Tuesday, January 27, 2009

Tuesday Word Tinkering # 5

Sunday is National Freedom Day. It is the first time I have heard of it, even tho' it began in 1948. Perhaps because it is an non-federal American holiday? It was listed in my agenda and I thought it would make an interesting writing prompt.


Wikipedia's definition:

National Freedom Day is a United States observance on February 1 honoring the signing by Abraham Lincoln of a joint House and Senate resolution that later became the 13th Amendent to the US Constitution. President Lincoln signed the Amendment outlawing slavery on February 1, 1865, although it was not ratified by the states until later.


Major Richard Robert Wright Sr., a former slave, believed that there should be a day when freedom for all Americans is celebrated. While living in Philadelphia towards the end of his life, he invited local and national leaders to meet to organize a movement for a national holiday to commemorate Lincoln's signing of the 13th Amendment. The resulting National Freedom Association proposed having a memorial date to call attention to the continuing struggle for freedom for African-Americans. Since President Lincoln had signed the 13th Amendment on the first day of February, that date was chosen to celebrate National Freedom Day. The first commemoration took place on February 1st, 1942, at Independence Hall. As it has every year since, the remembrance included laying a wreath at the Liberty Bell.


On June 30, 1948
, President Harry Truman signed a bill proclaiming February 1st as National Freedom Day. It is not a federal holiday; government offices and banks are open for business.



Writing Prompt:

What does freedom mean to you?


Post a comment or link to your blog so that we can read your thoughts!

Tuesday, January 20, 2009

hope?

Today was a historical day. An African-American man is now President of the USA. Barack Hussein Obama says he will bring change to America. Change has already come. We will see how much change that he and the future brings.

What changes have you seen during your lifetime? How about that of your parents, and then further back, your grandparents? What changes do you hope to see for future generations? What changes can you make to your daily world, in your lifetime?



Feel free to post your comments or link your blog to the comments section so that we all can read your thoughts!

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Wow.

When I was in Iraq I photocopied one of Ben's letters and gave it too all my soldier friends and the soldiers that came in the office. Here is one I found on a soldier's website: www.operationgive.org that I want people to read.

An Open Letter from Ben Stein
02/02/2007


Dear Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines, National Guard, Reservists, in Iraq, in the Middle East theater, in Afghanistan, in the area near Afghanistan, in any base anywhere in the world, and your families:


Let me tell you about why you guys own about 90 percent of the backbone in the whole world right now and should be happy with yourselves and proud of whom you are.


It was a dazzlingly hot day here in Rancho Mirage today. I did small errands like going to the bank to pay my mortgage, finding a new bed at a price I can afford, practicing driving with my new 5 wood, paying bills for about two hours. I spoke for a long time to a woman who is going through a nasty child custody fight. I got e-mails from a woman who was fired today from her job for not paying attention. I read about multi-billion-dollar mergers in Europe, Asia, and the Mideast. I noticed how overweight I am, for the millionth time. In other words, I did a lot of nothing.


Like every other American who is not in the armed forces family, I basically just rearranged the deck chairs on the Titanic in my trivial, self-important, meaningless way.


Above all, I talked to a friend of more than forty-three years who told me he thought his life had no meaning because all he did was count his money. And, friends in the armed forces, this is the story of all of America today. We are doing nothing but treading water while you guys carry on the life or death struggle against worldwide militant Islamic terrorism. Our lives are about nothing: paying bills, going to humdrum jobs, waiting until we can go to sleep and then do it all again. Our most vivid issues are trivia compared with what you do every day, every minute, every second.


Oprah Winfrey talks a lot about “meaning” in life. For her, “meaning” is dieting and then having her photo on the cover of her magazine every single month (surely a new world record for egomania). This is not “meaning.”


Meaning is doing for others.


Meaning is risking your life for others.


Meaning is putting your bodies and families’ peace of mind on the line to defeat some of the most evil, sick killers the world has ever known.


Meaning is leaving the comfort of home to fight to make sure that there still will be a home for your family and for your nation and for free men and women everywhere.


Look, soldiers and Marines and sailors and airmen and Coast Guardsmen, there are six billion people in this world. The whole fate of this world turns on what you people, 1.4 million, more or less, do every day. The fate of mankind depends on what about 2/100 of one percent of the people in this world do every day and you are those people. And joining you is every policeman, fireman, and Emergency Medical Technician in the country, also holding back the tide of chaos.
Do you know how important you are? Do you know how indispensable you are? Do you know how humbly grateful any of us who has a head on his shoulders is to you? Do you know that if you never do another thing in your lives, you will always still be heroes? That we could live without Hollywood or Wall Street or the NFL, but we cannot live for a week without you?
We are on our knees to you and we bless and pray for you every moment.


And Oprah Winfrey, if she were a size two, would not have one millionth of your importance, and all of the Wall Street billionaires will never mean what the least of you do, and if Barry Bonds hits hundreds of home runs it would not mean as much as you going on one patrol or driving one truck to the Baghdad airport.


You are everything to us, as we go through our little days, and you are in the prayers of the nation and of every decent man and woman on the planet. That’s who you are and what you mean. I hope you know that.


Love,
Ben Stein

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Tuesday Word Tinkering #3

SNOW

Do you like it? Hate it? Are you up to your eyeballs in it? Never got any this year? How about ever? I remember when I traveled to South Africa and was shocked that the house walls had no insulation and the people had never seen snow.... I've seen snow every year of my life. Er, correction, minus the years I was overseas. But every year before and after those ones!

How about great stories of getting you or yourself all snowgeared up and then realizing you or your child had to pee.... Or the time your car got stuck in the blizzard off highway 99.... Or the best garage sale you did down the mountain and four different skiiers/boarders handed you every piece of equipment you left scattered at higher altitudes.... Or the best vacation you took to escape the snow....

PLEASE leave a comment with your thoughts or a link to your story/thoughts if you have a blog in the comments section so we all can read what you wrote from this prompt! We can be the snow community... or stay isolated in the igloos of our minds. Happy writing!!!

SNOW

Saturday, January 10, 2009

want to come over for coffee?



Any takers? It's above zero today! And sunny! The blue sky is glorious, the snow is bright with sunshine, the ground is turning slightly mushy what with these positive numbers being recorded on the temperature scales!!!
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I took this photo New Year's Eve before going out to celebrate. Doesn't it look chilly! This is a good writing prompt photo. So far I haven't had a winter ice cap outside ~ it's been too cold! We had a good solid two weeks of -40s with windchill! I can now say that I've lived in -45 and +45 (C).
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Well, if you feel like an ice cap or a hot coffee, c'mon over. My treat!
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Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Tuesday Word Tinkering #2

"A rose by any other name is still a rose..."
unknown
(to me who said that - do you know by chance?)

I have renamed my weekly writing prompts from Wednesday Writing Prompt to Tuesday Word Tinkering. Simply put, I think it sounds better. Plus, I'm a Tinker whose name has evolved to Tencarre over the years along with immigration from Ireland to Canada and instead of tinkering with tin or whatnot, I tinker with words. That and I'm not living like a Gypsy right now. I like having a home.

So today's writing prompt is:


BEAUTIFUL

wHaT dOeS BeAuTy MeAn To YoU?

Who defines beauty? Is beauty tangible? What are some other names for beauty? Where do you see beauty - people, animals, nature, books, ...?

Do you consider yourself beautiful - inner and outer? If beauty is something with which you struggle, are there ways in which you can change your thinking? I am not promoting plastic surgery at all, I'm meaning intangible ways, like re-thinking your personal definition of beauty.
I love the Dove Campaign for Real Beauty because it is re-defining our physical perception of beauty and exposing the fakeness of the media world that is impossible to live up to because it is not real! Plus, I like seeing the ads of older woman with bodies that look like what mine will be in 20 + years!!!

Go out there and be beautiful!!!
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!
!

Friday, January 02, 2009

"Gunpowder & Lead"

"Gunpowder & Lead" is my new fave song!
I can almost play it on my guitar... :-)
I absolutely love the line on what little girls are made of - no more sugar and spice! Hell YA!


watch the video! (I don't know how to upload it directly on here....)

"Gunpowder & Lead"
Miranda Lambert
County road 233, under my feet
Nothin' on this white rock but little ole me
I've got two miles ‘till, he makes bail
And if I'm right we're headed straight for hell

[Chorus:] I'm goin' home, gonna load my shotgun
Wait by the door and light a cigarette
If he wants a fight well now he's got one
And he ain't seen me crazy yet
He slap my face and he shook me like a rag doll
Don't that sound like a real man
I'm gonna to show him what a little girls made of
Gunpowder and lead

It's half past ten, another six pack in
And I can feel the rumble like a cold black wind
He pulls in the drive, the gravel flies
He don’t know what's waiting here this time

I'm goin' home, gonna load my shotgun
Wait by the door and light a cigarette
If he wants a fight well now he's got one
And he ain't seen me crazy yet
He slap my face and he shook me like a rag doll
Don't that sound like a real man
I'm gonna to show him what a little girls made of
Gunpowder and lead

His fist is big but my gun's bigger
He'll find out when I pull the trigger

I'm goin' home, gonna load my shotgun
Wait by the door and light a cigarette
If he wants a fight well now he's got one
And he ain't seen me crazy yet
He slap my face and he shook me like a rag doll
Don't that sound like a real man
I'm going to show him what a little girls made of
Gunpowder and lead
!
!
!
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