Monday, November 28, 2005

We recently posted a note from Rickey on a Jeff Gordon fan site that said: I was a HUGE Jeff Gordon fan until an experience I had a few weeks ago. Please visit my site- http://exgordonfan.blogspot.com and leave a comment regarding your opinion of what happened-whether agreeable or not, comments are appreciated.
WOW -LOL- We got waaay more than anticipated. Sitemeter is showing 168 visitors yesterday and over 50 so far today. Some comments are so rude and offensive, I have deleted them. Some are plain stupid, defending Jeff without fully reading what happened. Some people are pointing out great things about him with charities and such, while ignoring that situation. There have been some really nice comments also. I have had to refrain from responding to the more insulting comments, but I have to laugh and realize how ludicrous it was to have posted on a Jeff Gordon fan forum..... teeheehee.

Thursday, November 24, 2005




We got a tree today. Rickey, Jason, Dylan, and I went to a tree farm that we have been passing by for a while now, and had made a plan to stop there when they opened. The farm had a picturesque setting...like a Christmas card. A place you would want to go visit your relatives at. Old timey barn. Trees all around, all different sizes, on gently sloping hills. The tree we picked is a Leyland Cypress. They also had some Frasier Firs, but I wanted to get something different. It doesn't have that Christmas pine smell- I wish it did, but it is really pretty. They are now setting it up in the tree stand. I'm hearing the customary @*#%$%* from Rickey until he gets it straight enough to call me over. :)














We also got this wreath at the tree farm.
HAPPY THANKSGIVING!





MAY GOD BLESS YOU

Monday, November 21, 2005

HAPPY HOLIDAYS
Saturday night we went to see WALK THE LINE.
Joaquin Phoenix and Reese Witherspoon star as Johnny Cash and June Carter. The movie is a biographical span of their musical careers and subsequent love story.
Even if you are not a fan of country music or of Johnny Cash, you should not let that stop you from seeing this movie. It is awesome. Joaquin captured the essence of Johnny Cash so well, it seemed as though he was channeling him, and as one critic put it;
Phoenix has never held the screen before the way he does here. At times he seems possessed by the spirit of Cash, who died just two years ago (a few months after June died). There are moments, when the camera catches him from a certain angle, or his voice develops a deep, raspy, demonic Cash-ness, when you'd swear that Cash and Phoenix had merged into the same person. -By John Hartl, Film Critic, MSNBC
click here for his full article/review

Friday, November 18, 2005


It is only 37 days until Christmas!!!






Question of the day: If you could have any gift at all (for YOU) what would you like?
Just for fun quiz
masculine/feminine test

my results:

44.62%
You are more Feminine than Masculine in your tastes, habits, and style. You can be sentimental at times, and you seem to be more in touch with your feelings than others. You appreciate order and balance, and you know what you like and where you are headed.


Thursday, November 17, 2005

I have trouble posting at times, because it is hard to decide what parts of my personal life I am willing to "put out there"........but tonight I am in the mood to express one of my vulnerabilities.
Okay, I am 35 years old. For three more months. :)
I am aggravated about being this old.
That is all.

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

I've been keeping myself amused playing around with the template. Give me any input/suggestions. I'll probably keep changing it.

Meanwhile,
my Question of the day is:

If you could meet any celebrity and hang out for the day, who would it be?

Sunday, November 13, 2005


my desktop this week

Saturday, November 12, 2005



My Linguistic Profile:



45% General American English

30% Dixie

20% Yankee

0% Midwestern

0% Upper Midwestern


Tuesday, November 08, 2005









Having visited Denise's Blog the other day, and reading a post she did about Mozart, and recognizing how very little I have focused in that area of musical history, I was inspired to look at his life. AND Beethoven's, but I'll get to that another time.

While I was reading about his travels and performances,
I glanced back up to see how old he was when he died and was floored to realize how young he was. He was only 35 years old. He accomplished more works and musical legacies to leave the world, in his 35 years, than most of us will in a lifetime......

His full name was Johannes Chrysostomus
Wolfgangus Theophillus Amadeus Mozart.
Amadeus was added to his name after a trip to Italy.
All these names mean "Beloved of God."

When he was younger, he went by the nickname, Wolferl, and eventually called himself Mozart.
His father, Leopold, who was a talented musician and composer, taught Mozart and his older sister at a very young age to appreciate music. Mozart was so ingeniously talented that he wrote his first piece at age 5, called a minuet. It is absolutely beautiful.

By the time he was eight years old he had started to write for other instruments as well. He shocked his family by joining in perfectly on a violin session that his father was having with a friend. He wrote a sonata for the flute and the piano. Shortly thereafter, he wrote an entire symphony!
Everyone was astounded at his musical ability. Many though, were skeptical that he was really the composer of these musical masterpieces. He had to prove to the townsfolk, time and time again, that the music was truly his creation.
Word of his talent spread. He was summoned to play for the Emperor and Empress of Austria. His family traveled there and “Wolferl” delighted them by performing some of his music. They were so impressed, they lavished him and his family with gifts and money. They gave them fine clothes to wear. The empress had made a suit intended for her son, but liked Wolferl so much, she gave it to him.




Mozart’s father, upon realizing what a success this journey was, started arranging trips for the family. They traveled to Venice, and Rome, and eventually throughout Europe. Mozart’s fame was spreading. By the time he was eleven years old, he had played for many important people of that time. As he grew older, though, he was becoming less in demand. He was no longer the child prodigy everyone was so amazed by. They traveled to Paris and were not impressed with the way they were received. They considered the people there to be fake and cold. His family felt the people in London were far more friendly and full of warm culture. As he grew older, illnesses beset him and his family. It was in Paris that his mother died suddenly in July, 1778. Mozart moved to Vienna where he lived for a time with the Webers, a family he had met in 1777. He eventually married Constanze Weber in August of 1782. He and his wife had six children, but only two survived.
He was always writing music to sell to try and make money. Occasionally, he would sell a composition to a publisher for a decent price or he would receive an order to write an opera. Off and on he struggled financially. Many felt that he mismanaged his money and did not pursue his career properly. When once asked about a meager court appointment he held, Mozart replied: "I get paid far too much for what I do, and far too little for what I could do." His music did not always please those in power: "Too many notes," Emperor Joseph II was reported to have said. And Mozart himself, who always felt that his talents were never adequately recognized, was often moody and difficult to be around.
During that time, music from other places in the world, called World Music, was very popular. Wolfgang loved the music from Turkey, and composed a piece to sound like the music played in that country. It is called Rondo ala Turca. It is a piece many consider among his best.

Throughout his life, he and his family were plagued with different illnesses. His health was never very good. It is written that a very strange and mysterious thing happened one day when Mozart was home alone. A stranger knocked on the door, dressed in dark clothes from head to foot with a dark hood covering his head. It is also written that he handed Wolfgang a piece of paper, asking him to compose a requiem, which is a musical piece written to honor the dead. It is reported that this really scared him. He stated that he was going to die soon and that the song he was writing was for his own funeral. Some say that it is not a mystery, who the hooded man was; that it was the servant of a Count Walsegg who intended to claim the work as his own at a memorial service for his wife.
Over the next several months, Wolfgang was completely obsessed with writing this piece.
As he wrote this requiem, his illness became more and more severe. He became ill with acute rheumatic fever. He eventually became so ill that he could not even get out of bed, and it became hard for him to breathe.
He was never able to finish the whole piece by himself. Part of this piece was named the "Tuba Mirem" and is considered one of the most beautiful pieces he ever wrote.
On December 5, 1791... Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart died.
He is considered one of the greatest composers who ever lived.

Sunday, November 06, 2005

We have an update on http://exgordonfan.blogspot.com

Tuesday, November 01, 2005

click on the link to read something I wrote for Rickey about an experience we recently had meeting Jeff Gordon.
http://exgordonfan.blogspot.com
Something is supposed to run in the paper. We actually got a response from Jeff Gordon through a reporter, regarding the statement. I'll be posting that later.

Please comment on that site about your feelings regarding Jeff's behavior- or about how shallow it is for us to care that much lol. I don't necessarily agree with every point in it-specifically on admiring anyone like that, as strongly as he had, but hopefully a point has been made. For the record, I detest Nascar-lol and there is no one on earth that I would go through any trouble to get their autograph. I am truly glad they were able to see him in a real light and not the fantasy. I have spoken with Dylan about the situation and he is fine. More than fine.