Thursday, September 29, 2011

book giveaway - i hope i win!!




Elizabeth  "Liz" Owen is one of my fave bloggers. She doesn't know me from Adam but I have come to know her through her posts on Mabel's House. Liz attended Harding during the time that some of my kids did. She is a wonderful writer. She has written her first book and I'm looking forward to reading it. Liz  is giving away 10 signed copies and I hope I get to be one of the lucky winners.  You can be to.  Go check out her blog for the details and you'll get to meet Mabel and also Jane the newest member of this great family. 

Here's an excerpt from her book.

***
Once one has breathed in the deep pungent aroma of sewage, you never again forget the nose-hair singeing, eye clawing, throat gagging experience. It comes over you slowly. You begin to feel like a character in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest as your muscles involuntarily jerk and you run screaming and blowing raspberries. Anything to get away from the mind-numbing stench.
But let me explain.
It was 6:30 a.m. I was standing in my retro pink tiled bathroom trying to open my bleary eyes and ready myself for work. As I stood there, peering into the mirror and wondering what demented nighttime fairy had planted four new wrinkles on my face, I paused and sniffed.
“Matt… what’s that smell?”
Matt staggered from the bedroom in his underwear, eyes half shut. “I don’t smell anything.”
I pointed my nose into the air like a hunting dog. “Seriously? You can’t smell that? Did you go to the bathroom in here earlier? I told you to use the room spray when you do things like that.”
Matt puffed out his bare chest and gathered his pride as best a man can with sleep in his eyes and a small hole in the side of his underwear. “I just woke up!”
I frowned, catching a glimpse of my makeup-less hot-rollers-in-hair state and tried not to think about the fact that I looked fifty instead of twenty-nine. “Well, help me figure this out. Because something smells ripe.”
We sniffed the sink drain and ruled it out as a suspect.
“Is it coming from the toilet?” Matt asked, examining it from top to bottom.
“No, that’s not it,” I snapped. I’m not known for my milk of human kindness in a disaster. Don’t get me wrong. I’m a survivor. I plan on eating my radish like Scarlet and clawing my way out of the nuclear dust while dragging my loved ones with me. But I won’t be doing it with positive phrases and a smile.
“Hon, I just don’t know. We’ll call a plumber after work, maybe it’s coming from under the house.” Matt staggered a little, trying to get past me and out of our tiny bathroom.
“Well, that’s just great,” I moved aside and pulled the shower curtain back so I could perch on the side of the tub and give Matt room to move out the door.
That’s when the full brunt of nastiness filled the air around us, a swirling mix of excrement and acrid stench that would have brought the sewer dwelling Ninja Turtles to their knees. Where the normally slightly-clean-with-a-hint-of-soap-scum bottom of the tub should have been, there sloshed gallons and gallons of brown sewage.
I clutched the front of my sweatshirt and held my breath. Matt began to dry heave.
“Get out and shut the door!” I screamed as we bumbled into the hallway.
“I’ll deal with this,” Matt grabbed my shoulders, trying to talk and hold his breath at the same time.
I could feel my eyes glaze over, the horrors of typhoid and hepatitis in our bathtub filling my mind. But more importantly, I could envision our evaporated savings account. In my mind’s eye I could see the long, gray hallway at the bank. A worker shrouded in a black suit pulled a set of keys from his pocket and unlatched a small locker labeled “Owen Bank Account.” Inside were two small stacks of quarters and a few crumpled dollar bills. It was bleak, not only because the banker with an unimaginative wardrobe gazed at me with an expression that could only be interpreted as “You’re a Big Fat Loser,” but also there was a very definite possibility we wouldn’t be able to pay for a plumber.
I wasn’t necessarily a spend thrift. In fact, I was downright frugal when it came to decorating with thrift store furniture and rewired vintage lamps. But the fact was, we were poor. We were starting out at starter jobs with starter salaries. We were starter adults with a starter bank account.
“Okay,” I nodded numbly, thankful that Matt was taking the lead on such a disastrous biohazard. “But make sure the plumber is super cheap. We don’t have much money!”
I left for work like a wino stumbling through a fog, not really remembering my commute, not really doing any work as I sipped my coffee and stared blankly at the computer screen. A disaster of such gargantuan proportions had previously been unthinkable in my life, and now I found myself attempting to push the image of a vast sea of bathtub poop from my mind. But I was sure of one thing: Anne Shirley never had to get ready for work while breathing raw sewage.
 

Monday, September 26, 2011

great lighting giveaway


I was visiting my sister-in-law's blog today and she was posting about a giveaway from this place.
  Barn Lights Electrical . I went over for a visit and found that they have some really cool  industrial and barn style lights in pendants, chandeliers, flush mount etc:  It's a great giveaway and since I've been wanting to update some of my lighting I decided to join in.  You can too.  Here are the particulars.


 The Prizes: We’re giving away one $1,000 Grand Prize and one $500 2nd Place Prize to two lucky winners who enter their homes. The two winners will each receive a Barn Light Electric Gift Certificate to purchase new lighting for their homes or to finish off that lingering renovation project.

1. Look around online at Barn Light Electric and pick lights you'd love to win.
2.Share your picks on your blog and link to the lights if you can.
3.Copy and paste these rules at the bottom of your blog post.
4. Once your post is up, you must email your blog link to: contest@barnlightelectric.com to be qualified to win. The contest ends October 12th, 2011.

These are some of the lights that I liked.  There are lots and lots to check out.


See it Here




Find it here
Find it here



where august went the final chapter (and it ran into september)

The saga of my summer journey has come to somewhat of an abrupt end. I did have a few pictures of my stay at my sister's (all of the dogs playing) on my way home but I've lost them somewhere on my computer. So suffice it to say the I made it home on the 21st of August. I spent that week getting back into a routine of sorts and had an enjoyable birthday with my kiddos. Then on the 29th I got a phone call that a good friend back in MS had died. So I packed up and went to Cleveland on Tues. and stayed on through the weekend to visit with my mother-in-law and other friends and family. Got back here on the 4th of Sept. and have been here since. I've managed to get back into a sort of sewing groove and have finished up three quilts and I'm working on a fall wall hanging. My sewing machine started acting up this afternoon so I'm probably going to take it to the shop tomorrow and have it checked. I love my machine but either I'm doing something wrong a lot and don't know what it is or it seems to be getting very tempermental. Hopefully I will find out something tomorrow. I'll post pictures of my finishes in the next few days and the changes in my kitchen and maybe a few other things too.




Friday, September 23, 2011

where did august go part 4

Notice the white band on my mom's arm??  That was the most exciting part of our trip.  We had just left  my sister's (as in less than 100 ft out of her driveway) to head out to complete the final leg of our trip to PA and she reached into the console between the seats to get something when  Freida decided to step up on it to checkout the view through the front windshield.  Well, the lid came down on her arm and made a nice slice -- all the way across. To make a long story short, we spent almost an hour finding a walk-in clinic and and another hour getting her arm all steri-stripped (about 12 in all) and then getting back on the road.  We still made it home before dark.  While at the farm we ate a lot of corn and tomatoes compliments of Frankies -- the veggie stand at the end of her road.  The dogs had a blast -- inside and outside playing and chasing each other around.  After that first day, mother's arm didn't seem to bother her at all and last report had it healing up very nicely.






A little Gibbs love after the corn is husked.





Freida waiting patiently while Granny gets the grass out of the bed around the tree.



Playing in the house









A view of the woods from the patio



Getting ready for our annual "group" photo

And here it is:)



Frieda offered to drive but I told she couldn't go. 



Monday, September 19, 2011

where did august go part 3

One evening while we were in Nashville we had all the fam over for a supper of grilled veggies and chicken.  While waiting for the food to finish, granny enjoyed watching all the kids play outside.



I knew my garden wagon would come in handy for something.










Micah is always the first one to the table:)



Wonder what Matthew was thinking when Granny sat on his lap??:)






Thursday, September 15, 2011

where did august go part 2

Thursday morning, we finished packing our bags, lectured the dogs on how to behave with the dog sitter - the girl across the street during the day and my oldest son at night- and then headed out for Longview TX via Cleveland MS where we spent the night with my mother-in-law.  We picked up Brian on our way through Franklin, dubbed him our official chauffeur and he obliged by driving almost the entire trip.  Thanks Brian:)  After a good night's sleep, we got up and went the rest of the way to Billy's house.  We got there around supper time and spent Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.  We stayed inside a lot because of the heat, but on Sat. Billy, Granny and I went to an oil museum.  It was pretty interesting.  They had some short movies that showed some of the history of the oil industry in TX and how the oil is brought up out of the ground.  They also had lots of memorabilia  from that area and   a replica of a boom town.










Granny enjoyed getting to see her TX great grands and visiting with them all for a few days.







One afternoon we talked her into trying her hand at Wii bowling.  At 91 she is still very spry and did quite an impressive job.





She looks armless in the picture below - it 's my photography skills I'm sure.




We also ate at a great catfish place while we were there and had some delicious meals fixed for us by my daughter-in-law who happens to be a great cook.

Thanks for the great hospitality Stacey and Billy.







Granny  had so much fun and Brian and I did too.  Since Brian had to be back home Tuesday to go to work, we left Monday and made the 10 hour trip back in a day.