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Saturday, March 24, 2012

Adjusting

So, our first day, and a work day st that, in our new home. L & D have been kind enough to open their doors to us and give us somewhere to regroup.

Last night we got here after work and I was disoriented. I did what I always do in such a situation and began cooking and cleaning. By the time they git home, the kitchen was clean and a pot of spaghetti sauce was simmering on the stove.

One of our co-workers, and a mutual friend, stopped by to visit. We all talked and laughed for a few hours. It was a nice change to the completely anti-social atmosphere of where we've been.

By 2:30 am, I couldn't keep my eyes open. I feel into a dead, dreamless, sleep and didn't know anything else till almost 9 am. With my insomnia, that's quite a stretch.

This morning, I awoke feeling more rested than I have in months!

I won't lie and say that a small part of me doesn't feel guilty for being the first to go, but my heart, mind, body and soul need to start healing. It's over anyway, so why prolong it?

The stress isn't over yet, I know. We still have to get our stuff and I'm sure there will be guilt involved, but I know I still have Man-hide and good friends and at the end of the day, I have peace.

Until next time...love, light & happiness

Friday, March 23, 2012

Everything's Changing

Everything is about to change. We are finally moving out and moving on. I can't say that I'm happy about the circumstances, but I can say that I think it was inevitable.

Even though no one has wanted to see it or admit it, things have been moving in that direction for a while.

We will be going to stay with friends in a few weeks while we try to put things together to get our own place.

I wish we could just go on in to our own place from here, but we've put everything in here. It's going to take us a minute to put together deposits and find something we can agree on.

We went and got boxes last night, but that was as far as we got. It still seems a little surreal.

I've been quiet lately for a number of reasons. Events leading up to this hasn't left me much time to myself. Maybe as we finish this chapter in our lives, we'll be able to take stock again and decide where we go from here.

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Blog Dare ~ Road Trips

I realized, somewhat belatedly, that starting a new blog challenge during my work week(end), may not have been the best idea I've ever had.  I wasn't able to post yesterday for the March 5th prompt, which was "What I  never leave behind on a road trip" so I want to do that one today.

The actual prompt for today is about Pinterest, but I have to be honest, I never really got caught in the craze.  I made an account and pinned a few things to see what all the fuss was about, but it just never caught on with me.

So, a day late, here is my post about road trips.

The Cascades along the Blue Ridge Parkway
Image via Wikipedia
Road trips, of every imaginable variety, have always been part of my life.  My great-aunt that I lived with until I was 12 was forever going on trips, rides, vacations, etc.  My parents loved the mountains and we were always taking rides and vacations every year (and we always traveled by car).

As an adult myself, I've made going for road trips a part of my life, as well as my daughter's.  I wanted to share the beauty of the world with her, and I did.

One thing that has been ever-present on my road trips was a cooler.  Always packed with drinks for the trip, but often it was also packed with sandwiches and snacks.  Many impromptu picnics have happened next to a lazy stream, a roaring waterfall, or a look-out on the Blue Ridge Parkway.
English: Blue Ridge Parkway across from Lookin...
Image via Wikipedia

One of my favorite memories of my little family from when my daughter was about 7 or 8 was a summer day in my old pick-up truck, just the 3 of us out exploring the world with our trusty cooler packed in the floorboard of the space-cab.  It was loaded down with soft drinks, juice, ham sandwiches, fruit, and a box of Little Debbie cakes.  We headed for the mountains and ended up on the Blue Ridge Parkway.  After about half an hour, I saw a breath-taking view and a pull-off.

We sat on the tailgate of the truck and enjoyed the view while Mini-Me looked through the viewer set up to take quarters.  I pulled the blanket and cooler out of the truck and we had a picnic, in the bed of the truck, with one of the most spectacular views in the world.  Had I not packed that cooler to take with us, we never would have had that memory.

One final thing that has always been a major part of our road trips was music.  A good radio station with a strong signal, (cassette tapes back in the day), CD's, a good playlist, whatever floats your boat, but music is crucial on a road trip.  I've cruised many a road to the beat of Green Day, Third Eye Blind, Alanis Morsette and many more favorites.  The three of us singing at the tops of our lungs as we boogied our way through our rides made the day that much more enjoyable!

a mom blog community


What do you consider a must-have for a road trip?  Leave me a comment, or go link up with Blog Dare!


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Sunday, March 4, 2012

Blog Dare ~ Goals for Spring

a mom blog communityToday, I joined up with Bloggy Moms and the Blog Dare Challenge.  The idea is for them to offer a prompt for every day of this year (366 days since it's a Leap Year).  Today's prompt asked what our goals for Spring are. Here are mine.


  1. Get the enrollment started for school.
  2. Find a job, either through the school, or on my own, working with animals.
  3. Get us in a better financial situation for when we move this summer.
  4. Go through all the boxes and bags packed up in the attic, building and on the back porch so that we know what we have, and what we don't have, for the move.
  5. Decide on the area we will move to. (Close to Man-Hide's job, close to the school I will be attending, or close to the shelter where we volunteer)
  6. Continue on the medications I've started taking and work on improving myself even more.
This is the short list.  I'm sure if I had more time, I could think of more, but the day has gotten away from me and now it's time to get ready for work.  I'll be back tomorrow though with my answer for the prompt "What I never leave behind on a road trip."

Until next time...love, light and happiness!


Saturday, March 3, 2012

Celebrating the right way

As I mentioned, March 1st was my 37th birthday.  Most of the time, my birthdays are a little "lack-luster".  I generally get a "Happy Birthday" or two here and there, but there usually isn't much celebrating to be had.  This year was different.

English: Logo of Romano's Macaroni Grill
Image via Wikipedia
Wednesday, the day before my birthday, BFF, her daughter and her boyfriend, took us out to lunch to celebrate.  They took us to somewhere we'd never been, a restaurant called Ramano's Macaroni Grill.  I had the Lobster Ravioli and now I'm on a quest to find a recipe for it.  Man-Hide swears we will find one, and that he'll make it for me, but so far, none of the recipes I've found sound quite like the real thing.

I'm not kidding about how good this dish was!  Let's put it this way, I'm sure you've heard of the Food Network Show, "The Best Thing I Ever Ate" where all the famous chefs get on there and talk about the best dish they've ever eaten and where they got it from, right?  Well, if I was a famous foodie on that show, that would totally be my pick.  It was fantastic!

They also bought me a cake with my name on it.  I had a blast and I will love BFF for forever for trying to make my birthday special!

After that, we went to our 2nd orientation at the Humane Society.  We were expecting a large group of people again, like it was at the 1st one, but it ended up just being us and the lady doing the orientation.  With my social anxiety disorder, that was awesome!

I got a BIG birthday surprise while we were there, too.

At our first orientation, we were told that we'd be starting in March sometime, but last week, I saw on their Facebook page that they were having some trouble with their system and that the lady in charge of setting everyone's schedules had lost everyone's email address.  Per her request, I dutifully sent in ours.  Her response was to say she appreciated it, but unfortunately, everything was now behind because of this system crash.  She'd get me a schedule as soon as she could.  I was disappointed to say the least, but tried to take it in stride.

Since we were the only people to show up for the 2nd orientation, and the lady doing the schedules was there, we were given our schedules on the spot, and since we'd put Thursdays on our availability, we were penciled in for the very next day, Thursday, which just happened to also be my birthday!  HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME!

Thursday, we were up and raring to go early and went and did a little of our weekly shopping and errands, then we were off to the Humane Society for our first official day as Volunteers.

When we first got there, in spite of the two orientations we'd been through, we were still a little disoriented.  We wanted to start with the Rescue Room, (which is where all the new animals go that are waiting for a clean bill of health from the vet tech, or behavior testing, or maybe just an open kennel on the floor.  This is a different room than the regular kennel area that the public sees.) but the kennel worker was cleaning their kennels, so we decided to wait.  We checked the Isolation room, but all the doggies in there were too young to be walked yet (and they have to be walked at the end of your shift with special leashes in a separate area so they don't get the other doggies sick), so we headed for the main kennels.

There was already a volunteer there that was letting the doggies out for free-play in the yard kennel by kennel, so we just kind of jumped in and started rotating kennels.  She would take one kennel resident out on a leash to the field and we would wait for her to get out of the gate, then we'd let the next kennel out for free-play.  When she would get ready to come back in, we'd leash our charges and get them back in the kennels so she could bring her charge through the yard.  (You have to keep dogs from different kennels separated because they might not get along.  Not all dogs at the Humane Society are necessarily good with other dogs.)

We did this until she left, then Man-Hide and I just started going kennel by kennel, taking them out to walk.

I walked one old girl named Emma.  She's a yellow lab, about 8 years old, arthritic and a little over-weight.  I bonded with her immediately.

As I walked behind her and watched her booty bounce with every step, I told her it looked like we had some things in common.  It was my birthday, after all, and I was feeling my age right about then (about an hour in to our session and I'd been chasing puppies all morning).  I could imagine our booties bouncing in unison as we walked around the field.

A little later, we finally made it to the Rescue Room, where I met the most adorable Boston Terrier named Angel.  Now, as you can guess, we have a passion for anything bulldog, and Bosties and Frenchies are both a breed of bull-dog, but they are small and manageable and, frankly, easier to get a place to live with.  When we get our own place, we fully intend to own one or the other.

Angel's paperwork listed her at about 8 years old (like Emma) but with a digestive problem that required a special diet (this is why she was still in the Rescue Room).  We took her out and enjoyed a nice walk around the field, just like with Emma, but Angel decided to take a break about half-way back to the fence, so we sat down with her in the grass and enjoyed the beautiful weather.

After about 10 or 15 minutes, one of the Adoption Counselors headed our way.  To begin with, I thought we'd done something wrong and they were coming after us, but as she neared, she said Angel's new family was there to pick her up!  She got adopted practically right out of my arms!

I'll be honest, I wasn't sure how I would handle dogs I bonded with getting adopted to someone other than me.  I was afraid I'd be sad and maybe even cry, but when we got there, we found out Georgia had been adopted and then Angel gets adopted practically from my arms.  I was thrilled for both of them!  Now I understand how people manage to work in shelters.  There is serious satisfaction in knowing one of "yours" found a home and that you made a really stressful time in their lives just a little bit better.

After we finished up at the shelter, we went up to Bald Rock.  For those that know me, this is a religious experience.  I find so much peace with myself and my life up there, and it was exactly what I needed after all the stress and drama I've been dealing with.  We even took some pictures while we were there, but I've been having a hard time getting around to getting them off of Man-Hide's phone (my battery goes dead the minute I think the word "camera").

All in all, it was an awesome birthday!  Truly one of my best yet!

Love, light and happiness...until next time!


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Wednesday, February 29, 2012

She's Home

English: Water filled ditch Water filled ditch...
Image via Wikipedia
I finally get a day off that isn't filled with running, going and doing.  Ok, so I have stuff to do this evening, but right now, I'm just kicking back and trying to enjoy a relaxed morning.

Mom is home from the hospital now and she has nurses and technicians in and out daily.  This morning, someone is coming to draw blood.  Tomorrow, someone else is coming to install a machine in the kitchen that she can weigh on and test her blood pressure daily.

She came home Friday night while we were at work and it's been good to have her home.  It's taken some adjusting, and she isn't at full-strength, but I'm just happy to come home and see her sitting in her chair in the living room again.  It was getting hard to come in and out every day and see it looking so empty and forlorn.

Dad's still struggling with good days and bad days, but Mom, as always, takes the brunt of it.  I think she's just relieved that she got to come home and he was still here.  There were a few days that we were afraid we might have to seek outside help, but we managed to get through it.

Tonight, we go for our 2nd orientation (the actual volunteer orientation).  I was supposed to go get an eye exam and some glasses today, but that's not going to happen.  After the orientation, I'm not sure what we're doing, other than maybe going to see our BFF.

Tomorrow is my birthday though.  I'll  be 37.  Yeah, I said it.  40 just seems to loom closer and closer on my horizon.  What happened to 30???

Life is moving along.  I did go yesterday to the herbal store and picked up some new medicine.  So far, it seems to be helping.  That's always a good thing.

So that's it for me today.  I wish I had something more exciting or entertaining to share, but right now, I just can't think of anything.

Love, light and happiness....until next time...
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Thursday, February 23, 2012

Hanging out

Sometimes you just need a break and today was my day.

Yes, I got a lot done today, but now, I'm just taking a second with Man-hide to breathe.

Everyone needs that once in a while.

So, no long post today, just a quick hello.

Until next time...love, light & happiness.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Georgia on my mind

This is Georgia.  She's a beautiful Boxer Bull dog that Man-Hide and I were lucky enough to spend part of our afternoon with today.  She's a year and half old, and has a club foot that the vet tech said was likely that way from birth.

We have no idea how she ended up at the shelter.  We spent over an hour with her, and she was one of the most loving and affectionate dogs I've ever had the pleasure of spending time with.

We took her out to the porch and as she walked, she did not let her foot hinder her at all.  She even pulled a little on the leash in her excitement to get outside with us.

As we sat, Georgia climbed up between us and lay across both our laps.  She was very relaxed and seemed to just be enjoying her time with us, as if she knew it was a gift.

Leaving her at the shelter today was hard for both of us, and we agreed that if we had our own place, she would have come home with us.  On the walk back to her kennel, she resisted and looked at us very sadly as we said our goodbyes.

The only thing that's going to get me through times like these, is knowing that if it weren't for people like us, and the rest of the staff and volunteers at the shelter, Georgia, and others like her, would likely face a life alone on the streets or be condemned to wait on "death row" because of her breed, or might get no attention at all.

As hard as it is to leave one behind that you could so clearly have a special bond with, I know that I brought a  little joy into Georgia's life today.  That, in turn, brought some joy into mine.

If I can give these wonderful babies love, time and attention until they find their fur-ever homes, then I know I have made some small difference in what could have otherwise been, a very sad situation.

As much as I hope to see Georgia again next week when I return to the shelter, part of me also hopes that I won't.  That I'll find out that she got to go to her fur-ever home with a family that will love and care for her.

For now, though, I definitely have Georgia on my mind....

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Mom update:

Today was another round with the plasma transfusions.  I spoke with her earlier (still haven't been able to go up there because of my cold) and she was very tired and said she'd had a bad day.  The plasma and blood transfusions do that to her.

Still no word on if she'll get to come home Friday or if that's just wishful thinking on her part.  We'll have to wait and see.

Love, light and happiness....until next time....
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Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Working it out

English: This icon, known as the "feed ic...
Image via Wikipedia
I've been a busy bee today with Wow being down.

I created a Blog Frog Community page, a Facebook Fan Page, set up an RSS feed, made buttons and did some moving around.  I'm really starting to like the way my blog looks.

I know all the awesome bloggers out there say that you shouldn't have a dark colored blog, but I like it, it suits me and my personality, and I think that's all that really matters!

I also had a busy day yesterday.  No, the taxes haven't come in yet (I wish!), but I did go to the Orientation class I've been talking about with the local Humane Society.

Last night's orientation was basically a "pick your part" kind of deal.  They had different groups for people that wanted to go to nursing homes and take puppies in to visit the residents, people to work the clinic, people to work in the kitty room and the puppy room (and more I can't remember) and then they had the dog walkers.

Dog walking is the group Man-Hide and I signed up for.  Why?  Well, it's actually more involved than you would think.

We will be attending a 4 week class in April to learn about dog training, coached by a very experienced professional behavioral trainer.  We will be working with adult dogs, which just don't get as much attention, or as many prospective adopters, as puppies and kittens.

Adult dogs that do get adopted, are often returned for behavioral issues because most of them have never known much companionship or been exposed to much beyond the end of a chain.

As Dog Walkers, we will be not only walking the dogs, but working with them on their behavior, such as not jumping on people, calmly exiting the kennel, sitting and staying, and taking the time to just sit and relax with them and allow them to relax.

Originally, I was thinking I might like to work with the puppies (and I'm thinking about giving an extra day to the clinic since I want to be a vet tech anyway), but now that I have signed on for the Dog Walkers, I'm really glad I did.  That's what Man-Hide seemed to be the most interested in and to start with, I wanted it to be a "together" kind of deal anyway.

I feel like working with the adult dogs, we are truly giving something to them.  Allowing them to see that there are good people out there that care about what happens to them.

Cover of "American Pit Bull (Complete Pet...
Cover via Amazon
I did get to have one of my warm and fuzzy moments last night.  When we first got there, there was an American Pit Bull mix in one of the kennels.  He was beautiful, but you could tell looking at him that he was stressed out and unhappy.  We spent a few minutes there with him before orientation started.

We went out at the end of orientation to the kennel area where he was to get a demonstration from the lady in charge of the Dog Walking volunteers on some of the basic behavior stuff, just enough to get us started until our 4 week class in April (we'll start volunteering in March) and I saw a big sign on his kennel that said "ADOPTED" in big red letters.  I was so happy for him!  Bull dogs in general have such a bad wrap and they often don't get adopted from shelters.  Many of them live out the remainder of their lives there until they become sick or so stressed out that their behavior no longer qualifies them for adoption, so I was thrilled to see this beautiful guy get a home and I even got to watch him walk out with his new owner to go to his furever home.

The hard part was that while we were waiting, we also saw owners come in to surrender their dogs.  That's going to be the part that makes my heart break, but at least I know that we will be there to give them some love while they wait for their furever home.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

A quick update on Mom.  They got the liver biopsy results back and the spots on her liver are benign.  Looks like the cancer is confined to her colon and whatever is going on with her blood.  She has hopes of getting to come home Friday sometime, and I truly hope she does.  She has been missed.  She will still need to get an appointment to have the cancer removed from her colon and she will have to undergo chemo after that, but at least there is progress.

Love, light and happiness...until next time.
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Sunday, February 19, 2012

Glad that's over

So it was another insane weekend in my own personal hell.  My job!

Friday wasn't too awful bad, and passed somewhat quickly.  Saturday, on the other hand, was horrible!  Two people called out and none of the managers thought we needed to replace them.  That left me and an my buddy that trained me, with one guy that hasn't been there long and a new guy that transferred from another store.  Unfortunately, although the kid seems nice enough, he seemed to have one speed, and it was just a notch above full-stop.

To top it all off, they kept sending my buddy to bus tables, which pretty much left me and the two other guys to try to keep up with everything, and it was busy!

Add to that the fact that I think I have a cold (AGAIN) and my favorite piece of man-hide had to work all day, all weekend, and it made for a very long weekend.

Also, our tax check has not come yet.  That's added another layer of stress since we live pretty much paycheck to paycheck and we missed time from work due to mom being in the hospital and my dad completely freaking out for a whole weekend.  Money has been non-existent.  I mean, can't even afford a cup of coffee non-existent.  If it weren't for our best friend, Double-D, I don't know what we would have done!

Today wasn't quite as horrible as yesterday since we apparently had the opposite problem from Saturday, and were over-staffed.  I got cut early, which is a blessing since Man-Hide has to open in the morning.

Right now, I just want rest and coffee.  And yes, I do drink coffee at night.  It doesn't have the effect of keeping me awake like it does some people.

English: This is Fred, and he is inside our co...
Image via Wikipedia
Man-Hide is playing his video game for a bit while I blog and play a little WoW.

Tomorrow, we're hoping the tax check comes since the website now says that our taxes have been processed.  We can hope anyway.  Either way, Man-Hide has work and then tomorrow night, we have our orientation at the Humane Society for our volunteer hours.  I'm truly stoked about that!

Due to my cold and work, I haven't been able to get to the hospital to see Mom.  She's mostly doing ok.  We're waiting for the results of the liver biopsy to come back and they're doing blood and plasma transfusions daily because they said that something was wrong with her blood.  She did say that she had trouble breathing last night when I called her this morning and that she was back on oxygen, but I'm hoping that's temporary.

Well, that's about all I have time for tonight.  My hands are still aching from a weekend of washing pots, lol.

Love, light and happiness...until next time!
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Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Listen to the gypsy

Valentine's day
Image by ♥♥♥Sand Creation♥♥♥ via Flickr
Everyone knows that today is Valentines Day, but not everyone knows that today also marks 16 years that I've been with my husband.  Our actual wedding anniversary isn't until April, but 16 years ago tonight, we began the journey of a lifetime.

It's been a long, and sometimes difficult, road, but we've managed to stay together somehow.

Looking back, I remember how our respective friends at the time warned us that we would never work.  We were too different, wanted different things.  The old saying that "opposites attract" never seemed to mean much to any of them.

Our "meeting" in December of the year before, was odd, and in a way, began before we ever laid eyes on each other.

After coming out of my 1st marriage, a friend who'd also recently separated from her husband, and I went to the local flea market.  Back then, there was a little gypsy lady that had a small camper that was there every weekend.  I'd seen her countless times, but never paid her much attention.

On this particular day, my friend suggested we get our "futures told".  It was all very fun and light-hearted at the time.

She said she wanted us to come in separately, so that our energies didn't mingle, or something of the sort.  Passing doubting glances between us, my friend went first.  We were both smiling as the door closed behind her on the camper.

Probably 15 or 20 minutes passed, and my friend emerged from the camper.  Her smile had been replaced by a look of shock and confusion.  She refused to tell me what had happened until after I'd had my turn.

I entered the gypsy's domain with much trepidation.

We sat at the little kitchen table, across from each other, as she looked into my eyes with an intensity that made me squirm, then she appeared to look all around me, at last she asked for my hand, palm-up.  After a few intense moments of staring at my hand, she abruptly released it and her gaze once again rested intently on mine.

Her words at the time, left me feeling confused.  She spoke of "the one I'd lost" not being meant for me.  That I'd gotten what I was intended to from that relationship and that although it would never be truly over, that it was in the past.

She then told me that the one that was meant for me, was still out there waiting, although he wasn't aware of it.  That I would have to travel to find him.

I was in the middle of a messy separation involving a child, I just couldn't, at that time, see me "traveling" anywhere.

She gave me a description of this man who was my destiny, including tall, with red hair and in a uniform.

My friend and I compared notes and discovered that much of both of our encounters had rung true, but there were some things she'd said to us both that just did not seem likely.  I dismissed it out of my mind and forgot about it for a little over a year.

We just never know what life will throw at us.  That day, I couldn't see how I could "travel" anywhere.  I had a small child to raise, a family here.  I just couldn't see it.

A little over a year later, the very foundation of my world had shifted beneath my feet and left me feeling as if I had nothing left.  The separation was final and my ex-husband had sued for, and won, custody of our daughter.  I went home from the courthouse in the deepest and darkest depression of my life.  Within days, I was in the grip of a complete nervous breakdown.

I was haunted day and night by memories of my daughter's laughter and footsteps ringing through the house. My grandfather found me regularly, in her room in the middle of the night, crying and clutching her toys and stuffed animals.  Finally, I couldn't take it anymore, and packed up the house, made arrangements for my Grandfather, and went to stay with a friend's mother.

A few weeks later, I was on that friend's doorstep in another state, clutching a picture of my daughter to chest with tears streaming down my face.

After much tender care from my friends, I started to find my feet again and decided I needed a job.  I found one doing one of the only things I knew how to do, waiting tables.

I had been working for about 2 weeks and was at work early, getting the place ready to open, when I got the strangest sensation.  All the hairs on my arms and neck stood on end and my heart leaped to my throat.

I spun around to face the door and there stood a tall, red-head.....in an Army uniform.  My heart promptly plummeted to my stomach as I turned and flew into the back room.

In that brief moment that our eyes had locked across an empty room, something passed between us, and he'd known, too.

He was a regular already, worked there part-time, and had just returned from his 30 days out in the field, and he came regularly.  It became my habit to try to avoid him and his habit to pursue me relentlessly, to the point that he almost got me fired.

I finally agreed to go to breakfast with him with the clear intention of telling him all the reasons he didn't want to go out with me and running him off.  My efforts at way-laying him only made him more determined to have me and he hounded me like a dog worrying a bone.

I eventually gave in, almost 2 months later, and we began dating.  Before I knew it, he'd practically moved in with me.  A month later, he invited me to a picnic on post and introduced me as his fiancee.  We went and got a ring when we left that day.

In the end, the gypsy lady was right.  16 years later, I still wake up in his arms every morning and fall asleep in them every night.


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Why Blogger, Why Now?

Today is Tuesday, and in the land of World of Warcraft, that translates to "Patch Day".  Some Tuesdays, all the servers are down.  Today is one such day.

What's a girl to do on Patch Day?  Mess with her blog, of course.

So, I go in to my Wordpress blog and start trying to accomplish some of the things I haven't gotten around to while Mom's been in the hospital and I notice that I don't have all the options I remember having on my old Wordpress blog.  This confuses me, so I do what any girl would do and I start Google-ing.  Apparently, the free blogs have a good many limits on what you can do or add to your blog unless you know a lot of html code, which I don't.  So, here I am on Blogger after a morning of frustration.

I almost went to Blogger when I first came back to blogging, but decided to go ahead to Wordpress because of the options I thought I would have there.  Now, I wish I had.

I suppose it's as long as it wide right now since I haven't been able to do much blogging since Mom when in the hospital.  Better to get it done now than to wait until I built a following again.

So, this is just a little explanation post.  Stay tuned for my ACTUAL Valentine's Day post!

Love, light and happiness...until next time!
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Back To Basics


I think a lot of women reach a point in their lives, after the children are grown and off living their own lives, when they take a look around and go “WTF? Is this really my life??”
Well I’ve hit that place.
I’ve been married twice (this time for 16 years), raised a daughter, and done absolutely nothing with my life for myself.
It seems like my whole life has been lived for others. First, for my parents, then for my daughter and two husbands.
Recently, I realized that as I close in on 40, I’m still living my life for others.
My husband now is one of the few people in my life that even comes close to knowing the real me. He’s always known my true dreams. The only thing I ever really wanted to do.
Recently, he’s started pushing me to go after that dream. To pursue my passion. Gotta love him for that.
I guess by now, you’re wondering what my passion is, right?
Animals.
I’ve always been an animal lover. While my friends were dreaming of being astronauts, doctors, presidents, I was dreaming of being a vet.
Unfortunately, the closest college for that is in another state, and we’re not willing to relocate, but 2 of the local technical colleges offer courses to be a vet tech, and that’s good enough for me.
I haven’t enrolled yet since I’m sorting out a few other complications in my life first (like getting our own place again), but I’m hoping to be in the fall classes this year.
Animals will be something I talk about a lot on here. My own (when I get my own place again where I can have them), other people’s, rescues.
School will also be a hot-topic once I get in classes, I’m sure.
I’ll also talk about my past, my husband whom I love endlessly, my daughter, my family and my current dead-end job.
I’m sure I’ll participate in a few memes as well and I might even share some recipes.
All of the things that define who I am, who I’m becoming. All the moments that are redefining my life.
Love, light and happiness…until next time.
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