9/24/09

Happy Bday, Shade!

















Happy Anniversary
to one of my very favorite online clothing sites, Shade. They have great tanks, tees, & other layering basics that make it oh-so-easy to be modest. They've been a lifesaver!

For their anniversary, they're offering a Friends & Family 30% off special. Go check it out here.

9/23/09

The day the white-out exploded

Once, I was at work, minding my own business, when I saw the white-out on my desk. "I should use that in my planner & make it a little cleaner," I thought, "rather than having all of these ugly squiggly lines I've created." So I pulled out the white-out. I should explain that I do indeed have white-out tape, but I have never been fully satisfied using it - it always seems to bunch up at the end & not cover to my satisfaction. Therefore, I prefer the old, liquid kind.

I proceeded to thoroughly apply said white-out, when, all of a sudden, my right hand got what I affectionately term "the dropsies." (I have these dropsies often - I have broken glasses, bowls, a phone & other numerous objects when my right hand suddenly shakes & dumps out any and all occupants on the floor.) Today, when I got the dropsies, my hand dumped the ENTIRE OPEN BOTTLE of white-out onto my desk, keyboard, lap & chair. Yes. I now have white-out covering my desk, keyboard, hand, black leather chair & khaki pants. (What if I had been wearing black pants???? I shudder to think.)

Instead of quickly snatching up the flowing liquid, I had a moment of - "I cannot believe this is happening to me - again."  (It happened yesterday morning, actually, only that time it was my Brita pitcher filled with water and not white out, so now my kitchen floor is essentially mopped for the week. Happy accident, I suppose.) I proceeded, like an idiot, to stare at the white-out gushing into my lap. (Nay, crotch. Crotch!) I finally had the presence of mind to jump up & scoop the white-out into my hands. I must have made some horrified noise, because two of the engineers I work with came running.

Now I didn't know this previously, but engineers sure like to fix things. They have, before I arrived on the job, fixed the toaster, the coffee maker, & the shredder- not once, but twice. (Part of me wishes Jared were an engineer, but I digress.) Two of said engineers came over to me & quickly assessed the situation. "Paper towels," shouted one. "Acetone!" shouted another. They came back with those products & a paintbrush and now, I am happy to say, I am spending my afternoon stipling the black leather chair & scraping off the keyboard, all while getting high off nail-polish remover. On a positive note, I managed to get it all off the desk (mostly), keyboard, & 50% off the chair (although this is being done in shifts - who knew leather had so much grain to it?).

Sadly, I cannot say the same for my hand & pants. My pants may be lost forever, & who knows if & when the white-out will come off my hands.

However, on the bright side, I have been wanting a new pair of khaki pants for awhile...hmm.

And you might ask - "Katie, why not just NOT use white-out/sharp objects/dishes/paint/etc. when you have the dropsies?" Well, unfortunately for me, the dropsies often strike without warning. But maybe I'll revisit & recorrect my aversion to the white-out correction tape...

For your reading enjoyment

I loved this great post on the Rosh Hashanah tradition by Tiffany. Sometimes I think we should try something as symbolic & introspective, no?

For me, I am flinging my bread theoretically out into the water & giving up my impatience with others (especially for being too slow on the road), my distaste for mornings, my laziness, my lack of will to exercise or eat right, & being too hard on myself &, occasionally, family members (not that I ever tell them this).

What are you giving up, tossing into the water?

Your random fun links for the day

The Cosby show celebrates 25 years. I feel old.

This one's for Chad - photos of the World Beard & Mustache Championships. Shudder.

Apparently, people in Philly have gotta be reminded to wash their hands. Wha??

Passive Aggressive Notes (wow, this reminds me of one of my college roommates).


Passive Aggressive Work Lunch/Fridge Notes.



Celebrities without makeup. Proving they are, in reality, just as ugly as we all are. Ha!

Quiz time: Which superhero are you? Apparently I'm Spiderman. Huh. Who knew.

Another quiz: Which villian are you? I'm Mystique.

Can you ID the candybar? I only got half right. I guess I don't know candy as well as I thought.

Take words & change them into a different dialect. Hilarious. (For example, "Have a nice day" in jive is "Gots some supa fine day. Slap mah fro!")

Truly odd products for sale.



And finally...

Graph Jam. Randomness put into graph form. This site is cracking me up.


P.S.

This template is beyond weird. I love the background, but when I try to edit, it often spits out odd colors. And then, when I fix in edit mode, it appears correct, but when I view, there are weird highlight colors or font colors. Whatever.

A few thoughts I like this morning

“In the strength of the Lord we can do and endure and overcome all things.” -Elder David A. Bednar (“In the Strength of the Lord,” Liahona and Ensign, Nov. 2004, 77.)


"[The Savior] is saying to us, 'Trust me, learn of me, do what I do. Then when you walk where I am going,' He says, 'we can talk about where you are going, and the problems you face and the troubles you have. If you follow me, I will lead you out of darkness,' he promises. 'I will give you answers to your prayers. I will give you rest to your souls.'" Then later in the same talk Elder Holland says, " . . . He knows the way out and He knows the way up. He knows it because He has walked it. He knows the way because He is the way." ("Broken Things to Mend," Elder Jeffrey R. Holland, Ensign, May, 2006)

"The enabling and strengthening aspect of the Atonement helps us to see and to do and to become good in ways that we could never recognize or accomplish with our limited mortal capacity.” David A. Bednar, “In the Strength of the Lord,” Ensign, November, 2004.


"The Lord wants to bless us, but we come to the earth to learn. What is the most significant thing that we must learn? 'And this is life eternal that they might know thee and the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent.' Nothing else really matters! And how to we get to know God? By listening. By putting off the 'natural man' as King Benjamin entreats us, and becoming spiritual men. And how is the only way we can do this? Through the grace of God, or the enabling power of the atonement. So the problems and challenges in our lives are opportunities for us to grow by enlisting the aid of the atonement to overcome those challenges. Alma pleads with us in the words of the Savior, 'Come unto me and ye shall partake of the fruit of the tree of life; yea, ye shall eat and drink of the bread and the waters of life freely.' (Alma 5:32) (GG Vandagriff, "Nephi’s Bonds and Mahonri’s Stones," http://www.ggvandagriff.comGG_Vandagriff_Author/Essay.html)

"Imagine yourself as a living house. God comes in to rebuild that house. At first, perhaps, you can understand what He is doing. He is getting the drains right and stopping the leaks in the roof and so on: you knew that those jobs needed doing and so you are not surprised. But presently He starts knocking the house about in a way that hurts abominably and does not seem to make sense. What on earth is He up to? The explanation is that He is building quite a different house from the one you thought of — throwing out a new wing here, putting on an extra floor there, running up towers, making courtyards. You thought you were going to be made into a decent little cottage: but He is building a palace. He intends to come and live in it Himself.
" (CS Lewis, Mere Christianity)

9/22/09

The clothes make the man

I am not generally a shopper - of clothes, that is. (I do quite enjoy buying presents for other people & lately, oddly enough, I really enjoy grocery shopping. Weird.) I hearken back to my fat years where I would try on clothes in the fitting room & eventually cry out of frustration. That kind of thing, repeated, tends to scar a person, so I'm still a little weary when it comes to clothes shopping.


But I bought this shirt online - when it was slightly more expensive - and I'm ever so glad I did. Obviously I am not as pretty or thin as the model they chose to showcase it, but I do feel a little pretty every single time I wear it. And I am wearing it today, so I feel kind of lovely, for once.

P.S. My favorite, modest-friendly online clothing sites (in no particular order):
DownEast Basics
Layers
Shade
Shabby Apple


Know of others? Send them to me. I'm always looking for great layering basics & pretty church dresses.

Something to think about...

I really liked this post (even though I don't yet have children)...

"I have found one of the best ways to examine the life you are living is asking yourself, 'Will I regret this?' I picture myself in a rocking chair on a front porch, watching my grandchildren, or great grandchildren play on the lawn. Will I look back with peace in my heart? Will I say, 'I wish I would have slowed down and savored every moment?' It's not really a fun thing to do, but it always enables you to spit out the right answer. It always tells me to stay focused, run against the grain of the times, and enjoy the small moments. It reminds me to stay strong and centered about what I want to believe...that simply raising your children, being a mother and a wife, is enough, when everything we read and hear and see is sending us the opposite message. To say 'no' to the excess's of life, and 'yes' to the things that really count."

Slow down and everything you are chasing will come around and catch you. ~John De Paola

Tender Mercies

Today Jared & I went to an Institute class that the new Institute director in our area holds at VCOM. It was kind of cool - I haven't been to Institute in so long. The class is an abbreviated version, because the 1st & 2nd years' lunch times overlap, so we really only have about 30 minutes for a class, but it was a good spiritual uplift for my day, and helped me get over my "this-feels-like-Monday-again" grumpiness.


Brother Cornelsen taught us today on "tender mercies." We were looking at 1 Nephi, 1:20, where Nephi says,
"And when the Jews heard these things they were angry with him; yea, even as with the prophets of old, whom they had acast out, and stoned, and slain; and they also bsought his life, that they might take it away. But behold, I, Nephi, will show unto you that the tender cmercies of the Lord are over all those whom he hath chosen, because of their faith, to make them mighty even unto the power of ddeliverance".

The basic gist was that in order to receive tender mercies, we have to be faithful & endure. And we have to learn to look for the tender mercies we receive. It's the small things, I think, that are often our blessings - or tender mercies - reminders that God hears & loves us.

Elder David A. Bednar, in his April 2005 General Conference talk "The Tender Mercies of the Lord," said,

"I testify that the tender mercies of the Lord are real and that they do not occur randomly or or merely by coincidence. Often the Lord's timing of His tender mercies helps us to both discern and acknowledge them. ...The Lord's tender mercies are the very personal and individualized blessings, strength, protection, assurances, guidance, loving-kindness, consolation, support, and spiritual gifts which we receive from and because of and through the Lord Jesus Christ. Truly the Lord suits 'his mercies according to the conditions of the children of men' (D&C 46:15). It is our hearts and our aspirations and our obedience which definitively determine whether we are counted as one of God's chosen. ...The fundamental purposes for the gift of agency were to love one another and to choose God. Thus we become God's chosen and invite His tender mercies as we use our agency to choose God."

I am grateful for the little things - the tender mercies, in fact - that remind me that Heavenly Father is aware of me, my struggles, my triumphs, my prayers. That he knows I am here. I am thankful for not one, but two phone calls from a friend & my sweet sister-in-law, just because I'd been on their radar to check in. I'm thankful for a husband who gave me a blessing of healing, but included some sweet words of comfort & love from a Father in Heaven above, who knows me. And loves me anyway. I am thankful for the beautiful sunset I saw while on a walk with Jared the other day, because sunsets always remind me of God's love for us by giving us such a beautiful place to live.

I am thankful for these small, tender mercies that help tie me back to Heavenly Father.

One more guilty pleasure...

My besties. As in, Gretel, Marisa, Arianne, Lizzie, Melody, Ginnie, Jared, and, of course, mom.