Saturday, February 6

Caturday: Snow Watch

We woke up to a winter wonderland outside! We have blizzardy conditions right now and a lot of snow of the ground. I love snowfall--especially when I don't have to go anywhere. The gang wanted to look outside early this morning so I opened the blinds around 6:30 a.m.


Kosmo takes a look at all the snow falling



This was actually the first picture I took this morning. It still looks dark out, doesn't it? See Munchie's eyes reflecting back? She sure was fascinated with it all!


Like Kosmo, Amber's a veteran of watching snowfall. I could tell she was enjoying the view.


This is what you can see from our side door in back of the house. I should have taken a picture of what the cats were looking at but ... I didn't want to open the front door, LOL.


Another picture of Munchie watching the snow fall from her favorite perch--the cat tree!

Want more Caturday and cat blogging?

Be sure to check out Blogging Cat Noos for all the latest and a listing of this weekend's carnivals!

Friday, February 5

Feline Friday: MY coat!


Munchkin: Whadda tawkin 'bout, Mommy? This's MY blanky, not your coat!

Want more feline Friday and cat blogging?

Be sure to check out Blogging Cat Noos for all the latest and a listing of this weekend's carnivals!

Thursday, February 4

Thursday Thirteen #50: Cat Blogs I Enjoy


Thursday Thirteen


A couple of weeks ago, I listed blogger blogs I like to follow. I love cat blogging and several of my posts a week are devoted to the feline gang here. It just follows I have quite a few cat blogs I like to read too. There may be a couple there that I listed before because they're blogger blogs. Here goes though:

Thirteen Random Favorite Cat Blogs

1. My Cats and Funny Stories

2. A House With Two Cats

3. Daisy the Curly Cat

4. Missy, KC, and Bear

5. Zoolatry

6. House Panthers

7. Cats Goats Quotes

8. Life From A Cat's Perspective

9. Katz And Other Tales

10. Boobah's Little Sunshine

11. Tabby Times

12. Cats in Trees

13. Sweet Praline

Tuesday, February 2

Cats on Tuesday: Mom Bean's turn/1000 Posts


CATS ON TUESDAY is a group of cat lovers who share pictures and/or stories about their cats once a week, hosted by Gattina.


Today is special for a couple of reasons. This is the 1,000th post of my blog and it just seems very appropriate to have that fall on a "Cats on Tuesday" day!

And ... most of the time when the gang poses with a member of the bean family, it's not me because I'm the one holding the camera. This time, though, TB had the camera when Mouse and Munchkin decided to visit with me.




Want more cat blogging?

Be sure to check out Gattina's blog. Today is also Tuxie Tuesday and then there's Blogging Cat Noos for all the latest!

Monday, February 1

Resolutions Update

This seems to be a good time to see how I'm doing 30 days (give one or two) since making my New Year's resolutions.

1. Take these resolutions seriously. I figured if I check myself every month to see how I'm doing, I'm taking them seriously!

2. Read fifteen new authors for the new author challenge. I've read two of the 15 on my list. Since I have the whole year to complete it, I'm doing ok with this one.

3. Work on my recovery with a sponsor from ACOA I started out really strong with this one. I'm still motivated but I'm not sure where my sponsor went. I better email her again.

4. Scan old photos I've scanned around 50 in the last few weeks!

5. Write memories I have from these old photos to help me work on my memoir/story I did note memories but, unfortunately, unless I have them in my sent email box I don't think I saved them in a place I could use them. I need to go back and do that and make sure I keep doing that!

6. Read thirty books for the Mixology reading challenge I have a year to do this one too. I just started book #4.

7. Get down to my goal weight, which means lose another 50 lbs. Eh, could be better. I've dropped another 2 lbs. I have to admit my surgeon made me a little nervous telling me I was losing weight too fast. He wanted me to start taking an enzyme so I'd absorb more of my calories. Instead, I decided to be a little more reckless about what I was eating and how much. After I see him this month, I think I'll focus a little better.

8. Go to at least 3 bariatric surgery support group meetings Nope ... not so far.

9. Attend at least 6 meetings of the Al-Anon meeting here in town Nope on this one too.

10. Practice more anger management skills. I'm doing well there except I did get very irritated when one of the cats gave me a hard time about getting her nails clipped. Well...I'm just human. I asked TB just to check my perception of myself. I asked him how my anger management's been since the New Year and he said, "Much better." That made me feel good. :)

I've made progress on 8 out of the 10, which is 80%. That's a B so I'll say I am passing so far. :D

The Given Day by Dennis Lehane (spoilers)

Beware! For here there be spoilers...

I bought The Given Day by Dennis Lehane with a gift card because I have such respect for him. I thought Mystic was one of the very best books I'd ever read. One of the reviews for this book said that The Given Day "may be Lehane's finest work." Another compared it to John Dos Passos's U.S.A. That might be accurate but to be honest, I thought Mystic was and still the finest of Lehane's books.

It's set in Boston, circa 1918-19. The central focus is supposed to be on two characters, one black and one white. In the beginning, the chapters alternate between the two. When they finally meet, there isn't as clear a distinction and then new characters begin to have the limelight. The latter half of the book started to fall apart for me a little at that point, to be honest. Part of the time, I'd think: why are we reading about you? In one way, I could understand because these characters played a part in what happened later but ... maybe it would have been better to focus on them more from the beginning?

Anyway...

Luther Laurence is black and hails from the midwest. He and his long time sweetheart are expecting a baby and he's laid off. They have to move to her relatives' to make a new start and they marry. Unfortunately, Luther falls in with some shady characters and eventually has to make a run for his life. He goes from Oklahoma to Boston, Massachusetts.

Danny Coughlin is a dedicated young cop. His father's a police captain and his brother is an assistant district attorney. He was involved with Nora, who holds a sort of mysterious role in the family--not quite servant, not quite family. In the beginning, he is all about being a public servant and has no interest whatsoever in unions or other forms of "Bolshevism".

Luther and Danny meet and become friends because Luther ends up working for the Coughlin family.

I really liked Luther's character. He is basically a decent, hard working young man who just wants to do right for himself and his family. He's constantly battered by racial bigotry and a couple of really evil, ugly characters. The first one he encounters in Oklahoma. The second, a police lieutenant, is by far a particularly nasty villain. I shudder just thinking about the guy.

On the other hand, I didn't care much for Danny. I suppose he's just a reflection of his times but I found him to be something of a hypocrite and weakling at first. He is moony over Nora--but the reason they're not together is because of her "sordid" past. He wants a "respectable" woman. Nora was sold to her husband "in the old sod" at the age of thirteen. She abandoned him to run to America. It turns out later she also abandoned a stepson. Well ... so? But the way Danny (and later, the whole family) carries on about this "sordidness" made me sick.

The other issue I had with Danny was his feelings about the police union. He was such a "company" man his father and godfather trusted him to infiltrate "Bolsheviki" groups and report back to his superiors with information. Along the way, though, Danny learns that all protestors are not terrorists. He becomes active in the labor movement for policemen. All that in less than a year. Really? Amazing.

All of these characters and events are moving toward one big cataclysm. There are some very powerful scenes there.

Throughout all of this, there is a thread: Babe Ruth. Actually, it's pretty cool the way Lehane adds in snippets from Babe Ruth's story and his rise to fame.

All in all, a very good book that I would recommend highly to anyone who likes to read, especially historical fiction!

Grace In Small Things

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