While the slow cookers were cooking I sat here hunched over the computer working on the March newsletter for the knitting guild. I'm sure that soon it'll start to go faster as I'm better at it but I got it pretty much laid out and sent out emails for the things I'm missing so maybe, if I'm lucky, the info will come before I send it out to the membership on Thursday. Fingers crossed. Oh, one stupid thing. I started working by getting the photos I'd taken photoshopped and cropped, looked for the 80-some pictures that MW had taken and lent me his SD card so I could download them and do you think I could find them? Of course not. I looked everywhere I thought they could be on this benighted machine but didn't find a trace of them. So I called him and the dear man drove over and handed me the SD card which I had returned to him last night. He visited with us for a few minutes and then left, promising to come back tomorrow with his impact drill to break up the patio glacier and help me make the outdoors safe for birdfeeder filling again. As soon as he drove away I put in the USB drive that I've designated for the guild files and guess what's on it. You're right, the folder with his pictures in it. Oh, he's going to laugh and laugh tomorrow when I tell him. I love it when I can make my friends laugh.
February 24--Felix Edouard Vallotton, Martiniquaise. Her hair framed her face in coal black waves that sprang from the center part like ripples on a midnight sea. Her dress was the pale yellow of dawn in the spring. Her dark brown eyes held warmth and compassion. I watched the sunlight glint off her jet and iridescent shell jewelry as she made her way up from the harbor. People called out to her, she inclined her regal head toward them but didn't smile or linger to speak. Every day I had watched her come into town and every day she had walked past the cafe where I sat reading the newspaper. That morning she stopped when she reached my table, smiled, and said, "May I sit?"
I just looked outside and I think it's raining again. Good thing tomorrow's Sunday so there won't be droves of school kids and people going to work on once-again icy streets. This whole freezing rain thing has got to stop. It's dangerous. I'm bushed. Over and out.
--Barbara
2 comments:
Thanks for this post, brought a smile to face. So descriptive.
All your "investment" cooking sounds and looks delicious. Good for D speaking his mind regarding the pizza nights. But I feel your anxiety after that "we need to talk" type announcement. Glad it was only a complaint about food. Easy enough to rectify. And you did that in no time flat. Good girl!
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