Please read and encourage this writer. We have all been new. Thanks.

Life with a TBI and now a stroke has made me look at my dull life through s different set of lenses. I have written 20+ posts and gotten like three “…
The Power of a Like
Please read and encourage this writer. We have all been new. Thanks.

Life with a TBI and now a stroke has made me look at my dull life through s different set of lenses. I have written 20+ posts and gotten like three “…
The Power of a Like
Do you need time?
No. I don’t have to try to squeeze too much into a day anymore, something to be grateful for. When my children were little, I got up at 5:00 am and cooked a hot breakfast while I dressed for work. I usually folded a load of clothes and put another in the washer. My daughter always wanted grits and eggs so that involved some cooking.
At 5:00, I handed off to Bud. He got the kids up, made sure they were dressed in clothes we’d put out the night before, and on the bus..
Upon arriving home, I put clothes in the dryer and another in the washer, then started dinner while Bud and I tag-teamed on homework, dinner, and baths. We usually shared family time till bedtime while I entertained myself loading the dishwasher or folding a load of clothes.
By 9:00, we were usually grateful to settle down to a cup of tea or coffee and a little evening relaxation. Of course, I put on a load of laundry on the way to bed.
No one knows what they are signing on for when starting a family. I am grateful for my family then and now. Time is relative.








Daddy had come into some money, so he immediately set to thinking what he had to spend it on. That was the way he thought. If you had money, you had to buy something. He finally settled on three things: a big Ford Truck, the biggest cab-over camper it could carry and a fine Ford tractor. The total of these items was three times his windfall, but that was the way he did things. Angered at the amount he’d spent, Mother ordered six pair of slacks and matching blouses from Montgomery-Ward. He raged at her extravagance. That was also the way they did things.
Anyway, back to the truck and camper. They set off on the typical American road trip. Daddy quickly found the big camper, though rated for that truck, was really too big and made the truck hard to handle. Even passing eighteen wheelers buffeted it about on the interstate. Imagine the challenge it presented on narrow mountain passes. Once, when they decided to go to Pike’s Peak, he unloaded it and left it in the RV camp, not wanting to deal with the excitement.
After they’d been travelling long enough that the refuse tank on the camper had reached near capacity, he pulled up to a dumping station in a national park to empty it. Never one to read directions, he knew he could figure out how it worked on his own, relying on his “common sense.”
He flipped a switch, and “Voila!” The tank emptied on the pad at the dumping station, its contents, solid and liquid, streamed across the busy road. Mother puttered nearby and noticed what he’d done, but didn’t get the big picture. “Why did you dump it here? Is it supposed to go here?”
Meanwhile, passing cars zipped through the refuse, flinging tissue and other unpleasant souvenirs up to await the nearest carwash! Daddy was in a panic, trying to get Mother to hush and get in the truck so they could flee the scene before his ghastly error was caught by a ranger. Mother nattered on, trying to figure out why he’d dumped the tank there, until she realized he was about to leave without her. All’s well that ends well. They managed to get away Scott-free as Mother dug out the instruction book and Daddy fumed.
I have to catch up with all my WordPress friends. We visited Mountain View, Arkansas for a few days. We stayed at a rustic cabin on the shores of Syllamore Creek.

We did absolutely no touristy things, only leaving the cabin once to buy groceries. We spent one afternoon watching buzzards glide on the updrafts from the creek up the cliff. Their ability to glide indefinitely was something to see. They seemed to exert no energy. They were still circling when the heavy rain ran us from our rockers on the back porch. The rain pounding on the tin cabin roof was relaxing.
Note the mansion on the bluff above the creek. Though we were at the cabin three nights, they never invited us up for coffee.

We have the responsibility to vote November 5. Please take your responsibility of voting very seriously. Think hard about the character and abilities of the person who will be charged with the responsibility of leading our country. They should look at the best interests of everyone, not just a privileged portion.
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"Creative Insights for Designers & Digital Artists
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