My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations;
Knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience.
But let patience have her perfect work, that ye may be perfect and entire, wanting nothing.
James 1:2-4

Havah - A Wild Card Tour - A Review by jubilee

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It is time to play a Wild Card! Every now and then, a book that I have chosen to read is going to pop up as a FIRST Wild Card Tour. Get dealt into the game! (Just click the button!) Wild Card Tours feature an author and his/her book's FIRST chapter!


Today's Wild Card author is:



and the book:

NavPress Publishing Group (October 10, 2008)


My eyes are tear-filled. Tears of relief and sorrow. Tears of elation and of grief not my own.

I have just finished reading Havah The story of Eve by Tosca Lee. I thought to give myself time to properly process all I have read, but was afraid to not try to somehow to give voice to my emotions. I am afraid that I won't properly express to you the great empathy, sorrow and joy that I am feeling if I do not immediately put it all into words.

This beautifully written book has affected me deeply. Profoundly. As I knew it would the moment I heard of it.

You can read the rest of my review by clicking here.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Tosca Lee is the author of the critically acclaimed Demon: A Memoir (2007), a ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year Silver Award winner, American Christian Fiction Writers Book of the Year nominee, and Christy award finalist. Her eagerly-awaited second novel, Havah: The Story of Eve, released October 2008 to high praise, including a starred review from Publishers Weekly.

A sought-after speaker and first runner-up to Mrs. United States 1998, Tosca works as a Senior Consultant for the Gallup Organization. She received her B.A. in English and International Relations from Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts. She also studied at Oxford University.

In her spare time, Tosca enjoys travel, cooking, history and theology. She currently resides in Nebraska.

Visit the author's website and blog.

Product Details:

List Price: $ 14.99

Paperback: 368 pages

Publisher: NavPress Publishing Group (October 10, 2008)

Language: English

ISBN-10: 1600061249

ISBN-13: 978-1600061240



AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:




Prologue



I have seen paradise and ruin. I have known bliss and terror.



I have walked with God.



And I know that God made the heart the most fragile and resilient of organs, that a lifetime of joy and pain might be encased in one mortal chamber.



I still recall my first moment of consciousness—an awareness I’ve never seen in the eyes of any of my own children at birth: the sheer ignorance and genius of consciousness, when we know nothing and accept everything.



Of course, the memory of that waking moment is fainter now, like the smell of the soil of that garden, like the leaves of the fig tree in Eden after dawn—dew and leaf green. It fades with that sense of something once tasted on the tip of the tongue, savored now in memory, replaced by the taste of something similar but never quite the same.



His breath a lost sough, the scent of earth and leaf mold that was his sweaty skin has faded too quickly. So like an Eden dawn—dew on fig leaves.



His eyes were blue, my Adam’s.



How I celebrated that color, shrouded now in shriveled eyelids—he who was never intended to have even a wrinkle! But even as I bend to smooth his cheek, my hair has become a white waterfall upon his Eden—flesh and loins that gave life to so many.



I think for a moment that I hear the One and that he is weeping. It is the first time I have heard him in so long, and my heart cries out: He is dead! My father, my brother, my love!



I envy the earth that envelopes him. I envy the dust that comes of him and my children who sow and eat of it.



This language of Adam’s—the word that meant merely “man” before it was his name—given him by God himself, is now mine. And this is my love song. I will craft these words into the likeness of the man before I, too, return to the earth of Adam’s bosom.



My story has been told in only the barest of terms. It is time you heard it all. It is my testament to the strength of the heart, which has such capacity for joy, such space for sorrow, like a vessel that fills and fills without bursting.



My seasons are nearly as many as a thousand. So now listen, sons, and hear me, daughters. I, Havah, fashioned by God of Adam say this:



In the beginning, there was God . . .



But for me, there was Adam.









The Garden









Chapter 1



A whisper in my ear: Wake!



Blue. A sea awash with nothing but a drifting bit of down, flotsam on an invisible current. I closed my eyes. Light illuminated the thin tissues of my eyelids.



A bird trilled. Near my ear: the percussive buzz of an insect. Overhead, tree boughs stirred in the warming air.



I lay on a soft bed of herbs and grass that tickled my cheek, my shoulders, and the arch of my foot, whispering sibilant secrets up to the trees.



From here, I felt the thrum of the sap in the stem; the pulsing veins of the vine; the beat of my heart in euphony with hundreds more around me; the movement of the earth a thousand miles beneath.



I sighed as one returning to sleep, to retreat to the place I had been before, the realm of silence and bliss—wherever that is.



Wake!



I opened my eyes again upon the milling blue, saw it spliced by the flight of a bird, chevron in the sky.



This time, the voice came not to my ear, but directly to my stirring mind: Wake!



There was amusement in it.



I knew nothing of where or what I was, did not understand the polyphony around me or the wide expanse like a blue eternity before me.



But I woke and knew I was alive.



A rustle, a groan practically in my ear. I twitched at a stirring against my hip. A moment later, a touch drifted across a belly I did not yet know I owned, soft as a leaf skittering along the ground.



A face obscured my vision. I screamed. Not with fear—I was no acquaintance of fear—nor with startlement, because I had been aware of the presence already, but because it was the only statement that came to lips as artless as mine.



The face disappeared and returned, blinking into my own, the blue above captured in twin pools . Then, like a gush of water from a rock, gladness thrilled my heart. But its source was not me.



At last! It came, unspoken—a different source than the voice before—the words thrust jubilantly to the sky: “At last!”



He was up on legs like the trunks of sturdy saplings, beating at the earth with his feet. He thumped his chest and shouted to the sun and clapped his hands. “At last!” he cried, his laughter like warm clay between the toes. He shook his shoulders and stomped the grass, slapping his chest as he shouted again and again. Though I did not understand the utterance, I knew its meaning at once: joy and exultation at something longed for suddenly found.



I tried to mimic his sound; it came out as a squawk and then a panting laugh. Overhead, a lark chattered an extravagant address. I squeaked a shrill reply. The face lowered to mine, and the man’s arms wrapped, womb-tight, around me.



“Flesh of my flesh,” he whispered, hot against my ear. His fingers drifted from my hair to my body, roaming like the goat on the hills of the Sacred Mount. I sighed, expelling the last remnants of that first air from my lungs—the last of the breath in them not drawn by me alone.



He was high-cheeked, this adam, his lower lip dipping down like a folded leaf that drips sweet water to thirsty mouths. His brow was a hawk, soaring above the high cliffs, his eyes blue lusters beneath the fan of his lashes. But it was his mouth that I always came back to, where my eyes liked best to fasten after taking in the shock of those eyes. Shadow ran along his jaw, obsidian dust clinging to the curve of it, drawing my eye to the plush flesh of his lips, again, again, again.



He touched my face and traced my mouth. I bit his finger. He gathered my hands and studied them, turning them over and back. He smelled my hair and lingered at my breasts and gazed curiously at the rest of me. When he was finished, he began all over again, tasting my cheek and the salt of my neck, tracing the instep of my foot with a fingertip.



Finally, he gathered me up, and my vision tilted to involve an altogether new realm: the earth and my brown legs upon it. I clutched at him. I seemed a giant, towering above the earth—a giant as tall as he. My first steps stuttered across the ground as the deer in the hour of its birth, but then I pushed his hands away. My legs, coltish and lean, found their vigor as he urged me, walking far too fast, to keep up. He made for the orchard, and I bolted after him with a surge of strength and another of my squawking sounds. Then we were running—through grasses and over fledgling sloes, the dark wool of my hair flying behind me.



We raced across the valley floor, and my new world blurred around me: hyssop and poppy, anemone, narcissus, and lily. Roses grew on the foothills amidst the caper and myrtle.



A blur beside me: the long-bodied great cat. I slowed, distracted by her fluidity, the smooth curve of her head as she tilted it to my outstretched hand. I fell to the ground, twining my arms around her, fingers sliding along her pelt. Her tongue was rough—unlike the adam’s—and she rumbled as she rolled against me.



Far ahead, the adam called. Overhead, a hawk circled for a closer look. The fallow deer at a nearby stream lifted her head.



The adam called again, wordlessly: longing and exuberance. I got up and began to run, the lioness at my heels. I was fast—nearly as fast as she. Exhilaration rose from my lungs in quick pants—in laughter. Then, with a burst, she was beyond me.



She was gone by the time the adam caught me up in his arms. His hands stroked my back, his lips, my shoulder. I marveled at his skin—how smooth, how very warm it was.



“You are magnificent,” he said, burying his face against me. “Ah, Isha—woman, taken from man!”



I said nothing; although I understood his meaning, I did not know his words. I knew with certainty and no notion of conceit, though, that he was right.



At the river he showed me how he cupped his hands to drink, and then cupped them again for me. I lowered my head and drank as a carp peered baldy from the shallows up at me.



We entered the water. I gasped as it tickled the backs of my knees and hot hairs under my arms, swirling about my waist as though around a staunch rock as our toes skimmed a multitude of pebbles. I wrapped my arm around his shoulders.



“All of this: water,” he said, grunting a little bit as he swam toward the middle of the river where it widened into a broad swath across the valley floor. “Here—the current.”



“Water,” I said, understanding in the moment I spoke it the element in all its forms—from the lake fed by the river to the high springs that flow from the abyss of the Mount. I felt the pull of it as though it had a gravity all its own—as though it could sweep me out to the cold depths of the lake and lull me by the tides of the moon.



From the river I could see the high walls of our cradle: the great southern Mount rising to heaven, and to the north, the foothills that became the long spine of a range that arched toward the great lake to the west.



I knew even then that this was a place set apart from the unseen lands to the north, the alluvial plain to the south, the great waters to the east and far to the west.



It was set apart solely because we dwelt in it.



But we were not alone. I could see them, after a time, even as we left the river and lay upon its banks. I saw them in sidelong glances when I looked at something else: a sunspot caught in the eye, a ripple in the air, a shock of light where there should be only shadow. And so I knew there were other beings, too.



The adam, who studied me, said nothing. We did not know their names.



The first voice I heard urging me to wake had not been the man’s. Now I felt the presence of it near me, closer than the air, than even the adam’s arms around me.



I returned the man’s strange amazement, taken by his smooth, dark skin, the narrowness of his hips, his strange sex. He was warmer than I, as though he had absorbed the heat of the sun, and I laid my cheek against his flat breasts and listened to the changeling beat of his heart. My limbs, so fresh to me, grew heavy. As languor overtook me, I retreated from the sight of my lovely, alien world.



Perhaps in closing my eyes, I would return to the place I had been before.



For the first time since waking, I hoped not.



I slept to the familiar thrum of his heart as insects made sounds like sleepy twitches through the waning day.



When I woke, his cheek was resting against the top of my head. Emotion streamed from his heart, though his lips were silent.



Gratitude.



I am the treasure mined from the rock, the gem prized from the mount.



He stirred only when I did and released me with great reluctance. By then the sun had moved along the length of our valley. My stomach murmured.



He led me to the orchard and fed me the firm flesh of plums, biting carefully around the pits and feeding the pieces to me until juice ran down our chins and bees came to sample it. He kissed my fingers and hands and laid his cheek against my palms.



That evening we lay in a bower of hyssop and rushes—a bower, I realized, that he must have made it on a day before this one.



A day before I existed.



We observed together the changing sky as it cooled gold and russet and purple, finally anointing the clay earth red.



Taken from me. Flesh of my flesh. At last. I heard the timbre of his voice in my head in my last waking moment. Marvel and wonder were upon his lips as he kissed my closing eyes.



I knew then he would do anything for me.



That night I dreamed of blackness. Black, greater than the depths of the river or the great abyss beneath the lake.



From within that nothingness there came a voice that was not a voice, that was neither sound nor word but volition and command and genesis. And from the voice, a word that was no word but the language of power and genesis and fruition.



There! A mote spark—a light first so small as the tip of a pine needle. It exploded past the periphery of my dreaming vision, obliterating the dark. The heavens were vast in an instant, stretching without cease to the edges of eternity.



I careened past new bodies that tugged me in every direction; even the tiniest particles possessed their own gravity. From each of them came the same concert, that symphony of energy and light.



I came to stand upon the earth. It was a great welter of water, the surface of it ablaze with the refracted light of heavens upon heavens. It shook my every fiber, like a string that is plucked and allowed to resonate forever.



I was galvanized, made anew, thrumming that inaugural sound: the yawning of eternity.



Amidst it all came the unmistakable command:



Wake!




M&Ms - always a great choice

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Right about now, gift giving may be the farthest thing from your mind. I understand. My birthday is at the end of January and I always suspected that a celebration so close to Christmas and New Year's was a little, well, much. Growing up, any excuse to get together with my aunt and her family was a good one, so I never felt gypped. However, coming up with even more gift ideas, now THAT is the hard part.

Lemme make it easy for you.

How much fun would it be to get a personalized gift? How about a personalized gift that you can design yourself for your loved one? How about a personalized gift that you can eat and it comes in the form of chocolate? Mm-hm. Now, I've got your attention.

How about M&Ms?

The personalization offered by MY M&M'S allows you to customize your gift. Simply visit mymms.com and pick your colors, messages, and upload your photos, making your order special for all occasions. Imagine how much Grandma would love her grandchild's face on her birthday M&M'S, or how great the bride and groom would look on their wedding favors! The site also offers dozens of gift options to accompany the MY M&M'S, such as candy dispensers, decorative tins, and MLB-themed containers. And new this year, MY M&M'S has even teamed up with Martha Stewart for ideas to make personalized gifts even more special. Each of Martha's MY M&M'S personalized gift options provide easy step-by-step instructions.

I got to play on this site and try out a couple of different ideas. Let's just say, The Cruise Director will be excited when his birthday rolls around and he can hand an M&M treat to his friends at school with his name on them. There are limitations because M&Ms are only so big, but overall it worked out well. And I was able to get the birthday message across. I honestly didn't try to do a photo, but the examples they had on the site looked great.

When I visited this site the first time I'd heard of it (I think about two years ago), I was put off by the cost and how large of an order that had to be placed. My M&Ms have remedied that and now a 7 oz bag costs $14.99. When you think of it as a gift in and of itself, $14.99 isn't too bad. And, since its a consumable, you can give the same person this kind of gift year after year. Just change up the caption or picture. Now, before you resist that idea, remember the person on your Christmas list that ends up with one of those huge sausages and little squares of cheese every single year?!

Aren't M&Ms a much sweeter choice? I think so too.

(Almost) Wordless Wednesday

2 comments from dear readers



This is my favorite mug and inside is my daily dose of caffeine. Please disregard the rather large jar of bread and butter pickles behind it. And the tissue box next to it. And, honestly, what IS that thing you can see through the handle of the mug? I don't even know. I'm not sure I want to. We have issues, m'kay?

But, I digress . . .

Granted, usually my hot beverage of choice would be Tastefully Simple's Oh My! Chai! but lately, it's coffee that has been getting me through the late nights of unpacking.

Okay, who am I kidding? It's the late nights of Facebook playing that dadblamed Word Twist or Pathwords or, gah Scramble.

What I Learned Today - Ironies Abound

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Life is full of little ironies. Like the fact that I can compose perfect posts while attempting to sleep, but when the time comes to actually type them out, I go blank. Totally. Even if the time between composing and typing are only as long as it takes for me to walk down the hall to the living room to get to the computer.

Can I get an Amen?

Or the fact that child number three, affectionately known as Whirling Dervish, may be my most energetic, ornery, exhausting child, but he's also my most entertaining child.

Or the fact that I shell out big bucks every month for a prescription and it's the $2 bottle of over-the-counter meds that I turn to when the prescription doesn't quite do the job.

And finally, when I am in need of sleep the most, I have a severe case of insomnia.

And just as I think I should slide into bed and try to sleep again, the youngest child wakes up wanting mommy. So mommy cuddles, cradles, and composes. Then when WD has fallen alseep, walks down the hall to the computer to write a post only to pop a few TUMS and come up blank.

Monday (A)Musings with Sara Groves

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This may be the funniest and most apropos song of the toy giving part of the season.
(Lyrics are below the video)


Nothing makes me lose my cool like
Toy packaging
Ask the kids to leave the room for
Toy packaging
I have no choice the money's spent
I've worked for hours to make a dent
I guess it's anger management
Toy packaging

Nothing makes me lose my cool like
Toy packaging
Ask the kids please leave the room it's time for
Toy packaging
I'm drawing up a battle plan
to extricate this robot man
My self-esteem is in the can
Toy packaging

In the old days you could hold a box and shake it
And hear the pieces rattling around
My eyes tear up with these grommets, tape and twisty ties
Remembering their beautiful sound

Toy Packaging
I love Toy Packaging
(Mom! Honey!)

Nothing makes me lose my cool like toy packaging
Kids you really need to leave the room, mom's opening toy packaging
I'm sorry you have to see this sight
You must be brave, no please don't cry
I promise it will be alright
I hope to have it by tonight
Nevermind this dynamite
Toy packaging


Thanks to OhAmanda for the heads up on this video. It pretty well sums up my experience the day of Christmas and the day after Christmas. It was a long two days, lemme tell ya.

Sara, you've hit the nail on the head. Again. (Remember the time in English class with Mrs C and . . . )

(For More Laughs click on over to JennyontheSpot's Make Me Laugh Monday.)

Thoughts From The Day After

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Hope you had a Merry Christmas. I thought about you all. Wondering how many of you actually were blog reading on Christmas Day.

I'd ask for a show of hands, but then that would just be wrong,wrong,wrong.

Our Christmas was good. We actually had three days of celebrating. We have three facets of our family and often each get their own day. This year it worked out pretty well except for the traveling in the rain in a pick up truck. Love the pick up, let's make no mistake about that, dear reader. It's the forgetting to arrange for proper stowing and storage of presents and overnight bags that were the issue. Um, yeah.

The Calm One earned a new nick name as a result of our storage and travel issues. I'll not share it. He's had a rough few days as it is. He's also decided that we'll not be traveling for Christmas again. As in EV-AH. Um, yeah. He's said that every year since our second child was born. Five years ago. You see how well that has worked out.

At any rate, soggy presents and clothing notwithstanding, a good time was had by all. The best part was reading the Christmas Story from Luke 2. Even though the kids were yawning and itching to get at those presents. I couldn't help but hope that this will become one of their favorite traditions too.

And as for all the finger numbing twist ties and the lack of batteries . . . that part I think I could do without.

I'm just sayin'.

And it's Friday! Are you wearing your festive RED today?

Don We Now Our Gay Apparel

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So, for awhile now I've had Big Mama's Ugly Sweater Contest button on my sidebar. I've anxiously awaited for The Bid Day to arrive. And let me tell you that I was not disappointed. Evidently, there's nothing that says "Happy Holidays" like seeing other people look less than their best. You simply must click over because her post is chock-full of these little kinds of gems:

Apparently, the holiday season puts folks in the mood to put on some sort of vest. I kind of knew this already because of an unfortunate incident at a college Christmas formal when my date wore a sweater vest. It was horrific and gave new meaning to the phrase, “Don we now our gay apparel”.

See? What'd I tell ya? (I can just imagine the Google search lists this post will end up on. Yikes!)

Who Dat!

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My sons are all about superheroes. At the moment, SpiderMan is the household favorite. Probably because he most closely resembles themselves: jumping and hanging off of things, often wielding soon-to-be projectile objects and leaving a trail of webby stickiness wherever they go.

They also have a few non-Marvelized super heroes with less than savory characteristics. Why, just today while eating pancakes (whole wheat with banana slices, in case you were wondering) they were laughing over the mini episode of Banana Man they were creating in between mouthfuls.

"Oh no! Banana Man has been syrupolzed! Who will save the city now?"

And on and on it went. Their energy is astounding; their creativity, often amusing.

But no matter what, in their book, Daddy is Numero Uno on the superhero charts. Daddy can do no wrong; even when they've been sternly disciplined, daddy still shines, unsullied. Mommy however is a different story. I can love on them and they eat it up, but the moment I have to discipline, forget it. Tarnished.

Well, I have some news for them. Mommy may have just topped the charts after all. I have scientific proof. Okay, okay the scientific part may be stretching it. But here it is nevertheless:


Your results:
You are Spider-Man

























Spider-Man
80%
Wonder Woman
55%
Green Lantern
40%
Superman
40%
Robin
40%
Hulk
35%
The Flash
35%
Supergirl
20%
Iron Man
20%
Batman
10%
Catwoman
10%
You are intelligent, witty,
a bit geeky and have great
power and responsibility.


Click here to take the "Which Superhero am I?" quiz...


See! Who's your Daddy Mommy now!

Peep O' The Week

1 comments from dear readers


This week's Jubilant Peep is Carolynn over at Willow Tree for her comment on my Many Hands Make Even More Work post. Here's what she had to say:

Willow Tree said...

Brave soul, indeed! I cheat... and buy the ready made dough! Roll, cut, bake, decorate. But next year I intend to get my mixer dirty, well that and the counters, the table, the floor, and 3 little sets of hands, LOL. You're making memories money can't buy. And I bet they taste great too!

Blessings, Carolynn


Any woman that can make it easier on mama to help their kids make memories is OK with me! Next year: ready made dough! Carolynn, feel free to post your award! You've been peeped in the best possible way!

Click on over to visit Carolynn at Willow Tree and say a prayer for her. She and her little chickadees are going through an extremely difficult time. But the Lord is Good (say it with me: "All the time!") and He's taking care of them.

Want to be a Jubilant Peep? Just leave a comment. Humorous, pithy, helpful and thought provoking comments are always welcome - and always considered!

Monday (A)Musings

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(Found this cute joke via This That and the Other Thing. Thanks Sadie!)

The children were lined up in the cafeteria of a Catholic elementary school for lunch. At the head of the table was a large pile of apples. The nun made a note, and posted on the apple tray: "Take only ONE. God is watching." Moving further along the lunch line, at the other end of the table was a large pile of chocolate chip cookies. A child had written a note, "Take all you want. God is watching the apples."

(For more laughs head on over to Jennyonthespot and her weekly Make Me Laugh Monday post)

Pay It Forward December Winner

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Hey there. Wanted to give a quick shout out to our Pay It Forward winner for December. And you thought I'd forgotten. Shame on you! Debbie from Suburb Sanity is our winner! Debbie, please email me your address so I can get In the Shadow of Lions by Ginger Garrett out to you. Thanks so much for those of you who participated.

Eat, Drink and Be Yummie With Yummie Tummie

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So, I know everyone is busy, but I couldn't resist sharing a new site with you. It's called YummieTummie. Where you can eat, drink and be yummie! Sounds delish, right?! YummieTummie is a site that endevours to help us indulge, just a little, once in awhile. At YummieTummie you can find delightful recipes and hints on how to splurge just a little when "tightening our belts" refers to more than just a passing comment on our waistlines! Think of YummieTummie as your gateway to some of the tastier things in life:




And then once you've indulged just a little, and you know you will, especially This Season, you can click on over to the body shapewear portion of the site. Now here is where it gets really interesting, ladies. (Sorry gents this part is for the dames, but be sure to click on over anyway. Can you say "Christmas and birthday gifts?!" The lady in your life will thank you. You are welcome!) Yummie Tummie is the first shapewear that’s comfortable, sexy and meant to be seen!

Here's a portion of what Yummie Tummie is all about:

The effects of Yummie Tummie are dramatic, both physically and mentally. You will look better, feel more confident, and stand taller. The core stability it provides is akin to the benefits you derive from taking yoga or practicing Pilates

Think of Yummie Tummie as a tank top or T-shirt on steroids: that favorite, super-soft, lightweight cotton wardrobe staple you wear alone or under everything you own. From your bust up and your hip bones down, it is exactly that. But, made with a patent-pending dual fabric technology, its extra bonus comes from its same-tone, firm control midsection panel, which smoothes and shapes your tummie and hips, eliminating pounds off your appearance, and camouflaging any lumps and bumps.

Because that panel is made with a microfiber fabric that actually wicks moisture away, you will always feel cool and comfortable. And, it never, ever rolls or rides up. It is made with sleek yarns that do not cling, so you can wear it under anything. Yummie Tummie is truly a fabulous undergarment that can be worn each and every day as a foundation, a layering piece, or even on its own.
-Heather @ yummietummie




The site has pictures, size charts, and a store locator. Take a few moments to indulge and click on over to see for yourself.

Inside-Outside-Upside Down in a Pear Tree

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Do ya feel like it's been a crazy season already? Like things are a little mixed up, turned upside down and inside out? Evidently, so do these guys.



(Thanks to Willow Tree for sharing this on her blog.)
********
It's Friday, so you know where your Red shirt is? Hopefully, you are wearing it in support of our troops. "'Till they ALL come home."

Many Hands Make Even More Work

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Whoever said, "Many hands make light work" never allowed their two preschoolers to help make cookies. I'm just sayin'.

The flour was poured into the mixing bowl. And some got on the table. The various other dry ingredients went into the bowl. Most of which flew out again and onto sweet little hands. And then promptly onto the floor.

The butter and sugar were creamed. And little hands flew over even smaller ears. They aren't too keen on the hand mixer, you see. And as a side note, the hand mixer isn't too keen on mommy. It was asked to do the job of a large stand mixer with a paddle attachment. Just like last year. And the year before that. Aaaaaaand the year before that. A-hem.

And then came the questions. "Is it time to decorate them yet, mommy?" "Can I eat some of the dough, mommy?" "MoooOOmmmy! Can I lick the silver thingies (aka beaters)?" "Why do we put the dough in the fridge?" "Is it time to ice the cookies yet mommy?" "Is the dough done resting, mommy?" "Can we take it out now, mommy?" "When do we get to decorate them mommy?" "MooOOoommy!"

The questions were accompanied by much hopping from one foot to the other. And many sighs while considering a name change. I'll leave it to you to figure out who did what.

Then when the very long wait was over - and believe me when I tell you that it was a longer wait for mommy than it was for the little ones - the dough was ready to be removed from the fridge and rolled out. Little feet pitter-patted their way to the sink for more hand washing and much discussion of who was to complete their ablutions first. (Read as: much bickering and pushing and shoving to see who'd get to the soap dispenser before their sibling)

In the mean time, mommy snuck in a first few tentative rolls with the rolling pin. Her children were not fooled and told her so. Emphatically. And loudly. I am of the opinion that children use their outside voices for every situation until they become preteens and then they mutter everything so as not to be heard at all. Just sayin'.

But, I digress.

So the children were allowed a few rolls of the pin while mommy watched and felt like she was rolling the dice. For you see, this was a borrowed rolling pin. From a very precious someone of the great grand-maternal persuasion. Someone who would know if a scratch or dent or breathing near it occurred. And then she'd proceed to wag her head and do a little muttering of her own. Not that she's particular or anything.

Cookie cutters were employed in numerous configurations without regard to edges, to dough thickness, sibling fingers or mommy's patience. Into the oven they went. More waiting. Only THIS time noses were pressed against the oven window. Cookies were cooled while dinner was made and consumed at an alarming rate.

And then It Was Time.

More hand washing, more bickering (by now The Cruise Director is involved, you see) and even more jockeying for positions at the table. Decorating ensued. A little green icing here. More hand washing there - because Whirling Dervish decided that no decorating session is complete until he scratches his head and fiddles with his socks one or twelve times. A lot of red sprinkles there. Yellow food coloring on the walls . . . a bit of finger licking. And lots and lots of dirty dishes.

Here is the result of a long day's journey into night:



Themmhmmgsimmon nimmonshmhgahmm baknmmihmmmn yermmhmmunn. (Translation of mommy mutterings: Thank goodness the baking is done for another year.)

(Almost) Wordless Wednesday

, 2 comments from dear readers


Chickadees in leaves

For more WW check out 5 minutes for mom.

Peep O' The Week

, 5 comments from dear readers

Top o' the morning to you! It's Peep O' the Week time. I just love this feature of the ol' blog because it gives me a chance to give a little back to readers. This week's peep is Michele from Mamatalk for her comment on my What I've Learned Today post. Here's what Michele learned that day:

The same day I find the time to spread the comment love to my bloggy friends is the same day I suffer from comment block. :-)


We bloggers know JUST whatcha mean! Sometimes the comments come easily and some days a gal just runs dry. Congrats, Michele. And thanks for commenting that day anyway! Feel free to post the peep award on your blog. You are now a Jubilant Peep!

Wanna be a Jubilant Peep? All you have to do is leave a comment and you're in the running. Funny, thought-provoking, pithy, (and flattering) comments are always welcome. Regular old comments are welcome too.

So, go on - comment!

Interested in the past Peeps? Click here.

Monday (A)Musings

, 2 comments from dear readers

I had to laugh when I saw this video on YouTube. This little guy has all the moves. I doubt he'll ever be lacking in female attention if he keeps this up! (Though I would suggest turning the volume down low. I have no idea who the music is by, nor could I understand the words, so I cannot vouch for it's child-friendliness.)



Pay It Forward - December Issue 2008

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It's Pay It Forward time! I am a little late this month getting this post up, but then with the holidays, all the chocolate to be eaten, getting ready to move, inconsiderate motorists who drive me to eat more chocolate, and play practice it's been a busy few weeks. I am sure you understand.

This month's book is In The Shadow of Lions by Ginger Garrett. Here is a portion of my review:

Dear Reader, Ginger Garrett presents us with a beautifully evocative tapestry of the lives of Anne and Rose by delicately weaving customs, fashion of the day, sights, sounds and smells that surely occurred during the reign of Henry VIII. Bridget's part of the story brings readers around full circle and helps to give a sense of immediacy. We are reminded that many have sacrificed much so that we can have God's Word today.

Her novel is compelling in it's viewpoint: A front row seat of how the conflicts of church and state, and the will of man versus the will of God, affected everyone of the day. It steamrolls over what history has taught us about Anne Boleyn. We see her struggles with a fledgling faith and a dictator bent on getting what he wants. Rose struggles much the same way Anne does, proving that neither hardship nor God's unfailing love is a respecter of persons. Bridget is the reader's counterpart; we have a choice: to embrace God's Truth or do nothing, thereby rejecting it.

You can read the rest of my review and the first chapter by clicking In The Shadow of Lions.

Now for the details. All you have to do is leave a comment by Thursday the 18th. And then check back here on Friday Dec 19th when I will announce the winner. This giveaway is open to US residents only.

I've had several books that have gone unclaimed from past Pay It Forward giveaways so I will be notifying new winners of those books by email. Check your box!
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Also, today is Friday: Are you wearing your RED today?

Happy reading,

Trivia Thursday

2 comments from dear readers

Way Cool: Halo around the Moon

I know I shouldn't laugh, but:
Need to go? These guys can help.

So much for cramming four years of college into five: He did it in two, but wait there's more . . .

(Almost) Wordless Wednesday

3 comments from dear readers

(Almost) Wordless Wednesday


The chickadees looooOoOOOooove their blankets. It's almost been a whole year and they still refuse to travel without them!

For more WW fun click on over to 5 Minutes for Mom.

What I've Learned Today - The Murphy's Law (Out and About) Edition

, 1 comments from dear readers


Well, dear reader, we seem to be on a roll. This is the third edition of What I've Learned Today! Don't forget to mention what you've learned today in the comments. Let's share the learnin' luv!

What I've Learned Today - The Murphy's Law (Out and About) Edition


- The one Sunday morning that you manage to get everyone out the door on time for church is the same Sunday church gets canceled due to weather.

- The same day your son traipses around the muddy yard in his newly purchased $22.95 pair of boots and refuses to take them off - even to go to bed ( pick your battles, mama) is the same day you find the exact same pair at GoodWill for $2.00. I so wish I were joking.

- The day you decide to finally buckle down and go workout is the same day that the only other woman in the entire establishment decides to use the locker directly next to yours. What's up with that?!

C'mon! Tell the rest of us what YOU learned today!

A Letter to the "Lady" in the Car Line At School This Morning

, 4 comments from dear readers

Dear "Lady",

Let me assure you that I am not going to yell at you. Please accept my humble apologies instead.

I am sorry that I was in your way this morning in the car line at our children's school. Never mind that you decided to jump out and around the front of me (and several people behind me) - as I was about to make a left into the school parking lot - and slam on your breaks to let your child off at the cross walk thereby causing me to slam on my breaks. I am sure the parent behind me (and the one behind him) understands.

I am sorry that your Driver's Ed teacher didn't teach you better than to sidle up to my blind spot and beep your horn incessantly as if I were in the wrong.

I am sorry that your mama didn't teach you manners. Obviously. Because you have yet to learn the valuable lesson of waiting your turn. If you had waited your turn, you still would have been able to drop your kids off safely in the cross walk, just like everyone else not pulling into the parking lot.

I am sorry that you didn't have a male figure in your life to teach you that cars can be dangerous weapons when you choose to come to a sudden stop right in front of another car on an icy road.

I am sorry that your third grade English teacher did not teach you the difference in definitions of the words ignorant and stupid.

I am sorry that you are under the mistaken impression that your time is more valuable than mine.

Yes, I am sorry that so many people have failed you on so many levels.

Now, since I endeavor to find the joy in any situation, allow me to outline them for you. Joyfully.

The joy is that I was able to stop on that icy road. But only by God's Hand of Protection for me and His Mercy for you. (Perhaps your sunday school teacher failed to teach you the definition of mercy?)

The joy is that your precious cargo and mine remained unharmed.

The joy is that I refrained from calling you the several names that came to mind, thereby sparing my child from an early morning lesson of his own.

The joy is that we are moving in the very near future and hopefully I will never have to encounter you again. But I'm not holding my breath.

I'm just sayin'.

Peep O' The Week

2 comments from dear readers

It's Peep O' The Week time!



This week's peep is a fairly new commenter and I am glad to have her here on the ol' blog. She's this week's peep because flattery will get you everywhere. And complementing my kids get you bonus points!

Mama Wheaton said...

Having kids around is like having your comic relief - most of the time!


Mama Wheaton @ The Unperfect Mom just plain gets it! Congrats! Mama Wheaton, feel free to post this award on your blog with pride!

Wanna be a jubilant peep? Just leave a comment and you are in the running. Humorous, pithy, and flattering comments are always welcome!

Want to see past Peeps? Click here.

Credit Card Scam

8 comments from dear readers

Today's post is a bit of a departure, but I thought it is important enough to share. Thank you to my aunt who alerted me to this scary scam.
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New Credit Card Scam

Snopes.com says this is true. See this site - http://www.snopes.com/crime/warnings/creditcard.asp

This one is pretty slick since they provide YOU with all the information, except the one piece they want.

Note, the callers do not ask for your card number; they already have it. This information is worth reading. By understanding how the VISA & MasterCard Telephone Credit Card Scam works, you'll be better prepared to protect yourself.

One of our employees was called on Wednesday from 'VISA', and I was called on Thursday from 'Master Card'. The scam works like this: Caller: 'This is (name), and I'm calling from the Security and Fraud Department at VISA. My Badge number is 12460. Your card has been flagged for an unusual purchase pattern, and I'm calling to verify. This would be on your VISA card which was issued by (name of bank). Did you purchase an Anti-Telemarketing Device for $497.99 from a Marketing company based in Arizona ?'

When you say 'No', the caller continues with, 'Then we will be issuing a credit to your account. This is a company we have been watching and the charges range from $297 to $497, just under the $500 purchase pattern that flags most cards. Before your next statement, the credit will be sent to (gives you your address), is that correct?'

You say 'yes'. The caller continues - 'I will be starting a Fraud investigation. If you have any questions, you should call the 1- 800 number listed on the back of your card (1-800-VISA) and ask for Security.'

You will need to refer to this Control Number. The caller then gives you a 6 digit number. 'Do you need me to read it again?'

Here's the IMPORTANT part on how the scam works. The caller then says, 'I need to verify you are in possession of your card'. He'll ask you to 'turn your card over and look for some numbers'. There are 7 numbers; the first 4 are part of your card number, the next 3 are the security Numbers that verify you are the possessor of the card. These are the numbers you sometimes use to make Internet purchases to prove you have the card. The caller will ask you to read the 3 numbers to him. After you tell the caller the 3 numbers, he'll say, 'That is correct, I just needed to verify that the card has not been lost or stolen, and that you still have your card. Do you have any other questions?' After you say No, the caller then thanks you and states, 'Don't hesitate to call back if you do, and hangs up.

You actually say very little, and they never ask for or tell you the Card number. But after we were called on Wednesday, we called back within 20 minutes to ask a question. Are we glad we did! The REAL VISA Security Department told us it was a scam and in the last 15 minutes a new purchase of $497.99 was charged to our card.

Long story - short - we made a real fraud report and closed the VISA account. VISA is reissuing us a new number. What the scammers want is the 3-digit PIN number on the back of the card Don't give it to them. Instead, tell them you'll call VISA or Master card directly for verification of their conversation. The real VISA told us that they will never ask for anything on the card as they already know the information since they issued the card! If you give the scammers your 3 Digit PIN Number, you think you're receiving a credit. However, by the time you get your statement you'll see charges for purchases you didn't make, and by then it's almost too late and/or more difficult to actually file a fraud report.

What makes this more remarkable is that on Thursday, I got a call from a 'Jason Richardson of Master Card' with a word-for-word repeat of the VISA scam. This time I didn't let him finish. I hung up! We filed a police report, as instructed by VISA. The police said they are taking seve ral of these reports daily! They also urged us to tell everybody we know that this scam is happening.
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Havah by Tosca Moon Lee

, , , , , , 4 comments from dear readers

My eyes are tear-filled. Tears of relief and sorrow. Tears of elation and of grief not my own.

I have just finished reading Havah The story of Eve by Tosca Lee. I thought to give myself time to properly process all I have read, but was afraid to not try to somehow to give voice to my emotions. I am afraid that I won't properly express to you the great empathy, sorrow and joy that I am feeling if I do not immediately put it all into words.

This beautifully written book has affected me deeply. Profoundly. As I knew it would the moment I heard of it.

I hadn't thought much about Eve before now. I was familiar with her brief story outlined in Genesis, but never bothered to flesh out my sketchy ideas of her as the mother of all humankind. Never truly thought about what her life must have been like after she ate of the forbidden fruit.

Until I was challenged by Michelle over at Scribbit. She was holding a Write Away contest with the theme of Color. My mind went to Eve and I began to wonder about the contrasts between her life in the Garden and her Exile. And I wrote a few paragraphs for the contest. But I was never fully satisfied, rather my curiosity was piqued and my mind turned again and again to Eve's role in our history. Mine, and yours.

Yes, yours, dear reader.

A short while later, I came upon Tosca Lee's site. She was holding a giveaway of her book, Havah. I was immediately captivated by the description. Here was a novel, a fictional tale, of how life might have been for Eve. I had to have this book. I actually cast a brief prayer heavenward hoping that I'd win a copy in the giveaway. And I did. When the novel arrived at my door, I ripped open the packaging and just held the book, savoring that moment. And then I put it aside, knowing that as soon as I started the book, I'd be that much closer to it's end. Moments afterward, I could no longer resist and I began to read.

The depths of her imagination and meticulous exploration of Eve's powerful story left me breathless. So beautifully written, that a turn of phrase here and a detailed description there guided me to the feel the sense of wonder that Eve must have felt upon opening her eyes for the very first time. And upon each new discovery after that - from her first meetings with the animals to her relationship with Adam; a pure, guileless, joyful, selfless relationship. The way marriage should be.

And then there are the whispered Words of The God of the Universe meant for her heart alone. She felt his presence so deeply, so intimately that to be bereft of it results in her desire of an ending in this life on earth. To be privy to Eve's communion with the One that Is, made me long for the same kind of relationship with my Creator.

And then there is The Fall.

I'd often wondered how a person could be deceived by a serpent. And one that speaks. But to think of God's greatest enemy as a mere snake is to commit a grave injustice. The reader is presented with such a convincing plot and conniving creature that I caught myself thinking Eve was very strong to have resisted as long as she did.

The stark contrast to the preceding pages left me grieving for Eve. And for each of us that has come after her. As beautiful as the description of the Garden was, it is her life after sin enters the world that haunts. So often while reading later chapters, I wanted to go back to those first chapters before her sin, to ease the sorrow I felt. To, somehow ease Eve's sorrow, as weird as that sounds. Eve longs and, in her way, strives for her former relationship with the One. Though she has many joys throughout her life, it all falls short of her perfect communion with Adonai.

But through the depths of Eve's grief there is Hope. An ever-entwining thread of faith that becomes her life-line. A hope of returning to her former relationship with God. A filling of the void that sin carved upon her soul. The chasm that only God can properly fill. And, by novel's end, she realizes her greatest dream.

We too can have that same Hope. You can have that same Hope.

To take God at His Word, love Him and follow him - as simple and as difficult as that is - is all we need to do. Are you ready to allow Him to fill the God shaped crater in your heart? As happy as you feel from time to time, you will never be content, truly joyful, until you do. In the stillness of your heart, if you are honest with yourself, you are aware that there is something more. And you've tried to fill it with all kinds of things. Some of them good. Some, not so much. But none of it fits. None of it sustains you.

He will. He will, my friend.

Havah renews my ache for Heaven and a perfect, harmonious communion with my Creator. Eve, at least knew perfection for a while, we won't see perfection until Heaven. Are you going? Want to be sure? Click here to find out how.

And then, after you click, pick up Havah, The story of Eve by Tosca Lee.

Hoping to meet you in Heaven, dear reader,

A Rose By Any Other Name . . .

, 7 comments from dear readers


Lately my two youngest children have been fascinated by last names.

Whirling Dervish (four): "Daddy's last name is R------- and so is Mommy's."

The Affectionate One (five): "Yes, but not Mimi and Poppy. Their last name is different. Mommy used to have their last name. How come, Mommy?"

Me: "Well when babies are born, they get the same last name as their daddy and mommy. But when I married your daddy, then I took his last name."

Whirling Dervish's eye grew round, then he squeezed his eyes shut and threw his head in his hands.

Me: "What's up, Bud? Are you upset?"

He glanced at me and back down at the table, "Mommy. It's not nice to take something from someone else. I am so sad at you."

Me, trying to hide a grin: "Oh, honey. I took it because Daddy wanted to give it to me. I didn't take it away from him. We share it."

Whirling Dervish with a long-suffering sigh: "This is getting complicated."

What I've Learned Today - The Murphy's Law (Home) Edition

, 5 comments from dear readers


What I Learned Today - The Murphy's Law (Home) Edition

- The moment you slather on the hand lotion, a task that requires hand washing will need your immediate attention

- The day you get every stitch of clothing laundered is the same day your youngest son throws up in two of the five newly folded baskets of clothes.

- The year your youngest son is old enough to get Santa is the same year your oldest son discovers the truth and feels compelled to share the information with his siblings.

What have YOU learned today?

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