Monday, May 31, 2010

"People" Medicine for Pets


Wonder what bottles you have in your medicine chest that can also help you dogs and cats? Many of the medicines prescribed by vets are avail over the counter in their human counter parts. The active ingredients are the same, however the dosage is usually smaller and the medicine from the vet is usually flavored to something the dogs prefer. The following is a list of medicines that I have used on my dogs:

St. John's Wort - Cupid takes this because he seems to have doggie OCD. He licks constantly (his brothers, his parents, the floor, the bedspread, etc...), and has to bounce 3 times before he'll jump up on the couch/bed/chair. Results take 2-4 weeks to be noticeable.

Herbal Stress Tabs (contains Passion Flower, Chamomile, Valerian Root & Tryptophan) - All 3 dogs (and occasionally the cat) take this. I have this in 3 forms: tablet, drops (which can be added to their water) and as cookies. The dogs receive these before car rides, trips to the groomers, thunderstorms and any other situations that may be stressful for them.

Benadryl - All 3 take Benadryl. Flapjack takes it to relieve itching so he'll stop licking his paw until it's raw and sore. As it heals it itches and the whole process starts over again.

During Spring & Summer, Romeo takes it to relieve his watery eyes and Cupid takes it to relieve his sneezing (you know that horrible sounding reverse sneeze that dogs do) Dosage is 1mg per pound. If I'm using the tablets which are 25mg each, I give each half a tab. If I'm using liquid Childrens Benadryl which is only 12.5 mg per tsp, then they each get a tsp.

Mylanta Liquid - We just started using this on Flapjack for indigestion and gastric distress. Fladjack has a problem with gas. Well it's not really his problem, it's more ours because we have to smell it!! I give him 2-3 tsp in the evening.

Pepto Bismol - We have this in our Pet First Aid kit. It will relieve everything for dogs that it does for people. Cats can't take Pepto.

Clear Pedialyte - We first used Pedialyte on 2 foster puppies we had 7 years ago because they were too weak to drink on their own. Because they were so sick, we used an oral syringe and gave it full strength. So if your pet is really dehydrated and too weak to drink on their own, you can use this method to administer the Pedialyte.

However, if you think your dog may be just a little dehydrated from running around on a hot day or from a little diarrhea, then you can mix Pedialyte with water 50/50 in their bowl.

There are many other items in your medicine chest that will work on your pets. I have just mentioned the ones here that I actually use. Please seek your vets advice if your pet is ill.


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Sunday, May 30, 2010

At Arlington, each soldier has a special lady

At Arlington, each soldier has a special lady

This story really touched my heart. What a wonderful service these ladies are doing to ensure no one is forgotten at the time of their death.



By HELEN O'NEILL
The Associated Press
updated 6:45 p.m. CT, Sat., May 29, 2010
ARLINGTON, Va. - Joyce Johnson remembers the drums beating slowly as she walked with her girls from the Old Post Chapel, behind the horse-drawn caisson carrying the flag-draped casket of her husband.

She remembers struggling to maintain her composure as she stared at his freshly dug grave, trying not to dwell on the terrible sight in the distance — the gaping hole in the Pentagon where he had so proudly worked.

The three-volley salute. Taps. The chaplain handing her a perfectly folded flag. The blur of tributes.

And then a lady stepped forward, a stranger, dressed not in uniform but in a simple dark suit. She whispered a few words and pressed two cards into Johnson's hands.

"If there is anything you need ..."

Then she melted back into the crowd.

Later Johnson would think of her as a touchingly, human presence in a sea of starched uniforms and salutes. She would learn that the stranger was an "Arlington lady" — one of a small band of volunteers, mainly spouses of retired military officers, who attend every funeral in Arlington National Cemetery. She would read the notes — a formal one from the Army Chief of Staff and his wife, and a personal handwritten one from the Arlington lady herself.

She would learn of their mission: to ensure no soldier is buried alone.

Johnson wasn't alone. In fact she felt as though an entire nation was grieving with her.

But she never forgot the kindness of her Arlington Lady.

And several years later, as she wrestled with how to best to honor her husband, she dug out the lady's card. This is something I can do, she thought, not just for him, but for every soldier.

"It doesn't matter whether we are burying a four-star general or a private," says Margaret Mensch, head of the Army ladies. "They all deserve to have someone say thank you at their grave."

Mensch is sitting at her desk in the basement of the cemetery's administration building in the cramped office shared by ladies from the Navy, Air Force, Army and Coast Guard. The place bustles with activity — young military escorts in dress uniform arriving to accompany ladies to funerals, chaplains scribbling eulogies in their tiny office across the hall, cemetery representatives ushering mourners into private rooms upstairs.

30 funerals each weekday
There are approximately 30 funerals in Arlington every weekday and the ladies attend every one. All have their own reasons and stories.

There is Mensch, married to a retired Army colonel, who oversees the mammoth task of organizing the schedules for her 66 Army ladies and who says attending the funerals is the greatest honor of her life. And Doreen Huylebroeck, a 63-year-old nurse who remembers how desperately she wanted an Arlington lady beside her when her own husband, a retired Navy officer, died three years ago. Janine Moghaddam, who at 41 is one of the youngest Arlington ladies, and who felt a desperate need serve her country in some small way after Sept. 11, 2001. And Johnson herself.

She treks to the cemetery in spring when cherry blossoms burst over the rows of white stones and everything seems dusted in yellow pollen. And in the swelter of summer when the stones blaze in the heat and mourners sometimes pass out at services. Even in winter, when the wind whips through the marble pillars of the Columbarium, Johnson and the other ladies keep their vigil, clinging to the arms of their escorts as they pick their way through the mud and snow.

Always elegantly dressed, often in hats and gloves. Always standing, hand over heart, a respectful distance from the grave. Always mindful of history.

The ladies know every inch of Arlington's 624 manicured acres, from the stones of freed slaves marked "unknown citizens" to the grave of the first soldier interred here (Private William Christman, a farmer from Pennsylvania who fought in the Civil War) to Section 60, where the men and women who lost their lives in the current wars are buried.

"So many stones, so many stories," says Paula Mckinley, head of the Navy ladies, as she drives through the cemetery one recent spring day, stopping at a section not far from the throngs of tourists at President John F. Kennedy's grave.

Baldwin. Curtis. Sanchez. She walks among their headstones reciting their names.

With her booming voice, red hair tucked under a straw hat, and brisk manner, Mckinley, whose husband is a retired Navy officer, is a striking figure. But she is subdued by the graves, reverential. "They all deserve to be remembered, and to be visited," she says.

McKinley, who has been an Arlington lady for 21 years, drives a little further. She stops by a grove of willow oaks, searching for a specific plot.

"Here you are, sweetheart," she says, gently touching the stone of a young woman Navy officer who died in an accident at the age of 25. The officer's mother called from California one day — on her daughter's birthday — and asked if an Arlington lady could put flowers on the grave. Now McKinley visits regularly. She says it's the least she can do.

Job to honor, not grieve
The first group of Arlington ladies were formed in 1948 after Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Hoyt S. Vandenberg and his wife, Gladys, noticed an airman being buried without any family members present, just a chaplain and honor guard. It seemed so sad, and somehow so wrong. So Gladys Vandenberg enlisted a group of officers' wives to attend all Air Force funerals. The other branches of the armed services followed, with the exception of the Marines, who do not have a group.

The ladies insist they are not mourners. They come to honor, not to grieve. "An Arlington lady doesn't cry," is practically a mantra.

And yet, there are times when that is inevitable.

McKinley remembers choking up as she offered condolences to a 10-year-old girl, who had just lost her parents. The child reached up and hugged her tight. And the time a young widow from Peru clung to her, begging McKinley to sit next to her in the front row. Her husband had died suddenly and there were no family members to comfort her.

Linda Willey, head of the Air Force ladies, describes the pain of burying friends from the Pentagon after September 11, 2001, when shards of debris still littered the cemetery and tears flowed freely behind dark glasses.


And Mensch tells of the heartache the Army ladies felt last year when one of their own escorts was killed in Iraq. The handsome young soldier from the 3rd Infantry Division, who had escorted the ladies to hundreds of funerals, was buried with full military honors, an Arlington lady standing by his grave.


About 145 ladies volunteer in the four branches, which all have slightly different rules. The Army ladies maintain a strict dress code — no slacks, no red, panty hose to be worn at all times. The Navy ladies introduce themselves to the families before the funeral, and follow up with personal notes about six weeks later.

All of the ladies volunteer for one day a month, sometimes attending four or five funerals in a single day. All have memories and stories: the time a family feud erupted and police had to break up the mourners; the young widow who wore a red cocktail dress because it was her husband's favorite; the older widow who refused to get out of the car because she saw the Arlington lady standing near the grave. She assumed this was the other woman.

"You never know what to expect, and you never judge," Willey says as she walks among the headstones and ponders her role. Willey, 63, who is married to a retired Air Force colonel, became a lady almost by accident, as a favor to a friend who kept pressing her. From her first funeral she knew that this was what she was meant to do.

"It just felt right, such an honor," Willey says. "It's such a simple gesture and yet it can be so powerful."


As she talks, strains of "America the Beautiful" seem to float over the stones from a grave site a short distance away. Jan Jackson of Fort Collins, Colo., is burying her parents. Their urns sit next to each other on a table above their joint grave.

Jackson's mother died in 2006 and her father, a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, died last year. She had planned this springtime date on what would have been her father's 96th birthday. She wanted to honor her parents, married 67 years, by burying them together in the nation's hallowed ground.

As a member of a military family, Jackson, 59, is familiar with the pomp and precision and patriotism that accompany funerals. But she was utterly unprepared for the flood of emotion that swept over her as a young military escort took her arm and guided her from the chapel to the grave.

It was a small funeral — just Jackson, her son and grandchildren. And her Arlington lady.

Everything about the service was perfect, she said later. And this stranger was there to make it even better — "almost an angelic kind of person who is there for you even though she doesn't know you, even though she is not required, even though it is not her job. It was so special, so comforting."

From around the cemetery drift the sounds of other services, bands and gun salutes and drum rolls, one funeral seeming to blend into the next.

In one section, three daughters in black dresses and pearls, are burying their father, a former Navy officer who served in World War II, Korea and Vietnam, and who meticulously planned his own funeral, even visiting Arlington regularly to view his final resting place. He smiles from a photograph propped next to his urn.

In the Columbarium, decorated veterans, laden with medals, are saluting one of their own — a member of the naval aviation squadron known as the Golden Eagles, and one of the last survivors of the Battle of Midway.

And in Section 60 a widow, young and beautiful and dressed in black, clutches her toddler son. Before her, standing to attention, the honor guard that had processed behind her husband's coffin, pulled in a caisson by six white horses. In the distance, the rifle guard that had fired the salute. In a far corner, the lone bugler who had played taps.

On this steamy spring day, beneath a towering oak, a 27-year-old Army sergeant, killed in an attack in Pakistan a month earlier, is about to be laid to rest.

"Today the country tries to say thank you ... and yet words are inadequate," the chaplain begins.

His widow seems overwhelmed, her eyes locked on the silver casket that holds his remains. His parents softly sob.

And then a lady steps forward, an older woman, dressed in a simple dark suit.

She whispers a few words of condolences and presses two cards into the widow's hands.

"If there is anything you need ..."


Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/37416579/?GT1=43001


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Internet addicts guilty of starving baby to death

Internet addicts guilty of starving baby to death

This story is really sad. I believe that internet addiction is a real ailment just like any other addiction, but there is no excuse for this extreme behavior. I can't believe nobody stepped in. Where were the grandparents? Did neighbors not hear the baby crying when the parents were at internet cafes for 10 hours at a time?

The sad irony of this story is that while their baby was slowly starving to death, they were on the internet all these hours raising a "virtual baby".

Saturday, May 29, 2010

High Five Etiquette



My hubby sent this to me and I thought it was entertaining. We've all been in more than one of these situations. They just need to make a "Kissing Etiquette".

NCIS Season Finale


Well it's that time of year again. When all of my favorite shows go into hiatus and won't be back until late September/early October. It was a pretty exciting week.

NCIS - First off, I really think they should of ended the week before without acknowledging that the decapitated body was not in fact Mike Franks. It would of added a little more suspense to the finale. Instead they end the episode telling us it's Col. Bell (like we really care if he died). I think there might be a littel romance on the horizon for Gibbs and Hart (Rena Sofer). Once confronted by Vance, she breached client privilege to benefit Gibbs. I personally think Gibbs needs to stick with the redheads (I'll be happy to take a role on NCIS as the new love interest:-P)

The tie back to the drug dealer that killed Gibbs family was an interesting tack to take. I never bought Alejandro as a good guy though, so it was no surprise to me that he ended up being the drug dealers son. As Gibbs would say, "there are no such things as coincidences" and Abby being summoned to Mexico and being handed that cold case then being given a live round all pointing to Gibbs would have been way to coincidental.

It was nice to see Dinozzo in Mexico with Franks, though I don't understand why Vance would send Dinozzo to a country where we have no jurisdiction to observe and report on Alejandro. Alejandro has met Tony and his cover could be blown very easily. At least Tony has earned the respect of a loyal ally, Franks. When Franks called Tony "Probie", I believe it was done with respect and affection, because up until this point, Gibbs is the only one Franks calls "Probie".

Lastly, the camera work in the last minute was very misleading. When they panned on the candy being placed into the jar, I really thought it was Alejandro about to be shot by Franks, not his sister threatening Jack. I really hope they don't kill Jack. I think there are more story lines that could be done with Gibbs and his father.

It was an exciting, if not a little confusing, episode, but it definately left me anxious for the fall season.


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Thursday, May 27, 2010

My Ex-Wife's Wedding Dress

My Ex-Wife's Wedding Dress

Whatever works for you! I actually think this probably started out being very therapuetic for him, but after a little while I think he'll have it out of his system but will end up feeling obligated to continue.

Hey! It's alot cheaper than a therapist!

Where are they now? - 2010

Where are they now?

Had some very interesting people in here that you don't hear about to often, in addition to the ones you do.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Finally Met My Nephew!!!!
















I finally had a chance to meet my nephew!! He's 17 months old today and totally adorable!! I also haven't had a chance to see my brother since 2003!

The circumstances were sad, my baby brother Greg & I have different fathers and his step-mom passed away unexpectedly last week. This led to Greg coming to Texas to see his dad with his son Logan.

Chet (ex-stepfather) invited Jerry & I up to Magnolia, so we packed our bags and hit the road! It was very hard for me because of the agoraphobia. I haven't been away from the house for more than 4 hours since last year and this was a 48 hour stay, but there was no way I was missing the chance to see my brother and meet my nephew!

We had a great time just sitting around chatting. We spent 6 hours the first day and 9 hours the second day just hanging out at Chet's house talkin'. I haven't talked that much since high school.

Magnolia is very pretty. Lots of tall pine trees and has a very New England feel to it which I love! On the drive back our Garmin took us the back country highways which were very scenic going through Bastrop State Park. We saw over 100 motorcyclists out enjoying the day.

The only thing missing was Greg's wife Valerie. She had to stay in Orlando because of work!

Romeo (my little therapy pomeranian) went with us while Cupid and Flapjack stayed home. Romeo was the only one we felt was ready for a weekend away from home and the long car ride. He behaved himself very well and he loved being off leash to explore the woods in Magnolia.

Soldiers Perform Lady Gaga's 'Telephone'

Very funny! It's great to see our soldiers keeping their sense of humor!

Check out this great MSN Video: Soldiers Perform Lady Gaga's 'Telephone'

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

My story of Kristopher James Allen

While Jerry & I were meeting with my therapist last year to help me deal with the anxiety attacks I’d been having, Kris came up. My therapist thinks I have unresolved issues regarding Kris’ untimely death and suggested I write everything down. I have been considering his advice for the past year, but did not feel strong enough to go forward with his suggestion. On this, the 18th anniversary of his passing, I think the time has come for me to write my story of Kris.

I initially met Kris in the summer of 1988 when my family moved onto his street. He lived across the street 5 houses down. I was attending a different school that fall so our relationship consisted of just an occasional awkward wave when we saw each other on the sidewalk. After Christmas break, I transferred to Roosevelt and we began talking.

At first it was just small talk as we waited for the bus in the mornings and farewells as we exited the bus in the evenings. My house was only 2 doors down from the bus stop so there was not much time for conversation. Our lockers were close to each other at school so we gradually began talking more and we started sitting together on the bus to and from school when we were both on the bus. Kris shared his locker with his girlfriend Kristi and we all became good friends. This friendship lasted through the school year and into the summer.

On August 18, 1989 I attended the funeral of my best friend Michelle who had been tragically killed in an automobile accident the day after her birthday. Kris knew it had been a rough week for me and I guess he instinctively knew that night was going to be very difficult for me. Sometime around midnight, he snuck out of his house and snuck into mine. He didn’t need to say anything; he just lay with me until I cried myself to sleep.

This was the first of many nights he would sneak down to my house in the middle of the night. We would lie down on my twin sized bed and talk for hours. Sometimes we wouldn’t talk much, just having the other person there was enough and we’d drift of to sleep. Of course these nights were always followed by the frantic wake up the next morning to get him back home before our parents found out. While we weren’t doing anything, I doubt either of our parents would have approved.

By the time school was back in session our relationship had grown quite a bit. His girlfriend Kristi, who was also my friend until this point noticed, and while I don’t know if she thought we were having an affair or not, a teenage love triangle was born!

At the time I didn’t understand why she was angry about my relationship with Kris. We weren’t having an affair, at this point we hadn’t even kissed. Looking back on it now, I understand her anger. While not being physical, Kris and I had an extremely intimate relationship that I don’t think you can understand until you’re an adult, if even then. We spent hours together after school, when I came home from my job at Whataburger he was often waiting for me at my house and we “slept” together or stayed up all night talking usually a couple of times a week after our parents had gone to bed.

Inevitably our relationship put a strain on his relationship with Kristi, so we stopped spending as much time together. We didn’t associate at school, we no longer sat together on the bus and our midnight rendezvous diminished significantly. At this point I realized how much I cared about Kris, because I missed him so much it hurt.

It’s now December 1989 and I have a 3 year old brother to buy a present for so off to the mall I go. Coincidentally, Kristi worked at the mall and she happened to work at the KB Toys store. By this time we are sworn enemies not even pretending to be cordial any longer. Kristi did not take to kindly to my being on her turf.

Later that evening just after dark, I received a phone call. It was Kristi calling me from Kris’ house chewing my ass up and down for coming into her store. I responded that if she had something she needed to say to me, that she should come say it to my face. I’m sure it wasn’t that polite, I probably said something more like “If you got something to say bitch! Get your scrawny slut ass down here and say it to my face!” (Teenagers are so eloquent after all). She agreed, we hung up and I waited. And I waited. And I waited some more. Finally I called Kris and said something along the lines of “I thought your little bitch was coming down here to say something to my face” his response was a loud sigh followed by “She’s coming”. With my parents sitting in the living room I walked by them and walked outside, they had no idea anything was going on.

What ensued outside was a good old fashioned catfight. There was some punching, kicking, scratching and maybe a little hair pulling. It seemed like a long time, but was probably only a minute or two until Kris broke us up. It was the one and only time I ever got into a physical altercation. Kristi & I joked about it many years later.

After the fight, Kris and I slowly started to talk to each other a bit more often. That summer in 1990, my parents decided to move to Devine. This was a difficult move for me on 2 points. First, I was moving away from Kris, and second because that was where my best friend Michelle was going when she died.

I don’t remember when Kristi and Kris ended their relationship. Being so far away (40 miles might as well be a thousand when you’re a teenager) we didn’t get to see each other much. I picked him up a couple of times that summer and brought him down to Devine, but school started and it was long distance to call each other so we didn’t speak too often. Kristi had also become pregnant with Kris baby earlier in the spring so they were dealing with a lot.

After spending my senior year in Devine, we were back in San Antonio. By this time Kris had a 8 month old baby boy named Bradley. I remember he used to tell me he would call him Brad because it annoyed Kristi. They were not together anymore by this time. Sometime after graduation, Kris took a job in Corpus Christi. This is when we began our “relationship” again.

To this day, I’ve never spoken about the last few months of our relationship with anyone or let anyone read my journal. I have kept it private in my heart. After all these years I hope finally sharing this will be somehow beneficial.

In the Winter & Spring of 1992 Kris would come up from Corpus on the weekends and we’d hang out at my house talking like we used too. My favorite nights were when he didn’t tell me he was coming and there be a knock on the door. One night in February he even surprised me at Diamond J’s playing pool with my little brother and a friend from Devine. I will never forget how happy I was seeing him walk through that door. He was wearing Z Cavarrici pants, a white turtle neck and tan jacket. He looked very collegiate.

By this time, we were both single and our relationship started to change. We always talked around our relationship though, never about it. I think we were both scared of losing what we had if we dared say it out loud. Our relationship was strange that way.

We never talked about dating each other, it was just understood that he’d come see me from Corpus and I’d be there and if I called him, he’d be there. We never said “let’s move in together” the conversation went more like “I’m going to try and get transferred back to San Antonio this summer, do you want to get an apartment in Leon Valley (where I was living) or by the old neighborhood?”

The last time I got to spend with Kris was the first weekend in May 1992. We had the house to ourselves; everyone was gone for the night. He sat in a plush armchair and I sat on the floor leaning on the chair by his legs. We had a bottle of wine and sat around talking as we usually did. We never seemed to run out of things to say to each other. As was the norm in our relationship, we talked about everything directly except about us. He was telling me that it looked like he’d be back in San Antonio before the end of the summer and that he had found a ring in Corpus that he liked and told me he thought I’d like it too. He said he’d bring it when he moved back and we got an apartment. We never actually talked about living together or getting married as I said, we talked around our relationship, but it worked for us at the time.

Unfortunately, I never had the chance to see the ring he picked out.

On the evening of May 19, 1992 I was at home with my family when my brother Ken came out of his room and said something to my mother. A few minutes later, my mother came out and asked me for Joyce’s (Kris’ mother) phone number. As she left the room my brother stayed in the kitchen with me drying dishes and I remember laughing and saying to him that mom was probably calling Joyce to plan the wedding because if she had her way Kris & I would’ve gotten married long ago. She loved Kris and in her mind he was already like a son so he might as well be a son in law.

When my mother came back into the room and told me Kris was gone, it was like my entire world was crashing down around me. I was holding a glass pitcher and actually swung it at my mom. My first instinct was to call Kris, because whenever I needed someone to talk to he was always there. I ended up in my car driving around for hours.

The day of the funeral, Kristi & I saw each other and just hugged each other tight. She was the only other person in the world that could understand what I was feeling. After all, we loved the same guy.

Later after the service at Kris' house a group of us were standing outside and a friend of his named Paul, came up to me and said that he never knew 2 people that loved each other as much as Kris and I did but were to afraid to say it.  That has stuck with me all these years.  I make sure I tell my husband I love him all the time because I never want to lose someone again without telling them how much I love them.

For months after Kris died, I would find myself picking up the phone to call him and having half the numbers dialed before I realized what I was doing. I couldn’t stop crying. If I heard certain songs on the radio I’d become hysterical. Under the Bridge by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Right Here Waiting by Richard Marx and anything off of Shenandoah’s “Road Not Taken” album (when we weren’t speaking to each other in the spring of 1990, he actually stole this cassette tape out of my bag during Astronomy class and used it to make a tape for Kristi, he gave it back to me on one of his trips from Corpus in 1992 and we laughed about it. It is the only cassette I still have. It is all I have left of him besides memories).

I literally spent the first year after he died drunk, even though I was under 21. I drank every night and engaged in behavior that I’m surprised I survived. There was a bar not far from my house called Around the Bend that thought I was older, so I went there every night. I even carried Vodka & Peach Schnapps in my car. I moved into an apartment with 2 DJ’s and a bouncer and they would take me to the clubs where they worked and no one questioned my age because I was with them. Kris’ death had a huge impact on my life. I ended up in an abusive relationship the year after he died that lasted for 2 years. All I cared about was being drunk so I wouldn’t care.

In 1995 I finally sobered up and moved out on my own. Being alone at night, sober, thinking about Kris was painful. He had been gone 3 years and I still hadn’t dealt with it. I had dreams about him witnessing drug transactions and being away in witness protection somewhere and almost convinced myself it was true. Some days, I think I did convince myself he was still alive somewhere. By the end of 1995 I was doing much better. I moved on with my life, started dating, got a full time job at the hospital and life was back on track.

Kris’ death changed the course of my life. After he died I never again had a friend that I was as close too. When I do make friends I tend to push them away after a while. I don’t want to go through the pain of losing another friend. I’ve lost too many already and Kris was always my support. No one was there to support me when he died.

I have a wonderful husband of 11 years, Jerry, but even now I sometimes think I push him away because I’m afraid of being left again. I do have abandonment issues that stem from losing my 2 best friends in my teens and my father, but that’s a topic for another post.

After all these years, I don’t get hysterical if I hear a song on the radio, but my eyes do water up and my heart still aches a little bit wondering how my life might have been different. Not necessarily better, but different.

Poetry About Kris

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Monday, May 10, 2010

Dogs First Ride in Their New Booster/Car Seat







Call me weird, crazy or whatever... Our dogs are little and when they go on car rides they tend to jump all over the place because they are trying to look out the window but have trouble reaching, so we bought them their own booster/car seat.

The seat solves 2 problems: it boosts them up high enough to see out the window and it secures them to the seat belt so they don't slip around when we are braking or turning.

An added bonus that the dogs LOVE is that we can open the window for them to stick their heads out without having to worry about them falling out of the car. It has made rides with them very easy now.

Friday, May 7, 2010

No Bobdy - After "A Door" by WS Merwin

This corpse is where no door could ever be
where here I'm cowering
from this dark inside my walls

through still another night
there will be no shadow
no window out
where I don't belong

No one could breathe
stagnant fog that closes
behind me once I've gone
nowhere after me could
no body ever open it.

-RW Hershey Jr

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Wednesday, May 5, 2010

A Dog's Ten Commandments....

1. My life is likely to last 10-15 years. Any separation from you is likely to be painful

2. Give me time to understand what you want of me.

3. Place your trust in me. It is crucial for my well-being.

4. Don't be angry with me for long and don't lock me up as punishment. You have your work, your friends, your entertainment, but I have only you.

5. Talk to me. Even if I don't understand your words, I do understand your voice when speaking to me.

6. Be aware that however you treat me, I will never forget it.

7. Before you hit me, before you strike me, remember that I could hurt you, and yet, I choose not to bite you.

8. Before you scold me for being lazy or uncooperative, ask yourself if something might be bothering me. Perhaps I'm not getting the right food, I have been in the sun too long, or my heart might be getting old or weak.

9. Please take care of me when I grow old. You too, will grow old.

10. On the ultimate difficult journey, go with me please. Never say you can't bear to watch. Don't make me face this alone. Everything is easier for me if you are there, because I love you so.

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Wonderful advice from Aunt Denise

Written By Regina Brett, 90 years old, of The Plain Dealer, Cleveland , Ohio

"To celebrate growing older, I once wrote the 45 lessons life taught me. It is the most-requested column I've ever written."

My odometer rolled over to 90 in August, so here is the column once more:

1. Life isn't fair, but it's still good.

2. When in doubt, just take the next small step.

3. Life is too short to waste time hating anyone.

4. Your job won't take care of you when you are sick. Your friends and parents will. Stay in touch.

5. Pay off your credit cards every month.

6. You don't have to win every argument. Agree to disagree.

7. Cry with someone. It's more healing than crying alone.

8. It's OK to get angry with God. He can take it.

9. Save for retirement starting with your first paycheck.

10. When it comes to chocolate, resistance is futile.

11. Make peace with your past so it won't screw up the present.

12. It's OK to let your children see you cry.

13. Don't compare your life to others. You have no idea what their journey is all about.

14. If a relationship has to be a secret, you shouldn't be in it.

15. Everything can change in the blink of an eye. But don't worry; God never blinks.

16. Take a deep breath. It calms the mind.

17.. Get rid of anything that isn't useful, beautiful or joyful.

18. Whatever doesn't kill you really does make you stronger.

19. It's never too late to have a happy childhood. But the second one is up to you and no one else.

20. When it comes to going after what you love in life, don't take no for an answer.

21. Burn the candles, use the nice sheets, wear the fancy lingerie. Don't save it for a special occasion. Today is special.

22. Over prepare, then go with the flow.

23. Be eccentric now. Don't wait for old age to wear purple.

24. The most important sex organ is the brain.

25. No one is in charge of your happiness but you.

26. Frame every so-called disaster with these words 'In five years, will this matter?'

27. Always choose life.

28. Forgive everyone everything.

29. What other people think of you is none of your business.

30. Time heals almost everything. Give time time.

31. However good or bad a situation is, it will change.

32. Don't take yourself so seriously. No one else does.

33. Believe in miracles.

34. God loves you because of who God is, not because of anything you did or didn't do.

35. Don't audit life. Show up and make the most of it now.

36. Growing old beats the alternative -- dying young.

37. Your children get only one childhood.

38.. All that truly matters in the end is that you loved.

39. Get outside every day. Miracles are waiting everywhere.

40. If we all threw our problems in a pile and saw everyone else's,we'd grab ours back.

41. Envy is a waste of time. You already have all you need.

42. The best is yet to come.

43. No matter how you feel, get up, dress up and show up.

44. Yield.

45. Life isn't tied with a bow, but it's still a gift."

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I'm in the 7%.

Remember that I will always share my spoon with you!

Friends are the family that we choose for ourselves.