June 15, 2008

  • Sad that Tim Russert has passed on, he was only 3 years older than me.  He was definitely an icon in the news field!

    We had a small storm pass through last night, but the winds and lightning were great.  My flowers-luckily-are all safe.  Have had the screens fixed from a past storm, but the outer glass panes are still broken.

    Our kitten, Miley, is chasing her foil ball around and in the fringes of a shawl, that hangs from my grandmother’s rocking chair-she is so cute, and very lovable.

    Not much new here, but I am excited to start job training the end of July!  I will also take a clay class for 4 weeks, starting next Tues.  We’ll be making a fountain!  Cant’ wait to get my hands into the clay.  A friend of mine is taking it with me.

    Our pool is not yet ready, the maintenance staff has been trying to get lights working.  If you ask me, I think it’s much more important to get a heater in the darn thing, than to have stupid lights!  I won’t go swimming, as the water stays too cool.  What a disappointment.

    I have purchased quite a few movies and cds in the last several months-now I need to take some time out to watch/listen to them.  I am so apt to save them for a ‘rainy day’, but I have to just stop that, and take the time!

    Hope everyone is well and happy?!!

    I love you!!



    Happy Father’s Day!

June 2, 2008

  • We had a huge storm here, on Saturday.
    (Minneapolis, MN).
    I did not take any pictures, but the storm was pretty scary.
    We had 1-3/4″ hail sailing right at all of my windows–2″ of the stuff!
    My dining room window and bedroom window are broken,
    and I lost some flowers.  I think it was straight-line winds, and we
    did have a tornado warning.  The pool, parking lot and ground are covered in tons of leaves.  I am no wimp when it comes to storms, in fact I love most of them, but this was
    pretty bad.  There is some hail damage to vehicles, too.

    I almost went downstairs to protect myself, but instead braved it out.  The
    cats were meowing and upset.  What a big, horrible mess!

    Saw this online today, made me sad…

    Bo Diddley dies at age 79.
    He was definitely a pioneer in the music business-
    sad to see him go.

    Here is a recent picture of my daughter.  She is now working about 2 days per week
    at Jamba Juice, and she loves it!

    Need to update on our newest cat, but need to get the pictures off of the camera first!

    Here is some really cool music!

    J.S. Bach: The Four Lute Suites
    John Williams
    1975

    One of the 20th century’s most beloved classical guitarists,
    John Williams is also one of the most versatile, having played everything from
    baroque cello transcriptions to contemporary avant-garde music and rock fusion.
    An artistic nomad he may be, but Williams sounds like he’s found a resting place
    in his recordings of Bach’s four lute suites. These are far from the best-known
    works in Bach’s massive canon, and it isn’t entirely clear which stringed
    instrument Bach had in mind when he composed them in the early 1700s; certainly
    not the classical guitar, which hadn’t yet been invented. Yet Bach’s
    compositional genius rings out of the quivering strings and resonant wood of
    Williams’ guitar in interpretations so deeply felt that every arcing melody,
    every chord voicing becomes a thing of quiet profundity.

    A meandering
    single-note figure opens the “Praeludium-Presto” section of Bach’s Lute Suite in
    E minor. It’s an inauspicious beginning to a suite that contains both rich
    harmonies and complicated, interwoven rhythmic lines. Williams internalizes
    Bach’s entire compositional breadth though, playing both the “Sarabande”
    section’s free-form rhythms and the famous “Bourrée”‘s rigid counterpoint with
    spellbinding clarity. The “Gigue-Double” movement of Bach’s Lute Suite in A
    minor could be a virtuoso showpiece; here, Williams articulates its constant
    stream of 16th notes with the litheness of a dancer, twirling and darting around
    the steady pulse of a strutting companion.

    There’s light-heartedness to
    the Suite in E, and it’s more than just the piece’s major key. The “Loure” is
    tender and slow, with wide-open chords radiating like angelic harp strumming.
    Imaginary noblemen and their ladies chatter and flirt over “Gavotte en Rondeau,”
    which feels like the accompaniment to an afternoon garden party with its
    delightful recurring theme. It’s a world far removed from the stately sadness of
    the Suite in A minor, transcribed from an earlier suite for solo cello. The
    “Allemande” is all crisp phrases and subtle ornamentation, summoning images of
    stiff-collared dukes glaring haughtily at one another. And dread pervades the
    spare “Sarabande,” sapping it of its connection to the traditional dance
    form—this is still, contemplative music. In Williams’ hands, each movement of
    Bach’s lute suites has its own internal psychology. These pieces breathe and
    weep, every detail echoing long after the guitar strings have stopped vibrating.

    Listen to all
    sound clips from this CD

  • “Lute Suite in E minor – Bourrée”
  • “Lute Suite in E minor – Gavotte en Rondeau”
  • “Lute Suite in A minor – Sarabande”
  • Buy this
    CD

    I have doctor’s appts coming up; the foot doctor wants to remove the 2nd toenail on each foot, as they are curled up tight, and I might get some ortho shoes, as my ankles lean in, when I walk.  I have to have cholesterol and glucose tests done.  I am ‘borderline’ diabetic, so I have been putting off that test.  Diabetes runs in my biological father’s history.

    That’s it from this front!

    I love you!!

May 29, 2008

  • Busy, busy, busy!!

    Son and family left on Tuesday, to head back to Hawaii,
    after having had a month off.  Sad to see them go, but
    that’s life!

    Been a little bit sick-cough and nasal stuff, but it’s slowly getting better.
    The first day of it, all I did was sleep.  It’s going around, I guess.

    I bought a new shredder (last 2 jammed up on me), and a new stereo.
    New stereos no longer have cassettes, but I have an older one that
    will play them!

    Here is a cd that is worth listening to, I played the short ones, and was transported!

    Quiet Earth
    Kamal

    1993

    Unpretentious, naturalist, and starkly transcendent, Australian
    composer Kamal’s instrumental albums have been quietly moving listeners for
    decades. Suitable for everything from the holistic healing table to the beach on
    a sunny day or driving home into a blazing sunset, Kamal’s music works from the
    inside out, bypassing your conscious mind altogether, speaking the subliminal
    language of the unconscious, where nature, earth, sky, and man’s soul are as
    intertwined as the roots of a big oak tree. Originally released in 1993,
    Quiet Earth is a gently coasting series of glistening ambient
    works—recalling the early minimalist work of Brian Eno and Harold Budd—with
    smooth glaciers of synthesizers gradually drifting into sunny vistas of flutes
    and chimes. Probably best known for his work with whale song, here Kamal takes
    what he’s learned from their sonic explorations, creating soundscapes of such
    organic fluidity that they same less composed than recorded in the field and by!
    ears attuned to the deeply subliminal messages of the earth.

    A student
    of harmonics and organic pitches, Kamal’s music has inarguable power. You don’t
    remember quite when you started to fall under its sway. A few minutes in and
    your heart may have slowed and your breathing relaxed as the rhythms and
    harmonics of the earth bring your nervous system away from the grind of
    civilization and back to the mellow perfection of nature. The title track is a
    fine example; gradually coalescing in and out of a series of chimes, the cycles
    of ambient synthesizer mimic the gentle spray of water against rocks, the
    circling of birds, the slow ripples along the surface, barely marring the
    perfect image of the sky reflected with its clear-blue emptiness and fast-moving
    clouds.

    “The Tides of Time” builds from a slowly cycling chime arpeggio
    and eventually morphs into the breathtaking, full melodic vista of “Healing,”
    (an extra track, rich in strings and shooting-star synths, not on the original
    1993 album). The fifth track, “Meeresleuchten” (German for “shine of the sea”)
    wraps things up in a nice, bubbly package. The clouds we’ve been gliding on all
    through the album at last coalesce into rain falling back into the ocean. Misty
    spray washes through the nerve-soothing chime cascades, and every last bit of
    stress evaporates in the rainbow above. Calm, relaxed, and renewed, we return to
    the place from which we came, ready for more of that day-to-day human grind,
    knowing Kamal is always there to slowly, patiently bring us home again.

    Listen to all
    sound clips from this CD

  • “The Quiet Earth”
  • “The Tides of Time”
  • “Meerleuchten”
  • Buy this
    CD

      Have you read the DailyOM
    Book?

    Click here to post a review of it, or read what other people have
    to say

    It’s cloudy here today, but I love the rain, it will nurture my morning glories and coleus and pansies and rose bush.  Can’t wait until they bloom, but I have heard it takes 2 years before roses will bloom.  I bought a new camera and need to take some pictures!

    A couple of jokes…

    The Dentist pulls out a 
    freezing needle to give the
     Man a shot.   ‘No way!  No needles! I hate 
    needles,’ the patient said.
    The Dentist starts to hook up
    the  laughing gas and
    The man objects. ‘I can’t  do the gas thing. The
    thought of  having the gas mask on  is suffocating  me!’ 
     
    The Dentist
    then asks the patient if  he has any
     Objection to taking a pill. ’No
    objection,’ the patient says.  ‘I’m fine
    with pills.’
    The Dentist then returns and
    says, ‘Here’s a Viagra 
    Tablet.’ The patient says, ‘Wow! I didn’t  know
    Viagra worked
    As a pain  killer!’ 
     
    ‘It doesn’t,’ said the Dentist,
    ‘but  it will give you something to hold onto when I pull your 
    tooth.’

    BEST “HEADACHE” JOKE EVER!!!!!

      A husband emerged from the
    bathroom naked and was climbing into bed
     when

      His wife
    complained, as usual, “I have a headache.”

     
    “Perfect,” her husband said.” I was just in the bathroom powdering

     my

      Penis with crushed
    aspirin.

     You can
    take it orally, or as a suppository, it’s up to you.”

    LOL!!

    I love you!!

May 16, 2008

  • I am doing great, just remaining pretty busy!
    My son and daughter-in-law, and their 3 boys are in town, from Hawaii!
    Going out to lunch with them today.  Can’t wait to see them-it’s been a year-and-a-half, or so!

    I haven’t had my interview yet, as the woman who was going to interview me, was called away on a family emergency.  Hope all is well with her, and that we get to meet pretty soon!

    The weather here has been lovely, today, it will be up around 77!!
    Need to get my planting done.  My good friend, Sharon, lent me a couple of planters, so I can get my Morning Glories started.  I also want to plant a rose bush in a container.  Might even plant some petunias or something.

    Hope you all have a great Friday, and a wonderful weekend!!

    I love you!!

May 3, 2008

  • Hi all!
    Keeping busy doing all sorts of things-like putting a table and 2 chairs together,
    and other appts. for me and my daughter. 

    It’s a beautiful day here, sunny and bright-puts me in the mood for spring cleaning!
    Have lots to do.

    How is it in your world?!


    Elder’s Meditation of the Day –
    May 3
    “But I have learned a lot from trees: sometimes about the
    weather, sometimes about animals, sometimes about the Great Spirit.”
    –Walking Buffalo, STONEY
    Nature is the greatest teacher on the Earth. Nature produces many
    different plants, animals, trees, rocks, birds, insects and weather patterns.
    Nature designed all these various things to grow and multiply while at the same
    time live in harmony with each other. We can learn a lot of we observe and study
    Nature’s system of harmony and balance. Today, go sit on a rock and quietly
    observe and ask to be shown the lessons.

    Great Spirit, Nature is my teacher. Today, let me be the
    student.

    If Only
    Locating The Underlying
    Cause

    Often, when we’re unhappy, we fall into the habit of thinking
    that, if only one or two particular things in our life would change, everything
    would be fine. We might focus on the fact that we need a new car, or a raise, or
    a change in our living situation. We dwell on this one thing and strategize, or
    complain, or daydream about what it would be like to have it. Meanwhile,
    underneath the surface, the real reason for our unhappiness sits unrecognized
    and unaddressed. And yet, if we are able to locate and explore the underlying
    cause of our discontent, all the surface concerns have a way of working
    themselves out in the light of our realization.

    Maybe we really do just
    need a new car, and maybe moving to another city would improve our life
    situation. However, it can only help to take some time to explore what’s going
    on at a deeper level. Sometimes, when we take a moment and stop focusing on
    external concerns, we get to the heart of the matter. We might realize that all
    our lives we’ve been dissatisfied, grasping at one thing after another, only to
    be dissatisfied about something else once we get what we want. Or perhaps we’ll
    notice a pattern of running away from a place, or a relationship, when things
    get too hard. We might then wonder why this keeps happening, and how we might
    work through the difficulty rather than just escaping it. The point is, slowing
    down and turning our attention within can save us a lot of energy in the long
    run, because it is very often the case that there is no external change that
    will make us happy.

    Once you’ve taken the time to inquire within, you
    can begin to make changes that address the deeper issue. This can be hard at
    first, especially if you’ve grown used to grasping for outside sources in order
    to quell your discontent, but in the end, you will be solving the problem at a
    deeper level, and it will be much less likely to recur.

    Hugh Masekela Presents the Chisa Years
    1965-1975

    Hugh Masekela
    2005

    Having scored with his 1968 instrumental, “Grazing in the
    Grass,” and his blazing number at the Monterey Pop festival, Hugh Masekela was
    an in-demand producer who too often found himself turning out watered-down
    versions of the steamy Afro-fusion he longed to create. Chisa Records was
    Masekela’s own small label, his chance to break out on his own, to create and
    market the spirited African-pop sound that would one day fall into the catch-all
    category of World Beat music. Hugh Masekela Presents the Chisa Years,
    then, is a collection of unreleased tracks and B-sides from the label’s heyday,
    and the stuff on display here ranges from rock-steady proto-acid jazz to buoyant
    African-pop, the wellspring from which would one day come Paul Simon’s
    Graceland, and so many others.

    The most energetic band here is the
    amazing Baranta, which rocks a steady Afro-pop vibe with a twin guitar
    effect—one doing a low-end wah-wah and the other in full fuzz mode. Vocalist
    Miatta Fahinbulleh belts out high-end African lyrics, soaring over a waterfall
    cascade chorus on the manic “Tepo,” and there’s an incredible fuzz freak-out
    guitar solo in the middle of “A Cheeka Laka Laka.” During this last song,
    Fahinbulleh sings out in English for celebration of the unity between Africans
    and countercultural northerners: “The blackbird is calling for justice / The
    white bird is calling for peace.” A muscle-heavy backing-vocal harmony mixes
    with chugging, spacey guitar to fuse the two spirits even more closely together.

    The most instantly funky and irresistible track here, though, will
    likely be “Afro-Beat Blues,” which features Masekela on horns and a nonstop,
    percolating soul-funk groove. The singing is low and half-spoken over crunchy
    guitar, drums, and a low and in-no-hurry heavy, throbbing bass that’s so tight
    and sanctified no amount of police or rioting could stop it. Masekela’s Chisa
    record imprint eventually folded up shop, but not before the 10-year run
    celebrated in high style on this worthy album. It’s a must for students of the
    global beat, fans of Masekela, and any intrepid explorer looking to shake those
    “Afro-Beat Blues.”

    Listen to all
    sound clips from this CD

  • “Afro-Beat Blues”
  • “Tepo”
  • “A Cheeka Laka Laka”
  • Buy this
    CD

    Ever wonder
    what happened to

    those cute and crazy hippie
    girls

    who did drugs in the
    60′s?….OR….

    What the ‘cool’ girls of today will

    look like in the
    future?

     

      

    On that note, I’ll end this!!

    I love you!!

April 26, 2008

  • Here it is, April 26th,
    and it’s snowing…
    not only that, but it’s staying on the green grass and trees…
    This is very unusual-it’s almost May for cripe’s sakes!
    I won’t take a picture, it’s too depressing!

    I have been busy getting all sorts of tests and x-rays done-not because there’s anything crucially wrong, but I do have arthritis.  I won’t bore you with all of the tests, but I still have to get my glucose and cholesterol done.  I’m slightly anemic and have chronic fatigue syndrome-not much energy here.  I’m a little worried about the chest x-ray, as I’ve been a smoker for many years.  I am not ready to quit, so don’t preach to me–I know the dangers.

    Our little kitty has sure grown–I will take a picture, once I’ve figured out where my daughter has put the camera!  I think she borrowed it again, without asking.
    The cats still fight and scrap with each other, but hoping kitty (Milee) outgrows it soon.

    I haven’t been around to your ‘places’, I have much making up to do.  I apologize and hope you’ll still be my friends!?!

    This is what I want to see!!

    Hope you’re all having a pleasant weekend!  I’m going to go to the Goodwill today and shop around, then tomorrow will go with another friend, to see a movie!  Any recommendations?!

    I’ll leave you with something off the top of my head–my muse has been so silent…

    She weeps
    from the depth of being
    with realization
    of what she cannot have

    She pulls
    herself together
    with realization
    of another life, another day

    She cries
    in joy, of all around her
    with realization
    of all she has missed

    She sees
    the moon rise
    in realization
    of what she knows…

    She rises
    wipes her skirts
    in realization
    of all the work ahead

    Blessed life!

    I love you!!

April 22, 2008

  • Pictures


    Huge rosary, art creation


    A working vehicle


    Elephant polo, in Thailand


    Famous ferris wheel for sale, in Santa Monica

    My interview is on Wednesday, May 7th!!
    Hope I get this job, and other projects coming up, after November!

    Have a great Tudesday!!


    Why people in Colorado don’t use trampolines!

April 19, 2008

  • I graduated from DBT!!
    No more Wednesdays and Fridays from 9 to 11:50 am!

    My brother and sister-in-law took me here

    for dinner!  Had the famous Monte Christo sandwich—mmm, good!
    They have wonderful French Onion soup.  For dessert I had the Brownie thing.
    They have Death by Chocolate, but it sounded like a little much!  I brought half of the sandwich home.  We had a great time.  Trisha’s cousins Scott and Brian came along,
    as well as Brian’s girlfriend, Anne.  It was really busy on a Friday night.

    Goddess Chants
    by Padma
    Previ

    2005

    A talented singer from the West who discovered her inner passion
    for yoga as a young visitor to Mumbai, Padma Previ is the best sort of New Age
    music artist. Never straying too far into either the earthly or purely spiritual
    realm, she offers a hand on either side of the veil, mixing down-to-earth
    vibrancy with crystalline beauty, the music of a true dweller on the threshold,
    a trickster dancer in the flame who brings earth to sky and sky to earth.
    Goddess Chants functions as a heart-soothing backdrop to one’s earthbound
    life, organically steering its listeners to their inner centers of calm, while
    still (sort of) rocking out on occasion.

    That rocking out you can hear
    best in sinuously, slow, and gyrating jams like “Ganairindrasya,” a heady mix of
    Indian, Middle Eastern, and—if you let your headphones take you deep
    enough—1970s Western rock flavors. Deep bass, psychedelic sitars, crashing
    cymbals, and fading echoes of Gobi desert winds provide the Bolero-style
    backdrop for the sexy and mystical vocalizations, which are Previ’s unique gift
    to the world. Under the knowing third eye and ear of producer J. Deere, the
    sound is full and rich throughout the soundscape. (He got his start producing
    Australian didgeridoo music, which is renowned for posing challenges in bass
    reproduction.)

    Similarly sexy is the opening track, “Om Shri Rama,”
    which carries Previ’s vocals into your speakers on an ornate caravan of moog
    synths, buzzing tamboura, and drum cymbal thunder. This relatively devotional
    chanting gives way to a more Westernized melody with “Om Shrim Swaha,” which
    opens on an eerie, childlike melody. Gradually, layers of Previ’s vocals slide
    in as glittering shadows in the dark, and the gongs and cymbals keep crashing,
    keep breaking up the inertialike accrual of ego and obsession. What Padma Previ
    has on Goddess Chants is one anklet-adorned foot in the genuine mystic,
    the raw archetypal energy that precedes symbols and language—and one without.
    With the help of some friends, she opens the doorway into our own possibility
    and hangs there, waiting for us to cross over or back when we would like,
    comforting like a mother, beguiling like a lover, and yearning like a seeker of
    the truth beyond all these illusory differences.

    Listen to all
    sound clips from this CD

  • “Om Shri Rama”
  • “Om Shrim Swaha”
  • “Ganairindrasya”
  • Buy this
    CD

    Still waiting for the woman in Human Services, to set up an ‘overview’ for the data
    processing job I’ve mentioned before.  I am certainly anxious to find out more,
    and to know if I will be hired for the project!  I will let you know as I hear…

    Earthquakes in Tennessee?  Yes, this one occurred in Lawrenceberg.

    Enjoy your weekends, as best you can!
    Remember, happiness comes from within,
    not from things!

    I love you!!


April 17, 2008

  • Sorry, I’ve been busy!
    Hope to put up a blog this weekend.

    Love to all of you!

April 14, 2008

  • Up to 56 today, and in the 70′s tomorrow–yaaaaay!!
    It’s about freaking time.

    Our kitten, Milee, is a mischief-maker!
    She spotted a tampon in a drawer and proceeded
    to run off with it-lol!  I finally got it away from  her
    before she damaged it!

    I did get signed up with the Senior Center,
    they have so many activities, including trips!
    Painting, ceramics, exercise, trips, computer help,
    etc., etc!  I am a young-looking 55 year old, so I qualified.
    Seems weird.

    Solace In Service
    Doing For
    Others

    When we feel bad, often our first instinct is to isolate
    ourselves and focus on what’s upsetting us. Sometimes we really do need some
    downtime, but many times the best way to get out of the blues quickly is to turn
    our attention to other people. In being of service to others, paradoxically, we
    often find answers to our own questions and solutions to our own problems. We
    also end up feeling more connected to the people around us, as well as empowered
    by the experience of helping someone.

    When we reach out to people we can
    help, we confirm that we are not alone in our own need for support and
    inspiration, and we also remind ourselves that we are powerful and capable in
    certain ways. Even as our own problems or moods get the better of us sometimes,
    there is always someone else who can use our particular gifts and energy to help
    them out. They, in turn, remind us that we are not the only people in the world
    with difficulties or issues. We all struggle with the problems of life, and we
    all feel overwhelmed from time to time, but we can almost always find solace in
    service.

    In the most ideal situation, the person we are helping sheds
    light on our own dilemma, sometimes with a direct piece of advice, and sometimes
    without saying anything at all. Sometimes just the act of getting our minds out
    of the obsessive mode of trying to figure out what to do about our own life does
    the trick. Many great inventors and artists have found that the inspiration they
    need to get to the next level in their work comes not when they’re working but
    when they’re walking around the block or doing dishes. We do ourselves and
    everyone else a great service when we take a break from our sorrows and extend
    ourselves to someone in need.

                                                                 

    I love you!!