Sunday, September 28, 2008

one fish, two fish, dead fish, new fish

Last week, Hot Tub Lizzy made mention of two little gerbils she had as pets growing up, and that got me thinking about all the great escapades my sister, brother, and I had with our own "pets" when we were little.

Dad and Mom wouldn't let us have a cat or dog for some unknown reason when we were really young. Truth be told, they knew that they would most likely be the ones tending to the lucky animal's every need and they had enough on their shoulders just raising three kids.

Our first "pets" were goldfish won by playing some dinky little game at our school carnival. You know the ones. Small, golden in color, sealed tightly in a clear plastic baggy, swimming precariously close to death's doorstep.

We were fascinated by the way they swam around their little glass home. We got a kick out of watching them poop and never really had to clean the bowl because they'd die before it got any kind of dirty.

One weekend, mom took the three of us to the mountains to visit family and my dad stayed home for some reason. He was given full authority over our precious babies. We left home thinking all was well in the world. Imagine our shock when we returned to find that our precious fishies had gone belly up over the weekend. And...as if that wasn't shock enough, we found out that Dad had flushed them down the toilet. Horror of horrors! To this day I still think he flushed them alive because he didn't want to deal with the nuisance of having pet fish.

After all the traumas of carnival fish, we moved up a step to store-bought goldfish. These babies were cool and much bigger than the last fish we had. We purchased all the necessary accoutrements and so Butterscotch (Sarah's), Satin Spot (mine), and Tommy Tonguebreath (Daniel's) came to call 531 McAlway Road home.

Life was good in fishdom until Butterscotch began to nibble at my sweet little Satin Spot's fins. It was because Butterscotch was jealous of Satin Spot because SS was sooo much prettier. Anyway, I'm not sure who went belly up first, but eventually is happened and the parental units nixed any more fish.



After that, we decided to get creative. My sister and I had such hearts for hurting animals. Its really a shame that mom wouldn't let us have indoor pets because we could have filled every square inch of our house with something alive or mostly-dead (which we all know means "slightly alive). Some of the lucky "pets" included:
  • "HD" (Half-Dollar) the tiny turtle. My friend Dusty gave him to me and I took him home, without parental consent. My mom let me keep him, but I don't think she was happy about the situation. Apparently, neither was HD - he died a week later.
  • "Slimy" the worm - Found severed in half and still wriggling, Sarah and I attempted to re-attach Slimy's appendage...with a piece of red yarn tied in a bow around his narrow body.
  • Baby Bird - found in our yard, the hatchling was "mostly dead" and passed shortly thereafter. We took such pity on the bird and declared that it needed a fitting burial. We buried in smack in the middle of the yard. Atop the grave we placed a small wooden cross made of sticks and surrounded it with azaleas. If only I could find the picture of it. Yes. I took a picture. Of a dead bird's grave.
Now its your turn to play along. What was your first pet and what did you name it?

Thursday, September 25, 2008

images of the day

I managed to tear myself away from Edward and Bella long enough to update my blog.

It seems the change of seasons has left me with nothing exciting to write about...yet. So, I bring you...

Caroline and the Camera (Episodes 1 & 2)


Episode 1 - Little Caroline takes pictures...of EVERYTHING!

Little Caroline (I'll call her LC) got a hold of the digital camera the other day while she was here and she went crazy. I'll spare you the really exciting pictures - Wesley's ear, me on the phone, the tv as the Veggie Tales movie Jonah was playing - and I'll show you some of the better pics from our fun day.



She had me take these since I have long arms. Did you know that if you arch your eyebrows just slightly in pictures it makes you look younger...or really stupid.



Here she is demonstrating her camera skills - not bad, but Lijah is done with paparazzi.


Episode 2 - My Experimentation with Photography



You've been privy to many a picture I've taken and never left a bad comment. I thank you for that and ask that you continue that tradition even after viewing these. Our yard happens to be very shady in spots and very sunny in others. I don't like simply using the automatic settings on the camera - I prefer to branch out and try to do it manually, choosing my own specs or whatever. The upside to this experimentation is that while the picture may stink, the subject is always redheaded perfection.



Monday, September 22, 2008

sssshhhhh...

(in a whisper)

hey! could you keep it to a dull roar?

i'm in the middle of something.


Sunday, September 21, 2008

mountains, wine, and a cop with no couth

This past weekend, two of my girlfriends and I went to the mountains of Virginia, home state to two of my bloggy sistas (hi Debbie and Lula!).

We stayed up late, we slept in. We ate junk food, we drank wine (at a winery!). We hiked, we napped, we talked, and we laughed. It was great and the weather couldn't have been more beautiful. The scenery was pretty good too...



view from Lover's Leap overlook




Mabry Mill




Katie, Jennifer, and me looking a little squinty at Philpott Lake



Chateau Morrisette Winery

Lovely.

On the way to the mountains, we stopped at an ABC store in Greensboro because Katie wanted to make some daiquiris on Saturday night. As we walked in a cop sauntered over and asked to see our id's. We joked about how flattering it is to get carded even though we look over 21. Jennifer said something about her mother and clearly the cop had selective hearing because he then turns to me and says...

"Are you her mother?"

Its really hard to describe the look that came over his face immediately after the words escaped his lips. I thought he might pass out. Then, I thought I might grab his nine and pop him with it. The shocked look on my face told him the real answer and he skulked away.

Honestly, I was insulted, but I did think it was funny. I'm not ashamed to admit I'm 31, and in my opinion, don't think I look older than 31. My friend Jennifer is 25 and yes, she does look young, but dude..., didn't you just look at our id's for crying out loud? Do you think I would have been capable of birthing such a child at the tender age of 5? I think not. I had to wonder if he hadn't been taking a few shots during a lull in customers.

So, now I'm over it, and I'm enjoying a glass of Sweet Mountain Laurel whilst updating you on my fun and girly weekend. Hope your weekend was sweet and without run-ins with idiot police who should have just kept their mouths shut.


Thursday, September 18, 2008

new office policies

As you know by now, I love humor. This is office humor at its best. You'll enjoy it whether you work outside the home or at home.



EFFECTIVE AUGUST 1, 2008

NEW OFFICE POLICY

Dress Code:

1) You are advised to come to
work dressed according to
your salary.


2) If we see you wearing
Prada shoes and carrying a
Gucci bag, we will assume you are doing well financially

and therefore do not need a raise.

3) If you dress poorly, you need
to learn to manage your
money better, so that you may buy nicer clothes, and

therefore you do not need a raise.

4) If you dress just right, you are right where you need

to be and therefore you do not need a raise.


Sick Days:
We will no longer accept a doctor's statement as proof

of sickness. If you are able to go to the doctor, you are able to come to work.

Personal Days:
Each employee will receive 104
personal days a year.
They are called Saturdays & Sundays.


Bereavement Leave:
This is no excuse for missing
work. There is nothing
you can do for dead friends, relatives or co-workers. Every
effort should be made to have
non-employees attend the
funeral arrangements in your place. In rare cases where

employee involvement is necessary, the funeral should be
scheduled in the late afternoon. We will be glad to

allow you to work through your lunch hour and
subsequently leave one hour
early.

Bathroom Breaks:

Entirely too much time is being spent in the toilet.

There is now a strict three-minute time limit in the
stalls. At the end of three
minutes, an alarm will
sound, the toilet paper ro
ll will retract, the stall
door will open, and a picture will be taken. After your

second offense, your picture will be posted on the
company bulletin board under
the 'Chronic Offenders'
category. Anyone caught
smiling in the picture will be
sectioned under the company's mental health policy.


Lunch Break:

* Skinny people get 30 mi
nutes for lunch, as they need
to eat more, so that they can look healthy.


* Normal size people get 15 minutes for lunch to get a

balanced meal to maintain their average figure.

* Chubby people get 5 minutes for lunch, because that's

all the time needed to drink a Slim-Fast.


Thank you for your loyalty to
our company. We are here
to provide a positive employment experience.
Therefore,
all questions, comments, concerns, complaints,

frustrations, irritations, aggravations, insinuations,
allegations, accusations,
contemplations, consternation
and input should be directed elsewhere.



The Management


Tuesday, September 16, 2008

my fortune

Mr. Baseball and I love us some Chinese food. More specifically, sesame chicken. Even more specifically, from Chu's Express. Yum.

Part of the meal is reading each other our fortunes. Of course this is just for kicks and giggles since we don't really believe a little manufactured cookie could actually predict our futures.

I tried to take a picture of my fortune, but it just didn't work, so without further adue (or however you spell it), here is what my fortune is (cue drumroll please)...



Your future looks bright.



I will now be able to sleep at night thanks to this profound information.

Monday, September 15, 2008

what defines me

Hi. It's me Caroline. You know, author extraordinaire of Pocket Change. And also the one who's been away for the last week. Allow me to explain.

Without launching into a bunch of unnecessary jargain about what's been going on the last several months, let's just say that I allowed this blog to take over my life. I would blog in the morning, letting the redhead watch tv for a couple hours just so I could "do my thing". I would blog during his nap - a time when I need to be spending time in Bible Study and "gettin' my Jesus on", but nope - I would blog then too. I would blog before dinner, after dinner, and into the evening while my husband sat watching tv.

The sad part? The whole time I was blogging, I was feeling guilty, like I should be tending to my responsibilities at home and to my family. But I continued blogging.

Last Monday was the breaking point. I sat alone working on a new Bible Study I'm a part of (Priscilla Shirer's Discerning the Voice of God - hmmm, coincidence...I think not) when I knew that something had to change. I'm going to share with you some excerpts of my journal entries from the past week:

A friend recently wrote about her love of blogging and how it had become an idol in her life and that she wanted to love Jesus more. She realized that she needed to give it up completely. I too realize that blogging has become an idol for me - while an outlet at times, it has really become a means of escaping responsibility, a hindrance keeping me from my family, but mostly a hindrance from my relationship with the Lord. A few weeks ago I told God that I didn't want to give up blogging and wasn't ready to obey if that is what He asked me to do. I have conintued to be plagued by unrest and my spirit is not at peace. I know God is trying to speak to me about this idol, but I'm stuffing my ears.

I feel I'm finally getting to a point where I want to hear what God is saying. I know what I hear Caroline saying - "I don't want to give up blogging...its my creative outlet". I know that I am also really bogged down in what other people will think. I also know what I want God to say - "it's okay, you don't have to give up blogging completely, just don't love it more than you love me".

Right now, I can't hear anything clearly and I want to, I need to. I love blogging and I recive much affirmation and have made many "friends", but my relationship with Christ will not flourish and I will not hear God if I don't chosse to obey.

I believe what I need to do is take a step away from blogging for a week and really clear my mind and heart to hear from God. Because I don't know whose voice is whose, right now I must take time to discern His voice and put Him back on the throne of my life.

So, I took a week off.

My love of blogging didn't dissipate - at all. The desire to blog all hours of the day did. My desire to spend more time with Jesus grew exponentially as I spent precious time with Him this week.

I also realized that while blogging in and of itself is not sinful, what I made blogging into - something I love more than God - is sinful.

My desire to spend time with my precious son who will only be small a short time grew. My desire to spend time with my husband also grew. God changed my heart, I just made myself available to Him.

So, with that said. I'm not hanging up the blog totally (unless I hear otherwise), but I won't be posting as often. If I lose some readers, then I lose some readers. That's hard for me to stomach. However, I desire to please my Father more.

This week, the Lord brought a Scripture to mind:

"Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us. Let us fix our eyes on Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith, who for the joy set before him endured the cross, scorning its shame, and sat down at the right hand of the throne of God. Consider him who endured such opposition from sinful men, so that you will not grow weary and lose heart."

Hebrews 12:1-3

It is so easy for me to become entangled in something that has no eternal value. It has happened with computer games, blogging, and worrying about what's going on with all the celebrities. What I truly desire to be embedded in is God's truth and a growing relationship with Him. I pray that as I seek to become more intimate with my Father, He will give me a passion for the things He desires as well.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

wordless wednesday


Ooooooh, tastes like chicken!


Monday, September 8, 2008

bully on the bus

Recently, I saw that someone's blog was discussing bullies and I thought I would post about one particular experience I had with a bully - who shall be named (we'll have none of this "names will be changed to protect the innocent" jargain. I plan on naming him outright because he's GUILTY!)

When I was in the 4th grade, I was all about some tennis shoes. Probably because mom only believed that children needed two pairs of shoes - one for play and one for church. So tennis shoes it was because my church shoes most surely weren't going to get NC red clay on them during recess.

With my tennies, I wore these beauties...



and yes, I did own them in every color, but my favorites were the green and blue ones.

As many of you may recall, back in the day, everybody rode the bus to and from school, it was the thing to do. My sister (who was 2 years ahead of me) and I always sat next to each other.

On this particular day (and maybe many others, but I just remember this day), Scott Reid sat behind us. Scott was a year older than me, which in my eyes made him automatically superior to me, and he was also a bully. He had spikey brown hair and was a troublemaker in general from what I can remember.

So, this afternoon, Sarah and I were minding our sweet sisterly bid'ness, our little feet dangling just above the floor of the bus, as we bounced along the neighborhood streets eagerly anticipating our arrival home.

All of a sudden, I felt a tug at my left heel, followed by another tug at my right heel. Puzzled, I picked my feet up to see what it could have been and I noticed that the pom-poms were missing from my socks!

As I prepared to look behind me to see what Scott has to say for himself, I glance at the aisle and notice the pom-poms rolling toward the front of the bus.

The little snake had plucked the pom-poms off my socks and bowled them down the aisle!

Words escaped me at that moment while horror and embarrassment hit me simultaneously. My cute socks had been de-balled. What was a girl to do?

Actually, I don't recall what I did in the moments following this tragedy, but I do remember that I was terribly distraught over the loss of my "balls" and probably shed a few tears in the privacy of my room. I'm sure my mother had some comforting words and probably told me to ignore Scott Reid for the remainder of our time together in elementary school. So I did. He never apologized for his dirty antics and it took me a long time to get over it.

Scott, if you're reading this, I just want to be the "bigger man" and say that I have forgiven you. I'm sure that you've moved on to greener pastures and maybe even have a carbon copy of yourself in one of your children. Hey, good luck with that...and teach them how to be kind to others so that their names won't be plastered on someone's blog in years to come.



Sunday, September 7, 2008

seven

I found this little meme over at Out on a Limb and I think she got it from Melissa at Stretch Marks. So now I'm jacking it for my blog.

Seven things I can't do:

  • yodle
  • dance (I live vicariously through the phenoms on So You Think You Can Dance)
  • a round-off back handspring with a full twisting layout
  • can vegetables
  • make anything from scratch (this is bad)
  • make myself throw up (ewww, gross)
  • run marathons...yet (maybe one day I will)

Seven things I do well:

  • cook
  • sing
  • play guitar and piano
  • remember little things like people's birthdays (I may remember the birthday, but I forget to send the card)
  • blogging
  • various sound effects
  • sleep

Seven things you might hear me say:

  • "Just a minute..." - to the redhead when he's whining and telling me something over and over and over and over.
  • "Do you have a stinky?" - also to the redhead...for obvious reasons.
  • "I don't understand whining, use your big boy voice."
  • "What did I miss?" - this would be what I say when I've fallen asleep during a tv show or movie (which is all the time)
  • Lijah, hush! - Lijah is our dog.
  • water with no lemon, please
  • turn over, Mr. Baseball, you're snoring.

Seven celebrity crushes (I even added pictures for your viewing pleasure):

  • Mike Rowe - Dirty Jobs
  • Curtis Stone - TLC's Take Home Chef
  • Chris Daughtry
  • Ty Penington
  • Daniel Craig (the newest James Bond)
  • Christian Bale (I have loved him since his days as a Newsie)
  • Mr. Baseball (yes ladies, this is a picture of him as he's seeing me come down the aisle at our wedding)


Seven things that made me love my husband:

  • his dashing good looks
  • his dedication to see something through
  • he isn't afraid to take risks and try something new
  • his intelligence
  • he is a faithful friend
  • he loves Jesus
  • he loves me

Thursday, September 4, 2008

bringing down the eco-family one class at a time

When I was a sophomore in high school, I was placed in an experimental trio of classes that were coined the Eco-Family. English, World History, and Biology were the three components of the family. The whole idea was that the same group of students would move together to the classes, getting to know each other, and forming a cohesive unit of highly educated 15/16 year olds.


Riiiight.


What we formed was a cohesive unit of rebellion that effectively brought about the demise of the Eco-Family that very same school year.


English

Ms. Williams. God bless her soul. A naive, soft-spoken lover of all things literary who was relentlessly teased by the boys in the class. Every time one of them would crack a joke in her direction, she would do that uncomfortable laugh - you know the one. The laugh where it is totally obvious she didn't get it, but wanted it to appear that she was wise to the joke. Once she figured out they were teasing her, she decided to use some leverage. She never let us forget that she took a $5,000 pay cut to come to us from a school in Atlanta and that she didn't have to be teaching us. If I remember correctly, we told her to return to Atlanta. Horrible.

Before taking English with Ms. Williams, the only required reading I had to do was a handful of William Shakespeare plays (very cool), and To Kill A Mockingbird (loved it). Ms. Williams introduced me to the required reading from hell in the form of All Quiet on the Western Front. All I remember is the title and that it made me uncomfortable for reasons I don't recall. My stomach feels weird, I need to stop talking about required reading. This book is the reason I never finished another required read until I met Jane Eyre my senior year.

Back to Ms. Williams. When the class would get rowdy,(which was quite often) she would break this mess out...



The infamous apple bell. It's a 1972 Fisher-Price child's plaything for crying out loud! When shaken, the bell would emit a soft jingling noise. And this was supposed to quiet us down? Yah...thanks for coming out. I think one of her remedial Eco-Family English classes tossed the apple bell out the window, only to watch it be obliterated into a kajillion pieces on the sidewalk below.

That very well may have been the last year Ms. Williams was at our school.

Eastside High (from the movie Lean On Me) had nothin' on us.


History

Enter Mrs. Stanley. My mom and I still talk about the absurdity of this class. You see, Mrs. Stanley had better things to do than teach. She was the cheerleading coach (I have nothing against cheerleaders - I always wanted to be one but could never do a Russian). Anyway, Stanley's room was one of the few with NO windows. Seriously? That really cramped my daydreaming style. She did happen to be the one teacher of the three that didn't get teased. She was the cheerleading coach...remember? And we all know that cheerleaders are all kinds of cool.

Stanley was all about some busy work. I don't recall that I learned anything in her class except how to fill 200 index cards, each with one fact about some specific topic from World History. I could have taught her class...when I was 4.

Funny story...Once during an exam I was concentrating so hard that a little foo-foo slipped out accidentally. I was MORTIFIED! In a setting where you could'a heard a pin drop, the foo-foo was like the freakin' H-Bomb!


Biology (or Bology)

The One, the Only, Mrs. P. Henry Watkins. Oh, the education I received in her class. You won't have the full effect of Mrs. Watkins without her voice. She used to purse her lips like Sean Connery when she talked and that coupled with a bit of a nasal tone caused many a laugh. She was a very smart, very kind woman, who didn't have the patience for our shenanigans. I probably should find her and apologize for being so hateful.

There were several phrases that would coax peals of laughter from P. Henry's students. I shall list them for you (Mrs. Noonzie, you'll totally appreciate this):

"Class, get out your no-books (notebooks)."

"Formaldehyde will give you cancer."

"Why don't you write HBJ." HBJ was the publisher of our Bology book and anytime we had an issue with something in the book, she would tell us to write them and complain - that way she wouldn't have to hear it."

"You will need Sex, Subject Index Finders." (Really, it was Six Subject Index Finders, otherwise known as dividers for a three-ring binder.)

"That's ONE demerit!" - when someone pushed her over the edge, she would do something that resembled jazz hands and yell this at them. Two demerits was the limit, but I'm not sure what happened after that.

"This is a feemstrip on Mollucks." - read: a filmstrip on Mollusks.

"No more Killer Statements." - Those were any unkind or hostile words toward anything or anyone. (i.e. "I hate feemstrips on mollucks" = a killer statement)

I sat at a table with Ben, Justin, and Amy and were we ever delinquent. One day, Justin recorded a toilet flushing and played it in the middle of class. She knew it came from our table and wanted to search our backpacks. I adamantly refused and played an Oscar worthy performance of "the victim". I can't recall if she ever found it, but we were definitely on watch after that. I also got one demerit one day for rocking my chair back on two legs. She must have been having a really bad day that day.

My senior year of high school, our English teacher asked us to write a poem and I chose to honor P. Henry by writing a poem about her class.

Upstairs on the second floor
Number 201 is on her door

Her class, meant to be an effective one
Is the kind of place where students have fun

Open your no-books and write down this note
But if you don't you might miss the boat.

If you have an answer raise your hand and share it,
but speak out of turn and you get one demerit.

While reading HBJ, her glasses slip to her nose
Meanwhile her class has begun to doze.

Her voice has a nasal squeaky sound
Which makes everyone fall laughing to the ground.

Fifty-five minutes on task is her theory
But working for that A will make you quite weary

Killer statements are not her thing
So if you say one, the apple bell will ding
(oh yeah, she had an apple bell too.)


Sometimes she is a complete bore
But when she does something funny, you'll be laughing some more.


I think that sums it up well, no?

It really is a shame that we successfully launched and crash-landed the one-year reign of the eco-family. It could have provided many more laughs for our successors. Oh well. It did succeed at providing many wonderful high-school memories for me.



the odd title award

Mr. Baseball and I always have handy some bathroom reading material for certain times when nature calls. One of our favorite reads is Uncle John's Ultimate Bathroom Reader. For those of you not familiar with Uncle John's, it, and its companion books, are a compilation of some of the craziest material out there. Its just random, which is why we like it.

Recently I came across a hilarious work entitled "The Odd Title Award", pg. 183, and oh is this ever post-worthy stuff.

(my comments will be in red)


The Name Game

Every year, tens of thousands of new books are published. Some are pretty strange...and in 1978, the staff at Bookseller magazine decided to honor a few with the Odd Title of the Year Award. Every year, they give a bottle of champagne to the person who finds the most unusual book title of the year. The only rules: the book itself has to be serious, and "gratuitously eye-catching academic works" are automatically disqualified. The title has to be weird without trying to be. (That's why New Guinea Tapeworms & Jewish Grandmothers; Tales of Parasites and People, lost out in 1994.) Here are (some) of the winners. Remember: These are real book titles!

1978: Proceedings of the Second International Workshop on Nude Mice (What was so incredible about the first workshop that made it necessary to have a second one?)

Runners Up:
* Cooking with God (I wonder if He only uses organic?)
* Iceberg Utilization (Classic example - Titanic)
* Fight Acne and Win


1979: The Madam as Entrepreneur: Career Management in House Prostitution (Stay-at-home-mom is just a cover-up people.)

Runners Up:
* Macrame Gnomes (Gnomes are weird, and why is the G silent? Who gnows?)
* 100 Years of British Rail Catering (boring...whatever.)


1980: The Joy of Chickens (the joy is in the meat and the eggs. period.)

Runner Up:
* Children Are Like Wet Cement (yeah, impressionable)


1985: Natural Bust Enlargement with Total Power: How to Increase the Other 90% of Your Mind to Increase the Size of Your Breasts (Oh, so if I just have enough faith, then they'll grow?)

Runner Up:
* Anorexia Nervosa in Bulgarian Bees


1989: How to Shit in the Woods: An Environmentally Sound Approach to a Lost Art (bwahahahahahahahahahaha! How is it a lost art, dogs do it everyday!)

1993: American Bottom Archaeology (maybe this is about "digging" out wedgies! tee hee!)

Runners-Up:
* Liturgy of the Opening of the Mouth for Breathing (Um, NEWSFLASH...Anyone who is not opening their mouth to breathe certainly won't be reading this book-I think we all know how to do this!)


So there you are, just a few of the funny ones. I might try to come up with some titles of my own. Maybe I'll work on that for later.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

cooking with the carolines

As I mentioned earlier here, I have been keeping a little girl named Caroline for about an hour and half after she gets out of school. Its really an ideal situation, and we have had fun this first week she's been here. We've played many games of Memory (so many in fact, that my el cheapo memory cards bit the dust, so I went out and bought some real ones), watched Shrek 3, danced to ABBA music, and played balloon volleyball.

On Friday, Mr. Baseball and I were having dinner with another family and were to bring a vegetable and dessert, so I enlisted the help of my name twin. She's quite the chef...who knew?

Our first assignment...

Chocolate Chip & Peanut Butter Chip Brownies



12 oz bag of chocolate chips
1 cup peanut butter chips (oops, we used the whole bag - and they were still good)
1 can sweetened condensed milk
1 1/2 c. graham cracker crumbs
1 stick of margarine

Melt margarine and mix with graham cracker crumbs. Press to cover bottom of 9x11 dish. Pour sweetened condensed milk over graham cracker and margarine mixture. Mix chocolate chips and peanut butter chips and pout over the milk. Bake at 350 for 20-30 minutes depending on your oven. (You may want to pull from oven before chips are completely melted.) Set up until cool and cut into bars.





Paula Deen's Corn Casserole

1 (15 oz) can whole kernel corn, drained
1 (14 3/4) can cream style corn
1 (8oz) pkg. corn muffin mix (Jiffy works well)
1 c. sour cream
1/2 cup (1 stick) butter, melted
1 - 1 1/2 c. shredded cheddar cheese


Preheat oven to 350. In large bowl, stir together 2 cans of corn, corn muffin mix, sour cream, and melted butter. (Please allow my lovely assistant to demonstrate)



Pour into a greased casserole dish. Bake for 45 minutes, or until golden brown. Remove from oven and top with cheddar cheese. Return to oven for 5 to 10 minutes or until cheese is melted. Let stand for 5 minutes and serve warm.



Enjoy!


Tuesday, September 2, 2008

alcohol sales = no coke zero

July 29th marked a big day for my "city". Prior to that day, one could not find alcohol on store shelves anywhere within the city limits. Oh, it was sold in the county (a mere 15 minute drive could get you some), but just not within the city limits.

All that changed on July 29th, when voters passed an alcohol referendum, and (legally) brought alcohol back in the city limits for the first time since the 50's.

I won't get into all the hoopla that surrounded this vote because that's not what's important here - but let me tell 'ya...

BOY, WAS I GLAD WHEN JULY 29TH CAME AND WENT!!!!!!

(Liken this to how some of you may feel once November 4th rolls around.)

I had actually gotten used to strolling through Wal-Mart/grocery stores/convenient stores and not seeing case after case of beer and wine.

It takes me a while to adjust to change, and well, I'm still adjusting to this change. I have lived here for 6 years with no alcohol and now its...EVERYWHERE! It will take a little time for me to once again become desensitized and then I'll be over it.

With that said, what I do have a problem with is that all the cases and cases of alcohol lining every shelf in every store I step foot in, have edged out my true love...



This picture doesn't lie folks, it really is a party in a bottle! More taste than Diet Coke with none of the calories of regular Coke. Yep, a party in a bottle!

I feel the need to tell you that after choir practice tonight I was craving some time with my love, so I did what any smart woman in need of a caffeine boost would do. I went to a convenience store. I quickly scanned the coolers for my love. I saw the red label, I saw the silver label, I even saw the gold label, but to my surprise, no black label. No worries, I'll just go to the CVS right down the road. It. Was. Not. There. Either! THEN, I went to another convenience store (I was really serious about my need) and THEY DIDN'T HAVE ANY EITHER!

I had to settle for a Diet Dr. Pepper (my one-night stand). Oh and never mind the fact that I could hardly see the floor (I kid you not) for all the alcohol boxes and what not all over the place. I asked the clerk where the Coke Zero was and he said (in his best Apu from the Kwik-E-Mart voice)...

"We trying make room for more things. We place order and it be here next week. We build store bigger to make room. Come back later."

Okay, great, but why was it that the only soda I didn't see was Coke Zero?

I see how it is.

No love.


I got love, and will proudly display my bling to prove it.




(P.S. I'll add this just because I know you're curious - Mr. Baseball and I do enjoy a glass of wine from time to time (read: like once every 3 months or so). Its not really a big deal to us.)


check out this giveaway!

Today I happened upon Rebecca at Uptown Girl and its a good thing I did because Rebecca is hosting a giveaway. Rebecca designed the blog for my friend Laurie at Baby Steps to Hannah and did a beautiful job!

Rebecca is going to be doing a giveaway once a month, so make sure you keep checking back. Here are the two gifts she'll be handing out to the lucky winner(s).

First is this cutie patootie handbag from Touch of Stardust.




The second prize is this cutsie camera strap from VMJESS.


Rebecca posts the rules on her site, so go to Uptown Girl and get yourself entered to win.