We are getting ready to wind our way "home" to Pennsylvania, to spend some holiday time with my family. The van is packed, the dog has been bathed, the presents are wrapped and the kids are scrubbed.....we are ready to go. We are just waiting on Dave to make it home from work and then we can leave!! It will be about an 8-9 hour trip, so we won't get there in too much of a big hurry. Most all of us will be together this year. The only one missing will be my niece Alicia and my nephew Randy Jr. It has been such a long time since we have all been together. It promises to be a fun chaotic time!!!! I will post pictures when we return!!!
Thursday, December 27, 2007
Monday, December 24, 2007
To All
A very Merry Christmas to each of you.......my friends and family!! I wish for you peace and joy during this holiday season and into the New Year.
Saturday, December 15, 2007
Libby's first recital
Libby's first recital was Thursday evening. She has just started taking lessons this school year and this was the first ever for her. She played the "Twinkles" with two other little girls, and then did a solo, "Jingle Bells". I was so proud of her, I thought she did very well for a new student. I always wanted to play a violin, but did the flute and piano instead, so I guess she is living my dream!! Anyway, just thought I would brag a little, guess I can do that since this is my blog!!
Florida was Wonderful!!!!
Yep.....unfortunately I am now back in Indiana, just in time for a snowstorm!!!! The hospital sent me to Orlando for a huge (7000 people) Quality Improvement conference. The conference was really good and I learned so much but the weather was even better!!!! It was so nice and warm and not one cloud could be found in the beautiful blue sky!! Then on Wednesday night reality hit, and I came back to the freezing cold, grey Indiana winter!!! We are now in the middle of a snowstorm and church has been canceled for tomorrow!!! Wish I was back in Florida!!! The picture is one I took of the park all decorated for Christmas...wish it was palm trees decorated instead!!!
Saturday, December 1, 2007
Past......and the not so past

Well, yesterday we celebrated sixteen years together!!! It really has gone very fast and its hard to imagine our lives any other way!! I thought you might like to see pics of us then.....we sure have changed...... now a little older and a little wiser ........... hopefully!!! I think we look so young!!! Jordan got the "now" picture.....we just got done from a day of crazy Christmas shopping........ so we look a little weary!!!! Sorry about the pic quality, it is a picture of a picture.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
My idea of Christmas housecleaning!!!!
HOW TO CLEAN THE HOUSE
1. Open a new file in your PC .
2. Name it "Housework."
3. Send it to the RECYCLE BIN.
4. Empty the RECYCLE BIN.
5. Your PC will ask you, "Are you sure you want To delete Housework permanently?"
6. Calmly answer, "Yes," and press mouse button firmly.....
7. Feel better?
Works for me!

Friday, November 16, 2007
Thanksgiving Post
I found this Thanksgiving article, and thought it very thought provoking. Hope you enjoy it too.
Dressing Down Thankfulness by Brendan Bruce
Novemeber 15, 2007
As turkey day approaches and we’re reminded to count our blessings and be thankful for anything and everything, it’s important to remember why we’re thankful. First of all, I’m biased a bit in that I believe we should be thankful towards someone (i.e. God… you know, he invented turkey and all the trimmings in the first place) instead of just roaming around in a tryptophan-induced haze of general thankfulness towards all.
Take our trendily dressed ancestors, the Pilgrims, for instance. After barely surviving in the new world, they sat down to a sparse meal of items they brought to the table by their own hands. They hunted the bird, picked the berries, grew the veggies and managed to defend their families from Indian attacks, cholera and small belt buckles. The most dangerous work the modern pilgrim faces is fighting through the Sam’s Club parking lot and figuring out one of those do-it-yourself credit card machines in the checkout. Our turkeys come dressed, plucked, stuffed and with a magic button that pops out of its chest to tell you it’s done and dinner is served. Kids, in the “old days” turkeys came home covered with feathers and still had a head.
A few hundred years later, the fashions had changed a little, but putting a meal on the table was still pretty much the same. The typical American would sit down to a dinner still cobbled together from whatever was grown out in the yard or hunted in the woods. I know people today who couldn’t put a meal on the table that didn’t come out of a box or wasn’t wrapped in the latest logo of a fast food chain if you held their cell phone ransom.
It wasn’t too long ago that microwaves weren’t part of the typical kitchen either. People did things the long way: churned their butter, milked cows, and drank Sanka! My great grandmother used to make a batch of biscuits in a giant bowl made from a hunk of tree by simply pouring the milk directly into that white stuff you make biscuits out of (someone tells me it’s called flour). I’ve tried to keep up the tradition and for the past three weekends in a row, I’ve whacked a round can on the edge of the counter and made biscuits too, sorry granny.
I don’t mean to disparage technology or imply the Americans of today are necessarily lazy. What I do mean to say is with all this convenience and ease, it’s easy to say “Boy, I’m thankful for the cordless vac – I can clean up the dirt from the floor mats of my SUV after soccer practice.” Hardly what our forefathers meant when they got together and planned the first Thanksgiving Day parade and lobbied for a two-day holiday. They were thankful to the Almighty for leaving a few of them around for one more year; realizing that His providence alone had spared them through the long, cold winter, a grueling summer and another football season without cable TV.
Think of the last time someone gave you a fur-lined ice scraper or a pound of coffee beans costing more than a Guatemalan family makes in a year. Did you sit amidst the shredded wrapping paper musing to yourself and those around you about how thankful you felt or did you hop up and hug Uncle Charlie and thank him over the sound of the football game? You thanked the person, right? Instead of encouraging everyone this year to “Be Thankful,” why not just say “Thank Him?”
As you’re laid out on the couch this Thanksgiving, your belly strained to the breaking point, a bony carcass of a once proud bird drying on the table and in-laws piled around like firewood, take a moment to think of the past. Think of what is was like for those who started this palate-pleasing tradition. It wasn’t about the goodies of life, the 401k rebounding or plastic wrap that clings like polyester pants on a cold winter day. Thanksgiving was directed heavenward for the blessings of another year, another crop and a land where opportunity was as boundless as the wilderness to their backs.
Dressing Down Thankfulness by Brendan Bruce
Novemeber 15, 2007
As turkey day approaches and we’re reminded to count our blessings and be thankful for anything and everything, it’s important to remember why we’re thankful. First of all, I’m biased a bit in that I believe we should be thankful towards someone (i.e. God… you know, he invented turkey and all the trimmings in the first place) instead of just roaming around in a tryptophan-induced haze of general thankfulness towards all.
Take our trendily dressed ancestors, the Pilgrims, for instance. After barely surviving in the new world, they sat down to a sparse meal of items they brought to the table by their own hands. They hunted the bird, picked the berries, grew the veggies and managed to defend their families from Indian attacks, cholera and small belt buckles. The most dangerous work the modern pilgrim faces is fighting through the Sam’s Club parking lot and figuring out one of those do-it-yourself credit card machines in the checkout. Our turkeys come dressed, plucked, stuffed and with a magic button that pops out of its chest to tell you it’s done and dinner is served. Kids, in the “old days” turkeys came home covered with feathers and still had a head.
A few hundred years later, the fashions had changed a little, but putting a meal on the table was still pretty much the same. The typical American would sit down to a dinner still cobbled together from whatever was grown out in the yard or hunted in the woods. I know people today who couldn’t put a meal on the table that didn’t come out of a box or wasn’t wrapped in the latest logo of a fast food chain if you held their cell phone ransom.
It wasn’t too long ago that microwaves weren’t part of the typical kitchen either. People did things the long way: churned their butter, milked cows, and drank Sanka! My great grandmother used to make a batch of biscuits in a giant bowl made from a hunk of tree by simply pouring the milk directly into that white stuff you make biscuits out of (someone tells me it’s called flour). I’ve tried to keep up the tradition and for the past three weekends in a row, I’ve whacked a round can on the edge of the counter and made biscuits too, sorry granny.
I don’t mean to disparage technology or imply the Americans of today are necessarily lazy. What I do mean to say is with all this convenience and ease, it’s easy to say “Boy, I’m thankful for the cordless vac – I can clean up the dirt from the floor mats of my SUV after soccer practice.” Hardly what our forefathers meant when they got together and planned the first Thanksgiving Day parade and lobbied for a two-day holiday. They were thankful to the Almighty for leaving a few of them around for one more year; realizing that His providence alone had spared them through the long, cold winter, a grueling summer and another football season without cable TV.
Think of the last time someone gave you a fur-lined ice scraper or a pound of coffee beans costing more than a Guatemalan family makes in a year. Did you sit amidst the shredded wrapping paper musing to yourself and those around you about how thankful you felt or did you hop up and hug Uncle Charlie and thank him over the sound of the football game? You thanked the person, right? Instead of encouraging everyone this year to “Be Thankful,” why not just say “Thank Him?”
As you’re laid out on the couch this Thanksgiving, your belly strained to the breaking point, a bony carcass of a once proud bird drying on the table and in-laws piled around like firewood, take a moment to think of the past. Think of what is was like for those who started this palate-pleasing tradition. It wasn’t about the goodies of life, the 401k rebounding or plastic wrap that clings like polyester pants on a cold winter day. Thanksgiving was directed heavenward for the blessings of another year, another crop and a land where opportunity was as boundless as the wilderness to their backs.
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