Arms like jelly
I finally went outside to deal with the garden today. It’s been such a dismal, wet spring, I felt like there was no point doing anything out there until it Continue Reading →
formerly Flotsam and Jetsam — Thoughts that float through my head like so much detritus
Head category for personal stuff and personal projects
I finally went outside to deal with the garden today. It’s been such a dismal, wet spring, I felt like there was no point doing anything out there until it Continue Reading →
There’s a whole lot of hoopla this week over tomorrow’s pending Rapture as proclaimed by Rev. Harold Camping who, even though he is telling the world that the rapture is Continue Reading →
I’ve said it many times and I’ll say it again, “I don’t hate my job, I just resent being tethered to a job.” — it’s the schedule, really. Each time Continue Reading →
Following on the heels of my panic over search algorithms that exclude things from me, a friend was discussing how difficult it is to talk to people “outside our geek Continue Reading →
I’ve always found Mother’s Day to be an odd celebration: equal parts guilt and consumerism seasoned with sentimentality, ambivalence or remorse, depending on family history or situation. In North America, Continue Reading →
What Threadless designers got for Christmas in 1978… [Photo by Kate Bingaman-Burt, kateconsumption on Flickr]
It’s a Sunday evening, on the tail end of a pleasant weekend (which would have been much more pleasant had I been sans sinus cold) and the eve of yet-another-election Continue Reading →
This week, I wrote a couple of haiku for a BlackBerry PlayBook contest through Twitter (hey, even if reviews aren’t great, I’ll take one for free.): compact, convenient communication device Continue Reading →
That’s the sound of my week disappearing under my feet. Even today, a day off, seemed to vanish. In part, due to the ridiculous location of the cabin air filter Continue Reading →
April 8-9-10 Haiku for poem-a-day; a summary of my last three days: meeting with my peeps history and future thoughts as libraries change yard sales and road trip shopping for Continue Reading →