Microfiction Monday

Welcome to Microfiction Monday,
where a picture only paints 140 characters.

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Susan at Stony River has begun a Microfiction Monday wherein participants write a story in 140 characters based on a particular image that Susan has chosen for the day.  Design 215’s Character Counter helps keep track of the number of characters. It’s a fun exercise in creative conciseness…or concise creativity…

It’s funny how different people’s personalities come out in just 140 characters!

Here’s today’s picture and my story:

“Over the river and through the woods,” they had sung on the way to Grandma’s house. Stuffed and sleepy, they had a much quieter drive home.

Visit Susan’s for different takes on the picture, or to join in the fun yourself!

Notable quotes

I’m home from church with tummy troubles today, but thought I’d share some words of others that have spoken to me.

The first link between my soul and Christ is not my goodness but my badness, not my merit but my misery, not my riches but my need.
— Spurgeon
(Seen at Strength For Today)

It is hard to enter the kingdom of God–not because an angel is set to keep us out, not because God would surround Himself with a highly selected elite, but because the condition for admittance is renunciation of all other kingdoms.
— Elisabeth Elliot, A Lamp For My Feet

Be hard on yourself and easy on others. Carry your own cross but never lay one on the back of another.
–A.W. Tozer

Seek to cultivate a buoyant, joyous sense of the crowded kindnesses of God in your daily life.
–Alexander MacLaren

If, thinking of your frailty, you hold yourselves cheap, value yourselves by the price that was paid for you.
— St. Augustine

When God permits His children to go through the furnace, He keeps His eye on the clock and His hand on the thermostat. His loving heart knows how much and how long.
— Warren Wiersbe
(Saw this one on someone’s blog but neglected to note whose.)

After Thanksgiving

(My photo hunt picture is below.)

I forgot to mention earlier that traditionally my very kind husband takes over the task of getting all the meat off the turkey after the meal and then cleans the roasting pan for me. I am so grateful — by that point in the day I’m wearing out!

I also forgot to mention in my Fave Five’s that when Jim went to pick up his mom for Thanksgiving dinner, he had his little car with the sunroof open. I guess he had never had it open when she had been in that car before. When she noticed it, she looked up to see out of it better and said, “Hi, God!” Cracked us up.

Edited to add: Here’s my husband’s (much better) version of the story, sent to his family:

I picked mom up in my car which has a sunroof.  Mom loves clouds and she always notices them and tries to figure out what they reminder her of.  So on Thanksgiving when I picked her up, at first, she did not notice the open sunroof (remember she sees with only one eye).  When we turned and the sun shined in her lap she looked up through the open sun roof and exclaimed “Hey!”.  Her head dropped back down to look at the sunshine on her lap, like she was figuring it all out and she looked back up and said, “Hi God!”.  Maybe you had to be there and to hear her squeaky voice say it,  but it was really cute.  Perhaps as long as a Thanksgiving prayer needs to be.

I had a very refreshing lazy day Friday. It was nice after a busy previous couple of days. I stayed in my jammies til after lunch, mainly messing around on the computer.

I hadn’t planned to go out on Black Friday, but Michael’s had a good sale on some things I was interested in, so I ventured out in the late afternoon. It wasn’t bad at all. Not too crowded and everyone was fairly friendly. The cashier and the lady directly behind me and I hadn’t been out in the morning and had, in fact, slept in, so we were pretty fresh! I imagine all those who had been out at 4 or 5 a.m. were taking a nap — or wishing they could. Plus I had some gift cards saved from birthday and Mother’s Day, which took care of 4/5 of what I bought, most of which was 50-60% off. A good excursion!

When I got home I told Jim I had been planning on making turkey bone soup, unless he wanted to take me out. 🙂 Jeremy asked me if that was a threat. I told him, no, I only use tuna casserole for that. 😀 We ended up all going out to a Mexican food restaurant — LOVE their chicken chimichangas!

Overall I’d say I had a pretty good day!

So, it’s turkey bone soup tonight. It is my all time favorite after-Thanksgiving dish. Plus I want to get the turkey carcass out of the refrigerator.

I’m not sure what all else is on the agenda for today besides a little laundry. I probably should sit down and make a game plan so I don’t waste spend another day being lazy. Two lazy days in a row would probably be even more indulgent.

Hope you have a great Saturday!

Saturday Photo Scavenger Hunt: Technology

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Theme: Technology | Become a Photo Hunter

We’re a family of techno-geeks. The males are, at least, and I am mighty glad to have people in the house who can figure these things out and show me what to do with them. I could have gone any number of directions with this, but when I walked into Jeremy’s room and saw him sorting through and organizing his technological “stuff” — while using his iPhone and having both his desktop, laptop, and cell phone at the ready — I thought this would be perfect for today.

You can’t use technology without the means to plug it in to a power source!

TN Chick is our Saturday Photo Hunt hostess: you can find there links to others’ interpretation of this week’s theme or join in the fun yourself.

Friday’s Fave Five

FFF fall leaves 2

Susanne at Living to Tell the Story hosts a “Friday Fave Five” in which we share our five favorite things from the past week. Click on the button to read more of the details, and you can visit Susanne to see the list of others’ favorites or to join in.

1. Thanksgiving praise service. Our church moves its usual Wednesday night service to Tuesday night during Thanksgiving week since many travel Wednesday, and the majority of the service is given over to whoever wants to share a testimony. To me it is one of the highlights of the year.

2. Thanksgiving Day. Though we should be thankful year round, it is nice to have a time set aside specifically for that purpose. Plus I like that it is an untarnished holiday — no controversial origins, nothing bad associated with it, the time for family gatherings. I enjoyed the extended time with all the family.

3. Thanksgiving food. All the usual stuff, having a meal in the early afternoon so that one clean-up is over, I’m “off” the rest of the day. Then heating up leftovers or making a sandwich in the evening. Plus it was nice to share the cooking with a new daughter-in-law this year!

4. Thanksgiving Day naps!

5. Playing a few rounds of Apples to Apples Thanksgiving evening.

Bonus:

My son shared with me a fun site called Face Ahoy: it’s a collection of photos of faces that people “see” in everyday objects. Some are very cute, some are funny.

Bonus 2:

Magazine deals! Thanks to a post at Skip to My Lou, I saw that Amazon is selling subscriptions to several magazines for $5 between now and Dec. 1.

Happy Thanksgiving!

It is a good thing to give thanks unto the LORD, and to sing praises unto thy name, O most high: To shew forth thy lovingkindness in the morning, and thy faithfulness every night. Psalm 92:1-2.

For each new morning with its light,
For rest and shelter of the night,
For health and food, for love and friends,
For everything Thy goodness sends.

For flowers that bloom at our feet,
For tender grass, so fresh, so sweet;
For song of bird, and hum of bee;
For all things fair we hear and see,
Father in Heaven, we thank thee!

~Ralph Waldo Emerson~

Giveaways here and there

This giveaway is now over and comments are closed. The winner is Ivory Spring!

I mentioned a couple of days ago that in all my sorting and organizing I found some duplicates that I planned to give away. I want to share this first one right away so someone will have it in time for Christmas.

If you sew or know someone who likes to, you might Sew Pretty Christmas Homestyle by Tone Finnanger.

I first saw Tone’s books at Anita‘s, and loved them. I have three and see another one or two I’d like. I just love her beautiful style and her neat ideas.

Here are just a few of the projects in the book. I am sorry about the photo quality: I had trouble getting the right amount of flash. But the photos in the book are gorgeous:

If you would be interested in this book, leave a comment on this post. I will use the Random Number Generator to choose a winner the morning of Dec. 2, a week from today.

There are several other contests around the Internet just now, too:

The 5 Minutes for Mom site is hosting s slew of giveaways beginning a few days ago with the final drawings on Dec. 4, among them an Oreck Halo Vacuum, an HP Touchsmart 600, an Epson Workforce 600. You can find more information and a list of links to the various giveaways here.

The 5 Minutes For Books site is also hosting a series of giveaways: more information here.

Vanilla Joy is hosting ten giveaways totaling $2,000 on Black Friday beginning at 6. a.m.


Mocha With Linda is also hosting a series of book giveaways in the next few weeks. Click on the button for more information.

Earlybird Thanksgiving Random Dozen

Linda at 2nd Cup of Coffee is hosting her usual Wednesday Random Dozen on Tuesday this week, since many will be making pies or traveling tomorrow.

1. Are you sticking to traditional Thanksgiving foods this year, or are you being culinarily adventurous?

All the usual very traditional Thanksgiving fare.

2. Tell me something concrete that you’re thankful for. (Something you can literally touch, see, etc., not a concept like “hope.”)

Music and the means to play it.
Heat at the touch of a button, especially after having been without it for two weeks.
Books.
Films.
Food.

3. You knew the flip side was coming: Share about something intangible that you’re thankful for.

Love, joy, peace, grace, forgiveness.

4. Share one vivid Thanksgiving memory. It doesn’t have to be deep or meaningful, just something that remains etched in your memory.

I think it was about 13 or 14 years ago we lived in GA and planned to come to SC to stay with friends, go to our old church and the Thanksgiving praise service the Wednesday night before Thanksgiving, spend the night with them, and then drive to TN Thanksgiving morning to spend a couple of days with more good friends, my husband’s former pastor and his family. The first part of the trip went as planned with a great visit and a wonderful service. But pulling out of our friend’s driveway Thanksgiving morning, our car broke down. We had to have it towed in but had to leave it as no mechanics were working on the holiday. We rented a car and headed out to TN, stopped at a Burger King for our Thanksgiving lunch, drove over the mountains where Jesse got sick all over the rented car, and made it to our friends’ house in time for leftovers that evening. The rest of the visit was very nice: then we had to deal with the car issue afterward.

5. What is one thing that you know beyond a shadow of a doubt is going to happen this Thanksgiving because it always does, year after year?

Oh, just all the usual stuff — cooking, eating, napping, more eating. Sometimes we watch a movie or play a game in the evening.

6. Do your pets get any left-overs?

Yes, my husband, thankfully, takes on the job of getting everything off the bird that he can, and he saves a bit for our dog.

7. Does your family pray before the big meal? If so, do you join hands while seated, stand, repeat a formal prayer or offer a spontaneous prayer? Who does the praying?

My husband either prays spontaneously or asks one of the boys to while we’re seated around the table.

8. Will you be watching football in the afternoon? If not, what will you be doing?

No football. My husband and I will be napping at some point, I am sure.

9. There are two distinct camps of people on this issue: How do you feel about oysters in the dressing/stuffing?

Bleah, I am not an oyster fan.

10. Do you consider yourself informed about the first Thanksgiving?

Yes.

11. Which variety of pie will you be enjoying?

Apple and pumpkin.

12. Do you feel for the turkey?? (This is a humorous throw back question related to the 12th question in another Random Dozen!

Not really. I enjoy every bite. 🙂

Check over at Linda‘s to find more participants or to join in yourself.

What’s on Your Nightstand: November

What's On Your NightstandThe folks at 5 Minutes For Books host What’s On Your Nightstand? the fourth Tuesday of each month in which we can share about the books we have been reading and/or plan to read. You can learn more about it by clicking the link or the button.

I finished My Heart Remembers by Kim Vogel Sawyer about three siblings separated after going West on an orphan train. I probably would not have picked it up, because I have read books and seen films about the orphan trains, and they all seemed to have the same basic plot line, but this one came highly recommended by several blog friends. I did enjoy it: Kim brought in some elements I hadn’t seen before.

I also just finished Home to Harmony by Phillip Gulley. It’s in the same vein as Mayberry or Jan Karon’s Mitford series: small town, eccentric residents, heart-warming stories. It was….okay. Parts I really liked, parts touched me, but overall I didn’t like it as well as Mitford. I’m not inclined at this point to read the sequels: I have a whole shelf full of books to be read. But I might pick them up some time in the future.

I also finished Farraday Road by Ace Collins, and it is the only one I did a full-fledged book review of this month, here.

With Thanksgiving and Christmas coming up, my reading plans for the next month are going to be very loose, though I do always have something available to read.

I’ve just begun The Heirloom by Colleen L. Reece and Julie Reece-DeMarco, given to me by my friend, Carol. It’s been on my shelf for a while, and I just rediscovered it while reorganizing my bookshelves and saw it was set during the Thanksgiving season. It’s fairly short, so it will be perfect for this week. I’m also planning on Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus, a compilation of 22 Christmas related essays from authors varying from Augustine and Luther to Piper. I saw this recommended by a lot of people last year, but by the time I got it the Christmas season was nearly over, so I saved it for this year. I’d also like to do a Bible study called My Heart Restored by June Kimmel.

Other than that…I have plenty to choose from my TBR bookshelf: I just recently gathered most of them on one shelf, the middle, double-shelved one here. Only the front row is TBR:

Book Review: Farraday Road

The opening pages of Farraday Road by Ace Collins set the stage for mystery: a literal “dark and stormy night,” a car discovered run off the road, two bodies having been shot, one alive and one dead, and a historic bridge washed off its moorings. Lije (short for Elijah) survives but neither he nor anyone else in the town can think of any reason why he or his wife, a pillar of the community known for her generosity, would become targets. In his grief he searches for clues about what happened, sometimes teamed with a reluctant detective who thinks at first she has the suspect, sometimes doing his own investigating, which leads him to another mystery involving a piece of prime real estate his wife had purchased before her death.

I am sorry to say I was not thrilled with the book. It could have used much tighter writing, and the “mystery” seemed splintered off into too many pieces which at the end are still unconnected. Hopefully it will all come together in the sequel, Swope’s Ridge. I thought perhaps this was Mr. Collins’ first book: I was wrong. He has written more than 50 books, but most of them are non-fiction. I was disappointed that, for a book in the genre of Christian fiction, there was a four-letter word usually absent in most Christian fiction and that there was little Christianity in it beyond the charitable nature of Lije’s deceased wife and the testimony of a wrongly-accused prisoner.

If you’ve read the book, I’d be interested in hearing your thoughts: perhaps I am missing something. And if you haven’t, please don’t let this review dissuade you from checking out the book if you like mysteries: most of the reviews at Amazon.com and Christianbook.com are positive.

Thanks to Zondervan for providing a copy of the book for review.