Wednesday, June 30, 2010

QT



Today's Topic: God's will is joy!
Author: Jerry Savelle
Verse(s): Philippians 4:4

Devotional:
Do you have the joy?
There hath no temptation taken you but such as is common to man: 
but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that 
ye are able; but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, that ye may be able to bear it.
1 Corinthians 10:13
The problem with most of us is that we get tunnel-visioned; 
so focused on the trials, that we quit looking for a way out.
 All we do is talk about the trial. We need to do exactly what God says
. REJOICE! Why does He want us to rejoice? The joy of the Lord is our strength! 
If you don’t have joy, you won’t have strength.


Joy comes from the Word. You have to read the Word constantly 
to have joy. You may sleep and slumber, but the devil won’t. 
The moment you open your eyes, he’ll say, “You’re not going to make it.
 This trial is too much for you!” But the devil doesn’t have any defense against joy.
Let me tell you what it means to rejoice. One meaning of the Hebrew 
word rejoice is “to brighten up.” Put a big smile on your face.
 Another meaning is “to spin around.” A third meaning is “to leap.”
 So, the next time you’re in a trial, here’s the way you’re going to respond: 
smile, spin and leap!!
Today’s Scripture Meditation
Rejoice in the Lord always: and again I say, Rejoice. Philippians 4:4
Be ye doers of the Word…
I refuse to be controlled by my feelings. I choose 
to rejoice in the Lord today. I choose to be joyful and make a joyful noise.
 I choose to give praise to my Lord and Savior.

Summer is almost here...vacation that is...

My plans for the summer are:

-prepare for company coming from the States
- marry off daughter numero uno.  This has been a stress free wedding so far
-sightsee Paris with our guests
-collapse afterwards
-get our 3 youngest ready for camp the 1st of August
-during the time they are at camp, I'll have some quiet time

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Almost summer vacation





I can handle this forecast. The week ahead looks full. Dan is in Israel til Friday. Do not ask about this. It's a sanctification thing for me.

I have to enroll J-N in high school. The high school sent the papers late and his present school did not give him his latest report card so I already have a missing element for the meeting tomorrow. I love it.

Our dog is turning into a real baby. Two nights in a row I woke to ThaƩ's whining and the hall light on. Then on the third night Isaac experienced the same thing. Now I knew I wasn't nuts. The crazy dog can turn on the light. He even tries to open Isaac's door. He probably could if we had a handle type door knob.

I'm moving his bed to the living room while Dan is gone so I can hold his paw if he whines.

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Monday, June 21, 2010

Cheeseburger Soup

Fresh bread and cheeseburger soup in the crockpot tonight!


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Looking more hopeful as the week goes on.

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Saturday, June 19, 2010

Kindle for Mac/iPhone

Oh my gosh, I think I'm going to be really really happy this summer. Not only have I ordered the next book club book and that dragon tattoo girl book. Sorry the title escapes me and I'm too lazy to google right now. I found Kindle for iPhone and Mac. I heard so many talk about the Kindle and I assumed it was only the device. Little did I know that it was available for Mac and iPhone. I have been a downloading maven today.

I downloaded the Heaven devotional and several books for F°R°E°E°, people!!!

I found a very very cool site called Survive France.

What I need now is a great guide on exploring Paris on foot.

Monday, June 14, 2010




http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2010/06/09/article-0-09F6EF96000005DC-590_306x423.jpg

Is this the world's oldest shoe? 5,000-year-old leather-laced size 4 found in cave in Armenia

By David Derbyshire
Last updated at 10:09 AM on 10th June 2010


Created more than 5,500 years ago at the dawn of civilisation this perfectly preserved brown leather lace-up is the oldest shoe in the world
For lovers of fashion, it's the ultimate vintage shoe.

Created more than 5,500 years ago at the dawn of civilisation this perfectly preserved brown leather lace-up is the oldest shoe in the world.

It was created from a piece of cow hide 1,000 years before the Great Pyramid of Giza and stitched together with leather thread.

The size 4 shoe - discovered buried in a cave in Armenia - is so well preserved that its lace is still intact.

Archaeologists say it probably belonged to a woman who deliberately buried it in the cave during a mysterious ritual. The cave also contained three pots, each containing a child's skull, along with containers of barley, wheat and apricot.

For Dr Ron Pinhasi, University College Cork, the shoe is a discovery of a lifetime.

'We thought initially that the shoe and other objects were about 600-700 years old because they were in such good condition,' said Dr Pinhasi.

'When we discovered that the shoe dated back to 3,500 BC and that it was the oldest leather shoe, we were very excited.'

The shoe was worn by an early farmer living in the mountains of Vayotz Dzor province of Armenia close to the border of modern-day Turkey and Iran.

The region was on the edge of the Fertile Crescent - the great sweep of land that gave birth to the first towns, cities and farms.

It was made from a single piece of leather, tanned using vegetable oil, and shaped to fit the wearer's foot. It contained grass, although archaeologists are unsure whether this was to keep out the cold, or maintain the shape of the shoe .


The shoe was made from a single piece of leather, tanned using vegetable oil, and shaped to fit the wearer's foot

This is the cave pit where the shoe was found. It is believed to have been worn by a farmer living in the mountains of Vayotz Dzor province of Armenia close to the border of modern-day Turkey and Iran
It was laced using a strip of leather threatened through slits. At some point in its life, one of the slits tore - forcing the wearer to make repairs by recutting another gash for the lace.

'It is not known whether the shoe belonged to a man or a woman,' said Dr Pinhasi, who reports the findings in the journal PLoS One.

However, the small size makes it most likely that it belonged to a woman, he added.

The cool and dry conditions in the cave helped preserve the shoe which appears to have been buried in the ground on its own. The floor was covered with a thick layer of sheep dung which helped conserve the shoe and other finds.

Three samples of the shoe were carefully radiocarbon-dated at laboratories at Oxford University and the University of California, Irvine.

The shoe was discovered by Armenian PhD student, Diana Zardaryan, of the Institute of Archaeology, Armenia, in a pit that also included a broken pot and sheep's horns.

Researcher Dr Gregory Areshian, of the University of California, Los Angeles, said: 'We couldn't believe the discovery. The crusts had sealed the artefacts and archaeological deposits and artefacts remained fresh dried, just like they were put in a can.'


The top and bottom close-up images show in detail how the shoe was laced together with a strip of leather. The image on the right shows its smooth sole

The entrance to an Armenian cave, marked with blue plastic in the centre of the picture where the shoe was found
The previous oldest known footwear were sandals made from plants found in a cave in Missouri. They were made and worn a few hundred years after the Armenian shoe.

The design is similar to the 'pampooties' worn on the Aran Islands in the West of Ireland up to the 1950s.

'We do not know yet what the shoe or other objects were doing in the cave or what the purpose of the cave was,' said Dr Pinhasi.

'We know that there are children's graves at the back of the cave but so little is known about this period that we cannot say with any certainty why all these different objects were found together.'

Armenia's climate 5,500 years ago was similar to today's - hot in the summer, snowy in winter. The owner of the shoe would have worn wool and leather clothes, and relied on the shoes for protection as she walked around the rocky terrain.

The shoe may have been made locally, or traded with the more sophisticated towns and villages in the heart of Mesopotamia, Dr Pinhasi added.


The spot in Armenia, marked with a red square, where the ancient shoe was discovered in the old 'fertile belt' of Fertile Crescent


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Sunday, June 13, 2010

Parisii

I have finally made the decision and (acted upon it) to officially close Parisii. It was a hard decision. I loved it. I loved my customers. It comes to no surprise to some of you that I'd close sometime soon.

I have some jewelry left if anyone was to buy some at lower prices.

I also have jewelry hardware that I'd be happy to sell all in a lump. Let me know if you'd be interested.

Catcher in the Rye

I'm reading "Catcher in the Rye" for book club. It has to be the most depressing thing I've ever read. Does the end get better?

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Purple passion

I'm not a cleaning maven but I did get a neato Mother's Day gift.  It's the Rubba Sweepa from Flylady. Not only does it sweep really well, I used it today to get dust off the ceiling and mouldings!


Here's the link!

Just Venting

Why do people make simple things like answering phone messages a matter of stress and anxiety? 


We have quite the technology nowadays ya know.  A simple text message is a wonderful way to let people know that you hear their messages and will get back to them soon.  BUT NO.  Not even with email possibilities, certain people just leave you hanging after multiples messages and texts.


I think there should be telephone policemen to hunt down the people who don't call back after a certain number of messages.