9/12/08

Clutter, Boxes and Closets (or lack of)

Many have asked, "How is the house coming along?" I decided to share with photos...they say a picture is worth a thousand words.......



Family room, with no sheet rock, not so family oriented...but livable!
Master Bedroom, not so Masterful!

This is our closet so to speak...boxes stacked inthe Jacuzzi Tub.....no relaxing in there right now!

Campbell's room has a new rug, purple, and shades are ordered......lovely contractors paper with Painters Tape, nice appointments don't you think!


Addison is color coordinated and has a new lamp above her bed....also waits for new shades so the paper will go away.




There are so many more boxes and photos I could share. I will spare you this time around!







The attic...playroom, office, guestroom....a long way to go before a visitor!

Not room for much dining in here....???
So, this is our update! Do plan a visit anytime! We would love to have you. As you can see, there are plenty of things to do here!

9/11/08

Remembering 9/11



I was going to post something else this morning but now I have a change of plans.
Please read this and remember those who experience 9/11 and those who did not make it.
Thanks Barbara. Your Nephew is amazing.....


Subj:
My Experience
Date:
12/06/2001 4:33:18 PM Central Standard Time
From: bforneyiii@email.msn.com (billy@forney.com) To: carolyn@forney.com (Carolyn Forney) A World Trade Center Story: Tuesday, September 11, 20018:00 am: I arrive at the World Trade Center complex. Stop off at the bankin the tunnels below Two World Trade Center to make a deposit at the ATM.8:15 am: arrive at the 85th floor of One WTC, where my company, SMWTrading, has its offices. I begin preparing reports for another day oftrading at the NYMEX, located in a separate building 5 minutes away from theoffice.8:43am: I am sitting at the table in the center of the office, my backfacing the outside windows. Suddenly, a horrific explosion. An immediatechange in the air pressure. A ghostly column of air shoots like a canoninto the office. The front door slams shut. Papers are whipped into theair. I’m thrown off my chair and to the ground. My boss jumps out of hisoffice a second prior to the explosion. He had watched, in horrificdisbelief, the entire event as the plane narrowly missed the empire statebuilding and set a direct course for our building. The explosion sends thetower shaking furiously, lurching back and forth with sickening vengeancefor maybe five or ten seconds. I think we may die. The building may toppleover, or crumble. Finally it stops. The building is still standing.Everybody stares at each other, no idea of what happened or what to say.Speculations about an explosion, a bomb. No, it was a plane, our boss says.A commercial jet.[Losing track of time]: I immediately walk to the door. Someone screamsnot to open the door; the hallway is on fire. Curious, Rob “Opie” Leder andI touch the door and the handle. It’s cool. I open the door, slowly,cautiously, to see what’s out there. It’s pitch black out there, except forthe office light, still on, shining off of the billowing smoke in the hall.The smell is horrible. This is no ordinary smoke. It smells of metal, jetfuel, of rancid concrete, of things unspeakable. I close the door. Peopleare still numb, shocked, confused. Opie was the first to say it; he wasgetting the hell outta there. I’m with you man. I open the door again.The smoke is thinner. I see an orange glow outside the door, a firesmoldering around the corner. I hear guys in another office yelling forhelp or something, too scared to open their door. Nobody knows where thestairs are, not even them.Back into the office, to grab some stuff. The black SMW jacket I wear tothe trading floor. It’s full of pick cards, order tickets, my empty waterbottle, Ice gum, a calculator, a pen, a halls cough drop, and tradinganalyzers. I put on my jacket. I decide to fill up my water bottle. Opiewaits for me, ready to bolt. Almost everybody wants to leave now.Marvin Pickrum. Where is he? When did he leave? Where did he go? Is hein the bathroom? The bathroom! Someone check the bathroom. I walk intothe hallway, inhaling the noxious stench, and I walk down the hall. To theleft, another hallway, three small fires burning, debris everywhere, lightsout. In front of me, another office, another man peering out, moreterrified people. To the right, another hallway, the bathroom, and thestairwell. I open the bathroom door, everything in pristine condition.Like nothing happened. I call out for Marvin, no answer. He’s not in thebathroom. We head down the stairs.We move fast. Not a lot of people in the stairs yet. At 81, Opie stops tohelp some guy break out some fire extinguishers. We each grab anextinguisher. We get to 72. People are coming back up the stairs. What’sthe problem? The door several platforms down is pinned shut. People comeback upstairs from below. We walk out into the hall to find anotherstairwell. This floor had damage. Wires and debris everywhere. A wallblown down into the hallway. Some fires smoldering in the rubble. I covermy face and try not to look. Afraid of another explosion. We find anotherstairwell at the other end of the hall.In the next stairwell, there are more people. The descent gets slower. Wetry to use Opie’s cell phone. It was impossible to get a connection; anoccasional faint ring, then everything goes dead. The display read “serviceunavailable at this time.” What, try again later?At about 65, still trying to use the cell phone. Service still down. Westop on a large platform. I notice a woman rocking back and forth directlybehind me. She was barefoot, holding her shoes. She asks me for a swig ofwater, and uses it to wet her shirt and cover her mouth against thesickening stench. She anxiously, nervously tells me that she has twochildren, and she has to get downstairs. We start moving again. She picksher way down quickly, passing people where she can. She makes goodprogress. She’s polite. She’s frantic.At 60, cell phones still not working. I toss the investor’s business dailyI’ve been carrying with me. Not exactly important stuff at the moment. Ithink to myself that I’m trashing the building, and I feel bad.At 50, cell phone service still out. A man with blood covering half of hisface and a bandage on his head walking down the stairs. Others pass withhim, obviously in pain. People move to the right and let them pass.Everybody is calm, orderly, supportive. Nobody takes advantage of the paththey clear. Such calm, such unselfishness in the face of tragedy. Quietadrenalin. Rumors of a second plane. People are making jokes to ease thestrain.We carry the fire extinguishers all the way down to the 49th floor. I’msweating like crazy, shirt untucked, unbuttoned, I’m wearing my jacket,still carrying the fire extinguisher.At 45, cell phones still not working. I see a firefighter heading up thestairs. A reassuring presence, giving words of encouragement. At 35, morefirefighters, serious equipment in their hands, on their backs. At 30, thedoor to that floor is open, firefighters have set up base camp, they’vedropped their stuff, tended to some injured people. They’ve secured all thefloors below them. They’re working their way up, trying to save the peopleabove us. At 25, a man with a cane struggles down the stairs, another manis helping him down. After we pass these men, things start moving. Maybehe was the bottleneck. We stop less frequently now.At 20, a woman, Juliette, is struggling to get down, tired and out ofbreath. We offer water and help, she accepts. We wait a few seconds forher to rest. Opie takes her purse, which is heavy, and her jacket. Opiewalks in front of her, I walk behind. We tell people to pass us on ourleft.Floor 15, then 10, and then 5. At 2, some light. Outside light. Close tohome free. We finally exit the stairwell, into the lobby, street level,facing east, and facing a courtyard I don’t really recognize. It must be inthe middle of the World Trade Center complex. In the courtyard I recognizecolors. Green from a small tree, gray from buildings. Blue sky, somewhere.Black, too. Black stuff on the green, and black stuff on the ground, smallpuffs of smoke. It must be debris from wreckage. What looks like a person’s leg. I can’t focus, my mind is wandering. I don’t want to look.Firefighters lead us to the escalators. They don’t work, there’s debris onthem that we climb over. We go down slowly. A few people complain we’rewalking too slowly. But we keep going at a snail’s pace. Some people needhelp. What if it were you, I think to myself.We get down to the lower level, to the glass doors separating One WorldTrade Center from the shops underground. The glass is all blasted out.Firefighters are showing us the way out, through the doors. An eeriesituation underground. The sprinklers are on. People are worried abouttheir clothes. Shops are empty, deserted. Some lights above are still on.Some aren’t. Water collecting in puddles on the ground. Ceiling tiles hereand there. A usually noisy, active underground is virtually silent.Firefighters are calling out to us to keep moving.We pass a sandwich shop, Banana Republic, Gap, entrance to Two World TradeCenter. The firefighters lead us northeast, around a corner. We stop.Juliette wants to rest. The firefighters urge us forward. Juliette wants aswig of water. Just then, I hear a faint noise behind us, it sounds likewater rumbling. No, it’s people screaming, they’re running, a mad fury, atidal wave before the crescendo. What are they running from?Someone yells to start running. We start running. Part of the undergroundgoes black. Like someone flicks off the switch. We take 3 or 4 steps; Opieslips and falls sideways to his left. People yell for us to get down. Wedive to the ground. The blast is like a hurricane. I find a small corner;I ball up as fast as I can. I cover my head with both arms. I grimace,mouth open, teeth clinched. For the second time in an hour, I think I’mabout to die. Things pelting me: shards of glass, pieces of debris. I waitfor something to sever me in two, and then the chaos subsides. Much later,I find out the blast was 2WTC coming down.I open my eyes. I’ve gone blind. Pitch black. Maybe I didn’t open myeyes. I close them tight, then open them again. Nothingness. I take abreath. Metal, ash, concrete. I cough, and breathe again. More ash. Witheach breath I take, it’s more painful. I call out for Opie and Juliette,she answers, he doesn’t. I call out again. I fear something happened tohim. I call out again. Finally, a cough, and a faint response. They’reboth alive. A few seconds pass. Somebody steps on me. What’s that downthere? A person, dude. Oh, sorry. I gather my wits, and try to get mybearings after being stepped on.Then, a glimmer of light from behind. A fireman’s floodlight. It’s hard tosee anything at all. The air is thick with dust and ash. I begin to seesilhouettes of people, I see the man who stepped on me, that’s cool man. Isee things blown all around us. I carefully stand up. I see Opie hunchedover on the ground. He coughs some more stuff up and spits it out. Opieslowly stands. The fireman starts to walk by. Others are following. Ipull Juliette to her feet. I don’t want the fireman to get away. He’s notwalking fast, but it gets dark quickly without the light. I grab for Opie’shand. The group of us develop a human chain. We follow the fireman.Another floodlight turns on in front of us.Without the firemen’s lights, we know we would be crawling, in total, pitchblack. It would take forever without their help. We navigate slowly in thedirection we had originally intended. Bill? Opie, is that you? It’sJonathan, one of our firm’s partners, in from Chicago, caught undergroundwith us. Jonathan joins our group; he knows the underground and its shopswell. We walk slowly, about eighty yards. We see light, its natural light,we walk towards it. It’s upstairs, the street level. We see anotherescalator, we walk to it, it has more debris on it. We walk up it. We getto the top, doors in front of us to the right. Broken glass. Debris. Alarge rug, or mat, it’s blocking the entrance, but only slightly. We’llhave to walk over it, through the broken glass door, to the outside. We’realmost outside. We carefully step over the rug. We’re outside.Outside, it’s a war zone. A monochromatic landscape, covered in dirt andash. Like lint, everything meshes into one color - gray. We’re in a movie,an abandoned city. Visibility is at the most 50 feet. I never once lookup. I’m still grabbing on to Juliette. I feel like I’m pulling her toomuch. I slow down. I’m amazed at the amount of soot on the ground.Several inches thick. The air is full of dust and ash. Just keep walking,don’t stop. We need to keep walking. Where’s Opie? He's in front of us, Iknow, I just can't see him.We reach a street, I think it’s a street; it’s covered in ash. We keepwalking across the street. Somebody comes running towards us, shouts out tous, look for bodies under cars. A four-inch layer of ash and dust coversthe streets. I glance around for bodies, I don’t see any. We start to walkby a church with a graveyard. We stop. I cough up the ash in my mouth andlungs, take a drink of water, and spit out blackness. I tell Juliette totake some water and do the same. Swish it around and spit it out. She asksme where her purse and jacket are. I don’t know. Opie had them. Where isOpie? I call out for him. Now I don’t know where he is. I call out forhim again, finally I see him up ahead.We start walking again. We pass the church, we get to another street, there’s less ash on the ground, the air is better, better visibility. Juliettesays she needs her purse. She has no money. She doesn’t know what to do.I’ll give you some money, don’t worry. You’re alive. Be happy you’realive. We continue walking. We meet back up with Opie. Now about 3 blocksaway from our exit, a man is standing in a store doorway. He opens the doorand tells us to come in. Juliette is exhausted; she wants to stay there.She sits down on some stairs. Opie and I want to keep moving. We tellJuliette that we have to leave. We exchange numbers. Opie and I each giveher $10 to get home. We kiss her on the forehead and wish her good luck.We walk about ten minutes. People have lined the sidewalks, looking at thebuilding on fire. We keep walking away. Then, a horrifying gasp, peoplebegin crying. We turn around to look. One World Trade Center goes down.Our building. We watch it go down, floor by floor by floor.Unbelievable. Let’s get outta here. We turn back around and keep walking.We come upon three co-workers. Thank God you’re alive. We find pay phones,with lines 20 people long. We keep walking, just trying to get away – tocall somebody, let them know we’re alive. We walk about thirty minutes. Wetake a side street. We find a corner store. It has a pay phone. Nobody isusing it. We take turns calling our wives, our parents, and our friends.We’re okay, we’re alive. We all walk home together. I walk the entirelength of Manhattan to get home to the upper west side. On the way I see mysister, I go to friends’ places, I see other New Yorkers walking home.Surreal.Wednesday, September 12, 2001.9:00 am. I receive a call from Opie. Everybody made it out okay. Marvinis alive.Monday, September 16, 2001.2:01 pm. I receive a letter from my bank. The ATM deposit went through.

9/10/08

School Year Resolutions


I was reading blogs this morning, surprise...but I stumbled across this one about SCHOOL YEAR RESOLUTIONS. What a grand idea!


After some thought, I decided to list a few of my own. Some may seem silly to you, but I need a few things to be resolved!

DAILY....

1. Drink less coffee!

2. Sweep the kitchen daily!

3. Try not to argue, fuss or raise my voice in the morning before school....leaves a bad taste in all our mouths!

4. Walk more, less driving.

5. Blog less...seriously!

HEALTH

1. Get to the YMCA twice or more a week

2. Eat less refined sugar

3. Walk more......

4. Cook healthily, not hurried dinners 4 nights a week minimum

5. Eat out less

6. Kids snacks, make them healthier and less CARBS

PERSONAL

1. Find a therapist

2. Call friends and family

3. Sleep better

4. Get in a bible study

5. Exercise more

6. Send cards and notes more often

7. Give more hugs

Ok, some of this is beginning to sound like true confessions but seriously, I have thought about this. Now that I have put it in writing, I will hold myself accountable and maybe you will hold me accountable too.

Write a resolution yourself. Either blog it or put it in a safe place that you can return to and see how you are doing.

Ok, away from the computer and off to walk the stairs to the laundry room!

9/8/08

A Perfect Birthday

My Perfect 10th birthday began with Breakfast of a donut and raspberries....my request.
Then off to school with my special birthday treat....smiley faced cookies for everyone from the Wyoming Pastry Shop and they are YUMMY!

After school I waited patiently for Daddy to get home from work.....very patiently.
And then...
PRESENTS!!!!Presents!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I LOVE PRESENTS!!!!!!!!!!


I got too many presents from my family and friends, thanks everyone! Now my social calendar is full....I have a dinner date with my family. I have to get going you know....Things to do, people...

But first a silly picture!


Off to PF Changs!! (since there is no Hsiu Yu here)

Had to wait an hour....but got to shop while waiting, never a bad thing!
First course is Won Ton Soup! Love it!

Next is Mongolian Shrimp and Chopsticks....I am good!!!

A special S'more Dessert but no singing, thank goodness!

Love my sister!!!

Oh, a cake at home of course, singing there is fine!
It was a perfect Birthday. I got to spend time with my family, my favorite thing in the world to do and I got to have Chinese food, one of my favorites and two desserts!
Don't forget shopping, where I got this cute little animal thing!
As my mom would say, "It's all good!!"


New Member

So Excited to find this one!


View my page on Blissfully Domestic Living

9/5/08

A PERFECT TEN!!!!

Addison is 10 years old TODAY!!!!






































CUTE AND SASSY AND LOVED BY MANY!!!












You are a beautiful and talented girl!













We love you Addison and are so very PROUD OF YOU!
HAPPY BIRTHDAY!


9/4/08

I am Loved


Heather Loves Me! Heather Loves me!!!
I am a loved blogger, is that not the coolest! I have won my first ever BLOG AWARD! You can Love On your Favorite blogs too....here is how....
1. The winner can put the logo on his/her blog.
2. Link the person you received your award from.
3. Nominate up to 7 other blogs.
4. Put links of those blogs on yours.
5. Leave a message on the blogs of the people you’ve nominated.
So here is who I love.....
#1Heather (of Course) She is my first real life BLOG BUDDY....I am talking an IN PERSON BLOG BUDDY! Cool huh, she is a true friend! Included in that is our newest Blog Buddy, Becky!#2 Jennifer and her THREE LITTLE INDIANS. Jen introduced me to this BLOG THING!
#3 Lula.....out there in Lulaville.....her blue eyes are so cool and her Blog is great too!!
#4 The recipe mama from Texas who makes me miss my Mexican Food and Chicken Fried things more than anyone.....Mommy's Kitchen
#5 A lonely Texan who also has great food tips and recipes from AWAY from Texas.....A Peach of a blog.....Homesick Texan!
#6 a new blog I just discovered....OSB or Operation Skinny Bitch. I have the Bitch part down, now I need to work more on the Skinny and with the help of this Blog, I may just do it....but I need to stay away from the Recipe blogs!!!
#7 Last but not least is a Blog I found that inspires me daily....literally. It has scoop on just about everything about everything....I am talking my SITS girls....Secret is in the Sauce!
So Bloggy friends, you too are loved and now you need to share it forward!

9/2/08

Wyoming Ohio

I am now living in Wyoming Ohio, who would have ever guessed I would be here?? It is a charming little suburb of Cincinnati. It has a Mayberry feel in some ways. People have been so very warm and friendly.
The schools are great! Elm Elementary is where the girls are attending and it is a charming tiny school. Two classes per grade K-4.
Addison has the biggest class in the school with 25 students. She has a "Cooler than cool" male teacher, Mr. Hayden who rides a Harley and plays guitar! I guess to a 4th grade girl, that is pretty neat! Campbell has a nice teacher named Ms. Alt. She said "Ms. Alt is Fun like Mrs. Ginther, Sweet like Mrs. Rouse and Teaches and Reads like Mrs. Weatherston" She has all her bases covered there! I am thankful they are so happy.
The community has so many things to offer. We joined a group called the Wyoming Newcomers Group. They have monthly activity groups for both of us together and separate as well as family events. Kipper and I attended the first party August 22nd and had a lot of fun. We met a neighbor from a block away, in the "other red house" and another cute couple that moved here in December. She (Kim) brought us an apple pie the day we moved in......see it is Mayberry!!
Other news that is great in our lives is that we have found a church! God is good and fast!!! We have been attending Presbyterian Church of Wyoming. Get this, it is exactly 6 houses away from ours around the corner. Yes, that is a God thing for sure. They are in the process of calling a head of staff but have a great Associate Pastor who we are really enjoying. They kids have great activities to participate in and Sunday school will begin this weekend so we can all check that out. We even met some great friends already through the church, the Walton Family. Not John Boy or Sue Ellen! The Walton's have daughters, Lucy & Sophie who are in our girls classes at Elm, can you even believe that one! It is so great!
So, we are settling into a routine. Girls walked to school from home this morning for the first official time! I walked to pick them up at 3:00! Everyone walks because you have to pay for the bus!!! Crazy huh? It is 1/2 mile each way so it is perfect. Now in the snow, we will see!!! I am going to look into a bible study and have signed up to volunteer for a few very small one day things at the school, not homeroom mom or troop leader again, YET!!
Girls are 2-0 for soccer...Go Pink Panthers! Otherwise, they will begin church choir next week on Wednesday and Addison will be a Junior Girl Scout again, still looking for a troop for Campbell.
So life in Mayberry, oops Wyoming, is "so far so good". Our Great American Adventure continues!

IN AND BEAT




We are in the house. Truck arrived Thursday before 8:00am and drove away before 6:00pm. Three very strong and very nice guys unloaded all of our CRAP!


We have so much stuff, it is so sad! We had no idea it would be such a tight fit.


Our bedroom furniture SWALLOWS our bedroom alive. We have no closet so there are racks and wardrobe boxes everywhere, even in the master jacuzzi tub!


The girls rooms are set up and looking cute. Just can't put things on shelves quite yet, the painter needs to return to finish....that is next week!


Boxes are stacked in the center of the living, dining and family rooms so they can be painted also.


Kitchen is minimal unpacking because it will be demolished soon, hopefully in the next few weeks so we can be done by Christmas!


I will post photos soon, once I take them!


Cats are here, they seem OK so far. Just have to keep them out of the basement that the previous cats used as their litter box, yes it stinks!!!


More Advil and Cardboard will fill my day!!!!!!

8/27/08

18 hours!







YEAH! YEAH! YEAH!!!