You get a coffee mug like this!
(What, you were expecting a punch line?) This series, not quite a gallery, describes the coffee mugs in my collection. There are no plain ordinary mugs, no plain white ceramic, no basic black. The duck mug was a gift, given to go with the art work on the mantle (below). Husband bought me the piece as a gift for completing my Masters Degree project a few years ago. The day I mailed the project, after many sleepless weeks of planning and work, he presented me with the framed duckling picture as a reward for having “all my ducks in a row”. When my sister-in-law spotted the mug, she thought they would go together well. She was right. I use the mug often, and every time I think of how good it feels to have the degree finished and “all my ducks in a row.”
Category Archives: the coffeepot’s on
>I’ve been “tagged” by Momnos to answer a few questions on books in my life. This is harder than it looks! I read a lot, both professionally and for pleasure, and it was still difficult to come up with answers for all of these.
A book that changed my life:
When I was young, I read and re-read Little Women. I was going to be Jo March when I grew up! I liked (and still prefer) books with strong female characters, believable plots, and good writing. I read Frank McCourt’s memoir Teacher Man earlier this summer. It was excellent — right on the money.
A book I’ve read more than once:
I reread. I do. Reading a good book once isn’t enough. I read The Horse Whisperer by Nicholas Evans so many times I can recite certain scenes in my mind. The movie was okay, but the book is SO much better. Evans has a way of describing his characters through their actions that lets the reader feel like a part of the story. Every time he publishes a new one, I buy it.
A book I’d like to have on a desert island:
Since I reread most books, I have trouble picking just one. If I were marooned somewhere, I’d hope that my previous reading would do me some good. In fact, I’d stand a better chance of surviving in a wooded area, based on reading a lot of Gary Paulson (Hatchet) and Jean Craighead George (My Side of the Mountain).
A book that made me laugh out loud:
Bill Bryson’s travel books make me laugh every time. I’ve read A Walk in the Woods several times, and I laugh out loud.
A book that made me cry:
Back to children’s literature again — when I read Walk Two Moons by Sharon Creech, I needed a box of tissues by my side. Oh, my, she builds up to a surprising and amazing climax.
A book I wish I had written:
There are too many to choose from. I really enjoy good books. I wish I’d thought of Harry Potter, but honestly, J.K. Rowling does him better than I would. She just gets better with every book.
A book that never should have been written:
Rather than a book, I’ll refer to a lengthy tome that affects so many children: the Elementary and Secondary Schools Act, sometimes known incorrectly as No Child Left Behind. Frankly, this law is very poorly written and leaves a lot of children behind.
A book I’m currently reading:
Alma Mater: a college homecoming by P.E. Kluge, and The Poetry Home Repair Manual by Ted Kooser. Maybe Ted Kooser’s suggestions will help me improve on my own work! When school starts, I make a conscious effort to have pleasure reading on my bedside. It keeps things in perspective and lets me sleep peacefully at night.
A book I’m planning to read;
Nickel and Dimed by Barbara Ehrenreich. Many of my friends have read and recommended it.
Thanks for the tag, Momnos. This was a thoughtful and enjoyable post to write!
>The Girls set goals
>While Da Boys were gone, La Petite and I set a goal: to avoid cooking as long as possible. Many of you can identify, I’m sure — only two of us at home, laid back atmosphere, no schedule to keep, yadayadayada…Here’s our progress report.
Tuesday: Dropped off the boys at the airport. Breakfast was toast and coffee, lunch leftovers, and for an early supper we went to the chicken wing place because it was Tuesday, and wings were cheap. Mmmm. I could be talked into doing that again.
Wednesday: bkfst simple, ran errands all morning, lunch: tried out the new sub sandwich. Again, Mmmm. We shared a twelve inch because it was cheaper than buying 2 six inchers. So far, not only are we avoiding cooking, we’re also finding bargains! I can live with that. Supper? good thing we had all kinds of leftovers in the fridge.
Thursday: Bkfst and lunch similar to Tuesday. Early supper at the bagel shop. Bought a half dozen to tide us over for the next few days’ breakfasts and maybe even lunches.
Friday: does it count if I made tuna salad? The tuna salad sandwich at the sub shop was so good we wanted to make them at home. It took no microwave or stove action, just draining the tuna and adding a few goodies and a scoop of mayo, so it isn’t really cooking. With a scoop on a slice of white flaxseed bread (from the Amish baker at the farmers’ market), we have a delicious sandwich — while still keeping to our goal.
Saturday: finished off the bagels. Picked up Da Boys at the end of their trip. Drive-throughs are useful (in moderation), so one more time we avoided cooking.
Success! I wonder what our goals will be next time the boys are away?
>To-Do list for a Hot, Lazy Day
>
- Sleep in.
- Still in pajamas, feed bunnies.
- Start coffee.
- Eat breakfast (nothing fancy, of course).
- Watch morning news (zone out over irrelevant stories) and drink coffee.
- Turn on air conditioning.
- Let dishwasher wash dishes.
- Read favorite blogs.
- Read book.
- Shower. Finally set aside pajamas and get dressed in casual, lazy clothes.
- Heat leftovers for lunch, avoiding cooking.
- Bring minivan to full service car wash to let other people wash it.
- Stop at bookstore and buy bag full of fiction books for future hot, lazy days.
- Read book.
- Take nap.
- Take daughter to bagel shop for early light supper, avoiding cooking once again.
- Answer text messages from traveling husband and son.
- Attend study group meeting.
- Okay, it wasn’t all lazy. I did read the assignment for our study group and write up the accountability paperwork so we get credit for it.
- Stop at the store to buy toilet paper (some things just can’t be put off).
- Come home, contemplate pajamas again, water plants, pick up book and zone out on Weather Channel until bedtime.
I wonder what tomorrow will bring?