My apologies for anyone who may be offended by my posting of an image with bikini-clad women.
Sometimes getting what you want is a disappointment.
I’m afraid I’m about to jinx myself. The water dispenser in our refrigerator has started to flow very slowly or not at all. For you scientific folk, there ain’t no laminar flow going on. I think I’ve identified the problem to part I was able to order off Amazon for a bit under twenty bucks.
It may be unmasculine, but I want to learn how to sew.
I always thought tap-dancing was cool. Perhaps that’s a result of having a much older father and watching a lot, a lot of classic movies.
There are some things it’s just worth spending the extra money on. I love that feeling of owning something for years and being proud of the purchase knowing you’d be unhappy with the slightly more affordable version.
I may not express it verbally or in any written language, but I’m extremely cynical.
Sometimes, it’s just fun to eat corn on the cob.
I put sugar in my coffee for the first time in over a decade. I forgot how much better it tastes, but I’ll go back to just drinking it black. If for no other reason than a random scene in Airplane!. If you take the time to view the clip, notice the propeller noise in the background despite them flying on a jet. It’s like that for the whole movie. I continue to think it’s the most under-rated bit of comedy in all of cinema.
Rubber does not conduct electricity, but does the amount of electricity and thickness of the rubber make a difference. I’d be willing to wear a thin surgical glove and to pick up a plugged-in lamp cord with exposed wiring, but I wouldn’t wear the same glove to pick up exposed live wire which powers the lights at AT&T Stadium.
Few things can make me feel more loved and accepted than a dog, on his own free will, sitting on my lap or resting his head on me. And if I ever need to get up, I’ll never not feel guilty, even though I know all he does is sleep and rest all day.
This is an old clip I saw it for the first time yesterday. Typos be damned – panties and pantries just differ by one letter. But, I wonder if it was a Freudian slip by the typist.
Ah, the Lenten season. Some of you may remember that year I decided to give up blogging for Lent. You may recall not only did I stop blogging, but I also went so far as to take the entire website down.
DaughterGeeding got a new set of braces yesterday and chose the green version. Her sole reason, so she doesn’t have to wear any green clothing on St. Patrick’s Day.
BoyGeeding is a first-grader. Nine weeks ago he had a reading assessment and scored on the second-grade reading level, which isn’t bad. He was assessed again last week and his teacher was impressed at his improvement, he’s scored above a fourth-grade reading level.
I’m sure most folks would think that the Star-Spangled Banner has been our national anthem for over a hundred years, but you’d be wrong. It only became the national anthem by a congressional resolution on March 3, 1931 (46 Stat. 1508, codified at 36 U.S.C. § 301), which was signed by President Herbert Hoover. I also bet most folks aren’t aware it has four stanzas and that we only sing the first stanza, which I always found odd. It’s not that I don’t like the song, just odd that we only to choose a part of it. We celebrate and honor our country by only singing a quarter of the anthem. Some folks prefer America the Beautifuland wished it was our anthem. Only recently, I found out that song has more than one stanza as well.
That new Micheal Jackson documentary is in the news. I only watched about 15-minutes of it. Other than emotional testimony and graphic descriptions of the accusations, I’m not aware of any new evidence and don’t understand why many think this is the documentary which will tarnish his legacy to the point of no return. I’m not defending the man. I’m not saying he didn’t do anything illegal and grotesque. I simply don’t understand what new evidence or facts make this documentary more credible than everything else we’ve already heard, whether it’s true or false.
Who sings the best version of I’ll Fly Away? I’m going to say either Johnny Cash or the Soggy Bottom Boys. I’m not partial to the Steve Goodman version, but like what he says about it, “This is the song that proves you don’t have to know very much about Jesus to like spirituals.”
WifeGeeding and I got into an entertaining conversation while watching people serve themselves a cup of coffee. We focused on those who used cream, both the powdered and liquid variety (like half-and-half). Some people poured the creamer in their cup first and then the coffee, others the opposite. Sometimes we tried to predict what the next person would choose – black, powdered, liquid – creamer first or coffee first? Then our conversation delved into if there is any etiquette involved or if there is a proper cooking or scientific better way to do it. For instance, by pouring the powder first, does that prevent maximum mixage or increase the chance of clumpage.
The Texas A&M student newspaper chose to take a hard look at the school’s history of blackface and other racist displays in their yearbooks.
I never heard of the burger chain P. Terry’s, but Texas Monthly thinks a recent change of leadership could lead it to become as big as Whataburger.
Presidential trivia – In 1841, three men served as U.S. president – Van Buren, Harrison, and Tyler. It happened again in 1881 – Hayes, Garfield, and Arthur. If you’d like some details, here you go.
One of our neighbors was looking to get rid of their portable basketball goal and offered to another neighbor who has a young daughter playing basketball for her school. The goal was refused because the parents of the girl won’t let her play basketball outside because they fear it will hurt her shooting ability because shooting baskets outside will throw off her indoor basketball perception or peripheral vision.
We took BoyGeeding to our pediatrician for his annual wellness test. He said his daughter will be attending Penn State in the fall. Here’s something I had no idea about, the school has underground tunnels between certain buildings so the students don’t have to walk in the elements when the weather is bad.