Friday, August 15, 2008

Still celebrating my birthday

My ever encouraging brother Mike posted the words to this song in a happy birthday message to me on our family blog.
Rather than recopy the lyrics I thought you might just enjoy a video montage from youtube with Weird Al's Happy Birthday song.
But if you want to read the lyrics click >>here<<.

So Happy Birthday to me!

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Happy Birthday to Me!

I'm Ba-ack!
I'm so sorry my posting has sucked the last week.
All but about 3 of my regular readers, who I didn't see or talk to during the last week, will allready know that I didn't post because I was busy on a trip to Utah to see my home, my family, and celebrate my birthday!
Now I am back with about 88 pictures to post.
So let me start with pics from my birthday party.
This was my first birthday at Home (my parents house, where I grew up) in about 13 years.

One family tradition is that when it's your birthday you get to pick the menu.

So I asked my amazing husband to make Cajun Chicken Penne. We also had garlic bread, salad, corn on the cob and jello fluffy stuff.

This is Chris (my amazing husband) and my sister-in-law Niki finishing up making the punch.

We had about 30 guests, (half were children) so we set up tables in the back yard in the shade of the walnut tree.

I am older than that walnut tree. I can't believe it has grown enough to shade most of the yard.

My Mom Nancy, our friend Janice, and Niki enjoying the meal. CJ and Mark with their cousins, playing in the neighbor's yard.

Another tradition is the red plate for the birthday girl (or boy).

And my favorite foods, yum!

My sister Carrie, her husband Karl, and some of the younguns.

My best friend Holly showing me the gift she made me. With Mark on my lap ready to eat my (Coldstone) cake.

My awesome husband Chris and Me with my birthday crown and boa.

It was a great birthday party.

Saturday, August 9, 2008

Yes, I'm alive

I'm just very busy. Here are a few pictures that CJ and Mark have taken while on their trip with their grandparents. At Martins Cove where a lot of pioneers , including one of our great great great aunts, died. The Hard Rock Cafe (Somewhere). At Niagra Falls. At the beginning of the trip at the Hill Cumorah Pageant. By the Hill Cumorah monument. Playing at a Park near Palmyra. There are pictures of Mount Rushmore too, but I'll post those when I find them again. -Della

Tuesday, August 5, 2008

Because I have nothing else to post....

I searched Youtube for an hour trying to find something entertaining to post.
Alas, youtube failed me.
There were many funny things, but few that were appropriate and under 2 minutes with reasonable acceptable video quality.
So this is what we ended up with.
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Forgive me.
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Sunday, August 3, 2008

Sunday Post

This sunday's post is an excerpt from the Article "May We So Live" in this Month's Ensign by President Thomas S. Monson.
Chris is giving the Elders Quorum lesson on this article this week.
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Because life is fragile and death inevitable, we must make the most of each day.
There are many ways in which we can misuse our opportunities. Some time ago I read a tender story written by Louise Dickinson Rich which vividly illustrates this truth. She wrote:
“My grandmother had an enemy named Mrs. Wilcox.
Grandma and Mrs. Wilcox moved, as brides, into next-door houses on the main street of the tiny town in which they were to live out their lives. I don’t know what started the war between them—and I don’t think that by the time I came along, over thirty years later, they remembered themselves what started it. This was no polite sparring match; this was total war.
“Nothing in town escaped repercussion. The 300-year-old church, which had lived through the Revolution, the Civil War, and the Spanish War, almost went down when Grandma and Mrs. Wilcox fought the Battle of the Ladies’ Aid. Grandma won that engagement, but it was a hollow victory. Mrs. Wilcox, since she couldn’t be president, resigned [from the Aid] in a huff. What’s the fun of running a thing if you can’t force your enemy to eat crow?
Mrs. Wilcox won the Battle of the Public Library, getting her niece, Gertrude, appointed librarian instead of Aunt Phyllis. The day Gertrude took over was the day Grandma stopped reading library books. They became ‘filthy germy things’ overnight.
The Battle of the High School was a draw. The principal got a better job and left before Mrs. Wilcox succeeded in having him ousted or Grandma in having him given life tenure of office.
“When as children we visited my grandmother, part of the fun was making faces at Mrs. Wilcox’s grandchildren. One banner day we put a snake into the Wilcox rain barrel. My grandmother made token protests, but we sensed tacit sympathy.
“Don’t think for a minute that this was a one-sided campaign. Mrs. Wilcox had grandchildren, too. Grandma didn’t get off scot free. Never a windy washday went by that the clothesline didn’t mysteriously break, with the clothes falling in the dirt.
“I don’t know how Grandma could have borne her troubles so long if it hadn’t been for the household page of her daily Boston newspaper. This household page was a wonderful institution. Besides the usual cooking hints and cleaning advice, it had a department composed of letters from readers to each other.
The idea was that if you had a problem—or even only some steam to blow off—you wrote a letter to the paper, signing some fancy name like Arbutus. That was Grandma’s pen name. Then some of the other ladies who had the same problem wrote back and told you what they had done about it, signing themselves One Who Knows or Xanthippe or whatever.
Very often, the problem disposed of, you kept on for years writing to each other through the column of the paper, telling each other about your children and your canning and your new dining-room suite. That’s what happened to Grandma. She and a woman called Sea Gull corresponded for a quarter of a century. Sea Gull was Grandma’s true friend.
“When I was about sixteen, Mrs. Wilcox died. In a small town, no matter how much you have hated your next-door neighbor, it is only common decency to run over and see what practical service you can do the bereaved. Grandma, neat in a percale apron to show that she meant what she said about being put to work, crossed the lawn to the Wilcox house, where the Wilcox daughters set her to cleaning the already-immaculate front parlor for the funeral. And there on the parlor table in the place of honor was a huge scrapbook; and in the scrapbook, pasted neatly in parallel columns were Grandma’s letters to Sea Gull over the years and Sea Gull’s letters to her. Though neither woman had known it, Grandma’s worst enemy had been her best friend.
That was the only time I remember seeing my grandmother cry. I didn’t know then exactly what she was crying about, but I do now. She was crying for all the wasted years which could never be salvaged.”
May we resolve from this day forward to fill our hearts with love. May we go the extra mile to include in our lives any who are lonely or downhearted or who are suffering in any way. May we “[cheer] up the sad and [make] someone feel glad.”
May we live so that when that final summons is heard, we may have no serious regrets, no unfinished business, but will be able to say with the Apostle Paul, “I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith.”

Saturday, August 2, 2008

What's more fun than a barrel of Monkeys?

A barrel of Screaming Slingshot Monkeys!
I got a box full of these in the mail yesterday as a birthday present.
(I think from Mike, though there wasn't a name on the package. But thanks.)
I've only had them for a day.
My dog is already terrified of them and my husband is already irritated by them.
Definitely a good present.
Tee Hee Hee.

Friday, August 1, 2008

Wisdom of Larrry the Cable Guy

1. A day without sunshine is like night.
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2. On the other hand, you have different fingers.
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3. 42.7 percent of all statistics are made up on the spot.
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4. 99 percent of lawyers give the rest a bad name.
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5. Remember, half the people you know are below average.
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6. He who laughs last, thinks slowest.
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7. Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm.
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8. The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese in the trap.
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9. Support bacteria. They're the only culture some people have.
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10. A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.
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11. Change is inevitable, except from vending machines.
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12. If you think nobody cares, try missing a couple of payments.
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13. How many of you believe in psycho-kinesis? Raise my hand.
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14. OK, so w hat's the speed of dark?
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15. When everything is coming your way, you're in the wrong lane.
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16. Hard work pays off in the future. Laziness pays off now.
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17. How much deeper would the ocean be without sponges?
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18. Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.
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19. What happens if you get scared half to death, twice?
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20. Why do psychics have to ask you your name?
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21. Inside every older person is a younger person wondering, 'What the hell happened?'
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22. Just remember -- if the world didn' t suck, we would all fall off.
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23. Light travels faster than sound.. That's why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.
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24. Life isn't like a box of chocolates, it's more like a jar of jalapenos. What you do today, might burn your ass tomorrow.

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