Sunday, October 28, 2012

Pumpkins Galore.jpg
Being a good person is like being a pumpkin.
God lifts you up, takes you in, and washes all the dirt off of you.
He opens you up, touches you deep inside and scoops out all of the yucky stuff –
including the seeds of doubt, hate, greed, etc.
Then He carves you a bright new smiling face and puts
His light inside of you to shine for all the world to see.
This was passed on to me from another pumpkin.
Now, it is your turn to pass it on to a pumpkin of your choice.
I liked this enough to send it to all the pumpkins in my patch.
Have A Happy Fall!!

Sunday, September 16, 2012

The Three Day Diet



         ...You can do anything for just three days...;^}

                    

Lately God has been nudging me to lose some weight. I have a wedding to go to this weekend, and I’m going on vacation next month, so I thought His idea of my losing a few pounds was a good one.  One of my co-workers, Monica, came in to work last Friday with the “Three Day Diet”!  How timely. 

Hmm, Three Day Diet—there’s something Biblical in there somewhere.  Perhaps God is trying to resurrect one of His original creations.

By following this miracle diet, I was practically guaranteed to lose 10 pounds in just three days!  Easy—I can do almost anything for three days!  I planned out my three days---Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of this week; and armed with my list, took off for the grocery store.  This was just so awesome, not too restricting, it even had a few enticing perks, not to mention a carrot dangling in front of my nose (literally).

Tues:

Breakfast:
½ grapefruit (I love grapefruit, but am not supposed to eat it since I’m on cholesterol medication)
1 slice of toast with 2 tbls. Peanut butter.  Coffee or tea.  That’s more than I usually eat, so I was on my way to skinny!
Lunch:  ½ cup of tuna, 1 slice of toast.  Coffee or tea.  Well, that’s a little limiting, but just think, 10 pounds in 3 days!
Dinner:  2 slices of meat!  Wow, I thought of 2 giant slabs of prime rib, but then I read the fine print (3 ozs.) , 1 cup of green beans, 1 small apple, and ½ banana.  My dog, Mia, was so happy, she got the other banana half.  And, I couldn’t believe my eyes:  1 cup vanilla ice cream for dessert.  I chose Haagen-dazs.

I was so pumped!  This was a snap.  I could hardly wait to get to sleep so I could hit the scale in the morning and see my 3 1/3 pound weight loss.

Apparently there is something wrong with my scale!  I lost nothing.

Wed:

Breakfast:
1 Egg, 1 slice of toast and ½ banana (another happy day for Mia)
Lunch:
1 cup cottage cheese, 1 hard boiled egg, 5 Saltines – this feast lasted until about 2:30 when my stomach was serenading the entire office.
Dinner: Now this was what I’d been waiting for – my favorite food!  2 hotdogs—I fired up the grill as soon as I got home and threw on 2 Ball Parks and watched them plump!  With my meat dish, I gagged down (oops, I mean enjoyed) 1 cup broccoli, ½ cup carrots, ½ half of a banana (Mia is in heaven by now), and, can you believe it, another ½ cup of Haagen-dazs!

I could hardly sleep Wednesday night, just thinking about all of the clothes I’d be able to get back into, instead of taking them to the women’s shelter. Again I stepped gingerly onto the scale.  No Change!  I picked the scale up and shook it just to be sure it was working correctly.  Nothing!

Thurs:

Breakfast:
5 Saltines and a slice of Cheddar cheese so thin it only had one side, accompanied by a teenie weenie apple.
Lunch:
1 hard boiled egg and a slice of toast.  No further comment on that.
Dinner:
1 Cup of tuna – must have come from some old tuna living in the Dead Sea – dry as a bone, ½ half banana (Mia is doing flips through the living room by now) and, of course, 1 cup of vanilla ice cream.

OK, so I lived through the 3 days—barely.  Friday morning was the big day, the day I would step on the scale and see how my weight had plummeted! 

WHAT!  1 pound?  Really?  What about the big promise?  I was starving, and still fat! 

I came in to work and told Monica I wanted a refund.  She reminded me that the diet had been free of charge. 

The lesson in this, I believe God has been trying to get my attention.  Well, it worked, and in His amazing sense of humor, He reminded me that free will is my choice.  He doesn’t make bad choices for us, we do!

Written by an only slightly thinner
Paula Glauber

Friday, March 9, 2012

Reflections on Housekeeping


Reflections on Housekeeping

                                                                                    by Peggy Schimmelman

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
This was written by my friend, Peggy, for a presentation for our Writing Class that we both take. I thought readers might get a kick out of it. Enjoy!
Corinne Mustafa
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

           Inviting friends over for pizza and board games seemed like a good idea in the middle of the week when I spontaneously issued the invitations. But this morning, waking up to a day that would necessarily be dedicated to de-cluttering and dusting, vacuuming and mopping, scrubbing tiles and scouring sinks, I drag myself out of bed with a self-pitying sigh.

Lingering over breakfast, I ponder my dislike of house-cleaning. Few people love it, I know, but certain comments by my sisters and friends on the subject have led me to believe that my aversion is stronger than most. How did this unhealthy attitude develop, I wonder, and could it be overcome? Learning to enjoy cleaning would be too much to ask,  but could I perhaps figure out how to get though an entire day of it without growing grumpier with each swish of the toilet brush? Without stamping my foot and cursing the forty-year-old electrical outlets that keep spitting out the vacuum cleaner plug?   Without muttering to myself, snapping at my husband or shouting at the cat? 

          I don’t think of myself as a lazy person.  I work out at the gym three or four times a week, I never turn down an opportunity to dance, and my husband and I take at least one brisk neighborhood walk every day, weather permitting. My list of hobbies and interests would fill this page, although admittedly, ninety-nine percent of them are best enjoyed in a sedentary position.  Still, I don’t think you could accurately describe me as sluggish –  at least not until it’s time to drag out the cleaning supplies and mount an attack on several weeks’ accumulation of cat hair and dust bunnies. So if the problem isn’t physical, I remind myself, then It must just be in my head, and perhaps all that’s needed is an attitude adjustment. Lately, I’ve been trying to take a more Zen-like approach to many aspects of my life, including my job, my diet, ageing, and my husband’s reduced travel schedule. Why not apply the same principles to house-cleaning?

 Perhaps, I tell myself, I should try to stop thinking of housework as something that keeps me from more interesting, rewarding pursuits. Rushing to get the drudgery behind me, working against the clock, serves only to raise the level of tension and to further darken my mood.  And what’s the hurry, really? It’s true that I could use this time to paint, read, or finish that story for my writing class. But the truth is that I might just as likely sit in my rocking chair and work my second crossword of the day or chat on the phone with one of my sisters for an hour.

So this time, instead of hurrying through the process as usual – that is to say, with much sighing, frowning, cursing and muttering - I take a deep breath and give the woman in my kitchen mirror a smile and a little pep talk. “Relax!” I tell her. “You have all day to finish the job, and there is nothing else of any importance that needs to be done.”  
             
            My aversion to housework is a lifelong affliction, possibly genetic, but more likely absorbed from parental modeling. My father drove away to work each morning, then came home in the evening and plopped down into his favorite chair (with a cup of coffee brewed by my mother) to wait for dinner. My mother never worked outside the home, so managing the house and six kids was her job.  She had no car and no driver’s license, and the closest thing she had to a hobby was watching the soaps for an hour or so in the afternoon, after the house had been whipped into shape. To me, her day seemed a whirlwind of washing and ironing, sewing and sweeping, mopping and dusting. She often had sore feet and chapped hands, and little energy left after dinner for anything more than a sitcom or two on TV. But did she ever complain? Yes, of course she did - not only with words but with sighs, frowns, and woeful shakes of her head.  “Just look at this mess! I picked it all up yesterday,” she would lament. “I swear, I don’t know why I even bother.” There was never any doubt that she hated her job, and so I grew up thinking of housework as exhausting, boring and unrewarding - a woman’s load to bear.

With all those kids (you might ask) why didn’t she train all of you to pitch in? The house was small, and as an organized family cleaning unit we could’ve rendered it spotless in one hour on a Saturday morning. When my sisters and I were old enough, we began to share the chore of washing the dishes, and we were expected to make our beds, but nothing more. My mother never even taught me how to properly hold a dust cloth, and when I asked once, on a whim, if she would teach me to cook a whole meal by myself, she snapped at me. She didn’t have time for teaching on top of all her other work, she said. It was easier to just do everything herself.  As a result, my dislike of housekeeping is intensified by my suspicion that I’m unqualified for the job. My painted walls bear the scars of my well-meaning attempts to remove fingerprints, my wood tables have wax build-up, and I can never seem to get all the streaks out of the mirrors and windows, The vacuum cleaner leaves tracks on my rug no matter which direction I push it, and the toilets never look as clean as I suspect they should.
   
But today I am taking a new approach to cleaning – a calmer, more Zen-like approach. My husband vacates the premises, as usual. He used to stay and pitch in, but comments such as “Good grief, you’re in the way of the vacuum again” and “I already cleaned that bathroom, damn it, why do I even bother,” have led him to believe he’s better off roaming the aisles of various hardware and electronics stores until the cleaning frenzy runs its course.  So today I’m on my own, but I resist the urge to whine about it.

I tackle one room at a time, starting with the smallest and working my way up. I scrub the guest bath and the laundry room, and decide I’ve earned a break. I call my sister and we chat for twenty minutes. “I’m in no hurry,” I tell her. “I’m just cleaning the house, and I have all day.” I take on another bathroom, the one I used to make the kids clean before they escaped the nest. When the woman in the mirror complains, “No one even uses this bathroom anymore; how does the shower still manage to get dirty?” I .shrug and remind her, “Cleaning is neither bad nor good. It just is. And anyway, you’ve got nothing else of any importance to do.”

I clean on through the afternoon, with breaks for lunch, a preliminary stab at the Saturday crossword, and a couple more extended phone chats. Finally, I’m finished! And I’m a little surprised at how good I feel – not only about the way the house looks, but also about the new approach I’ve discovered to help me get through my most hated chore with a minimum of stress. The woman in my hallway mirror looks serene, proud and happy - for about five seconds, after which her eyes fly open in horror.

  “For crying out loud!” she complains..“Would you please get your darn feet off this wet floor? I swear, I don’t know why I even bother!”

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

WHEN YOU THOUGHT I WASN'T LOOKING


WHEN YOU THOUGHT
I WASN'T LOOKING
A message every adult should read

because children are watching you
and doing as you do, not as you say.






When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you hang my
first painting on the refrigerator, and I immediately
wanted to paint another one.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you feed the
birds in winter, and I learned that it was good to be kind
to animals.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you make my
favorite cake for me, and I learned that the little
things can be the special things in life.

When you thought I wasn't looking I heard you say a
prayer, and I knew that there is a God I could always
talk to, and I learned to trust in Him.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you make a
meal and take it to a friend who was sick, and I
learned that we all have to help take care of each other.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you take care
of our house and everyone in it, and I learned we have
to take care of what we are given.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw how you
handled your responsibilities, even when you didn't
feel good, and I learned that I would have to be
responsible when I grow up.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw you hold
the door open for others and heard 'thank you' and
 'you're welcome', and I learned respect for others.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw tears come
from your eyes, and I learned that sometimes things
hurt, but it's all right to cry.

When you thought I wasn't looking I saw that you
cared, and I wanted to be everything that I could be..

When you thought I wasn't looking I learned most of
life's lessons that I need to know to be a good and
productive person when I grow up.

When you thought I wasn't looking I looked at you and
wanted to say, 'Thanks for all the things I saw when
you thought I wasn't looking.'

I AM SENDING THIS TO ALL OF THE PEOPLE I KNOW
WHO DO SO MUCH FOR OTHERS,
BUT THINK THAT NO ONE EVER SEES.


 LITTLE EYES SEE A LOT!!!
Each of us (parent, grandparent, aunt, teacher, friend)
influences the life of a child.

Live simply. Love generously. Care deeply.
Speak kindly.
Leave the rest to God.

Shared by Corinne Mustafa

Saturday, February 4, 2012

This will explain the word "chutzpah". (hoots-pah)

Chutzpah is a Yiddish word
meaning gall, brazen nerve, effrontery, sheer guts plus arrogance;And, as Leo Rosten writes,
no other word, and no other language,
can do it justice.

A little old lady sold pretzels
on a street corner for a dollar each.Every day a young man would leave
his office building at lunch timeAnd as he passed the pretzel stand
 he would leave her a dollar,But never take a pretzel.This offering went on for more than 3 years. The two of them never spoke.One day as the young man
passed the old lady's stand
and left his dollar as usual,
The pretzel lady spoke to him
for the first time in over 3 years.

 
Without blinking an eye she said:
 "They're a dollar and a quarter now."
 
 That's chutzpah!
 
 
Shared by Corinne Mustafa

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Athiest Holy Day

I know God is giggling!
A Florida Court Sets Atheist Holy Day!   
           Gotta love this Judge!  
            You must read this......
A proper decision by the courts...
for a change. 

 
             A  FLORIDA COURT SETS
ATHEIST HOLY DAY
 
         In  Florida , an atheist created a case against Easter and Passover Holy days.  He hired an attorney to bring a discrimination case against Christians and Jews and observances of their holy days.  The argument was that it was unfair that atheists had no such recognized days.          The case was brought before a judge.  After listening to the passionate presentation by the lawyer, the judge banged his gavel declaring, "Case dismissed!"
 
       The lawyer immediately stood and objecting to the ruling saying, "Your honor, How can you possibly dismiss this case?  The Christians have Christmas, Easter and others.
  The Jews have Passover, Yom Kippur and Hanukkah, yet my client and all other atheists have no such holidays..."
         The judge leaned forward in his chair saying, "But you do. Your client, counselor, is woefully ignorant."   

The lawyer said," Your Honor, we are unaware of any special observance or holiday for atheists."    The judge said, "The calendar says April 1st is April Fool’s Day. Psalm 14:1 states, 'The fool says in his heart, there is no God.' 
Shared by Corinne Mustafa      
 Thus, it is the opinion of this court, that, if your client says there is no God, then he is a fool.
Therefore, April 1st is his day.   Court is adjourned..."
You gotta love a Judge that knows his scripture!    
 
 
This is too good not to forward!