Monthly Archives: March 2008

Tension Headache

Lately I’ve been getting tension headaches.  I take Tylenol and Motrin but they don’t help much.

Today I finally figured out why I’ve been having them.  Can’t believe it took me so long, especially since I’ve had the same problem at different times in my life.

You see, I’ve been growing my hair out.  And I guess it has reached critical mass.  It’s long enough and heavy enough now to pull on my head just enough to give me a headache.

Time to get a haircut!  :-)

Ah, the mundanity of blogging!  Working on a post about my afternoon spent in Denver yesterday.  Can’t promise it’ll be interesting, perse, but it won’t be as dull as a hair-related headache!!

:-)


Little Successes!

Did the short four miles of the Waldo Canyon hike with Vickie this morning…it was too icy to do the top 3 1/2 mile loop though.  When we started this hiking thing I could barely make it up the three “flights” of steps at the trailhead and had to stop multiple times during the hike.  Today there was no stopping.  We do that part of the hike in just about an hour.  We could have run and done it faster today, but the air was bitingly cold and it hurt too much for that.  Anyhow, it’s amazing how much better my stamina is after just a couple of months of hiking once a week.

When I got home I tried to go on the internet but couldn’t make a connection.  I rebooted.  Reset the modem.  Reset the wireless router, etc.  I did note that the icon for my router which generally resides in the bottom bar of my screen was absent.  Odd.  So I fiddled with this and that, tried to fix it while I was on hold with Comcast to find out if there was a provider issue involved.  While I waited I found a link on my computer which, when I opened it, showed that my wireless system was turned off on my computer.  I clicked it to turn it on right when I got a live person and my internet was restored.  I’m pretty sure the Comcast person who got my call thought I was a nutbar.

How do you suppose it got turned off in the first place?  I have NO idea other than maybe my cat Mew Ling walked on my computer during the night and turned it off somehow.  She’s a sneaky snake that one!  She always does the most creative things when she takes a stroll on my keyboard!  I learn such interesting things when I am fixing her computer work.

… 


“Photographic Art” – Photo Friday

PHOTO FRIDAY

(click above for more information)

Photo Friday

Today’s Photo Friday entry is entitled: Photographic Art © Jan Marshall 

Photographic Art.  Photos as art?  Photos OF art?  Photos enhanced to be more “artsy”??  I can’t wait to see how everyone will interpret this assignment!  I’d been thinking about how *I* was going to interpret this assignment since Jan (of the blog “A Curious State of Affairs) came up with the idea two weeks ago. 

It’s been a long and tiring and emotional week for me.  An excellent friend of mine passed away on Monday morning.  My mind has been a bit occupied with things other than doing something fresh and exciting for Photo Friday.  Despite not getting much in the way of inspiration, I still very much wanted to participate.  Hoping my entry isn’t a complete cop-out.  I messed around with a number of photographs doing different affects and enhancements, but didn’t end up with anything that I really liked.  So I ended up deciding on a photo OF art.

In one of my curio/collection cabinets I have a small oil painting on canvas done by an artist in Zambia.  I’m pretty sure it’s a painting that the artist recreated often to sell to foreign tourists, but I bought it anyway because I loved the bright colors, the long lines, and the general grubbiness of it.  I look at it and I can hear the excited chatter.  I wonder “What is it that has captured the attention of these ladies?”.  It’s only about 4″ X 8″.  I’ve not yet framed it.  But I thought that this would be a good place and time to share it.  I don’t know the name of the artist, but his cell phone number is on the back!  Perhaps I should call and ask his name!

In Zambia, as in many African nations, it is unrealistic to string phone lines, but very reasonable to set up cell towers.  People who can afford phones don’t have land lines, they carry cells.

Here is my unnamed, unsigned, Zambian work of art…

Don’t forget to check out the other participant’s work!  I’ll be posting links as they become available.

“A Curious State of Affairs”

“Idea Jump”

Next week’s assignment?  “The View Through My Window”…


Not Usually So Oblivious! At Least I Hope Not!

For fun I clicked on the AOL link on my sign-on page to see just how many national brand logos I could correctly identify.  I was given a choice of the real corporate logo and a fake logo.  For example, I could choose between the Starbuck’s logo with stars in the green border or without.  (Click HERE if you want to test YOUR logo knowledge.)

I got them all right.  Then I clicked on an associated link to see how I’d do in a brand awareness quiz.  I faired worse there.  And I was stunned by my apparent complete lack of awareness when I got to a question asked about the FedEx logo.

The question was “What does the arrow between the E and x in FedEx’s logo represent?”.

Until that moment, I never even noticed that arrow!  Now it jumps out at me like a cobra.

Help!  What ELSE have I been missing in my oblivious state???

:-)

Were the rest of you aware of that arrow in there???  Did anyone else miss it like I did???

April 30, 2011 – Update…sorry folks, the links do not work anymore!  :-(


My Jesus Isn’t a Dead Jesus

There is little debate in scholarly and historical circles that the Jesus of the Bible actually lived.  What do we then do with that person of Jesus?  Some say that Jesus was a “good man”, a “prophet”, a “teacher, a rabbi”.  They place him in the same category as Siddhartha Gautama (Buddha), or Mohammed, or Ghandi.  They don’t deny his having lived, but many who say these things about him deny his being God. 

I ask this question…if Jesus claimed to be God but wasn’t, how could he be considered a good man?  And how could he have been a prophet if he himself didn’t even know who *he* was?  And what sort of rabbi lies about truth?  Either Jesus is God, as he claimed, or he isn’t.  He could not have been a good man, a prophet, or a teacher if he wasn’t.  If we are to be intellectually honest, we must admit that we cannot have it both ways.  We can’t embrace him on one hand and reject him on the other.  If  Jesus wasn’t God as he claimed, then he was a liar and led people horribly astray.  If he wasn’t who he claimed to be, then he was not only not a good man, but he was a very bad one.

The Apostles returned to their homes. But Mary Magdalene remained by the tomb, crying. Then she turned and saw a man who asked her why she was crying. Mary Magdalene soon realized that the man who was talking to her was Jesus Christ. Jesus had risen from death. Mary Magdalene was the first person to see the resurrected Jesus.  (John 20:10-18)

This verse in the Bible particularly strikes me as proof of the truth of what Jesus claimed to be.  If Jesus and his disciples cooked up the resurrection as a scheme, then they would have had Jesus first appear to men.  Women didn’t hold much of a place in that society, and certainly wouldn’t be considered good witnesses to an event.  And yet Jesus chose to reveal his risen self FIRST to a woman, and Mary Magdalene at that.  If Jesus wasn’t who he said he was, he picked a very socially unacceptable witness to his being raised from the dead.

But Jesus was a good man (a perfect one, in fact), and he was a prophet, and he was a teacher.  And he gave his life as the perfect and final sacrifice for our sins, for MY sins.  And to seal the deal to give his sacrifice the power to once and for all make us acceptable in the eyes of God the Father, he conquered death and was resurrected into life.

I rejoice because my Jesus isn’t a dead Jesus.

Happy Easter! 

… 


“Amazing Architecture” – Photo Friday

PHOTO FRIDAY

(click above for more information)

Photo Friday

Today’s Photo Friday entry is entitled: Amazing Architecture © Jan Marshall   

As much as I love nature and all the beauty that is just because it IS, I love the beauty of the things that man creates just as much.  Man (and by that I mean humankind) was created in the image of its maker, and part of being created in His image includes the ability to create as well.  Out of God’s creation of rock, wood, metal, and sand, one of the things man creates is architecture.  The interpretation of a floor, walls, and a ceiling is as varied as the birds of the air.  Shacks and cathedrals, skyscrapers and lighthouses, cottages and castles, pyramids and soddies, forts and obelisks.  No other creature in all of creation exhibits the ability to never have to build the same thing twice as they are driven to do so by instinct.  Birds of a feather always build the same nest.  People never do.  Even the most mundane tract homes each have their own individuality.  But man doesn’t only build homes.  Man builds all kinds of structures because he CAN and because he WANTS to.  And man can build things that last, some times for millenia.  Since taking digital pictures is till fairly new to me, most of my favorite architectural pictures are still 35 mm prints or even worse, they are SLIDES!  But I found a few pictures I thought would do nicely for this challenge.

This is the Gallarus Oratory in Dingle, Ireland.  Believed to have been erected for use as a church, it was built in the 6th century and is mortarless!  It is also very small.  Even a short person must duck to enter the doorway.  It is watertight and has amazingly remained unchanged, stone upon stone, for 1500 years.

 

In about 480 B.C. the Greeks erected a Doric temple in Syracuse, Sicily.  Some of those pillars remained after the temple was destroyed and were incorporated into the wall of the Syracuse Cathedral at an unknown point in time.  The cathedral was named the Cathedral of Syracuse (Sicily, Italy) in 680 A.D., so this building, too, has been around a LONG time!  The first photo is of the front of the cathedral.  The second is of the interior wall of the left nave which amazingly incorporated pillars from the original temple.

 

 

Finally, because I wanted to include a picture that I took specifically for this post, this past weekend while in Denver I took the opportunity to look around at the many varying architectural structures there.  This building caught my eye as it was very ungainly and looked completely out of place in its surroundings.  I cropped it down to focus on the lines and shadows, which I actually thought were quite amazing.  The elements?  Lovely.  The overall concept and location?  Ugly!  (Incidentally, I have no idea what this building is used for).

As per the usual, I will add the links to the other participant’s work as they are posted.

A Curious State of Affairs

Idea Jump!

Sky Windows

Just For Fun

Please come back to check those links out!

Anyone else still wants to play this week, do so!  Friday lasts until midnight, wherever you live!

Next week’s challenge?  “Photographic Art”.


Day 146

One hundred and forty six days ago Larry was airlifted from his home to a local hospital in critical condition.   

“If he even survives, he’ll be in the hospital for at least six months recovering”.

MIRACULOUSLY, Larry got to go home last night after 146 days in the hospital.  He’s still recuperating and has a continued long recovery ahead of him, but his mind is all there, and he has come so far. 

“The man who lived” is what I’ve heard he’s been called at the hospital…

Welcome home Larry.  Can’t wait to see you back at small group with us!

Thanking God for returning you to all of us.


California In Danger of Falling Into the Ocean – Part II

I’m on the e-mail distribution list of L.A. Mayoral hopeful, Walter Moore.  I doubt he’ll ever win.  But he’s the most straight-talking, realistic-goal-setting, voice-of-reason to enter into politics in my lifetime.  When I lived in Southern California, though not in L.A. proper, I financially supported his first campaign.  He lost to Villaraigosa, unfortunately.  However, I have stayed on Mr. Moore’s e-mail distribution list just so I could make sure that my ulcer never completely heals!  :-)   Here’s one of his latest offerings.  I doubt he’ll mind that I have taken the liberty of reposting it here in its entirety.

Up In Smoke:  Common Sense
By Walter Moore, Candidate for Mayor of Los Angeles, www.WalterMooreForMayor.com

Use a fireplace, go to jail.

The Philosopher Kings of the South Coast Air Quality Management
District (AQMD) have decided that government must stop you from
burning wood in your fireplace.

The AQMD — which is funded with $125 million of your money each year
– just made it illegal to install wood-burning fireplaces in new
homes, and adopted regulations to stop you from using your existing
fireplace on days they deem too polluted.

In a region where massive wildfires are as routine as televised car
chases, these kill-joys want to stop you from burning logs?  Are you
kidding me?

We’ve got ten jillion cars and trucks stuck in traffic, idling, for
about 18 out of every 24 hours.  We’ve got a governor who fires up the
Gulfstream twice a day to commute from L.A. to Sacramento.  We’ve got
kids getting shot while minding their own business.  And yet we need a
new law to ban the burning of logs in fireplaces?  Really?

Maybe I’ve led a sheltered life, but I don’t remember ever hearing
about a coroner listing, as the cause of death, “lived in a city with
wood-burning fireplaces.”

Laws like this make you wonder what they’re smoking at the AQMD.
Wonder no more:  our city’s representative on the AQMD’s board is Jan
Perry.  That’s right:  the same City Council Member who wants to
“protect” you from fast food in South L.A. because you’re too fat and
stupid to decide what to eat and where.

Remember common sense?  I really miss it, especially when it comes to
people who have the power to tax and regulate.

People used to understand the concept of “priorities” and
“reasonableness.”  Now we’ve created so many agencies that they need
to manufacture new problems to justify their continuing existence and
ever-increasing funding.

The AQMD will never issue a press release saying, “The federal and
state Environmental Protection Agencies, along with county and city
agencies, have pretty much taken care of everything, and since we’ve
gotten to the point of regulating wood-burning fireplaces, we
recommend that our agency be disbanded.”

Okay, enough ranting from me for one day.  I’ll think I’ll go buy a
McBreakfast and light up a cigar just to spite the Philosopher Kings.

I don’t even think I have anything pithy I can add to this well-crafted and succinct masterpiece.

More idiocy in bureaucracy at its finest…

A brief follow-up note:

Looks like Mr. Moore has someone searching LexisNexis!  I got an e-mail from him today!  Love the internet!  Here’s the nice note I got from him:

L.A. needs you!  Come back!

It is so crazy here.  I’m glad to see you stayed on my e-mail list.

And hey, I may win this time.  I’ve raised nearly $80,000, and 
Villaraigosa is SO bad that I think he’s going to increase turnout 
among people who would ordinarily ignore the election.

We’ll see.

Bye for now.

Walter Moore

I have decided to make “California In Danger of Falling Into the Ocean” a regular feature as I come across items that make me shake my head.  I’m sure I’ll be posting more from Mr. Moore in the future!


California In Danger of Falling Into the Ocean – Part I

I grew up in Southern California and spent the majority of my life living there.  It is a BEAUTIFUL place.  And the weather is near-perfection.  You have oceans and mountains and deserts and valleys all within an easy driving distance.  Despite all that California has going for it, including being the home of most of my family, I pretty much fled from there back in 2005, in part as I was increasingly sickened by “the state of the state”.  California will soon fall into the ocean, but not because of some powerful earthquake.  No, it will fall into the water under the weight of all the stupid that is building up there.  Case in point:

Homeschoolers’ setback sends shock waves through state

Friday, March 7, 2008

Debbie Schwarzer of Los Altos homeschools her two boys, W... Debbie Schwarzer (left) runs Oak Hill Academy, a private ...

(03-07) 04:00 PST LOS ANGELES

A California appeals court ruling clamping down on homeschooling by parents without teaching credentials sent shock waves across the state this week, leaving an estimated 166,000 children as possible truants and their parents at risk of prosecution.
The homeschooling movement never saw the case coming.
“At first, there was a sense of, ‘No way,’ ” said homeschool parent Loren Mavromati, a resident of Redondo Beach (Los Angeles County) who is active with a homeschool association. “Then there was a little bit of fear. I think it has moved now into indignation.”
The ruling arose from a child welfare dispute between the Los Angeles County Department of Children and Family Services and Philip and Mary Long of Lynwood, who have been homeschooling their eight children. Mary Long is their teacher, but holds no teaching credential.
The parents said they also enrolled their children in Sunland Christian School, a private religious academy in Sylmar (Los Angeles County), which considers the Long children part of its independent study program and visits the home about four times a year.
The Second District Court of Appeal ruled that California law requires parents to send their children to full-time public or private schools or have them taught by credentialed tutors at home.
Some homeschoolers are affiliated with private or charter schools, like the Longs, but others fly under the radar completely. Many homeschooling families avoid truancy laws by registering with the state as a private school and then enroll only their own children.
Yet the appeals court said state law has been clear since at least 1953, when another appellate court rejected a challenge by homeschooling parents to California’s compulsory education statutes. Those statutes require children ages 6 to 18 to attend a full-time day school, either public or private, or to be instructed by a tutor who holds a state credential for the child’s grade level.
“California courts have held that … parents do not have a constitutional right to homeschool their children,” Justice H. Walter Croskey said in the 3-0 ruling issued on Feb. 28. “Parents have a legal duty to see to their children’s schooling under the provisions of these laws.”
Parents can be criminally prosecuted for failing to comply, Croskey said.
“A primary purpose of the educational system is to train school children in good citizenship, patriotism and loyalty to the state and the nation as a means of protecting the public welfare,” (emphasis mine) the judge wrote, quoting from a 1961 case on a similar issue.

Union pleased with ruling

The ruling was applauded by a director for the state’s largest teachers union.
“We’re happy,” said Lloyd Porter, who is on the California Teachers Association board of directors. “We always think students should be taught by credentialed teachers, no matter what the setting.”
A spokesman for the state Department of Education said the agency is reviewing the decision to determine its impact on current policies and procedures. State Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell issued a statement saying he supports “parental choice when it comes to homeschooling.”
Brad Dacus, president of the Pacific Justice Institute, which agreed earlier this week to represent Sunland Christian School and legally advise the Long family on a likely appeal to the state Supreme Court, said the appellate court ruling has set a precedent that can now be used to go after homeschoolers. “With this case law, anyone in California who is homeschooling without a teaching credential is subject to prosecution for truancy violation, which could require community service, heavy fines and possibly removal of their children under allegations of educational neglect,” Dacus said.
Parents say they choose homeschooling for a variety of reasons, from religious beliefs to disillusionment with the local public schools.
Homeschooling parent Debbie Schwarzer of Los Altos said she’s ready for a fight.
Schwarzer runs Oak Hill Academy out of her Santa Clara County home. It is a state-registered private school with two students, she said, noting they are her own children, ages 10 and 12. She does not have a teaching credential, but she does have a law degree.
“I’m kind of hoping some truancy officer shows up on my doorstep,” she said. “I’m ready. I have damn good arguments.”
She opted to teach her children at home to better meet their needs.
The ruling, Schwarzer said, “stinks.”

Began as child welfare case

The Long family legal battle didn’t start out as a test case on the validity of homeschooling. It was a child welfare case.
A juvenile court judge looking into one child’s complaint of mistreatment by Philip Long found that the children were being poorly educated but refused to order two of the children, ages 7 and 9, to be enrolled in a full-time school. He said parents in California have a right to educate their children at home.
The appeals court told the juvenile court judge to require the parents to comply with the law by enrolling their children in a school, but excluded the Sunland Christian School from enrolling the children because that institution “was willing to participate in the deprivation of the children’s right to a legal education.”
The decision could also affect other kinds of homeschooled children, including those enrolled in independent study or distance learning through public charter schools – a setup similar to the one the Longs have, Dacus said.
Charter school advocates disagreed, saying Thursday that charter schools are public and are required to employ only credentialed teachers to supervise students – whether in class or through independent study.

Ruling will apply statewide

Michael Smith, president of the Home School Legal Defense Association, said the ruling would effectively ban homeschooling in the state.
“California is now on the path to being the only state to deny the vast majority of homeschooling parents their fundamental right to teach their own children at home,” he said in a statement.
But Leslie Heimov, executive director of the Children’s Law Center of Los Angeles, which represented the Longs’ two children in the case, said the ruling did not change the law.
“They just affirmed that the current California law, which has been unchanged since the last time it was ruled on in the 1950s, is that children have to be educated in a public school, an accredited private school, or with an accredited tutor,” she said. “If they want to send them to a private Christian school, they can, but they have to actually go to the school and be taught by teachers.”
Heimov said her organization’s chief concern was not the quality of the children’s education, but their “being in a place daily where they would be observed by people who had a duty to ensure their ongoing safety.” (again, emphasis mine)

More regulations, more restrictions, more ridiculous impositions by the state into the lives of American citizenry, and a couple of THE MOST ridiculous statements I’ve ever heard from anyone anywhere…

 

To Justice H. Walter Croskey…you truly sound like someone who toes the Communist party line, or like a character from “Animal Farm”.

 

To Leslie Heimov…how arrogant can you be to imply that a child in their own home being taught by their own parents aren’t being observed by people who have a duty to ensure their ongoing safety and that this observation can only be carried out by the state in the public school arena.  Shame on you.  Watch the news.  Hear about the bullying, the shootings, the assaults on buses, the fraud (holy cow, the fraud in the LAUSD is fathomless but I won’t go into THAT debacle here), and the teachers who are luring their young charges into sexual relationships, and then come back with a straight face and tell me that our children’s ongoing safety is being adequately ensured in our schools!  And you don’t even hide behind the agenda of assuring a quality education!  You just come right out and say that across the board, the state does a better job caring for children than parents do.

 

Where have we heard these sorts of statements before about the state being the only entity truly qualified to raise children, educate them, and make good citizens out of them?  It’s kind of scary!!! 

 

And finally, should all these homeschooling parents decided to get their teaching certificates, just to get those bozos off their backs, will they then be forced into joining the all powerful teacher’s union?  Will they be forced into using “state approved” curriculum???  I bet the answer is yes.  And then what??  This is only the beginning.  Homeschooling parents (and others like myself who don’t even have children) everywhere are gearing up to fight this decision.  It’s an assault on the family and on PARENTAL rights.  I don’t think that the establishment is quite aware of just what sort of hornets’ nest they’ve blasted their shotgun into…


pleuronectiformes checker board

WordPress nicely lets us know what search engine terms are used that bring people to our blogs.  Every once in awhile I get traffic directed to my blog through some pretty interesting and/or weird terms.

Today’s weird term is “pleuronectiformes checker board”.

What the heck?  I’m pretty sure I don’t know what that is.  I KNOW I’ve never used it in any iteration in my blog!

:-)


“Black and White” – Photo Friday

PHOTO FRIDAY

(click above for more information)

Photo Friday

Today’s Photo Friday entry is entitled: Black and White © Jan Marshall   

I love black and white photography.  (I already have a post titled “I Love Black and White” in fact!)  In the days when I used to draw, my favorite media were charcoal, pencils, and india ink.  I love black and white in general.  Often my color photographs will exhibit black and white qualities.

“Black and White” can be interpreted SOOOOO many ways in this setting.  I was thinking of doing something super-creative and unexpected.  Nahhhhhh.  :-)

On one my cousin Julie’s and my many little road trips, we happened upon these fantastic weeds in a park.  I was so disappointed that I couldn’t get my macro setting working on my old digital.  None of the pictures came out clearly…at least the part I wanted to be clear didn’t come out clearly.  The shape of the weeds was so wonderful, that I thought I might be able to make something interesting out of them by digitally manipulating them…

 

This image has a monochromatic grayscale feel to it to start with, so I converted it to grayscale:

 

 Didn’t care for the result.  Too blah.  Still doesn’t change the lack of focus and now it had lost the warmth of the golden hues.  I wondered what it would look like if I converted it to a true black and white picture:

Loved it!  Reminded me of a Jackson Pollack painting, with a twist…or is that with a curly-q?

Be sure to check out the other participants’ work!

 A Curious State of Affairs

A big welcome to CuriousC of the blog Idea Jump!

Just For Fun

Sky Windows

I’ll be adding links to any other entries as they are posted.  We’re growing! 

Consider joining us next week for the great topic “Amazing Architecture”!


It’s 2:43 AM…

I generally sleep really soundly. 

Once on Thanksgiving I fell asleep after dinner on the floor at my Aunt’s house while we were watching the “Twighlight Zone” marathon.  After I woke up my Uncle told me that he poked at me (hard) with his foot because he thought I was dead.  He thought I was dead because I hadn’t moved in quite some time and there were people everywhere making all kinds of noise, and stepping over me and tripping over me.  I guess I moved when he kicked me and satisfied his curiosity (and concern), but I didn’t wake up.

Another time, when I was living in the mother-in-law house behind my brother, my brother came in to get a movie I’d left for him on my dresser.  He came in the front door when I didn’t answer his knock and came into my room (not very quietly because he didn’t think I was home) to get it.  I apparently sat up and talked to him when he turned on the light, but I have no recollection of this.  Scary, because he could have been anyone.  I discovered he’d been in my house the next morning when the tape was gone.

I will often incorporate whatever is going on in the real world into my dreams.  If I have fallen asleep with the TV on I might incorporate that in.  Like the time I was dreaming about “Paris Slips”.  Didn’t make a bit of sense to me, even in my dream, so I dragged myself out of my dream to find that I was watching the middle of the night Oprah and she had a guest talking about getting a plastic surgery procedure done that I’d never heard of.  This was many years ago, and because at the time I’d never heard of it, my brain made “Paris Lips” into paris slips!  I was dreaming about lingerie, but the audio track didn’t at all match the visual track!

Which brings me to tonight.  Tonight I was dreaming about being on an Amazing Race sort of show.  I was apparently ahead of some of the other contestants when I saw a small duffel bag being thrown up over a railing.  It was full of tools and rope.  And I heard voices down the stairwell.  I knew that some of the other contestants were hot on my trail.  I scrambled to finish what I was doing so that I could make it look like I’d not yet been there while I heard the voices become louder and louder.  I had barely pulled a door shut behind me when I heard them break through a nearby door, shouting, and banging and stomping around.  Then I heard them pound up the stairs, slamming the door behind them.  It was so loud that it shook the building.  And it woke me up….

And that, dear friends, is when I discovered, at 2:43 this morning, that I don’t think I’m going to like my new neighbors much.

Whoever owns the unit next to me has an excellent track record for renting the place to really loud people.  The last ones had a couple of dogs who’d bark a lot and run up and down the stairs like a herd of cattle.  Thing was, they couldn’t stop at the bottom, so they’d slam into the wall.  Dogs are kinda dumb that way.  AND the couple screamed at each other.  Top of your lungs kind of screaming.  They did this rather often.  Thankfully, they moved out after a short tenancy and the place has remained empty for many months.  I’ve gotten used to the quiet.  But that is apparently only going to be a distant memory.

I don’t want to be the crabby old lady neighbor, but this young couple might force me into it!  I’m pretty tolerant, but as the clock is now telling me it’s after 3:00, and they’re still hollering and stomping around, I might reach my limit.

I won’t reach it tonight, but I might if I get a repeat performance tomorrow!  And I might just have to tape it.  But I won’t be able to post it here for you, because these two use some mighty colorful language.

I hope I can get back to sleep…I have to be up in less than four hours…

Argh.

… 


“Portrait” – Photo Friday

PHOTO FRIDAY

(click above for more information)

Photo Friday

Today’s Photo Friday entry is entitled: Portrait © Jan Marshall  

For a number of years I was the “official photographer” for my friend Manuel and his family.  I would take the pictures and then give the prints and the negatives to him.  That’s the only real portrait work I’ve ever done. 

As I no longer possess any of those pictures, I had no idea of what I wanted to post for this week’s entry.  I have lots of pictures that could qualify as a portrait, but I couldn’t get past thinking about my Manuel portraits.  In looking through my computer files to see what I had that I could use, I found a single picture from one “photo shoot” I did back in May of 2004.  It was hiding in a file called “Friends To Be Sorted”.  I’m not even sure when I uploaded it.  It was a digital picture I took to check the lighting and the background before taking the “real pictures” with my standard 35 mm camera.  I was delighted to see that it even existed.  

This is Manuel and his daughter, just standing in the space…waiting for the shoot to begin.

Mi amigo Manuel y su hija

Mi amigo Manuel y su hija.

As “luck” would have it, today just happens to be Manuel’s birthday.  Happy birthday Manuel!! 

Here are links to the posted entries:

A Curious State of Affairs

Just For Fun

Sky Windows

Next week’s topic is “Black and White”.  Welcome to my cousin Julie of the blog “Just For Fun”.  Anybody else wanna play???


A Different Kind of “Big Give”

And he looked up, and saw the rich men that were casting their gifts into the treasury.

 And he saw a certain poor widow casting in thither two mites.

 And he said, Of a truth I say unto you, This poor widow cast in more than they all:

 for all these did of their superfluity cast in unto the gifts; but she of her want did cast in all the living that she had.

Luke 21:1-4 

One of the blogs I read regularly shares intimately of what life is like living in Zambia as a full time missionary with a young family.  I often can’t bear to hear of the physical suffering that exist there, but it inspires me to read about people who have given up the life that they know so that others can know life.  We have poverty in America, but nothing like the grand scale poverty that exists in so much of the rest of the world.  It seems like an overwhelming amount of work that needs to be done.  How can one person even make a difference?  I know that there are many people who don’t even know where to start when it comes to “helping”. 

Wanna hear about two little kids who aren’t overwhelmed?  Wanna read about two little American kids who made a difference?

Here’s a different kind of “Big Give” I’d like to share with you from the blog “Alive in Africa”.     

Click to read “The Tooth Fairy Would Be Proud“.

…and a little child shall lead them (Isaiah 11:6)


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