Monday, December 17, 2007

Crimped Straw


Crimped Straw
Originally uploaded by ketla

Found this straw at a Cracker Barrel. Seems the end got caught in the machine when it sealed the paper wrapper.

Ciao,
Ann B.

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Ugh! Insomnia may be common...

...but it is the pits! I've had a particularly annoying case of it for about a week now. Up till all hours before I can fall asleep, then drag awake each morning. At this point, caffeine isn't helping much in the morning. LOL.
Well, enough ranting, back to work.
Ciao.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Boy, do I neglect this blog!

Lol, I really need to post here more often. The gaps between sets of postings is getting ridiculous. I am rather busy, so again, this will be short, but more to come.

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Conway Lake

View from hill.
Ciao.
Ann B.

Post-Move

My fiancé & I are gadding about. He moved the last 2 days. We're very tired.
Ciao.
Ann B.

Friday, September 28, 2007

Recumbent Bike

I haven't seen this style of it since I was 8.
Ann B.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Written Post 2

Ann B.

Church Cafe

Lull time for the café at Fellowship Bible Church in Little Rock.
Ann B.

Friday, September 21, 2007

Handwritten Post

Ann B.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Better Excercise?

Good news for budding soccer players.
Ann B.

News Comment-More to the story!


News Comment
Originally uploaded by ketla

The test judge suggested that this woman wait a year or so until she weans her child, since she needed the extra time for pumping milk.
This lady finished an MD-Phd while having two kids in two years, and has a job waiting for her.
Really, would he have suggested postponing one's career to another? Hmmm.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Fish Pond


File for resizing
Originally uploaded by ketla

My favorite pond for personal reflection.

Voting Line

Long lines just to vote on a single-district milleage tax.
Ann B.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

My Latest Painting Teacher


Photo_091307_001
Originally uploaded by ketla

Here is Marlene Gremillion, whom I am taking a class from at the Arts Center.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

New Energy Source?

Think they call this "clean fusion" in Star Trek.
Ciao.
Ann B.

Sunday, September 09, 2007

Bored Officer?

How nuts does a public official have to be?
Ann B.

News Comment

Can't believe these guys.
Ann B.

Sunday, July 01, 2007

New Pic

Here's a recent shot of me. Enjoy! Lol.
Ann B.

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

New Haircut

What do you think?
Ciao.
Ann B.
--
Sent using Agendus Mail demo.
Visit www.iambic.com for more great products!

Saturday, June 02, 2007

Rainy Evening

Enough said.
Ciao.
Ann B.

Myself In Need of a Trim

Man, what a mop, eh? And my hair stylist isn't free till Wednesday. Lol.
Ciao.

Ann B.

Friday, June 01, 2007

Lunch Break

Been watching "Crocodile Dundee 2" while paused for lunch.

Ciao.
Ann B.

Sunday, April 29, 2007

Seniors

The senior class from my church.
Ciao.

Ann B.

Saturday, April 28, 2007

The Latest Fashion?

Ick!
Ciao.

Ann B.

Monday, April 23, 2007

Article-Making Our Lives Golden

"I find television very educating. Every time somebody turns on the set, I go into the other room and read a book."
Groucho Marx

Making Our Lives Golden

I have always been a strong opponent of television. But, as I told you on Friday, K and I recently started watching it together. Just a little bit here and there, but enough to get me thinking about the way people spend their recreational time… and make me wonder if the kind of activities we engage in during our down time really make a difference.

On Friday, I pointed out that the more time you spend working, the more successful you’re likely to be - but acknowledged that even the most ambitious and hardest workers need to take at least a few hours out of the day to do something that gives them pleasure. Something that isn’t work.

The question then becomes, "What should that ’something’ be?"

As I said, just about any activity we choose to do can fit into one of three categories. It can:
  1. damage us in some way
  2. improve us somehow
  3. leave us more or less the same

Think of the best choices - the ones that improve you - as Golden. Think of the neutral choices - the ones that just help you pass the time - as Vaporous. And think of the worst choices - the ones that hurt you - as Acidic.

It’s up to you how much Gold, Vapor, and Acid you are going to have in your life.

When I think of my own choices - good, bad, and neutral - I notice that they have the following characteristics:

Golden Choices

My best experiences tend to be with activities that are intellectually challenging and emotionally engaging. Because they demand a lot from me, I shy away from them when I am low in energy. But when I do get into them, they build my energy and thus make it easier to continue. When I am through with such an activity, I feel good about myself and content with how I have spent my time.

Vaporous Choices

These activities are easy to slip into and easier, too, to stay involved with. They are the choices we make when we don’t feel like making choices. The time we spend when we don’t much care how we spend our time. Welcome to the Vapor zone, the neutral, happy world of poker and sitcoms and gossip.

When I’m ready for some relaxation, my first impulse is always to choose a Vaporous activity. Having "worked hard all day," I want something simple and mindless so I can gear down. And most people would probably say the same thing. Getting into the Vapor zone is easy - and staying there is easier still.

The big problem with Vaporous activities - and this is a very big problem for me - is that they leave me feeling enervated instead of energized. And empty. Vaporous activities do for me what Vaporous foods (i.e., comfort foods) do: They fill me up but tire me out.

Acidic Choices

Everybody has vices. At one time or another, I’ve had just about all of them. I have never smoked crack, but I’ve done plenty of other things to destroy, reduce, or disable myself.

Why I do these things, I can only guess. Sometimes I think I need the challenge of surviving self-imposed obstacles. Whatever my reasons, the result of making those choices is generally the same. I get a dull pleasure that is mixed with a barely discernable level of pain. Even when the pleasure is intense, it is clouded by a foggy brain. It feels like I’m having a great time … but I am not sure. And if the actual experience of Acidic activities is mixed, the feeling afterward is not at all ambivalent. It is bad.

The interesting thing about Acidic options is how attractive they can be. Nobody would argue that they are good choices. We pick them because we are too weak to pick anything else, and we use what little mind we have left to rationalize our self-destruction.

Let’s Take a Closer Look at These 3 Categories

When we are at our best - confident and full of energy - we can easily choose Golden activities over all the rest. When we are feeling just okay, we can usually reject Acidic choices but find it hard to opt for Golden moments over Vaporous ones. And when we are at our worst - low in energy and full of doubt - that is when we are most susceptible to making Acidic choices.

Golden activities include:
  • Meditation
  • Yoga
  • Watching an educational and inspiring documentary
  • Listening to complex, uplifting music
  • Appreciating art
  • Watching a really, really good movie
  • Reading a very good book
  • Making love
  • Tasting a really good wine


Vaporous activities include:

  • Getting a massage
  • Going to a sporting event
  • Watching most "entertaining" TV like Friends, CSI, The Tonight Show, etc.
  • Reading "beach" novels and page-turners
  • Listening to most mood music, including most rock ‘n’ roll
  • Having sex
  • Drinking beer or whiskey


Acidic activities include:

  • Getting drunk
  • Listening to rap music
  • Watching stupid/degrading TV shows like Jerry Springer, Cops, and The Bachelor
  • Doing things you’d be ashamed to talk about


You may not agree with some of these designations. Not to worry. You can (and should) make up your own list. But in creating that list, consider the following:


When Choosing Gold…

  • The activity/experience is intellectually challenging. It teaches you something worth knowing or develops a skill worth having.
  • It is emotionally deepening. It helps you understand something you hadn’t understood before and/or makes you sympathetic to experiences and/or situations you were closed to.
  • It is energizing. The experience itself charges you up spiritually, emotionally, and intellectually. You have greater strength and more endurance because of it.
  • It leaves you happy with your choice. During the experience and afterward, you have a strong sense that you are doing the right thing.
  • It builds confidence. Because you know that you are improving yourself, choosing Gold makes you feel better able to make wise choices in the future.


When Choosing Vapor…

  • The activity/experience is intellectually and emotionally easy. It feels comfortable and comfortably enjoyable. You have done it before and it amused you, so you are sure that if you do it again you will be equally amused.
  • It is usually passive rather than active. It is watching TV rather than going to a stage play.
  • It is getting a massage rather than practicing yoga. It is chugging a brewsky rather than savoring a good wine.
  • It tends to be habit forming. Because it feels good (in a medium-energy sort of way) and is so easy to do, you find yourself doing it over and over again.
  • Doing too much of it is not good for you. Whether it’s eating starch and fat or sitting on the couch and staring at the TV screen, a little bit doesn’t hurt. But too much leaves you with of the unpleasant feeling that you’ve wasted your time.


When Choosing Acid…

  • The activity/experience is physically or mentally damaging. Often, it kills brain cells. Sometimes, it gives you cancer.
  • Although it is bad for you, it is alluring. There is something about the way the experience takes you out of yourself that you find attractive.
  • It attracts bad company. Since most healthy people don’t approve of it, you find yourself doing it with another set of friends. Eventually, you reject the friends and family members who don’t "get it." They are too straight-laced or lame to understand, so you figure you don’t need them in your life.
  • It disables you intellectually, emotionally, and physically. During the moment, you are less capable of performing complex skills or dealing with complex emotional or intellectual issues. If you engage in Acidic activities a lot, you become less capable of peak performance generally.

Acidic experiences have ever-extending thresholds. What gets you off in the beginning is never enough to get you off later on. You have the mistaken notion that more is always better.


Will This Make a Change in the Choices You Make?


Once you’ve drawn up your own list of Golden, Vaporous, and Acidic activities, use it to keep track of the way you’re choosing to spend your time. (A good way to do that is to make notes in your journal.) You may be surprised - and disappointed - by what you discover.
Make your own list. Track your own life. Ask yourself what you could become if - starting right now - you began making better choices.


In the meantime, I am going to have to talk to K about our plans for installing cable TV in our house. I will tell her my fears:

  • that I will become addicted to it
  • that I will begin to watch the worst kind of shows
  • that in watching more and more Vaporous TV, I will spend less time on Gold activities


She will point out that she is content watching her three or four favorite shows on video while she is on her Stairmaster. She will tell me, "Do what you want. It makes no difference to me" - and she will mean it. Which will make me entirely responsible for figuring out how much of my free time will be Golden or Vaporous or Acidic.


What about you?


- Michael Masterson

This article appears courtesy of Early To Rise, the Internet’s most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com/.

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Article-Concentrate on Concentrating

"Concentration is the ability to think about absolutely nothing when it is absolutely necessary."
Ray Knight

Concentrate on Concentrating
By Robert Ringer

When I finished rewriting Winning Through Intimidation, I felt pretty confident that there were no glaring errors in the new edition (re-titled To Be or Not to Be Intimidated?). After all, I had done about 25 drafts of the rewrite.

Nevertheless, I thought to myself, "Hmm … seems I’ve been here before." Meaning, every time I’ve finished a book, I believed my editor and I had caught every mistake. Such a naive belief stems from not remembering the lessons of history.

What I’m saying is that I don’t believe there has ever been a book that didn’t have at least one typo or missing word or other obvious mistake in it. And, to my chagrin, To Be or Not to Be Intimidated? was no exception.

Of course, I don’t read my books after they’ve been printed, so these "catches" have to come from someone else. In this case, it was a good friend who called my attention to a place in the book where I stated:

"Show Victor Vermin the agreement that spelled out my commission? Are you kidding? Victor ate little kids for breakfast and didn’t bother to spit out the bones. He rooted for the Pacific Ocean in Titanic."

Brilliant … funny … well written. I couldn’t stop mentally patting myself on the back when I came up with those dazzling words. And, as I did with the entire book, I went over them draft … after draft … after draft.

Only one problem. As my friend pointed out, the Titanic didn’t sink in the Pacific Ocean; it sank in the Atlantic! (Will Leonardo DiCaprio ever forgive me?) Getting hold of myself, I quickly checked to make sure my socks matched. (Both black. Good sign.)

It really irritates me that Homer Simpson is so much more famous than I am. After all, I say "Doh!" more often than he does. I’m telling you, it’s an unfair world.

Yes, my mistake was corrected in subsequent printings, but the question remains: How does a perfectionist like me make such a dumb blunder? The answer, I believe, is a lack of concentration. But there’s a bit more to it than that. Let me explain.

Some time ago, a wise old sage said to me, "You know what I do to cut down on mistakes? I concentrate on concentrating."

What simplistic brilliance! It had never occurred to me that in order to concentrate, you have to concentrate on concentrating.

Thinking about this life-changing insight prompted me to hearken back to the 1972 Miami Dolphins, the only team in NFL history to go through an entire season undefeated and untied.
I vividly recall the legendary coach of the Dolphins, Don Shula, explaining why a "no name" team like his was able to go through 17 games without a loss. Shula said that though his team wasn’t that much better than most of the other teams in the league, they did excel at one thing: concentrating.

Specifically, Shula said that his players didn’t make silly mistakes at crucial moments. They concentrated on not jumping offside or getting called for unnecessary roughness. The Dolphins running backs concentrated on hanging onto the football when getting tackled, and the receivers concentrated on locking the pass into their hands before turning on the afterburners.
Concentrating on concentrating penetrates down to the simplest aspects of our lives.

Have you ever bumped your hip on the corner of a table and ended up with a three-month bruise?

Or accidentally sent an e-mail to the wrong person?

Or not heard a word of something your spouse just told you?

Or checked two or three times to see if a door was locked?

Or reread a paragraph more than once because you had no idea what you just read?

I’m sure you know what I’m getting at. In each example, the problem was that you weren’t concentrating. I don’t know any other way to reduce the number of such mental lapses but to make a conscious effort to concentrate.

Through the years, I’ve repeatedly stated that the difference between success and failure is much smaller than most people might suspect. As with any other aspect of success, concentrating on concentrating, of and by itself, doesn’t guarantee positive results. But I find it amazing how much of an edge it gives me when I consciously focus on this fascinating mental skill.

Make a commitment in 2007 to concentrate on concentrating, and I think you’ll quickly see what I’m talking about. At the very least, you’re sure to notice a significant decrease in Titanic-type mistakes in your life.

Gotta cut it short here, because I have to check the front door again. I think I locked it, but …
This article appears courtesy of Early To Rise, the Internet’s most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com/.

Article-"The Choices We Have"

"Every choice moves us closer to or farther away from something. Where are your choices taking your life? What do your behaviors demonstrate that you are saying yes or no to in life?"
Eric Allenbaugh

Notes From Michael Masterson’s Blog: The Choices We Have

Now that our last child is about to leave home, K and I are talking about getting television service. For about 20 years, we have been without TV. The idea was that our children would become better readers without the distraction - and that objective was achieved. All three of our boys are voracious and skillful readers.

So now, as empty nesters, we are thinking that it would be kind of fun to watch some shows together - to spend an hour after dinner, sitting next to one another, laughing at the same things.

To test this hypothesis, we jimmy-rigged an antenna connection for the set that used to play only DVDs, and we spent a few evenings watching it.

The results of that experiment were mixed. There was something wonderful about watching those programs together - the double pleasure of the experience itself and knowing that your mate is "getting it" too. But when it was over, we found ourselves feeling like we used to when we watched television - which is to say a little sad and empty inside. As if we were mourning the time we’d lost.

The other night, we watched a science program together, a documentary about insects. Suddenly, we were having the experience we had hoped to have - sharing something that was both entertaining and illuminating.

That got me thinking about how people spend their recreational time - how much time they devote to it, the things they do, and whether the time they spend is spent wisely.

Broadly speaking, there are four kinds of activities that we engage in: working, sleeping, eating, and relaxing. And it seems logical to assert that - up to a certain point of mental or physical exhaustion - the more hours you spend working, the more successful you will be.

That said, we must acknowledge that all work and no play makes Jack a dull… or cranky… boy. We do need some recreation. The question is: How much?

And the answer to that is pretty simple. Just ask yourself how far you want to go in life. How smart you want to be. How high you want to rise in your industry. How much money you want to make. What accomplishments you want to achieve.

Determine how ambitious you are… and then find out how many hours of work were done per day by people who have already done what you want to do. Unless you are exceptionally gifted (or exceptionally slow), chances are you will have to work about as hard (i.e., as many hours) as they did.

Take the number of hours you sleep and eat and add to that the number of hours that successful people in your industry typically work. Subtract that from 24, and you will be left with the number of hours you can safely devote to recreation.

But there is another question that must be asked: Does it make any difference what kind of recreational activities you engage in? During your down time, does it matter whether you are sitting in front of the boob tube watching Jerry Springer or lifting weights or playing a musical instrument?

Broadly speaking, there are three ways you can occupy yourself during down time. You can amuse yourself with activities that, though fun, are harmful (like getting drunk). You can busy yourself with mindless distractions (like junky novels). Or you can choose to do something that requires a bit more energy on your part but will give you both a high degree of pleasure and the knowledge that you have somehow improved yourself (like practicing yoga).

It seems to me that whether it is the work we do, the sports we play, the vacations we take… we have the same three choices. We can do something that:
  1. Damages us in some way
  2. Improves us somehow
  3. Leaves us more or less the same

Look at almost any activity, and you will see what I’m talking about. In the books you read. In the friends you keep. In the jobs you take. You name it. Some choices will improve you and some will damage you… but most will fall somewhere in the neutral zone: They won’t harm you… but they won’t help you either.

If we fill our lives with mediocre experiences - does that make sense? Every day, we are given dozens of choices - from which foods to eat to which parts of the newspaper to read to which words to say in any given conversation. Many of those choices seem to be insignificant, but when you string them all together they determine the quality of our lives.

At the lowest end of the scale, there’s the person who spends his time using drugs, watching television, and prostituting himself or stealing to pay for his addiction. At the highest end of the scale - well, I don’t really know who that is. But when I think of rich guys in limos or holy men on mountains… that just doesn’t work.

Most of us live in the middle ground, mixing quality experiences with neutral ones while trying not to harm ourselves … but doing so anyway. We recognize that some of the choices we make are better than others, but we don’t always have the willpower to make the better ones.

It’s interesting, isn’t it? The best choices are often the hardest to choose… because they require more of our energy. The worst choices are usually the easiest to refuse… because we are frightened by them. But when we have experienced them and found them pleasurable, they have the greatest pull on us. The neutral choices - the actions that do little more than get the job done - are the most popular because they are relatively easy and benign. They don’t require much energy and they don’t leave us hurting.

If there is one thing that life gives us all in equal portion, it is the hours of the day. We can’t determine (with any certainty) how many hours will be allotted to us, but we can decide how to spend those that we have.

Think about it over the weekend. I’ll have more to say on this subject Monday.

- Michael Masterson

[Ed. Note: To read more of Michael’s unedited, uncensored (and sometimes unexpected) ruminations, check out his blog here.]
This article appears courtesy of Early To Rise, the Internet’s most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com.

Saturday, April 21, 2007

My BF's Home

View from John's window. Visited today with friends.
Ciao.
Ann B.

Article-Five Ways to Alienate Your Audience

"All the great speakers were bad speakers first." Ralph Waldo Emerson

5 Ways to Alienate Your Audience
By Virginia Avery

When you make a presentation, whether it’s a report to the board of directors, a speech to the Kiwanis Club, or a major talk at a conference, it is vitally important to captivate your audience and make them want to listen to you. Yet when you hear some people speak, you would think their purpose is to bore, frustrate, and alienate. By learning how to avoid the things that will put your audience off, you increase your chances of getting your message across, impressing your boss, being asked to speak again, and/or finding new customers.

Just last month, I attended a conference where I saw a perfect demonstration of how to alienate an audience. The speaker had lots of platform experience, but his presentation was most memorable for the mistakes he made - the kind of mistakes you should avoid at all costs.
Though he didn’t make every mistake in the book, he sticks in my mind as an example of the last person I would ever pay attention to… mainly because of his attitude. It appeared that his main reason for being there was to tell us how wonderful and successful he was.
And that is the first way to lose your audience:

1. Being Self-Centered Rather Than Audience-Centered

This is your speech - so you should be able to brag, boast, cajole, or rant if the mood suits you. Right? After all, if not to learn more about you, your products, your company, and your importance, why did they ask you to speak? So thinks the self-centered speaker.
An audience-centered speaker, by contrast, is concerned with giving value, providing a solution to a problem, or inspiring the group to take a particular action. In addition, the audience-centered speaker involves his audience with less lecturing and more interaction.

Today’s audiences are sophisticated and knowledgeable. Approaching your talk from your listeners’ perspective by asking yourself, "How can I make this clear and helpful to them?" assures they’ll be more receptive to what you have to say. Plus, each group you speak to will be different - so seeing your topic through their eyes will help you keep your material fresh and interesting.

2. Winging It

If there ever was a recipe for presentation failure, failing to prepare is it. No matter how well you know your subject, it is difficult to decide which direction to go in when you are facing a group. In fact, the more you know about your subject, the more difficult it can be to make a coherent presentation on the spot… because your mind will be focused on whether you should make this point or that point.

Watching a presenter who is winging it is painful. I recently watched one who was so obviously unprepared, it was embarrassing. And, of course, since he didn’t know what he was going to say, he took longer to say it, running over his allotted time.

You should always prepare for a presentation. This includes researching your audience, their concerns, and the reason they are attending that particular presentation. Speakers who don’t prepare lack focus, organization, and ultimately lack a compelling message… which wastes everyone’s time.

Do the opposite: Prepare by researching your audience and their stance on your topic. Then think about the main point you want them to remember one week later, and build your presentation around it.

3. Staying Stock Still… or Hiding Behind the Lectern

Many presenters seem to think there’s no point in moving, smiling, or altering their voice. (It might jar the audience awake.) But stiffness, lack of body flexibility, and lack of movement all contribute to a boring presentation. I’ve heard this referred to as the "Dan Rather School of Speaking."

You see, we are hard-wired to pay attention to movement - especially if it is purposeful. Gestures, vocal inflection, and facial animation help deliver your message. When you fail to use expression, your message falls flat.

No matter how well crafted your words are, it takes energy and "life" to instill interest. The mind tends to reject information it deems boring.
  • To encourage people to pay attention, come out from behind the lectern.
  • Move with purpose.
  • Address different people in your audience.

Most of all, deliver your message with enthusiasm. If you don’t care about what you’re saying, neither will your audience.


4. Using Many Words to Say Very Little

I remember eagerly anticipating a famous author’s presentation. I had read some of his books, and knew I was going to glean gems of wisdom from his talk.

Imagine my disappointment when this author put up 15 Power Points for us to consider, and pretty much just read them to us. No pertinent examples to flesh out each one. Just superficial statements I could have constructed myself.

A list of points is no more a presentation than a grocery list is a meal. It doesn’t nourish the mind. Instead, take three of your most important points, or even one, and elaborate. Tell stories to show your audience some interesting tidbit or background, provide examples of a point in action, explain why you consider that point to be so important.

Today’s audience is looking for enlightenment and entertainment. To give them value in exchange for their time, forget lists and platitudes. Describe the meaningful experiences you’ve had, explain the meaning of the data you are providing.

In other words, give your audience your insights, your thoughtful opinions, and your stories. That’s what they have come to hear.

5. Disregarding Time Limits

You might have heard that when Woodrow Wilson was asked how long it took for him to prepare a one-hour speech, he said "one week." But when asked how long it took for him to prepare a two-hour speech, he said "I’m ready now!" That’s because it takes more preparation to speak well when you are given less time.

It’s a simple courtesy to end on time - especially if another speaker is waiting in the wings. One way to be sure you finish on time is to prepare only enough to fill 70 percent of your allotted time. (A speech often takes longer when you’re facing an audience than it does in practice.)
You should also decide ahead of time what you will omit if you run out of time. If you must cut something from your presentation, cut an example, a supporting point, or a story. Never cut your introduction or conclusion.

To keep from alienating your audience, beware of repeating these five presentation sins. Stand apart from the majority of speakers by having the courage to do the reverse of what they do. The important points you make will be remembered.

[Ed. Note: Virginia Avery is a communications specialist who has trained thousands of individuals to make more dynamic presentations. Become more confident and persuasive in just two days with her Presenting Yourself Professionally workshop.
This article appears courtesy of Early To Rise, the Internet’s most popular health, wealth, and success e-zine. For a complimentary subscription, visit http://www.earlytorise.com/.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Catchup

Just a note to remind myself and any readers that I am still online.
Ciao.
Ann B.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

My Tent

If the weather cooperates, I'll be sleeping in this in the Ozark hills this weekend.
Ciao.
Ann B.

My Favorite Art Supply Place

Their 20th anniversary edition catalog. Great prices and quality stuff. www.cheapjoes.com
Ann B.

Friday, March 23, 2007

Lawn Guys

Equipment of some landscape company working on my street.
Ann B.

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

'Nother Day, 'Nother Dollar

....spent. Shopping Day, weekly thing. Did it on my own, since Dad is busy with ball park and house painting. Still forgot the bird seed. LOL.

Gonna spend the next two days with John. Up to visit him in Conway tomorrow, then him down here with Gene the next day. Full days. Very tiring.

Legs still giving me some fits. Not THAT bad, but Mom is still fussy. Thinks I shouldn't be lifting or bending at all. I'm not a china doll, but try telling her that.

Catch you later,
Ciao.

Monday, March 19, 2007

Umpteenth Time

Old comp won't boot up. Aged, I guess. Grrr.
Ciao.
Ann B.

Up Late

What a night! Long weekend. John everyday, cookout, camping plans, church, and fishing. Full and fun.
New week, odd market. Salud.

Ciao.
Ann B.

Saturday, March 17, 2007

My Bf

We are web conferencing.
Ann B.

Recent Me

Looking goofy, eh?
Ann B.

Saturday, January 06, 2007

New Year, second week

Yes, it's been over a week since I posted. Post-Christmas is crazy, too.

Spent New Years with John. We had lots of fun. Went to a concert and a party; spent a lot of time talking, as usual. We have become very fond of each other.

Well, enough for now.
Ciao.