be contract instead of hourly and I would get benefits. These are all great things with my life situation as it is right now, (I am married to a not so nice man and would like to not be married to him in the near future). A higher salary and benefits would make this change go so much easier and smoother. But I have to go take an elementary financial test in a few minutes. I am not a math whiz, but can balance a checkbook, so I am hoping that it won't be too involved and scary. Anyway, prayers would be nice.

Another change in my life is that I have created a new website/shopping cart for my Urban Botanic business as well as a redirect URL for my UB website.
You can purchase unscented product as well as UB Signature Fragrance Collections from my regular UB site. However, I have customers that live farther away from me and cannot just pop over for a refill. So I have created a place to shop for your refills or I can create something for you. Or you can just head on over to my regular site from this one: http://www.customfragranceonline.com
I will be adding products as time goes on, so that is another evidence of change in life.

Another change is that UB is adding new Fragrance Designers daily. Because of this, many customers are forgetting the part of the UB desgner address that comes after the last / (as in www.urbanbotanic.com/sandrasparties). They are not putting it at all and just going to the corporate website, and then they are assigned to another fragrace designer. Or they type it in wrong and go to another designer's site. For that reason, I have a redirect URL that makes it easier to get to my site and you don't have to remember what comes after the /. It is:
http://www.yourscentyourway.com pretty easy to remember. Thanks to all of those family members that helped me choose what the name should be. I have also opted to start using this as my personal business slogan- Your Scent, Your Way.

Well, I am off, calculator in hand to take a math test. Wish me luck!

Monday, July 23, 2007

The End of Harry Potter

I finished Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows this morning about 2:30ish. And that is all I am going to say about this particular book for a while, so that everyone has a chance to read it. I do, however, have some general observations that I would like to make at the ending of this era of Harry Potter publications.

*Why can I wait breathlessly by the mailbox for my new Harry Potter book, but don't even know what day of the month the church magazines come?

*Why is is easy for me to drop everything and even stay up until 2 in the morning to finish the latest Harry Potter book, but I can't find the time to read the Ensign. Or even worse, I have had the same 5 chapters left to finish The Book of Mormon for the last 2 weeks, and I haven't done it! What's up with that?

*Why can I have meaningless conversations with my children about who we think is going to die and why and is Snape really good or bad and what makes you think so, but we don't have meaningful conversations about what is going on in life?

*If I stayed up till 2 in the morning cleaning out my sewing room and/or office, I wouldn't be doing it in the heat, my kids would not interrupt me, the phone wouldn't ring and my house would be cleaner. But I find that too hard to do, I need my sleep, you know.

*Does anyone else think that Ron is whiney and needs to get over himself? (I know, I know, he is a teenager and the last son in a big family and all sidekicks are that way, but really)

*And do you think that it would be great if Harry and Ron would admit that Hermonie really does know what she is talking about?

*Tell me why, when Harry learns in book 1 that he is the chosen one, why does he not put a bit more effort into learning those things that might help him instead of just leaving it all to chance?

*Finally, and this has been my biggest pet peeve throughout the whole series, Why, why, why does she have them celebrate Christian holidays, like Christmas and Easter? I know it is just a story and it gives the readers something to relate to the characters and all that, but this has always irritated me. Just ask my kids, they'll tell you. Even if they are good and bad and in between, they are still witches and wizards- they don't celebrate the birth or death of Christ. (ok, off of my soap box on this point now)

But all in all I have this to say- I knew it, I knew it, I knew it. That is the way I would have ended it.

Saturday, July 21, 2007

The Dance


Myspace Countdown Clocks at WishAFriend.com

Sheep's Clothing

I didn't get to bed early. I tried, I really did, but I picked up Josi Kilpack's book, "Sheep's Clothing". I thought I would read a bit to relax before drifing off to sleep. Well, I turned the last page of the book about midnightish.


You can read the teaser from the back of the book over at Josi's site.
And Karlene reviewed this book here.

I agree with Karlene's review. I also agree with the balance between reality and the happy ending, but I was really afraid that Josi would go the "we all fasted and it was revealed to us what the problem was, and so we all hugged and made up and lived happily ever after, after all the nonmemebers joined the church". I am so glad that she didn't go that route.

I also liked the arguments between the parents- well the way Josi handled them. It seems that too often in LDS lit. that one of the parents is perfect and the other one is always at fault and the perfect one looks down on everyone and can't understand why the family doesn't get it. These parents are real, they work and don't give enough time to the people that need it. They make mistakes, they lose patience with their kids and each other, they argue, they don't know what to do so they don't do it.

When I finished the book, I felt decidely unsettled and wanted to do something about this problem. I realized how I had gotten lax with my computer rules the last little bit, especially with the child that I never have to worry about.

Quoting Karlene
"If your children have access to the Internet, YOU NEED TO READ THIS BOOK. If those children are over the age of 12, THEY NEED TO READ THIS BOOK."

Say What?????

I needed some new pot holders. So when I was at the store, I got some that matched my kitchen decor. One of the kids brought one of the pot holders over to me to show me the tag. This is what it says on the tag:

This is a decorative item only. Not to be used as a hot pad.

Are you kidding me????

Friday, July 20, 2007

another one

Ok, I really have gotten some stuff done today. I had a nice chat with my sister about books and I will be expanding my list of books to read to include some that she really likes and recommends. I started building my new webpage. I had to quit because I am tired and so I was getting very frustraded that the simple heading wouldn't do what I wanted. Then I checked my mail and there was another mindless quiz that you can take. Take it here.
If you take it over again, you get different logos in the mix. I suppose if you take it often enough, you could get 100%, but I don't feel like wasting that much time.

Now I am off to fix supper and finish sanding a table I am refinishing. Then I am going to bed early- 3 1/2 hrs. of sleep last night was just not enough- and I want to be well rested for Harry Potter!

Wasting time

Ok, I have things to do. So many things to do. But I am tired and just don't feel like it, so I am wasting time doing nothing. (well I did spend the night in the ER with my oldest child and then I took my friend to pick up her car at the shop and stopped at the insurance place and fixed a messed up policy and picked up my son's meds and took them to him so I am not totally lazy today)

I found these tests on another blog and thought that they were perfect for wasting time instead of doing what I should be doing. So here they are with my results.:


You Are Periwinkle

You're very intuitive and sensitive. You often know other people better than they know themselves.
You're also quite optimistic, and you think well of yourself and others. You know your dreams will come true.


You Are 12% Evil

You are good. So good, that you make evil people squirm.
Just remember, you may need to turn to the dark side to get what you want!


Ok, enough wasting time, I really really have things to get done if I am going to start Harry Potter in the morning and not feel guilty for reading instead of doing housework.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Finished

I just finished another book;



I was reading "The Edge of Battle" but just couldn't get into Dale Brown's books. I checked out two by him and when I found myself wanting to clean the bathroom instead of read, I knew that it was time to call it quits with his books. So I picked up this one.

It wasn't really a book that I enjoyed. Emelie is a very smart girl (well woman since she is 19 and this is set in the 1700s). Her father has raised her to be observant and to notice and experiment with everything and be curious about why things happen. But he has kept her apart from the rest of the world and so she know nothing about human relationships. Because of this she is taken in by the first man to make eyes at her and though her father and housekeeper can see that he only wants her land and inheritance, she believes it is love and allows herself to be seduced. It takes her most of the rest of the book to realize what everyone else, includng the reader knows from the beginning, her husband cannot be trusted, he is no good and up to no good and taking advantage of her. And it isn't until the last chapter that she stands up for herself and puts her foot down. I really did not enjoy this book very much, but was passing time until Harry Potter comes out. The author gets too descriptive of the husband's exploits and I really really don't like weak women. And any book that reminds me that men are scum is just not my cup of tea.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Proud Mamma

I just got three letters from my son in Marine Boot Camp. I have to brag a bit on what a great kid he is. The first Sunday he was there, he invited a lonely boy to go to church with him. The boy went and wanted a copy of the Book of Mormon. This coming Sunday, July 22, my son will baptise that recruit as well as one other. He said I taught him to stand as a witness of Jesus at all times, and in all places and to be a missionary no matter where you are. Good learner, that boy. My stripling warrior. I love him, I miss him, but am so very proud of him.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Who's who?

Karlene and I are a lot alike. We don't try to be, honestly. We just are. Take this post of Karlene's for example. I took the test and got my results. Here they are:



I am Elinor Dashwood!


Take the Quiz here!




(I like taking these tests, except the answers don't always apply. I always end up feeling frustrated because there is invairably one or two questions where I am left saying "none of the above, none of the above!!" but that is never an option, so I am left choosing the next best closest answer. After studying psychology, and more closely personality, I understand these tests and at times tend to spend too much time on the questions and sometimes overthink the answers instead of going with my first gut response, though.)

Now, let me tell you that Karlene and I are as much not alike as we are alike. So what if we tend to do things the same. Did you notice that she is reading about vampires and the book I just randomly picked up at the library is about vampires? (maybe there is some grand cosmic force working on us) So what if her grandbaby was born on Tue. and mine 4 days later. We had nothing whatsoever to do with any of that. (again with the grand cosmic force)

So how are we different?
*I'm a redhead, she isn't
*I have wayyyyy more kids than she does (well three more, but some days it feels like more than that)
*I like fluff and glitter and bling, she wouldn't be caught dead in them
*She is amazing with a computer and I know how to turn one on
*I like reading and she, oh wait, she does too
*I'm thinking, I'm thinking

Well, you get the idea. We can't help it if the great cosmic force insists that we do things alike. Not our fault.
*

Thursday, July 12, 2007

What's that sound?

I was woken up this morning to a strange sound. It sounded a bit like someone was rustling the leaves in the tree outside my window. Who would be in my tree at this time of the morning? The boys are at camp (and wouldn't be out of bed anyway). Wait, there is a strange smell as well (as opposed to the smell of smoke that we have been smelling for weeks now).

Now there is another sound to go with the leave rustling. It sounds like something splatting on the ground. Over and over and over. Wait! I think I remember that sound that goes with that smell. I better look outside to make sure I am right.

I am right. Rain! It is raining!

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Sunshine

From part one,

I sat on the sagging porch, swinging my legs and feeling the troubles of the day draining out of me like water. The lake was beautiful: almost flat calm, the gentlest lapping against the shore, and silver with moonlight. I'd had many good times here: first with my parents, when they were still happy together, and later on with my gran. As I sat there I began to feel that if I sat there long enough I could get to the bottom of what was making me so cranky lately, find out if it was anything worse than poor quality flour and a somewhat errant little brother.

I never heard them coming. Of course you don't, when they're vampires.



I wanted something besides mindless drivel, so while at the library I just wandered up and down the aisles looking at the spines of the books. For some reason, I thought about Anne McCaffrey and her Dragon Riders of Pern series. I thought I would see if the library had any books by her that I might want to read. While I was in that section, my eye caught this book for some reason. I pulled it down and looked at it. Now, normally I would not read a book about vampires unless someone else I knew had read it and promised me that it was NOT scary and creepy. I have nightmares and I like am afraid of the dark and I read a lot at night. Reading scary books is not a good thing to do in this situation. So I checked out a book about vampires. But the reviews on the book said it was funny. Can you have a funny book about vampires? So I started my reading in the full noon day sun. I will be reading more books by Robin McKinley Remember that sense of humor that I posted about when I talked about Robert Farrell Smith? Ms. McKinley writes a bit like that as well.

Rae, or Sunshine as she is known, works in her stepfather's diner/bakery. She is the baker. A quite good baker at that. People come from all over for her cinnamon rolls. And it is a good thing that this book sucked me in and kept me mezmerized or else I would have had to go make cinnamon rolls several times and would have gained instead of losing weight. I could smell the cinnamon rolls as I read and kept craving them. Anyway, back to the story. It is after the WARS and the world is rebuilding. Sunshine and her family have the coffee house in one of the lesser parts of town, but not near any of the "bad spots" that are inhabitied by bad things. This world has were people (did you know there could be wererabbits, weremice, were whatever besides werewolves? I didn't) There are all kinds of demons and part bloods. Most people tolerate these but not the Others, vampires, also called suckers. They are just not tolerated.

Well, as you can guess, Sunshine is abducted by vampires. But she is not bled dry. No, she is taken captive as a meal for Con- a captive master vampire that is in a feud with Bo, another master vampire. But Con does not do Sunshine in. As he explains it to her, "There are many ways of being what we are". They form an alliance, escape and have to help each other survive- he the daylight and she the darkness. Then the fun begins because Sunshine was gone for 2 days. She can't tell anyone what really happened because Humans don't escape from vampires. They just don't. If she explains how she did, and who/what helped her, she would be locked up in the place where they lock partbloods and anomolies and magic handlers (which she is part) No, she can't tell them the real truth.

Then Con comes to her again and she finds out that they are bound to each other because of the aid they gave each other. In order to stay alive, they have to destroy Bo, together. Then Sunshine starts doing some remarkable things, things that even she doesn't want to admit to or think about but it draws the attention of the SOF (the equivelant of FBI ghostbuster division). Plus her mother keeps giving her charms to ward off bad things and they are just annoying. Then to make things even more complicated, Sunshine keeps finding out that the people she has known all of her life are not neccessarily who she thought they were. And in her mind, she keeps jumping to consclusions making things even more complicated. And exactly who or what is the SFO head honcho and why does she have it in for everyone, especially Sunshine?

I really really liked this book. It was not scary, well maybe a bit, but Sunshine's humor always made it so that slept with no nightmares. In fact, this was one of those books that you are sad to see end. I want to still be with those people and friends I met in the covers. What is going on with them, where are they, what are they doing, is there a sequel, when is it coming out, that type of thing.

Now, there were a couple of things I didn't like, but obviously they didn't stop me from enjoying this book. At times I felt as if I was reading the second of a series and should already know what the author was talking about- like turning on the t.v. half way through a mystery movie. She used words that I had no idea what they meant in the context that she used them (some were supposed to be swear words-you could tell them by context). I am not sure if this is a functon of the author living in England or the fact that it is a fantasy book and so the words were "another language", but it didn't distract too much.

There were a couple of times that I thought she was going to a place that I would be embarrassed to read. Everytime I came to one of those passages I thought that I would not be able to finish the book, because I won't read that. But she always faded to black and left it to our imagination or took the scene a totally different way than you would expect. However, there is one paragraph in part three that goes a bit further than I would have liked and because of this, I would not let my teenagers read it.

I liked this book so much that I am having a hard time letting go of the characters and being able to get into the next book. If you want a fantasy book that is not too scary to read late at night in the dark, this could be it. I will be reading more by this author.

Secrets in Zarahemla



Secrets in Zarahemla by Sariah S. Wilson

From the back of the book:

As she hangs upside-down in a hunter’s snare, Kiah feels a wave of fear as her captor comes into view. By his looks, as appealing as they are, the tall Lamanite is the mortal enemy of Kiah and her people. She can’t hope that her father, Captain Moroni, and his Nephite soldiers will rescue her—the strong-willed young woman has wandered well beyond the safe borders of Zarahemla. However, she is determined to use her warrior training to fight the Lamanite called Jeran until the end, no matter how hopeless the odds.

The land of Zarahemla has long been under serious threat from its enemies. But recently, its worst foes come from within—including Corahan, a man who would stop at nothing to fulfill his desires. One of the things Corahan most wants is Kiah as his wife. Now Kiah and her new unlikely ally must call on all their faith and courage to save Zarahemla in a struggle that will bring either deliverance or death—to both of them.

Journey to 62 BC and discover adventure, intrigue, and romance in a story where evil must be fought against, no matter how high the cost.

I liked this book. I liked it for a number of reasons:

1. Kiah is not your typical "is my hair in place, look how great I can cook and clean, I gotta have a man to make me complete" girl. She is definately her father's daughter. She knows how to use a sword and is not afraid to. She is smart and knows how to use that as well. She reminded me a bit of Mulan.

2. Jeran is kind and considerate. He is not yor typical "I am the great man and all women should fall down at my feet and worship me" male. He has his insecurities as well. However, he is intelligent and knows his way around the jungle. That is a definate plus.

I do wish that there were a reference page or chapter notes. I found myself trying to find the section in the Book of Mormon where the story takes place. I needed to orient myself as to what was going on before and after the story. Don't get me wrong, Sariah S. Wilson does a great job of letting us know this information, but I always need more background to help me orient myself. I would have liked maps to help me see the places they were going, chapter notes about the history of that chapter or at least a reference page.

I know, I know, this is a story taken from a few chapters in the Book of Mormon. Only some of the people are mentioned in the scriptures and this really is a fiction story set in an historic setting, but I wanted it to be more. I guess I wanted it to be more like David Wolley's Promised Land series.
. Which brings me to a tangent rant. When is book four ever goingto be published!!! I have been waiting forever and a year for it. I know Harry Potter mania abounds right now, but I would camp out on David's front step (if I knew where that was) or maybe I need to be camping out at Covenant's door step if I thought it would get it published any time soon. Heck, I would even read the unpublished manuscript if I could. Even though I know how the story eventually ends (the Lamanites extinguish the Nephites, they do it everytime I read the Book of Mormon, never change) I still want to see my old friends in David's series and see how he gets them from point A to point B and reading his chapter notes is so intruiguing. I learn so much from them. I think I would love to take a Book of Mormon history class from him.

Ok, when did this post change from a review of "Secrets of Zarahemla" to a "I want the next book in The Promised Land series rant? I did't mean to do that. I really did like Secrects of Zarahemla. It was well written and the people were real and I love that the girl is the hero. I really don't like wimpy, can't stick up for myself, I need a man stories.

Robert Farrell Smith

Robert Farrell Smith is one of my favorite authors. When I was in the library, I thought I would just pick up one of his books and read through it while I was waiting for my daughter. I ended up checking out 3 of his books- The Trust Williams Trilogy- "All is Swell", "Falling for Grace", and "Love's Labors Tossed". The books are a quick read and nothing serious.

What I like about these (as well as others of RFS's books) are his tongue in cheek look at the world. I look at the world in much the same way. RFS just has a way of twisting words so that what could be grave and oppressing turns out to be humorous. example: "The future looked bright. I should have had my eyes examined."

In the first book, "All Is Swell Trust in Thelma's Way" Trust Williams is sent on his mission and gets sent to Tennessee. He really wanted to go foreign. He gets foreign all right when he ends up in Thelma's Way. For the entire 24 months of his mission. He gets a bit worried when he realizes that he is begining to care for the people and their quirky ways. This is not what he envisioned for his mission, but he learns and grows anyway.

The second book is "Falling for Grace Trust at the end of the World." Trust is home from his mission and brings home a girl from Thelma's way that he thinks he would like to marry. But how would a girl from Thelma's way fit into the real world. And better still, how can Trust save the ward from the man that is preying on their insecurities about food storage? And will Grace still love Trust after he tries?

"Love's Labors Tossed Trust and the Final Fling" bring us to the end of the Trust Williams trilogy. Cindy Cravitz lives her life in a romance novel. She believes that is the way real life works. And she has her sights set on Trust. Join Trust and Grace and Cindy as we experience the ups and downs of romance and find out if Trust will marry Grace, or will life turn out like a romance novel with Cindy getting the man in the end.

Reading

Ok, so I am going to do a series of posts for the Summer Reading Thing. My daughter goes to the library summer reading class every Th. A couple of weeks ago I took her and had nowhere else that I had to be, so I stayed. I checked out two armfuls of books and wondered when I would get them all read. Well, then I broke my toe and had to keep my foot up for a couple of days. Then I took the above daughter to get her hair braided and had a couple of hrs to just sit and read, so I have finished some of the books. I am going to do a couple of posts about them today.

Saturday, July 7, 2007

Special Anniversary

36 years ago today I was baptized by my father. 8 years before that, he baptized his father. So, I was baptized by the man that baptized my Grandfather. Ok, how is that special? Well, today my youngest child was baptized by my father, the man that baptized both her mother and her great-grandfather! Not many people can say that.








Getting her hair braided so that we won't have to comb it after the baptism.



In her new white dress and shoes getting ready to go to the stake center



With Grandpa just before the baptism

Friday, July 6, 2007

Stadium of Fire

I attended the Stadium of Fire on Wed the 4th. It was the best one I have ever been to. I am going to post some of the pictures I took. I don't have the best camera nor am I the best photographer, but some of them turned out pretty good. I might be biased, but the Marine on the far left of the color guard is the most handsome one there. Doesn't he just look great in his dress blues? Sewing his insignia on was not the most fun, but it is worth it to see him in his uniform. And I can hardly wait to see his brother in his blues in Sept.


Color Guard


The flag being flown in


Handsom Color Guard (again)


Corbin Blue


Brooks and Dunn
Who were amazing, but then I like Brooks and Dunn


Now for some fireworks










These looked like they were spraying liquid gold



Ok, I was having a hard time getting a good picture of this Iwo Jima re-enactment/tribute. My son was supposed to be part of this, but one of the men wanted to trade this for color guard. My son later said he was glad he traded because these men had to stand perfectly still for 20 minutes.



Just so you can see the platform they were standing on










Thursday, July 5, 2007

Help, Please

Could someone help me out here?

I have changed a setting somewhere (I think) but am not sure which it is or how to get it back. Here is what happened. I used to be able to upload pictures to my blog and move them around. Now, however, when I upload a picture, I get the HTML code and there is no way to move it around. What have I done and how do I get it back the other way?

Wednesday, July 4, 2007

Happy Birthday America!










The sight of this large flag still flying over Fort McHenry after a long night of battle inspired Francis Scott Key to write the poem that became the U.S. national anthem. The flag we now call the Star-Spangled Banner is the very flag that flew over Fort McHenry during the Battle of Baltimore in the fall of 1814.

The Star Spangled Banner

O say, can you see, by the dawn's early light,
What so proudly we hail'd at the twilight's last gleaming?
Whose broad stripes and bright stars, thro' the perilous fight,
O'er the ramparts we watch'd, were so gallantly streaming?
And the rockets' red glare, the bombs bursting in air,
Gave proof thro' the night that our flag was still there.
O say, does that star-spangled banner yet wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?


On the shore dimly seen thro' the mists of the deep,
Where the foe's haughty host in dread silence reposes,
What is that which the breeze, o'er the towering steep,
As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses?
Now it catches the gleam of the morning's first beam,
In full glory reflected, now shines on the stream:
'Tis the star-spangled banner: O, long may it wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!


And where is that band who so vauntingly swore
That the havoc of war and the battle's confusion,
A home and a country should leave us no more?
Their blood has wash'd out their foul footsteps' pollution.
No refuge could save the hireling and slave
From the terror of flight or the gloom of the grave:
And the star-spangled banner in triumph doth wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave.


O thus be it ever when free-men shall stand
Between their lov'd home and the war's desolation;
Blest with vict'ry and peace, may the heav'n-rescued land
Praise the Pow'r that hath made and preserv'd us a nation!
Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just,
And this be our motto: “In God is our trust!”
And the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave!


I hate that we usually only sing the first verse of this great anthem. What is the point of that? The first verse is a question. Why don't we sing the answer to the question, because that is the important part of the song. Without the answer, we are left hanging as to what country controls the fort. (of course we know the answer, but that is not the point. The point would be that we just sing words and don't pay attention to what it is that we sing- that really irritates me and is my biggest pet peeve)







The Few, The Proud
My Stripling Warriors

Please remember on this great and wonderful day, that the freedoms that you are celebrating came at a great cost. Take time to get on your knees and thank our Father in Heaven for those men and women that gave of their blood so that you can live in freedom. They paid the ultimate price for you and for me, let us not forget that. The rockets might be a bit more sophisticated, the foes haughty host may not sleep through the night because they have night vision goggles to help them see. The ramparts are no longer in a fixed position, the bombs still burst- day and night. But our soldiers still fight for that Standard- the Star Spangled Banner, Old Glory to wave o're the land of the free and the home of the brave!