Musings & Memories Montage
Telling My Stories and Discovering Your Stories
Happy New Years from NYC
12/31/07

Well the craziness has begun down in "The City." We were down there last week, the Saturday before Christmas. The place is an energy buzz. I'll put up photos shortly. In the mean time, you might enjoy enjoying New Years Eve the same way we will ... via the Internet! No, we're not actually crazy enough to be down there (yet) but I am keeping up via Earthcam's Streaming Video.

Enjoy,
Have fun!
pam

Pam is a Texan living on the Southern Fringes of Upstate New York. She enjoys messing with people's minds by consistently offering up proof that all of New York state is NOT New York City.
A Great Time was Had by All
11/18/07

The wedding went very very smoothly yesterday and the rehearsal dinner was highly eatable. (Homemade goodies all around!) I suspect we all put on mmm 2 or 3 pounds a piece. Oh and then we all had another piece of cake this morning at church.

The best overheard line was said by one of the groom's brothers to the groom (scroll down).

DSCF5584

Oh man! She's already got you trained!

Have fun,
Enjoy,
pam

Pam is a Texan living on the Southern Fringe of Upstate New York. She counts herself as exceedingly blessed.
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Last comment made by Sarah ~ 11/25/07
Decisions and a Story about Men and Women
05/08/07

Hmmm well it seems I am getting threatening posts and harassing emails. So I give up ...

Yes, it's true! Atypical said, "If you don't come out of hiding soon, I am going to have to send my rambunctiously adorable epileptic dog out in search - and he has a bad sense of direction!"

And Mary-LUE sent me a note saying, "You are awfully quiet. Has Second Life stolen you away from us?"

Even this IM from my own daughter!
[12:05] violetkey: Hi, how goes it?
[12:06] MarillaAnne: HEY I'm actually writing a post
[12:07] violetkey: yeah, i've heard that before

And from my own husband!
[12:12] Billy: u really should put up a new pic
[12:12] Billy: the snow is long gone now

So they've confirmed to me something ... it's time to take my own advice. It's time for me to give up only posting when I have time to write -- as I prefer to. It's time for me to stop dismissing the small bits of time that I have.

Between all the activities that spring brings and working towards having my own business in Second Life, I am simply not able to devote large chunks of time to writing those long meandering posts that I love. But that doesn't mean I should just stop!

Aside: I do have two longish posts that I'm working with but every time I sit with them, the heart of it seems to slip just beyond the confinement of words. But there is progress being made.

Also, for the moment, I am not going to separate my "First Life" and my "Second Life" in this blog. I had toyed with the idea. And I may yet. But for now, I'm just going to tell about both.

Today is about First Life and how proud I am of my hubby. (He gets very frustrated that I always make him look like a saint ... but ... he never gives me anything bad to write about ... for which I am eternally grateful!)

One Sunday morning, shortly after we started attending our church, the pastor and his wife told about a lovely dinner they had attended the night before. A church in Connecticut had invited them to a meal prepared by the men in the church especially for the ladies.

Well the men in our church were not to be outdone! And I do not know how they possibly could be. They rolled up their sleeves and the Saturday before Mother's Day they put on one Royal Shebang!

All of us ladies were properly impressed and I don't know how we could have enjoyed ourselves more.

Billy grilled all day ... brisket and chicken. Anyone who's had Billy's grill'n will tell you it is fantastic. He's very careful to cause the effect to be much closer to slowly smoked meat.

The rest of the men ... oh my! Decorated, organized, fixed excellent side dishes, planned/performed music, and then the pastor gave us some encouraging words.

Now, I want to tell you about the most amazing affect of two very important aspects: 1) This was not hailed as a Mother's Day dinner. It was a dinner to honor the ladies of the church (and their friends). 2) The men never sat down with us.

As an event to honor the ladies, the men made little speeches about things that this event had made them reflect on. How much the women do in the church, how as a group the ladies bring the feeling of family to the church (this was especially pointed out by a single young man), and how we work diligently, side by side, with the men to make community events successful, etc. These facts are true -- motherhood and marriage have nothing to do with them. It was all about the ladies bringing their unique blessings to the church.

Now, the majority of us are married. And I will be the first to admit that we fully expected the men to put out the food and all of us to go through a line and for all of us to sit down together.

But they did not do this. They seated all of us ladies and then served us. They brought us punch and bread and the main course and all the sides and desert and coffee or hot tea.

At first, it felt funny to be separated from Billy but I quickly got use to it -- as did all of the other married women. Soon we were a group of women laughing and carrying on and enjoying the company of each other.

After the meal they ushered us into the sanctuary and we were seated as a group and we sang together and were sung to by a few of the men.

Then the pastor spoke to us about how the pressures in today's world are huge for women and encouraged us to take them seriously. He encouraged us to especially protect our hearts, souls, and emotions by "Rejoicing alway."

"It is not always. It is alway as in every way." Also Rejoice is to re-live joy ... not that every moment is joy but that every moment we can remember another joy.

And all the while, most of the men were cleaning up in the back.

I cannot begin to tell you what a huge huge blessing the whole evening was. The men totally cocooned us into a moment just for us. And we women fully enjoyed the company of other women, each of us in a different place in our individual lives. ... our only common threads were our womanhood ... and the fact that each of was connected to another man or woman who was in some way connected to our church ... and no it was not always by membership.

Okay now this is one more aside for anyone who attends the same church: No, Billy did not make himself sick grilling. He woke up with a fierce headache Saturday morning and it carried on through Sunday. He just didn't admit it to anyone on Saturday -- not even me! And I ended up with a round of insomnia Saturday that hit me like a ton of bricks Sunday morning. (Often I make it through the next morning.) So that's why we weren't there Sunday. Ya'll didn't do anything to us :~)

Okay, tomorrow I will introduce you to Janford and her Second Life islands. An absolute oasis! Right now I have to get ready to attend a meeting in Second Life and then also follow up on some advice from Janford.
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Last comment made by atypical ~ 05/09/07
If This is God's Will -- Where's the Joy?
04/10/07

Well, there's a little problem with asking a storyteller a question: Storytellers don't answer questions with three words or less. PLUS You will always get a very very long story if you ask the storyteller when she's starting to feel alive again after spending a week cooped up, isolated and feeling like a pile of cold, cooked spaghetti noodles. (Really.)

Plus we all know I have this meme affliction wherein I twist every meme to meet my own objectives.

Yeah ... so ... out of Atypical's interview questions ... I generated at least an entire week's worth of verb-age.

I am starting with Atypical's question #4:
Can you give one example of a time in your life where joy welled up so much inside of you that it had to spray out, sprinkler like, on anyone who happened to pass by?
My very, very first thought was of the incredible experience that carried us from Oregon to New York. (I had wanted to go back to Texas but ... )

How many people do you know who have nothing ... nada ... zippo ... ZZ-EE-RR-OO in the bank account and no reason to believe money is "in the mail," "winging it's way to you," and certainly "we're in the money" is not a phrase they know?

Ok how many of those people would paper the nation with a resume and cover letter claiming to be able to "self re-locate" at that very moment -- in that very condition?

We did it with my husband's resume -- with a complete trust in God that He was perfectly able to make it happen. The very first clue that this was a perfectly fine idea was how the two of us felt about it's very existence. It's birth was the first time Billy and I had been on the same page in almost a year. That out of sync feeling that had been so disconcerting suddenly disappeared.

I want to tell you that from the time the phone rang 30 minutes after the first resume went out until we moved into our current apartment 90 days later -- every single moment of every day was filled with contentment, peace, joy ...

Yeah ... and I'd have to lie in order to tell you that. It was full of struggle, suspense, doubt, anger, fear, hurt, separation from my better half, etc. Of course, this drama was only one of six extreme drama's going on all at the same time. Oh yes ... when we do drama, we do it up right!

So, how is it that I reached a point of "sprinkling" joy everywhere? Because God is good ... Great ... AWESOME !!!

If you start at the beginning of the story and read all the way through, I created a page just for that: Our Moving to NY Story

You will find most of the dramas listed in this post: A Banner Week. I started my blog a few weeks after I sent out this "Dear Everybody" note.

The overview to strictly the moving story and some of the conclusion is in A Moving West Coast - East Coast Story. It also has footnotes with links to the hair-raising details of the money story. If you are looking for some courage to believe in God's care, I strongly suggest you find those footnotes.

The joy part? :: smirk :: Seek and ye shall find. It's a perfectly grand story that deserves it's place in time. So, I encourage you to persevere to the end.

I used this as an opportunity to go back and put these posts back in order the way I want them read and I turned on the commenting for each post.

It is perfectly legal to bookmark the story and come back to read in bits and pieces.

Enjoy
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Last comment made by Terri B. ~ 04/13/07
Haiku with One Deep Breath #3 -- Spring's Song Risk
04/07/07

This week the prompt over at One Deep Breath was an encouragement to slow down and listen to spring's song.

When I finally got over there and read it, I burst out in laughter. Just the night before when I opened our door, I was accosted by spring's song. It turns out that the swamp critters took a great risk though.

Great Swamp's sweet Spring song
burst forth in eve's cacophony;
next night frozen mute.
This image is of a revisit of a swamp dawning at the end of last August.



Go read/see more poetry
Read the prompt

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Last comment made by susanlavonne ~ 04/13/07
Ok Ya'll it's Your Turn to Talk
04/03/07

I think I'm fighting with the flu ... Yes, I'm taking appropriate non-drugs and drugs ... so don't leave me any drug advice ... I have enough!

Instead, what I really want is to hear from you about you and yours. And feel free to talk among yourselves ... leave notes for each other ...

I just feel too brainless to even go look at my feed reader ... so if you've written something you want me to know about ... leave me a link.

If you've found something fantastic out on the web lately ... leave me a link.

If your dog had puppies, tell me about it.

Ya get the idea?

I'll be fading in and out ... so have fun.

And for pities sake don't say "oh I'm so sorry your sick." I don't need to be reminded. I going to assume you aren't jumping up and down happy. I think you're nicer than that.
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Last comment made by Barbara ~ 04/09/07
Haiku with One Deep Breath #2 -- One Line Poems
04/01/07

First a note ... If you expected to arrive here and read about Casey and the Magnolia Cafe, something went all sideways and so you can find it on another post of mine: here.

This week the prompt over at One Deep Breath was about writing one line poems. What? A one line poem?

Well, I'd love to explain it to you in detail but besides the fact that I am again posting my poem at the very last second. I'm also striving to accomplish this in about 15 min ... and I'm trying to fix a post gone awry.

go on over to One Deep Breath and read through the references.

My one liner is in keeping with my Texas Spring Fever:

Texas unique thunder storms across rolling prairie hills.
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Last comment made by Marcia (MeeAugraphie) ~ 04/10/07
Magnolia's Cafe, Patterson NY
03/30/07

I no longer have anything to do with the Magnolia Cafe in Patterson New York. I will not eat there. I will not enter the doors. It has nothing to do with my move. It has everything to do with my move. If you want to be the talk of the cafe, just take a seat. Sooner or later they'll get around to you.

Sleeping with Bread -- Springy Short Stack
03/28/07


My Sleeping with Bread refused to be deep and thoughtful this week. I actually wrote it Monday afternoon at the cafe but between obsessing over my baby and being overwhelmed by the blogosphere ... well here we are ... again ... Wednesday.

Blessings:
  • Hints of Spring

  • More birds

  • Little gray squirrels

  • Deer visitations

  • New Friends

  • The New Computer arrived safe and sound! Happy Dance!

Missing:
I started down that slippery slope of homesickness when I was reading my National Geographic Adventure Magazine and noticed an advertisement for TravelTex.com. They proudly proclaim:
Who am I to argue? So I checked them out. It's a fairly decent site actually. The screen saver download was disappointing since they don't use images that are actually large enough for my monitor.

But! I found out that I can control a camera in Texas from New York. It's rather fun. But be patient with it. The camera really does receive every request you make. Every left and right and every zoom. Alright, if you want to play with the camera, click to get in line. Literally. You're looking for a button that says "Get in Line."

Oh and you should also know that by mid-May, I know I'd be ready to come back to my "Southern Fringes of Upstate NY!" Or maybe somewhere even cooler. So obviously I just have a small case of Texas Spring Fever.

The Sleeping with Bread meme is propagated by Mary of Life, the Universe and Everything. It gives us a chance to stop and consider God's blessings and a chance to evaluate what is giving us pause or grief.
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Last comment made by Sarah O ~ 04/07/07
A Modern Child's Handprint
03/28/07

I'm the first to admit that I thought my child's hand print in tempera paint or clay was just too cute. But do you know what happens to those over the years? I'm not going to spell it out for you. I will tell you that it just gets messy -- and other things that could make you cry.

Enter stage center (yes, use the lift and include dry ice effects), one highly creative, exceedingly modern dad -- Mike Leonen. Mike is an award winning writer. He won his awards in journalism. Now he stays home to give time to his sons, write a hysterical blog, and explore his skills in the visual arts. Let me show you his latest ...

Mike Leonen: Something about Parenting

Posted with Mike Leonen's permission.
Please do not use this image without Mike Leonen's consent.

If you have a child, a grandchild, a niece, a nephew, a close friend with a child, ... the possibilities are endless ... you can completely understand the importance of this piece of art work. And I'm sure you can completely understand how much better digital survives compared to clay or tempera!

Mike is offering to create your unique image starting at the most insane price of $18. Trust me when I say this: I would never create it for you for $18 and you know how much I love my readers. MOREOVER, He his giving you the rights to print and reprint the digital file he creates for you. This is a generous licensing agreement. Many artists control the printing process -- and charge dearly for it. So I highly suggest that you get over to Mike's Something about Parenting blog and take advantage of him his incredible offer before he comes to his senses. And while you're there, add Mike to your RSS feed reader.

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Last comment made by Kim ~ 03/29/07
Now! This is what I call Tracking!
03/28/07

A moment by moment update on it's location.



Now ... Poughkeepsie is about 28 miles +/- from me. I'm up. I'm dressed. I'm even going to open my front door today. (OK. You've got me. The door's really gonna be open because the weather is being soooo wonderfully warm. And yes I'm almost always up and dressed by now. Still ... it all fits in nicely with being ultra prepared in case the UPS delivery route makes a sudden deviation straight to my house.)

So, you know, why couldn't UPS at least told me when the package crossed state lines? They don't have to actually rescan each box in a "truck" (aka plane). They could just do a batch update.

I still maintain that UPS can't do that because then they'd have to admit that it's not really the transportation that delays delivery ... it's really about prioritizing. Don't they think we're mature enough to chose a priority vs a methodology?

FedEx Overnight is totally based on priority. Works out pretty well in my mind.

Ok well ... I'm usually on the near tail-end of the deliveries with UPS ... so today I shall be entertaining myself with blogging and cleaning house.

I still have a few things left over from last week that I want to talk about.

Late Monday afternoon I went down to the cafe to just enjoy some time with my thoughts away from a keyboard. I got a few bloggable ideas.

Yesterday I bumped into two things. One, is the very epitome of why I hang out with moms and dads. The other is one reason why I don't miss the tech world. And it explains why I am so strict with my blog.

I'm going to do all the light-weight stuff first because I'm afraid that the last item is going to take up most of a day to compose something mostly coherent.
"Baby" Update
03/27/07

Finally!!



That's about 72 miles away. Now, there's no telling when it will get here tomorrow.

Arrgggg!

Okay I think I might should tell ya'll some of the rest of the story.

Back ... wwway back ... before MailBoxes etc was a household name ... back when the franchise was maybe four or five years old, I worked in one of the stores.

It was fascinating. People thought the counter was the bar and I was the bartender. They'd walk in and put their packages down and then fill me in on alllllllllllll the drama surrounding this package -- and if I was really lucky, they'd also include their life story.

One thing we did on a regular basis was call the customer service people to track down a package. It was just a regular love-fest. Not.

So fast forward about fifteen years and what did my Daughter V do for about 1.5 yrs? She worked at a FedEx/Kinko's. She did everything I did at MBE in a whole new modern way.

Guess what ... nothing's really changed as far as people go. One small advantage she had: She could at least try to track a package by looking it up online. 'Cause that love-fest thing with customer service ... that didn't change either.

And we're both laughing about my frustration about the (lack of) tracking re my baby. Just because you know how the system works doesn't take away anxiety.

Next stage: Will it be in one working piece if it does actually make it to my door?

After all ... to quote my former employer ... "They say there's not a war on but I'd never know it by the shape these boxes arrive in."
Where IS my NEW Baby?!
03/26/07

Ok ... so ... a few of you may have noticed that ...

  • I have a daughter who lives in Portland.

  • She's seriously thinking of popping down to Dallas, TX for a long weekend in April.

  • Nothing hugely urgent -- just her haircut is six months old and there's this once-a-year nationally-top-ranked art show ...

  • This kind of chatter use to be reserved for the likes of the Kennedys and the Rockefellers.

So obviously air travel has come a very long way. VERY! We live in a new world. Really.

So but for some reason ... UPS wants us all to believe that they still actually put all of those "ground shipments" into their little brown trucks and actually Drive them across country ... from say ... Colorado to New York.

Personally I don't believe this. I have proof, too.



This is a screen shot of the tracking of my NEW computer from Colorado to New York. First, as we've established ... I don't think it's in a little brown truck somewhere. Nope. Because if it were ... they could at least have the decency to stop and scan the box and transmit it's new location ... like ... is it safe to assume that it's made it across the flatlands of Kansas ... or did the driver take the scenic route through the southern edge of Kansas? No. They can't stop and scan the package and let me know if it could be in, oh say, Indiana, visiting my friend Laurie. No. They can't tell me any of this.

Why? (well aside from the very high unlikelihood that my friend would know a UPS driver who would know that she's my friend and that that box is my new baby ...) ... They cannot scan the box and give me a location update because the box is not in a truck. Shipping it by truck from Colorado to New York would be hugely inefficient. It would NOT fit into the new world.

So ... you see ... obviously ... there's a plot.
  • It boarded an airplane.

  • My new computer is sitting down in NYC right this minute in a warehouse.

  • They can't scan it and provide me with an update on it's current location because then I would expect delivery today.

  • This is all about their convenience.

Look, don't expect logical from me. They aren't telling me where my new baby is. For four six days all I've known is that it's left it's originating city in Colorado ... well really do I even know that? What exactly does "Departure Scan" really mean?

My nerves are wearing thin.
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Last comment made by Mike ~ 03/27/07
The Wikipedia Time Machine Meme
03/25/07

Well, I think we can pretty well establish that I have a proven record of struggling to remain inside the boundaries of any meme's original scope and intent. Mary of Life, Universe and Everything tagged me for a fairly harmless looking little meme. The idea is ...

1. Go to Wikipedia and type in your Birthday Month and day only.
2. List 3 Events that occurred that day.
3. List 2 important Birth days.
4. List 1 Death.
5. List a Holiday or Observance. (if any)
6. Tag 5 other bloggers.
I came close to staying within the boundaries. As to #6, I'm tired from all the exploring I did when I fell head over heals into this little exercise. It was amusing, informative, and ... a little disheartening to discover that only movie stars and musicians were born after say 1945-ish. Oh, yeah, right, as I was saying ... I'm worn out from goofing off with this ... so ya'll talk amongst yourselves, compare notes, and tag someone else to do the meme. Then come back and let me know "who, what, when, where ...." If you want, you can even throw in "why."

For my birthday: July 3

EventsBirths
  • 1567 - Samuel de Champlain, French explorer (d.1635)[Loved to do small things on his birthday ... like establish cities in out of the way places ... like Canada.]
  • 1738 - John Singleton Copley, American painter (d.1815) "... was a Boston-born American artist of the colonial period, famous for his portraits of important figures in colonial New England, particularly men and women of the middle class. His portraits were innovative in that they tended to portray their subjects with artifacts that were indicative of their lives." [Yeah ... but when the going got tough ... he took off for England.]
  • 1958 - Aaron Tippin, American [country] singer [I do not mind sharing my bday with him.]
Death
1749 - William Jones, Welsh mathematician (b.1675) "As a
mathematician, his most noted contribution is his proposal for the use of the symbol π (the Greek letter pi) to represent the ratio of the circumference of a circle to its diameter. He became a close friend of Sir Isaac Newton and Sir Edmund Halley. In 1712, he became a Fellow of the Royal Society, and was later its Vice-President." [The man knew how to collect friends! Can you imagine bumping into the three of them at the local coffee shop?]

Holiday / Observance
July 3 is the official first day of the Dog Days of Summer. And my mom will be the first to vouch for the truth of this statement. She does not have fond memories of dealing with a first new baby in the heat.


For my mother's birthday: March 23

EventsBirths
  • 1699 - John Bartram, American botanist (d.1777)
  • 1924 - Bette Nesmith Graham, American inventor (d.1980)
  • 1941 - Jim Trelease, American educator and children's literature author [My kids will remember The Read-Aloud Handbook and now out is The New Read-Aloud Handbook. I can say without hesitation Jim Trelease's book contributed to my children's great love of books. It is a HUGE MUST GET BOOK if you have children ... or grandchildren ... or know children ... or know anyone who has children ...]
Death
1982 - Barney Clark, first artificial heart recipient (b.1921)

Holidays
I was totally dissatisfied with the holidays listed on Wikipedia so, with very little effort, I discovered that March 23 is both "Liberty Day" (in honor of the 1775 speech by Mr. Henry) and it is "Near Miss Day." You can read "Did the Earth almost get hit by an asteroid on March 23, 1989?" at The Astronomy Cafe
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Last comment made by Darren ~ 03/26/07
Hey, Have Ya'll Noticed This?
03/13/07

Ok ... I'm the first to admit ... I tend to be ... what's the word ? ... phrase ? ... musically unaware? ... no ... if music is on, I hate it or love it ... well whatever it is ... it's definitely not "musically addicted." I have a collection that amounts to about maybe 20 CD's stored in my itunes player. And probably at least 40% of these I've adopted. They came to me because my husband shares his 20 CD's that he purchased mostly before we got married.

But ... gradually ... I'm trying to become more music aware. It is very gradual. Very very very gradual for many reasons ... like I can't concentrate on anything else if the music is too loud, too soft, or has words. Seriously. We'll chalk that up to my ADD.

So anyway having some desire to have more music in my life has made me somewhat aware of my music options on the Internet. Sometimes I play Accuradio. Sometimes I poke at the stations attached to itunes or Windows Media Player. A great deal of my music still comes from Dallas. Occasionally I listen to KPLX (my country fix at 99.5 - the Wolf! Sunday nights offer me an excellent opportunity to stay in touch with my Texan accent with The Front Porch Show with Texas Native Justin Frazell - 6p to 9p). Every now and then I remember that Dallas has a pretty good classical station, WRR. (But I avoid the City Council meetings like the plague.)

At Christmas I check in on KCBI (Christian). (I raised my kids and kept my sanity in those days by listening to KCBI when I was stuck in the kitchen FOR HOURS.) When I want to feel a little bit in touch with a trend slightly more current, I listen to Positive Hits Alternative, yRadio, while Billy listens to zRadio. They are sister stations in Florida.

Yesterday I was glancing at my Google Reader and it brought me this by way of my subscription to Google Operating System: Unofficial news and tips about Google™:

Musicovery is fun! Limited selection. True. But a fairly good time machine all the same. Now, when you read the post at Google Operating System, you will see that he and his readers have some other ideas, also. One mention is Last.fm.

A word of warning
: Do not load up the Last.fm site with the young and impressionable nearby. The users can have some very raunchy avitars. That said ... WOW! I love it.

The link I'm providing takes you to the "Listen" page. It's true ... if you type in one artist, you will get a very close-knit group of songs that weave in and near this artist's genre. For example ... I entered "Jars of Clay" and so far I've listened to "Newsboys" "Delerious?" "Audio Adrenalin" "Third Eye Blind" "Petra" and "Building 429."

When I want quiet, I enter "Enya" or "George Winston." (Unfortunately none of his music is available but it usually results in instrumentals with no words.) Then I get more music like theirs.

Last.fm also learns what music to play for you and it's fairly easy to teach it ("heart" or "stamp out" symbols). With some discernment, you can also figure out how to create a play list. There's also a downloadable program to help you with your library that is stashed on your computer. Yeah. No. I haven't felt the need to organize my 20 cds.

Well, alright, so, give me some artists to expand my horizons with and ya'll go have fun, now. Ya hear?
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Last comment made by Darren a/k/a Clare's Dad ~ 03/14/07