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Celebrate > being alive and aware

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message 1: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments I woke up this morning! felt great emotionally. woke up happy. happy I am still interested in the world out there somewhere. looking forward to catching up on terminalcoffee. there are so many people out there just locked into their own little worlds with no hunger to know more, explore different ideas, no intellectual curiousity...no curiousity. they have become rats in a maze and do not even know it. they have no hunger to meet new people with new ideas. So, yes , I am celebrating my very existance today.


message 2: by Félix (new)

Félix (habitseven) I'm with you, Michele. Yay for life!


message 3: by Suefly (new)

Suefly | 620 comments since i started to go back to school in my 30's, i realize how much i missed being able to flex a little bit of my 'mind muscle'. it is not so much that i lack a sense of curiousity, but i was simply so bogged down in my very narrow world of trying to simply keep my head above water. i was underemployed and underpaid, and i was just so consumed with keeping myself together. i just found it hard to really return to that sense of hunger and awareness when life was just so effectively kicking my ass.


message 4: by Joanne (new)

Joanne (bonfiggi) When I take the time to think about this planet orbiting the sun, and us alive on it at this moment, I'm dizzy with amazement and happiness.


message 5: by Phil (new)

Phil | 11837 comments Barb wrote: "Can I borrow some of Michele's enthusiasm for the day? I'm having a very blah day, just the thought of trying to find something to have for lunch nearly threw me into a temper tantrum. Can I just..."

Yes, you have official permission.


message 6: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments to suefly: hey, been there,done that and lived through several life altering events. I am the phoenix, always (so far) rising from the ashes. I was unfortunately (sometimes)born curious and even when I was juggling fulltime job,school,1 son and 40 hrs/month working for the crises service I still met people,asked questions,debated and squeezed in 4 books a week...only time I "lost" that curiousity was the year I had both mononucleosis and a migraine nearly every day triggered by the mono...actually,the migraine lasted 2.5 years and I call it my "black hole period"...even then I explored all the info I could get about mono,epstein-barr virus and migraines. always wanted to know stuff because knowledge is power. The reason I am so happy today is because this is the 1st migraine free day in a week.


message 7: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments the sky is blue and the bare,slender tree limbs profiled against that blue is just lovely. the house is quiet and I am on terminalcoffee. life is good. so what if I have no peripheral vision. Don't need it if I am stationary and on the computer. no pain,just occular migraine which has not happened in a long,long time. I hear some birds chirping and squirrels scampering outside. I guess some birds forgot to migrate. I'll have to pick up birdseed. Life is good. I am very fortunate.


message 8: by [deleted user] (new)

Michele wrote: "I hear some birds chirping and squirrels scampering outside. I guess some birds forgot to migrate. I'll have to pick up birdseed. Life is good. I am very fortunate.

"


I'll have whatever she's having.


message 9: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments today is errand day...I always look forward to it because I am out and about..I get to see what is new at the grocery store. the weather is sunny and the trees are elegant without their leaves..I can smell leaves burning somewhere in the neighborhood and oour next door neighbor is burning applewood in his woodstove. the air is dry and crisp and the leaves are crunching underfoot. I am glad to be alive.


message 10: by Jan (new)

Jan | 241 comments I've just started Stephen King's newest and am looking forward to settling in for a nice read. That is, if I'm not scared away first. So far, so good. Btw, it's a library book, not on my Kindle. I didn't want to have to pay $14.99 if I could get it for free. If the price had been $9.99, I may have considered it.


message 11: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments It's a robert frost kind of day: chilly, grey outside but nice and cozy inside. reading terminalcoffee, drinking gingerale..enjoying, enjoying...started the day with kitty kisses. will read something new later. finished "Grave Witch" and enjoyed it. good ,it is all good and will,I hope, stay that way.


message 12: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments slept through the night. kitty chin rubs given in multitudes all day..blessed quiet before the insanity of thanksgiving and I do not have to cook today.


message 13: by Scout (new)

Scout (goodreadscomscout) | 3595 comments Suefly, know what you mean about trying to keep your head above water. Definitely narrows your focus. So, you're in school now?

Jan, what is King's latest? I've read most of what he's written, but those written in the couple of years after the hit-and-run were just too much for me. He knows the darkest places, and sometimes I can't go there with him.


message 14: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments The air smells so clean and crisp today. The sun is so bright I had to wear my sunglasses. Elegant tree branches waving in the wind against a blue sky and 1 lone crow. I threw him breadcrumbs. I woke up to kitty kisses and I rewarded her with 5 minutes worth of 1st class chin rubs. Mellow day.


message 15: by Lee (new)

Lee (LeeTschetter) The craziness of this holiday is over and I'm taking the time to sit and reflect on how lucky I have been to be gifted with wonderful family and friends..


message 16: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments there is a tree in our yard that has refused to lose it's leaves. They are all brown but still on the tree. My sister in law wonders why I notice things like this. I like to observe the beautiful and unusual around me. Like the stark beauty of bare tree branches against the sky. the way sunlight hits the windows in my neighbor's house and turns them a pink rose golden color that is spectacular. Wish I could write or paint but i am glad I notice things like this.


message 17: by Jim (new)

Jim | 6484 comments Oak trees usually don't drop their leaves very early, it could be an oak.


message 18: by Félix (new)

Félix (habitseven) Sounds like an oak to me.


Jackie "the Librarian" | 8991 comments It might be a pin oak. They don't drop their leaves, even when they're brown.


message 20: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments that is possible. I'lll take a closer look at the leaf shapes tomorrow in the daylight


message 21: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments listening to the wind whisper through the branches of the trees in our yard. beautiful cloud shapes against the blue sky. hot cider on a cold night.


message 22: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments 3rd day in a row without a migraine! My careful diet of avoiding any and all foods that could possibly trigger a migraine (and it is a lengthy one) seems to be working. It is very cold out but I am in a nice warm house with pleasant company trying to decide what I want for supper. That is a very nice place to be indeed.


message 23: by [deleted user] (new)

Great news Michele!


message 24: by Carol (new)

Carol | 1678 comments Good for you Michele!

I knew there was a "celebrate" thread.

While waiting for my checkup MRI - the news said Elizabeth Edwards was gravely ill. By the time I was done with the appt. they announced she had died.

MRI - all clear! wooooo


message 25: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments Carol, that is the best news I've had today! Congratulations...happy dance and hug.


message 26: by Félix (new)

Félix (habitseven) Good news for you, Carol.


message 27: by Carol (new)

Carol | 1678 comments Thanks! It is the best news.


message 28: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments Had a really great session with my therapist. discovered I feel really energized without the migraine to drag me down and suck my energy level dry. Ready to become an activist again. Public speaking on issues of rape and battering and about chaning the term/meaning of "senior citizen". I am not dead yet! Babyboomers unite: throw out the rocking chair image. lets go!


message 29: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments Didn't you write that in another thread as well?


message 30: by Jammies (new)

Jammies It's like having an avatar, Sarah, the news demands to be shared.


message 31: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments Ah. I see. I guess anything worth celebrating is worth celebrating twice. That's why I have two birthdays.


message 32: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments two birthdays? how does that work?


message 33: by janine (last edited Dec 09, 2010 01:17PM) (new)

janine | 7709 comments i like to think people celebrate my half birthday (new year's eve).


message 34: by Sarah (new)

Sarah | 13814 comments janine wrote: "i like to think people celebrate my half birthday (new year's eve)."
I do, Janine!

(I was joking about the two birthdays...sorry. I'm a little punchy.)


message 35: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments Barb wrote: "... and what exactly is a half birthday?"

you know, when you're six months older, instead of twelve.


message 36: by Félix (new)

Félix (habitseven) Why stop there? How about a 1/12 birthday every month?


message 37: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments but i already don't get presents for my half birthday, just the fireworks and hugs. if i start celebrating it twelve times a year it won't be special anymore.


message 38: by Félix (new)

Félix (habitseven) You are wise beyond your years, Netherlander.


message 39: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments don't mock me!


message 40: by Félix (new)

Félix (habitseven) I would never!


message 41: by janine (new)

janine | 7709 comments tsk


message 42: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Lopez | 4726 comments janine wrote: "but i already don't get presents for my half birthday, just the fireworks and hugs. if i start celebrating it twelve times a year it won't be special anymore."

The Dutch fireworks tradition is quite a sight to behold. My wife and I were in The Hague for New Year's in 2007. The air was so thick with smoke and gunpowder, it was like a WWI battlefield--a wonder any buildings were left standing by morning. But actually it was fun and entirely non-violent/goodnatured and everything return to normal the next day. A very nice country.


message 43: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments Since my birthday is Christmas most people forget it. Except for my immediate family that is. One Christmas I forgot it! That was the first Christmas my son understood Christmas and I was enjoying his joy so much I forgot my own birthday.


message 44: by Michele (new)

Michele bookloverforever (lovebooks14) | 1970 comments enjoying Johnny Mathis singing christmas songs. looking at my handsewn christmas ornaments. nice warm house and a kitty warming my feet. life is good.


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