If you want happiness for an hour - take a nap.
If you want happiness for a day - go fishing.
If you want happiness for a year - inherit a fortune.
If you want happiness for a lifetime - help someone else.
~Confucius~
(Graphic found at pixabay.com)
If you want happiness for an hour - take a nap.
If you want happiness for a day - go fishing.
If you want happiness for a year - inherit a fortune.
If you want happiness for a lifetime - help someone else.
~Confucius~
(Graphic found at pixabay.com)
We decided to go out for lunch two days ago. There was a 30 percent chance of rain and the skies looked blue when we went outside. First of all I wanted to check on the flowers to see how they were fairing after the hailstorm we had last week. Still pretty beaten down but the next bloom should sort them out - fingers crossed! This coneflower had some kind of insect on it. Looked like a bee but wasn't a bee, at least I don't think so.
Henry Cuyler Bunner (August 3, 1855 – May 11, 1896) was an American novelist, journalist and poet. He is known mainly for Tower of Babel.
Bunner's works have been praised by librarians for its "technical dexterity, playfulness and smoothness of finish".
(One of my favorite photos from a road trip out west ten years ago or so.)
“If you are ever lost while hiking, get stranded with a broken down car, etc., and you notice your cell phone is low on juice or has no signal, here is a tip that may very well save your life.
Change the voicemail on your phone to a message that gives your approximate location, the time, the date, your situation (lost, out of gas, car broken down, injured, etc), and any special instructions such as you are staying with the car, you are walking toward a town, etc. The best part of this is that even if your cell phone dies or stops working, voicemail still works, so anyone calling your phone looking for you will hear the message and know where to find you, or where to send help.”
"Example: Waking up on a cozy Sunday morning after a long week of work to the sound of rain? That’s the best drizzlosis for me."
The drizzl in drizzlosis represents “drizzle” which means “light rainfall.” “Osis” is a suffix meaning “condition or state of (something).”
I don't think Squirrel cares much about words.
From the children's garden it is a very short walk to the area where produce is grown.
We also saw signs saying that all produce grown is donated to local food banks. The garden near us does the same.
a dragon who apparently loves tacos.